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human cultures and relations may i have the brainiliest plz
Answer:
Two effects of the Silk Road are the sharing of technological advancements and the spread of the plague.
Explanation:
The Silk Road was a network of trading routes that connected East Asia, Southeast Asia, South Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and northwestern Africa. This trading network has been functional for several thousand years and it has had a lot of positive effects on humanity, but also the occasional negative one.
One big positive effect has been the sharing of technological advancements between the different civilizations, which has led to improvements in the living conditions, exploration, and further advancements all over the areas that are connected with this network. One big negative effect has been the plague. Through the extensive trade of goods, the plague managed to find its way from East Asia all the way to Europe, and it had such a negative effect on the population that it contributed to big geopolitical changes, and it was the last time when the human population dropped.
Answer: World War II.
Explanation:
By pursuing economic reforms to solve the financial crisis, Roosevelt introduced an economic reform package called the New Deal. These reforms partially addressed the problems of the economic crisis. However, this set of economic reforms has not thoroughly solved the accumulated problems. The crisis ceased at the beginning of the Second World War because, in this way, absolutely every segment of life changed. So the end of the economic crisis began at the beginning of World War II.
Step 1
List all of your options as the row labels on the table, and list the factors that you need to consider as the column headings. For example, if you were buying a new laptop, factors to consider might be cost, dimensions, and hard disk size.
Step 2
Next, work your way down the columns of your table, scoring each option for each of the factors in your decision. Score each option from 0 (poor) to 5 (very good). Note that you do not have to have a different score for each option – if none of them are good for a particular factor in your decision, then all options should score 0.
Step 3
The next step is to work out the relative importance of the factors in your decision. Show these as numbers from, say, 0 to 5, where 0 means that the factor is absolutely unimportant in the final decision, and 5 means that it is very important. (It's perfectly acceptable to have factors with the same importance.)
Tip:
These values may be obvious. If they are not, then use a technique such as Paired Comparison Analysis to estimate them.
Step 4
Now multiply each of your scores from step 2 by the values for relative importance of the factor that you calculated in step 3. This will give you weighted scores for each option/factor combination.
Step 5
Finally, add up these weighted scores for each of your options. The option that scores the highest wins!