Answer:
Federalists, if that is an answer choice
Explanation:
Georgia,
British artist Thomas Addison Richards painted River Plantation (1855-60) from sketches made in Georgia during his travels through the South in the 1840s. Oil on canvas (20 1/4" x 30").
River Plantation
uniquely situated among southern states on the eve of the Civil War (1861-65), played a vital part in the formation of the Confederacy. A geographic lynchpin that linked Atlantic seaboard and Deep South states, the "Empire State" was the second-largest state in area east of the Mississippi River (Virginia was larger until West Virginia broke away in 1861), and the second-largest Deep South state (only Texas was larger). In population, slave and free, Georgia was the largest in the Deep South. Both geographically and demographically, Georgia encompassed as much diversity as any other Confederate state, and these factors had an important impact on how the state experienced the war years and what it contributed to the Southern war effort.
Geographic isolation limited access to stories told in oral tradition due to language differences between regions.
<h3>What is oral tradition?</h3>
- It is the custom of telling stories that were not written.
- It is the tradition of passing these stories from generation to generation, without the use of writing.
Language is very important in the oral tradition because the people who tell and listen to the story must understand the words used so that the tradition remains alive.
This issue was hampered by geographical isolation. This is because this isolation provoked the creation of new languages and customs, which did not allow the stories to cross the borders between the regions.
More information about oral tradition at the link:
brainly.com/question/1672106
Answer:
Slaves and crops.
Explanation:
The more land they had the more crops they could grow. The more crops they grew the more slaves they needed.
Brainliest please i need it to level up.
Answer:
El hallazgo del esqueleto de Lucy.
Explanation:
Lucy es el nombre de un Australopithecus bien conservado encontrado el 24 de noviembre de 1974 en Hadar, Etiopía. Lucy vivió hace unos 3,2 millones de años.
Lucy constituye el primer fósil relativamente completo que fue descubierto para un período tan antiguo, y revolucionó nuestra percepción de los orígenes humanos, al mostrar que la adquisición del bipedalismo se remonta a menos de 3,2 millones de años, y había precedido en gran medida al proceso de aumento del volumen endocraneal.