An innovative way was an improvised vaccination.
This consisted of smearing open cuts of healthy people with substances taken from wounds of sick people (for example sick from smallpox) in the hope that they will undergo a mild version of the disease and when the disease catches them, not die.
The risk was that they could get seriously ill, but the advantage was that on average, they had better survival chances than without this "vaccine"
I think that This is correct, the very reason for English settlers
coming to U.S is haphazard. They came here in search for religious
freedom from the British crown, and forced there way onto America. From
then on they have used the land, gotten sick and died, searched for
treasure destroyed the land and fought with Indians. The situations that
brought them to settle in America and their dissensions afterwords set
the building blocks for an extremely haphazard way of life. They killed
many Indians made treaties and broke them, mined the earth for oil and
made war with Brittan 2 times. Also their greed for money and
industrialization was also out of control. All in all the settlements of
early America, was forced due to oppression and was never gilded into a
thoughtful manner.
All this needs is specific detail which i can't do since i don't have your book or curriculum.
Answer:
Ultimately the Protestant Reformation led to modern democracy, skepticism, capitalism, individualism, civil rights, and many of the modern values we cherish today. The Protestant Reformation increased literacy throughout Europe and ignited a renewed passion for education.
Explanation:
Answer:
Congress can override a veto by passing the act by a two-thirds vote in both the House and the Senate. (Usually an act is passed with a simple majority.)
Explanation:
I hope this helps!
More flowers, trees, and emotion. In this second collection of poetry, Wordsworth develops the Romantic project of bringing man/woman back to nature, focusing on the individual, and making poetry accessible to all.
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH IN ROMANTICISM<span> </span>