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Agawa Canyon is a magnificent scenic wonder located on the Algoma Central Railroad line, 182 kms northwest of Sault Ste Marie, in total wilderness. The railroad line is not heavily traveled. Trains run infrequently. The canyon floor is walled in by sheer cliffs of red rock 500 feet high. The railroad track descends into the canyon along the side of the cliff. Some 22 kms to the south of the canyon, the track crosses a huge, long, trestle over the Montreal River. You and your companions are classmates in a high school in Sault Ste Marie. You decided to skip school one day in mid-October, and take the sight- seeing train trip to Agawa Canyon. Naturally, you did not tell anyone where you were going. The train stops in the Agawa Canyon to let people off for two hours of sight- seeing. The train itself continues on, and the sightseers are picked up by a return train. There are no facilities of any kind in the canyon except picnic tables, water, and rustic sanitary facilities. You and your friends set out exploring, became lost, and did not hear the train return. It pulled out without you. Your group decided to wait for the next day's train by sheltering under the picnic tables. During the night a terrible storm occurred, washing out the trestle, and causing an enormous rock slide, blocking off the entire north end of the canyon. You are wet, cold, hungry, and entrapped. 1. Create five (5) laws needed by the group stranded in Agawa Canyon. 2. Do these laws differ from our present- day laws or are at least some of them similar? How? Why? 3. Provide a punishment for one of your laws if it is broken and briefly explain why you believe the punishment to be just and fair. 4. What does the expression, "Respect for the Law" mean to you