The Nile river give transportation, fertile soil, water and food(fish)
The correct answer is option "D".
The growth of business in the 1950s have positive effects on farming, since innovations and mechanization sped up farm prowesses, making family farms more profitable and efficient. Farm population fell dramatically due to the rapid growth of urbanization in the world economy. However, agriculture benefited from the growing urban population due to the demands as food consumers. As a result, agricultural production increased by 50% thanks to the quality of labor, the capital, more efficient use of machinery as well as fertilizers among others.
The lives of the indigenous people of Brazil, the region of the Americas where the Portuguese landed, changed radically after this event.
Explanation:
For one, the vast majority of them perished (around 90%) due to the spread of contagious Eurasian diseases like measles or viruela, for which they did not have immunity.
The few who survived were subjected to slavery at first, and when the Catholic Church prohibited the enslavement of Native Americans, to serfdom, and brutal working conditions.
They were also stripped of their lands and property, and were given very few opportunities to climb up the social ladder in the colonial Brazilian society.
The name “Canada” likely comes from the Huron-Iroquois word “kanata,” meaning “village” or “settlement.” In 1535, two Aboriginal youths told French explorer Jacques Cartier about the route to kanata; they were actually referring to the village of Stadacona, the site of the present-day City of Québec. For lack of another name, Cartier used the word “Canada” to describe not only the village, but the entire area controlled by its chief, Donnacona.
The name was soon applied to a much larger area; maps in 1547 designated everything north of the St. Lawrence River as Canada. Cartier also called the St. Lawrence River the “rivière du Canada,” a name used until the early 1600s. By 1616, although the entire region was known as New France, the area along the great river of Canada and the Gulf of St. Lawrence was still called Canada.
Soon explorers and fur traders opened up territory to the west and to the south, and the area known as Canada grew. In the early 1700s, the name referred to all French lands in what is now the American Midwest and as far south as present-day Louisiana.
The first use of Canada as an official name came in 1791, when the Province of Quebec was divided into the colonies of Upper Canada and Lower Canada. In 1841, the two colonies were united under one name, the Province of Canada.
<span>Nathaniel Greene replaced the gates in the South.</span>