<span>The answer is "plowed fields and domesticated bulls"
Before the appearance of white European settlers in North America, there was limited agriculture practiced by the Native Americans, certainly nothing to the scale of the contemporary Europeans at the time. The same goes with domestication of animals, which was practiced on a much smaller scale by the pre-Columbian Natives. Indeed, many Europeans justified simply taking Native American territories because they weren't "being utilized" in the practice of growing crops; the notion was that whomever "made the land useful" had clear right to it.</span>
I would say the Spanish. There were no answer choices that you gave (not sure if you were aware). The Spainards were amongst the first to colonize the Americas.
One of the most important effects and significance was the use of the US 1890 census, rather than the population census of 1910 or 1920, it excluded the new wave of foreign-born from South-Eastern Europe from quotas truly proportionate to their new numbers in the population. The effect on immigration from Europe is conveyed in the picture on the right.
it brought spices to england when the crusaders returned
Answer:
Women
Explanation:
I think this because women were often doing the chores.
Have an amazing day!
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