Let's create a travel advertisement to stimulate. Those structures are visually appealing and attractive, but they also must retain exotic unique signatures. Heterogeneity embedded in travel advertising stimulates curiosity, which is also aimed at stimulating the reader's adventure. Advertisements by the Newfoundland and Labrador Tourism Board ("NL Tourism") and Air Canada West Jet are no exception. However, this particular ad is unique in that it publishes harmonically combined dynamic elements and design elements to sell ideas.
Modern Labrador's ancestor was born in Newfoundland and is now part of Newfoundland and the state of Labrador in Canada. The foundation of Labrador is St. John's Water Dog, a species that emerged by a special variety of early settlers of the island in the 16th century. The ancestors of St. John's Dog are unknown but may be a random breeding mix of occupations in England, Ireland, Portugal. Newfoundland (which was then known as Grand Newfoundland) was probably brought to the island by Portuguese fishermen for many generations who have been fishing at the sea since the 16th century and the breeding of St. John's dog It is a result. A small short coat of St. John's dog (also called Little Newfoundland dog) is used to collect and withdraw water from the net. These little dogs are the ancestors of the Labrador retriever
Labrador Retriever actually came from Newfoundland, not Labrador. In the 18th century, Big Newfoundland dog breeded with a small water dog and made a St John's water dog. These little dogs are very similar to modern laboratories, but there are white muzzles and nails. St. John's water dog eventually became extinct, but became an ancestor of the Labrador retriever. After traveling in Canada, the number brought the dog back to the UK and called his new baby child "Labrador" in 1887. Because of the similar geographical location of Newfoundland and Labrador, many historians suspect that the name is the result of what Britain generally believes. Mix areas and call the whole mass Labrador. Others believe that their name is an acknowledgment of the fact that such dogs often swim in the Labrador sea.