It was primarily the business and shop owners in the west that <span>profited the most from the California Gold Rush, since finding gold was relatively rare, but the surge of people hoping to find gold boosted the economy of the west as a whole. </span>
Canada feared the invasion by the US from both the north and the south.
Answer:
like shoot sorry if im red, not many people liked ruby for her color but i think they shouldn't be so rude to a little child
Explanation:
ruby bridges is that one girl as a child went to an all white school and not many white folks were happy since they didnt want their little white kids to be with anyone with a different color. and ruby was very smart and beautiful and very kind.
Answer:
-- Japan's leaders were refusing to surrender.
-- US resources had been stretched thin, and the United States' ability to invade was limited.
-- Japan's ability to make war had been badly crippled.
-- The United States was inflicting heavy damage by bombing Japan's cities.
Explanation:
Harry S. Truman was one of the greatest and one of the famous Presidents of the United States of America. He served as the 33rd President to the United States of America. He is well known all over he world mainly as the man who dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki of Japan to put an end to World War II.
The United States wanted to avoid casualties resulting from the invasion of Japan and also to end the war quickly. The Japanese leaders did not wanted to surrender and they were crippling the war by heavy bombarding and killing everybody. Besides the USA's resources also stretched out and the US was inflicting heavy damages by attacking may of the Japanese cities. Hence Truman decided to attack Japan with the atomic bomb in the year 1945.
Because of increasing sea ice.
In climate change taking place since then, there has been an opposite problem. Beginning in the late 19th century, a reduction of sea ice has been progressing in the Arctic regions. The pace of ice mass loss has been accelerating especially since the 1970s. In the first decade of the 21st century, Greenland's ice loss accelerated at a rate of 30 gigatonnes a year.