The correct answer is option C: someone diagnosed with smallpox.
The person that would have been most grateful for the work of 19th-century scientist Edward Jenner, would be someone diagnosed with smallpox because Jenner was who discovered the first vaccine against the smallpox virus. Moreover, this disease that was widely spread in the 18th century and killed many people.
15 percent of the total population. (I learned this in World History Honors)
The correct answer is B) No historians have written about the era that preceded the ancient era.
The option that could be a reason why humans know very little about the time before the ancient era is that no historians have written about the era that preceded the ancient era.
We are referring to what is cold prehistory, the time where events occurred before the existence of written records. Historians write what they can research or interpret written records from the past such as the clay tablets of Sumer-Mesopotamia or the Egyptians glyphs due to the Rosetta Stone. But without written records, all is speculation, that is why humans know so little about prehistory.
HR2520, It is a law that deals with the equality and responsibility of 2017 in the internet browsing.
This law seeks to restric the disclosure or access to information of users depending on the sensitivity of the information.
You must also have the express approval of the user for use confidential information, such as social security numbers, financial information and others.
Answer:
When Christopher Columbus arrived on the Bahamian Island of Guanahani (San Salvador) in 1492, he encountered the Taíno people, whom he described in letters as "naked as the day they were born." The Taíno had complex hierarchical religious, political, and social systems. Skilled farmers and navigators, they wrote music and poetry and created powerfully expressive objects. At the time of Columbus’s exploration, the Taíno were the most numerous indigenous people of the Caribbean and inhabited what are now Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. By 1550, the Taíno were close to extinction, many having succumbed to diseases brought by the Spaniards. Taíno influences survived, however, and today appear in the beliefs, religions, language, and music of Caribbean cultures.
Explanation: