The New England colonies would trade for a living.
<span> Most of the trading was done by
New Englanders because the farming was bad there and so that was a good way to
earn a living. Some of the objects that were trading are fish, whale products,
ships, timber products, furs, maple syrup, copper, livestock products, and rum. The people that traded were called merchants
and they would deliver the objects to other parts of the 13 colonies and some
of them would deliver to England and China too. </span>
A) Vikings were the first Europeans to encounter North Americans. Although it is much less historically popular, the Vikings were the first Europeans to have interactions with the indigenous peoples of North America. The Vikings came to North America to pillage and raid the villages, but some were also involved in trade.
The most widely accepted theory on how early humans migrated to North America is the one that raises that the first settlers of North America crossed from Siberia through the Bering Strait.
For 19,000 years there was the possibility that the primitive tribes of Asia could cross the Beringia bridge. The first one to compose a possible migratory model of Asians to America through Beringia was Caleb Vance Haynes in an article published in the journal Science in 1964.
The most important data to establish a migratory theory during the last glaciation is the fact that Canada was completely covered with ice during the last glaciation, invaded by two gigantic plates: the laurentine ice plate and the ice plate of the mountain range. This made it impossible to enter the continent beyond Beringia.
A theory was then developed: shortly before the end of the last glaciation and the Beringia bridge was flooded, the edges in contact of the two large ice sheets covering Canada began to melt, opening an ice-free corridor of about 25 km wide, which followed, first the valley of the Yukon River and then the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains along the Mackenzie River corridor. Scientists who hold the theory estimate that this occurred in 14,000 BC, although others question the date and claim that it could not have happened until 11,000 BC. At that time the human beings who were in Beringia could move towards the interior of America although there is still no physical evidence to prove the fact itself.
This theory was articulated with the discoveries of the Clovis culture that dated from the year 13,500 BC to conclude that it had been integrated by the first migrants that entered by the bridge of Beringia, which in turn would have descended all the other cultures indoamericanas.
Answer: to escape political turmoil
Explanation: