Natural born, 35 years of age, resident for 14 years
When ancient cities get lost in China, they get lost in places like Anyang. The ebbs and flows of 20th-century history rushed across this part of the Yellow River plain, leaving their traces like so much jumbled driftwood. Outside of Anyang stands the tomb of warlord Yuan Shikai, who briefly seized control of the nation in the 1910s. Anyang's new downtown—white tile, blue glass—is a monument to another conqueror, the modernization of post-reform China. Wedged between the tomb and the town, there's an old airstrip that was built by Japanese imperialists during their occupation in the 1930s
The expansion and development of the railroads was revolutionary in many aspects, one of which was the availability of natural resources. Before the railroad expansion, the natural resources couldn't be transported to distant location, or only in smaller amounts. While that is not a big problem for the resources like the gold, the ones like the coal and timber are not economically justified nor are of great use if they are transported in small amounts. So once the railroad expansion took place, this all changed, and the natural resources were now possible to be delivered in large amounts over long distances without problems.
Water vapor condenses and leaves the air in the form of water. At this point relative humidity is essentially 100%.
American colonist should be right