Aqueducts transport water, they are like the things that supply water to faucets and the sewers
hmm
a. enhanced understanding of human ailments and injuries
not reallyh, that just give water,not wisdom or anything, and injuries are
like stabs, so water doesn't help with understanding stabs
b. improved public sanitation and access to fresh water
duh, this is true
c. sped up transportation across the empire
unless people were small enough to travel in these aqueducts, they couldn't travel using these, also it wouldn't be clean to polute the water with people, the answer for this option would be roads
d. made it easier for Roman officials to rule the provinces
what, they shut the water off or something? send letters down the channel?
the right answer is b
Answer:
The south is more focused on the production of cotton and things like that for which they needed labor from slaves so the economy of the south was mainly based on slavery and the north on the other hand was more focused on the production of products by hand. invoice was more advanced than the south in economy and failure and its economy was not focused on slave labor
Explanation:
It was called Isolationism
Answer:
Early Tehuacan Valley people were hunter-gatherers who first domesticated maize.
Explanation:
The Tehuacan Valley is an arid plateau located in southeast Puebla, a state located in central Mexico. The Tehuacan Valley is renowned for being an extremely dry region, where rain is scarce and access to fresh water is difficult. Despite that, the Tehuacan Valley has been continously inhabited for millennia, with the first nomad hunter-gatherers arriving in the area some 20,000 years ago. According to several findings, including those in a cave known as the Maize Cave,<u> it was here were </u><u>maize was first domesticated</u><u>, some </u><u>7,000 years ago</u>. This led to the Tehuacan Valley being the site of some of the first permanent settlements in Mesoamerica. Starting around 2000 BCE, the valley inhabitants devised and built a series of canals and dams to collect the much needed water for their maize crops. Because of this history, the Tehuacan Valley is also known as the "Cradle of Maize" worldwide.
Answer:
16%
Explanation:
The graph lines up at 16%.