Answer:
The Cotton Gin
Explanation:
The cotton gin made it easier to harvest cotton so plantations planted more cotton and hired more slaves
The answer is number 3: The eagle represents the threat the United States poses to other countries
This cartoon, published in 1898 in support of US expansionism, was named "Ten Thousand Miles From Tip to Tip", referring to the extension of United States from Puerto Rico to the Philippines.
It was published in the Age of American Imperialism, a period where the United States acquired lands crossing from the Philippines to Eastport, Maine, and the country was being a major political, economic and cultural influence beyond its borders.
Giving the context of the period and the eagle's stance, with its outstretched and large wings over the possessed lands, the eagle symbolizes the U.S. as an imperialistic power, protecting its lands below, and with the threat to become a global power, superior to the rest of the countries.
David Livingston
It is 200 years since the birth of David Livingstone, perhaps the most famous of the missionaries to visit Africa in the 19th Century. But as author and Church historian Stephen Tomkins explains, the story of an African chief he converted is every bit as incredible as Livingstone's.
Monks kept the first books.
Answer:
<em>Guerrilla Warfare</em>
Explanation:
<em>in the vietnam war, the vietminh relied more on their knowledge of the land to gain the upperhand on the u.s. soldiers. they set traps, hid in tunnels, dressed as civilians and even recruited civilian communists to help aid in attacks. they did did quick, flash attacks before quickly retreating. the u.s. tried to solve this problem by initiation operation ranch hand, releasing a defoliant named agent orange across the farms and jungles of vietnam, but the attempt was futile. </em>