It’s a Babylonian code of law in the ancient Mesopotamia :-)
Answer:
left
Explanation:
Our brain is divided into two hemispheres, left and right. Each hemisphere tends to specialize in controlling different body functions, but a curious thing about our brain is decussated - that is, the left and right hemisphere are crossed: <u>the left hemisphere controls the right side of the body, and the right hemisphere controls the left side</u>. Generally speaking, this means that any damage caused to a hemisphere will manifest on the opposite side of the body. In our example, since the individual is experiencing a tingling on the right side of the face, the MRI will show an abnormality in the brain tissue of the left hemisphere.
James cook helped Great Britain settle in A. Australia.
The answer is A. AUSTRALIA
Have a great day!
<span>B) Most victims of famine are middle-class inhabitants of urban areas.
Famine is a widespread scarcity of food, this is the only answer that makes sense. </span>
In 1898, the bowl weevil infected the cotton crops of the South leaving acres and acres of cotton devastated. Finally, the hold of King Cotton in the South was finished. In 1914, foreign immigration stopped with WW I which left industries in the North short of workers. Some people migrated to the North to get factory jobs. Big businesses decided to help with the war effort and because they needed a good supply of workers, decided to built factories in the south. At this point the South was behind in education, labor skills, etc. because the idea of the South was the better of the two regions still lay in the minds of many Southerners. However, some had left farms years ago and were just waiting for a chance to see what the North had to offer. When the coal mines opened up, many ex-farmers headed North to see what kind of jobs could be found. As more people quit working the land and headed North, some would stop off at different places and some would continue onward. If the big crop of cotton had not failed, many would have been stuck in the Southern way of life and racism from the end of the Civil War.