<span>This is simply a struggle between empires, the only two empires still remaining after World War II. It just so happened that these two empires had completely different and competing systems of government and economy. One sought world domination, while the other sought to contain it.</span>
Answer:
Steel
Explanation:
It complemented the Siemen's process. The latter is slower but more easier controlled and less cost effective than the Bessemer process.
Answer:
The battle of the Somme was a British-led British and French expedition to gain control of no-man's land situated in between the western allies and Germany's trenches. The battle itself was a pyrrhic victory, as it did see to the expansion of territory gain, albeit by a few miles over the course of miles, as well as providing much needed experience to the British soldiers that participated in the fight. However, it did not deal a decisive blow that ended the war, it continued to drag on for years to come.
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Answer:violate the state constitution.
Explanation:good luck
According to Herodotus, at the top of each ziggurat was a shrine, although none of these shrines have survived. One practical function of the ziggurats was a high place on which the priests could escape rising water that annually inundated lowlands and occasionally flooded for hundreds of miles, for example the 1967 flood. Another practical function of the ziggurat was for security. Since the shrine was reachable only by way of three stairways, a small number of guards could prevent non-priests from spying on the rituals at the shrine on top of the ziggurat, such as initiation rituals such as the Eleusinian mysteries, cooking of sacrificial food and burning of carcasses of sacrificial animals. Each ziggurat was part of a temple complex that included a courtyard, storage rooms, bathrooms, and living quarters, around which a city was built