<span>The first settlements in the Nile Valley began around
7,000 years ago. Hunters and gatherers moved to the Nile Valley from
less fertile areas in Africa and southwest Asia. As in other parts of
the world, these settlements gradually developed into more and more
complex societies. Most Egyptians lived near the Nile as it provided water, food, transportation and excellent, fertile soil
for growing food. Ancient Egypt could not have existed without the
river Nile. Since rainfall is almost non-existent in Egypt, the floods
provided the only source of moisture to sustain crops.
I hope this helps.
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The correct answer is A.
The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 was a United States federal law prohibiting all immigration of Chinese labor.
From 1870 to 1880, Chinese immigrants represented the largest group of nonwhite immigrants in the U.S. at the time.
The Chinese immigrants were mostly men and they provided cheap labor, often working on farms, railroad construction and in low-paying industrial jobs. They were seen as unfair economic competition by many Americans. They were blamed for low wages and reduced job opportunities and for bringing drugs, crime and prostitution to the States.
<em>To many, they posed an economic danger as they held job taken away from white Americans.</em>
The answer is true just because
Believed that states’ rights (powers) were not being protected