I would say the Sumerians the developed a lot of modern tech and ideas for the time include sail boats, astronomy, codes of law, a numerical system, advanced water systems and most importantly a written language. The akkadian in general took these innovations from the Sumerians and used them as their own. The akkadians did eventually form the 1st "empire," which lead to the extinguishing of Sumerian culture, but most or the of their technologically was taken from the sumerians. So I would say deff the Sumerians. The akkadians simply stole and/or built on Sumerian tech
Canada used the U.S. and imperial systems of measurement until 1971 when the S.I. or metric system was declared the official measuring system for Canada, which is now in use in most of the world, with the United States being the major exception. However, “declaring” and “truly adopting” are not always the same.
Because of Canada’s strong ties to the United States, a lot of our food products come from across the border, and many Canadian producers also sell in the U.S. market. This is one of the main reasons Canadians need to know how to work in both systems. Most Canadian packages include both Canadian and U.S. or imperial measurements on the label, and many suppliers still quote prices in cost per pound instead of cost per kilogram.
The most commonly used units of measurement in the U.S. and imperial systems are shown in Table 6.
<em>liter</em>
<em>literThe liter (L) is the basic metric unit for measuring liquid volume. A milliliter (mL) is the metric unit to measure liquid in very small containers.</em>
<em>Pic </em><em>is </em><em>up!</em><em>!</em><em>!</em>
Color coding, underlying key details, and make the studying or studying fun like eat snacks decorate your notes :)