Answer:
Cause the Natives had died off. They needed slaves to do the labor of farming, so the transatlantic slave trade/the middle passage began.
Explanation: Afterwards comes about 300+ years of the most repulsive and inhumane trade possible. People are taken from their homes and treated as property. Most would die before they'd make the journey. 3-4months of grueling terror and anguish. It's something no one should bear or learn about, yet here we are, looking back into the dark past of the middle passage. It's a mistake that society might make again, and it's sad how true it is.
Answer:
Trans-Saharan trade requires travel across the Sahara between sub-Saharan Africa and North Africa. While existing from prehistoric times, the peak of trade extended from the 8th century until the early 17th century. The Sahara once had a very different environment. In Libya and Algeria, from at least 7000 BC, there was pastoralism, the herding of sheep, goats, large settlements, and pottery. Cattle were introduced to the Central Sahara (Ahaggar) from 4000 to 3500 BC. Remarkable rock paintings (dated 3500 to 2500 BC), in places which are currently very dry, portray vegetation, and animal presence rather different from modern expectations.[1]
As a desert, Sahara is now a hostile expanse that separates the Mediterranean economy from the economy of the Niger basin. As Fernand Braudel points out that crossing such a zone (especially without mechanized transport) is worthwhile only when exceptional circumstances cause the expected gain to outweigh the cost and danger.[2]
Trade, beginning around 300 CE, [3] was conducted by caravans of camels. According to Ibn Battuta, the explorer who accompanied one of the caravans, the average size per caravan was 1,000 camels; some caravans were as large as 12,000.[4][5] The caravans would be guided by highly paid Berbers who knew the desert and could ensure safe passage from their fellow desert nomads. The survival of a caravan was precarious and would rely on careful coordination. Runners would be sent ahead to oases so that water could be shipped out to the caravan when it was still several days away, as the caravans could not easily carry enough with them to make the full journey. In the middle of the 14th century Ibn Battuta crossed the desert from Sijilmasa via the salt mines at Taghaza to the oasis of Oualata. A guide was sent ahead and water was brought on a journey of four days from Oualata to meet the caravan.[6]
Explanation:
hope this help plese mark branlest
Answer:
C. Germany was forced to limit the size of its military forces.
Explanation:
The Treaty of Versailles imposed several harsh restrictions on Germany as a losing power in the First World War. It limited the number of its armed forces, prohibited the development of certain systems of weapons, established a demilitarized zone in the Rhineland and imposed exorbitant reparations on Germany. No wonder all of this led to outrage and resentment among the German population in the postwar period.
Answer:
details, statistics, and facts
Explanation:
took the test
Popular sovereignty is the idea that the people within a geographic territory should be able to make decisions about how they are represented or governed. The idea is to maintain the consent of the people through elected representatives. Therefore the notion of popular sovereignty is represented in the notion that "The people that live in a territory should choose whether to allow slavery or not."