The correct answer is D) They cultivated the “three sisters” crops of corn, beans, and squash.
The two agricultural contributions that are common to both Northeast Woodland Indians and Southeast Indians are the following: they cultivated the “three sisters” crops of corn, beans, and squash.
The term "three sisters" in agriculture refers to the most important crops in the agriculture fields of some Native American tribes such as the Northeast Woodland Indians and Southeast Indians. The crops were corn, beans, and squash. The Native American Indians used a special agriculture technique called companion planting, that was the planting of different crops close to each other. So squash, corn, and beans were planted in proximity to each other.
<span>Killed thousands of Indians.</span>
The labor demands, of war industries caused millions more Americans to move mostly to the Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf coasts. When World War II ended in 1945, September 2 the United States was in a better economic condition than any other country in the world. 300,000 combat deaths suffered by Americans diminished in comparison to any other major pugnacious. American society became more prosperous in the postwar years than most Americans could have imagined in their wildest dreams before or during the war. The so-called GI Bill of Rights passed in 1944, (due to Public Policy) provided money for veterans to attend college, to purchase homes, and to buy farms. The overall ramifications of such public policies was almost cosmic, but it unequivocally availed returning veterans to better themselves and to begin forming families and having children in exceptional numbers.
Jackson's plans toward Native Americans were controversial because he wanted to remove the Native Americans, though they were the original people who lived in the land. The land should've belong to them, they originally inherited the land.
<span>The Russian architecture followed a tradition that was established
in the Eastern Slavic state of Kievan Rus’. Kievan Rus’ were influenced by
mixtures of Ukraine, Belarus, and Russian cultures (including architecture).
Mixes of Christianity, Byzantine architecture, and Eastern orthodox greatly influenced
monumental architectures of the medieval state of Kievan Rus’. After the fall
of Kiev, this type of architectural tradition made its way to different
principalities of Vladimir-Suzdal, Novgorod, Tsardom states, Russian Empire,
Soviet Union, and the modern Russian Federation. </span>