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svp [43]
3 years ago
10

In colonial america, what was an example of a borderlands area?

History
2 answers:
Dima020 [189]3 years ago
4 0

Natural elements of the ecosystem are often borderlands, for example rivers or mountains, the Great Lakes.

vredina [299]3 years ago
3 0
<h2>Answer:</h2>

In colonial America, <u>Great Lake</u> was an example of a borderlands area.

<h2>Explanation:</h2>

The great lakes form the United States and Canadian boarders and are interconnected lakes of fresh water. They are the biggest source of surface freshwater in great quantities by area and volume. They exhibits sea characteristics with strong currents, sustained winds, great depths, etc. which results in the name inland sea.

The great lakes were formed during the last glacial period. The area around them include Great Lake of Megalopolis and it is called great lakes region. They have also provided opportunities for trade, fishing, migration, and serving as habitats for various aquatic species.

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Select the correct answer. french fur traders established fair trade with american indians in north america. what is one item th
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Horses are those whose French fur traders established fair trade with American Indians in north America.

<h3>What is French fur traders?</h3>
  • In the early 1600s, French explorers made alliances with the Algonquins, Montagnais, and Hurons to gain access to rich fur territories.
  • Indigenous peoples pursued these alliances with the French as a means of securing a wide range of European manufactured goods, but cloth, firearms, and metal weapons were among the most sought after.
  • The Great Lakes region had a well-established fur trade by the early 1700s. Fur trade in this area served as the foundation of the French empire, which depended on Native American relationships to remain strong.
  • Native Americans and French traders coexisted, shared housing, frequently got married, and raised families together.

To know more about French fur traders with the given link

brainly.com/question/11237332

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1 year ago
Before the Fifteenth Amendment was passed, which states refused African-Americans the right to vote?
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Some northern and southern states
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What was one reason African American families did not make as much money as white families
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They did not like them
7 0
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Read 2 more answers
Great Britain and France avoided a take over by fascist by
maks197457 [2]

Answer:

Great Britain and France avoid a take over by fascists' by restricting freedom of speech.

Explanation:

Fascism is a governmental system led by a dictator having complete power, forcibly suppressing opposition and criticism, regimenting all industry, commerce, etc. , and emphasizing an aggressive nationalism and often racism.  

How Britain and France avoided fascist revolution inside their own country during rise of fascism in Italy and Germany?

What made Mussolini’s Fascism, and Lenin’s Communism too, was a specific and unique situation, never to be repeated in later history: namely, the presence of enormous masses of disaffected veterans, with recent experience of war at a very high technical level of skill, and angry about the condition of their country. (And of enormous amounts of weapons.) Fascism was not made by speeches or by money, but by tens of thousands of men gathering in armed bands to beat up enemies. And that being the case, what happened to the similar masses of veterans who came home to France, Britain, and America too, after 1918?

Well, France was exhausted. She had fought with her full strength from day one, whereas Britain had taken time to deploy its whole strength, and America and Italy had only entered the war much later. For five years, every man who could be spared had been at the Front. Her losses were larger in proportion than those of any other great power. And on the positive side, France, like Britain and America, was prosperous. The veterans went home to a country that was comparatively able to receive them, give them a place to be, and not foster any dangerous mass disaffection. This is of course relatively speaking. There will have been anger enough, irritation enough, even some disaffection. But the only real case of violence from below due to disaffection was the riot in Paris that followed the Stavisky affair in early 1934, and that, compared to what took place daily in other countries, was a very bad play of a riot.

ON the other hand, both America and Britain experienced situations that had more than a taste of Fascism, but that failed to develop into freedom-destroying movements. In America, Fascism could have come from above. The last few years of the Wilson administration were horrendous: the Red Scare fanaticized large strata of the population, and the hatred came from the top, from Wilson and his terrible AG Palmer. (Palmer was a Quaker. So was Richard Nixon. Is there a reason why Quakers in politics should prove particularly dangerous?) Hate and fear of “reds” was also the driving force of Italian Fascism; and Wilson and Palmer mobilized it in ways and with goals that Mussolini would have understood. Had Wilson not suffered his famous collapse, he might have been a real danger: he intended to run for a third term in office. And the nationwide spread of the new KKK, well beyond the bounds of the old South, shows that he might have found a pool of willing stormtroopers. Altogether, I think America dodged a bullet the size of a Gatling shot when Wilson collapsed in office.

Britain’s own Blackshirt moment took place in Ireland. Sociologically, culturally, psychologically, the Blacks and Tans were the Blackshirts of Britain - masses of disaffected veterans sent into the streets to harass and terrify political enemies, bullies in non-standard uniforms with a loose relationship with the authorities. Only, their relationship with public opinion developed in an exactly opposite direction. Whereas Italy’s majority, horrified by Socialist violence at home and by Communist brutality abroad, tended increasingly to excuse the Blackshirts and wink at their violence, in Britain - possibly because of the influence of the American media, which were largely against British rule in Ireland - the paramilitary force found itself increasingly isolated from the country’s mainstream, and eventually their evil reputation became an asset to their own enemies and contributed to British acceptance of Irish independence.

Thanks,
Eddie

5 0
1 year ago
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