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Alborosie
4 years ago
6

Que productos se obtienen de la caña de azucar​

History
1 answer:
oksian1 [2.3K]4 years ago
6 0

Answer:

Falernum, molasses, rum, cachaca, and bagasse. Also, sometimes pens, mats,  screens, and thatch.

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Match the following Maya, Aztec, and Inca inventions to the effects they produced.
ioda

The correct answer is the following.

Match the following Maya, Aztec, and Inca inventions to the effects they produced.

Rope bridges - helped the Incas travel long distances and communicate with their neighbors.

The pyramid at Chichen Itza - helped the Maya view astronomical

phenomena such as eclipses with the naked eye.

Chinampas - helped the Aztec farm more productively.

Prehispanic civilizations such as the Aztecs, the Mayas, and the Incas were some of the most important and stronger civilizations in Mesoamerican times and South American times.

The Aztecs built impressive "chinampas," where they built their homes and grew crops in small portions of land in the water canals that connected the great capital city of the empire: Tenochtitlan.

The Mayas were great astronomers and built observatories in Chichen Itza, one of the most important cities in the Yucataán Peninsula.

The Incas were the dominant civilization in South America, they built Machu Pichu at the top of the Andes mountains.

8 0
3 years ago
Why did John Brown lead the raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia in 1859?
Advocard [28]
To inspire an armed uprising of enslaved African Americans. He was strongly against slavery and thought that if the slaves saw white people fighting for them the slaves would join him. However, his plan backfired when none of the slaves joined him and the government sent military back up
3 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Fast please<br> How did the Cold War effect us today?
Brut [27]

Answer:

The cold war effect us today//

Explanation:

World War II led to the massive mobilisation of all the people and resources nations could bring to bear. This was total war on a global scale, producing a new sense among nations that their fates were interconnected. New technologies of war, such as heavy bombers and long-range missiles like the V-2 rocket, reduced distances of time and space. In recognition of this new state of affairs, in 1942 the US Army chief of staff, George Marshall, sent identical 50-inch, 750-pound globes to British prime minister Winston Churchill and US president Franklin Delano Roosevelt as Christmas presents.

The sheer scale of the war and the complex administrative and strategic systems required to manage these global operations led to, during the Cold War that followed, a growing interdependency of a network of institutions, attitudes and ways of working.

Fuelled by the development of satellites and intercontinental nuclear missiles that further shrank the size of the planet, the Cold War redrew geopolitical notions of time, space and scale. Huge nuclear arsenals made it necessary to consider both the instantaneous and the endless: the decisive moment when mutually assured destruction is potentially set in motion, the frozen stalemate of the superpower stand-off, and the long catastrophe of a post-nuclear future.

The power of an individual decision was now outrageously amplified – the finger on the nuclear button – yet, at the same time, radically diminished in the face of unfathomable forces, in which human agency seemed to have been ceded to computers and weapons systems. The world had become too complex and too dangerous: systems were at once the threat and the solution.

It’s all about planning. x-ray_delta_one, CC BY-SA

The response

During the second half of the 20th century, many fields of enquiry from anthropology, political theory and analytical philosophy to art, music and literature were influenced by the explosion in interdisciplinary thinking that emerged from developments in cybernetics and its relationship with Cold War military research and development.

The practice of engaging with the connections and interactions between disparate elements of a problem or entity conceived as a system, and between such systems, is now commonplace in areas such as corporate strategy, town planning and environmental policy.

The pervasiveness of a systems approach also influenced the arts. The so-called systems novel, associated with writers such as Thomas Pynchon, Don DeLillo and David Foster Wallace, attempts to grasp the complex interconnectedness of society, and often the effects of technology and progress upon it. Through the 1960s and 1970s, in the radical architecture and design of the likes of Buckminster Fuller or the Archigram group, through minimalist and electronic music, and in conceptual art and emergent electronic media, the possibilities and implications of an increasingly computerised, information-driven society began to determine the form and content of cultural work.

Systems thinking offered a means of conceptualising and understanding a world that had grown hugely more complex and dangerous. Nuclear weapons demanded radical new ways of thinking about time, scale, power, death, responsibility and, most of all, control – control of technology, people, information and ideas.

The present

We are now accustomed to thinking about the current moment in global terms – globalisation, global warming, global communications, global security. Mobile phones and laptops connect us to a vast global network so we can upload and download data – data that promises to broaden our connections even as it flattens our identity into a trickle of binary code to be tracked, traded, sorted and stored.

Everyday life is firewalled and password-protected. We move under a canopy of invisible cameras and sensors, where our personal details and likenesses, our associations, preferences and transactions lie waiting to be called upon – by friends, strangers, employers or snoops. And so what? We all do it – we are already conscripted. We have already become agents, checking up on people by rifling through social media accounts or poking around on Street View.

Faced with the unfathomable complexity of world events, or climate science, or the effects of the technology that delivers updates on such matters to us in an instant, information is both the source of our dilemma and a refuge from it.

5 0
3 years ago
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How did seminoles resist removal
vitfil [10]
They went to war against Andrew Jackson.
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3 years ago
In 1979, vietnam expelled nearly one million ethnic ________, partly as a result of centuries of hostilities between the two cou
choli [55]
 In 1979, Vietnam expelled nearly one million ethnic <u>Chinese</u>, partly as a result of centuries of hostilities between the two countries.

China is located in est of Vietnam
8 0
3 years ago
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