With so many agricultural goods to get to market, people in the South liked the idea of building rail rods to ship heavy bales of cotton and tobacco. In 1833 investors got a charter for the railroad tracks which would run from Athens to Augusta. The first railroad track of Georgia was next, running from Macon to Savannah.
The Georgia Railroad ended for many years at a little settlement in the Piedmont, which was named fall line because the line stopped there. It was named “Marthasville” briefly and then got a new name, Atlanta, in 1845.
As the railroads grew in importance, the little town grew too. It was an important railroad hub by the start of the civil war which broke out in 1861.
Answer: GDP relies on measuring spending, much of which (gambling, etc.) is not
really productive.
Explanation:
Decomposers break down food and release mineral and nutrient into the earth. If there were no such thing as decomposers, none of the nutrients we need can be reused, and life could end as we know it. We depend on decomposers.
Answer:
Reactance.
Explanation:
This is simply explained the juror's motives and doings which directly tells that inadmissible evidence violates due process, and legal evidentiary standards dictate that a curative instruction is appropriate to minimize the risk that the jury is misled by the unacceptable information.
Psychologists posit that jurors are likely to follow the prescribed corrective action only if motivated and able to do so. Research shows that jurors do attempt to use information in a fair manner and to align their decisions with the judge’s instructions. However, juror motivation also may be affected by reactance resistance to a judge’s admonition when it is seen as constraining effective deliberation unless the judge can offer a clear and compelling reason as to why the information is unreliable or irrelevant to the case. Jurors may resist giving up information that they find probative.