Answer:
Mississippian American Indians were living in Georgia when Europeans arrived.
American Indians in Georgia were farmers.
American Indians had established trade networks between villages by the time Europeans arrived.
The Mississippian culture, and specifically the South Appalachian Mississippian, was the civilization found in modern-day Georgia before the arrival of the Europeans. This culture has large settlements where they practiced agriculture that was mainly based on maize. They also had extensive trade routes that reached west to the Rockies, south to the Gulf of Mexico, east to the Atlantic Ocean and north to the Great Lakes.
Options
A. By noting that no degree of phenotypical difference is implied by the term Macro evolution.
B. By suggesting that Macro-evolution in contrast to Micro-evolution can not be explained or demonstrated by fossil records.
Answer:B. By suggesting that Macro-evolution in contrast to Micro-evolution can not be explained or demonstrated by fossil records.
Explanation: Macro-evolution is the evolution that is above the specie level of evolution example can be seen in Vicariance which is an evolution based on specie selection, independent evolution.
Micro-evolution is the type of evolution that describes the change in allele frequency that takes place from time to time through Mutation,gene drift gene flow, Natural or artificial selection etc. Modern-day creationists sometimes misunderstood the contrast between microevolution and macroevolution by suggesting that Macro-evolution in contrast to Micro-evolution can not be explained or demonstrated by fossil records.
Greensboro sit-in, act of nonviolent protest against a segregated lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina, that began on February 1, 1960. Its success led to a wider sit-in movement, organized primarily by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), that spread throughout the South
Answer:
Because then the city got very crowded and transporting food got difficult to do, so the railways and automobiles made it easy.
Explanation:
The recipient must not belong to your immediate family; your spouse, children, parents and grandparents cannot receive your zakat. Other relatives, however, can receive your zakat.