B. Sails
The Egyptians were among the first to use sails on their ships to improve transportation.
According to Cynthia Scott and Dennis Jaffe's stages of coping with change in an organization, at the first stage of the cycle, individuals' interests are not threatened.
The Scott and Jaffe Change Model, otherwise called the Scott and Jaffe Resistance Cycle, was created by Cynthia Scott and Dennis Jaffe, and was first presented in their article, "Make due and Thrive in Times of Change".
In the event that you've at any point been liable for overseeing change inside an association, you might have experienced protection from change.
The Scott and Jaffe Change Model doesn't make a difference in all hierarchical change. Clearly, assuming a representative's underlying reaction to a proposed change is that it's perfect and they can truly see the advantage, for both themselves and the association, then they will quickly be in stage 4 of the model. In this situation, there will be no protection from the change.
No change model will be totally exact, as a matter of fact. Notwithstanding, each model can give us understanding and rules which can more readily prepare us to really oversee change.
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The geographic location of New Orleans made it, along with Savannah, an ideal center of the slave trade in the United States.
New Orleans sits on the Mississippi on the Gulf of Mexico. As a result, ships carrying slaves could go from anywhere in the world and have access to the river systems of middle America where slaves were being used.
The figure of 600,000<span> adult males described in Exodus 12:37, or 603,550 at Exodus 38:26, would imply a total population of Israelites in flight through the desert for 40 years of 2 to 2.5 million people, when the total population of Egypt at the time was 3 to 4.5 million.</span>
Answer:
The U.S. government made reservations the centerpiece of Indian policy around 1850, and thereafter reserves became a major bone of contention between natives and non-natives in the Pacific Northwest. However, they did not define the lives of all Indians. Many natives lived off of reservations, for example. One estimate for 1900 is that more than half of all Puget Sound Indians lived away from reservations. Many of these natives were part of families that included non-Indians and children of mixed parentage, and most worked as laborers in the non-Indian economy. They were joined by Indians who migrated seasonally away from reservations, and also from as far away as British Columbia. As Alexandra Harmon's article "Lines in Sand" makes clear, the boundaries between "Indian" and "non-Indian," and between different native groups, were fluid and difficult to fix. Reservations could not bound all Northwest Indians any more than others kinds of borders and lines could.