Answer:
the 2nd one I think In the late 1800s, workers organized unions to solve their problems. Their problems were low wages and unsafe working conditions. ... Their problems were low wages and unsafe working conditions. First, workers formed local unions in single factories.
Explanation:
hope this helps sorry if incorrect have a good rest of your night :) ❤
The beginnings—Stone Age technology (to c. 3000 BCE The identification of the history of technology with the history of humanlike species does not help in fixing a precise point for its origin, because the estimates of prehistorians and anthropologists concerning the emergence of human species vary so widely. Animals occasionally use natural tools such as sticks or stones, and the creatures that became human doubtless did the same for hundreds of millennia before the first giant step of fashioning their own tools. Even then it was an interminable time before they put such toolmaking on a regular basis, and still more aeons passed as they arrived at the successive stages of standardizing their simple stone choppers and pounders and of manufacturing them—that is, providing sites and assigning specialists to the work. A degree of specialization in toolmaking was achieved by the time of the Neanderthals (70,000 BCE); more-advanced tools, requiring assemblage of head and haft, were produced by Cro-Magnons (perhaps as early as 35,000 BCE); while the application of mechanical principles was achieved by pottery-making Neolithic (New Stone Age; 6000 BCE) and Metal Age peoples (about 3000 BCE).
Earliest communities
For all except approximately the past 10,000 years, humans lived almost entirely in small nomadic communities dependent for survival on their skills in gathering food, hunting and fishing, and avoiding predators. It is reasonable to suppose that most of these communities developed in tropical latitudes, especially in Africa, where climatic conditions are most favourable to a creature with such poor bodily protection as humans have. It is also reasonable to suppose that tribes moved out thence into the subtropical regions and eventually into the landmass of Eurasia, although their colonization of this region must have been severely limited by the successive periods of glaciation, which rendered large parts of it inhospitable and even uninhabitable, even though humankind has shown remarkable versatility in adapting to such unfavourable conditions. (LOOK IN THE COMMENTS FOR THE REST)
Answer:
Hello. You did not put the map to which this question refers, but I can help you by showing you something that traveled from the Americas to Europe, Africa and Asia, which were agricultural products.
Explanation:
Through the Colombian exchange, it was possible that many products originating in the American continent were transported to other continents, Europe, Asia and Africa. The majority of these products were agricultural products, specifically food products, which modified food on all these continents, through trade and colonial exploitation.
As an example of this, we can mention the production of potatoes, corn and sweet potatoes in America that was brought to Europeans and Asians, being introduced in their food, supplying problems of supply and influencing the food of citizens. The corn produced in the Americas was transported to Africa, several times, causing the same impact that it had in Europe.
The Fugitive Slave Law (C) required that all states help slave owners catch their runaway slaves. This law required that if a slave were to escape to a northern state where there was no slavery that the person must be returned to their "owner" in the South.