C. Flourine
<span>
Flourine is a pale yellow glass. It is the least dense and
the most active chemically. It displaces other halogens from their compounds
and also displaces oxygen from water. Bromine
is liquid with a dark red color. Chlorine is more dense and less reactive than fluorine.
It is a yellow-green gas. Iodine is a solid, grayish black in color and is the
least chemically active among the halogens. Among the nonmentals though, only
oxygen is more reactive than iodine. </span>
Settlers wanted to kill animals because, they would
create stampedes and ruin their farms. Although they found a solution to that problem
they still killed the animals because, they found no use for them. While the Indians
wanted to use their fur for clothes and meet to feed their hungry children. Instead
of leaving the
rotting carcasses out in open to rot the Indians wanted to have a good use for
the animals.
Moat filled with water from the Euphrates River surrounded the city.
Answer:
the Mandan and Hidatsa people, located in five villages on the upper Missouri near the Knife River confluence.
Explanation:
Their primary contacts were the Mandan and Hidatsa people, located in five villages on the upper Missouri near the Knife River confluence. These tribes were semi-sedentary, agricultural bands who lived in earth lodges. Before and after the advent of the Corps of Discovery, these tribes were the focal point of trade between other Native Peoples, some of them as distant as the central and southern plains. Other tribes with whom they had contact in North Dakota included Dakota and Yanktonai bands, and just south of the present-day North Dakota- South Dakota border, the Arikara. The Arikara are a Caddoan-speaking people who were related to the Pawnee of the central plains. After repeated conflicts with the Mandan and Hidatsa, as well as the Sioux, the Arikara made peace with her northern neighbors and eventually joined them at Like-a-Fish-Hook village near Fort Berthold in the mid-1840's. Like-a-Fish-Hook was abandoned after allotment began and today it is under the waters of Lake Sakakawea.