True.
The Great European Plain extends <span>from the Pyrenees mountain range (on the border of Spain and France) across northern Europe to the Ural mountain range in Russia. The plain is narrower in Western Europe, expanding in width as it moves toward the east. The size of the plain is great enough that it gives Europe the overall lowest average elevation of any continent. Rivers like the Loire and the Rhine are waterways in the western European part of the plain, and agricultural production is key to the plains region.</span>
Answer:
leonardo da Vinci
Leonardo da Vinci began painting the Mona Lisa in 1503, and it was in his studio when he died in 1519.
Explanation:
that last one always makes me laugh
The correct answer is C.) Lack of diversification in industry, growth was experienced in only a few industries while others suffered.
Explanation:
Option A.) is factually incorrect - there was actually a mass overproduction in the agricultural economy, not “too few farm products.” Farmers actually produced more food than consumers wanted.
Option B.) - Yes, there was indisputably an uneven distribution of wealth; however, it was not in the favor of the farmers. In fact, many farmers were left in sever debt following the agriculture economic crisis.
Option D.) - While there were probably technological advances to a certain degree, it would be incorrect to say there were “too many jobs.” Unemployment rates in the U.S. during the Great Depression reached nearly 25% at its highest (which may not sound drastic, but it absolutely is.) This was one of the highest unemployment rates in history, and it affected most of the industrialized world in the West.
On March 11, 1888, one of the worst blizzards in American history strikes the Northeast, killing more than 400 people and dumping as much as 55 inches of snow in some areas. New York City ground to a near halt in the face of massive snow drifts and powerful winds from the storm. At the time, approximately one in every four Americans lived in the area between Washington D.C. and Maine, the area affected by the Great Blizzard of 1888.