Answer:
The West of United States, extending from the top corner of Washington, through California and into parts of Nevada, Utah, Colorado, and Idaho, was home to a diverse array of Native American groups living off bountiful natural resources much before Lewis and Clark ever discovered the region’s riches. It is hard to generalize about the cultural practices of native groups in the West since the climate and resources varied immensely, creating microenvironments which different groups used to advantage. Some tribes that lived in the Pacific Northwest include the Makah and the Kwakiutl people. Over one hundred federally-recognized tribes lived in modern California. The Great Basin—the vast expanse of land between the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevadas—was home to the Mono, Paiute, Bannock, Shoshone, Ute, and Gosiute peoples, among others.
Answer:
No
Explanation:
There is nothing in the Declaration of Independence, the founding document of the nation, about any mission to do anything. Nor is there in the Constitution. So any such mission exists only in the heads of people who feel the U.S. ought to be doing this.
Explanation:
All of the wonders on the list are UNESCO World Heritage sites and were chosen by an online poll of tens of millions of votes in 2007. If you couldn't name all seven (but hopefully now you can), then naming the Ancient Seven Wonders of The World could prove even more difficult
Answer:C
Explanation:because it is I can’t explain it
The answer to your question is Muslims refused to spread ideas in Ghana