Answer:
The goods that where brought into England from the colonies included raw materials from natural resources found in the New World such as timber, fur, iron, fish, whale oil, sugar, tobacco, rice and cotton. Rum was also one of the few 'finished goods' that were sent to England.
Explanation:
Triangular trade or triangle trade is a historical term indicating trade among three regions. Triangular trade arises when a particular nations exports are not required in the country from where most of its imports comes from. In such a situation, a third country will come into play in order to create a balance in trade.
I would say that both being leading geographers during the late 18th and early 19th centuries, they believed that the characteristics of the natural (and social) environment played a large role in human development. Tw o modern day examples of this could be that Canadians are known as having a pioneering spirit because they have to deal with a harsh northern environment, especially in winter and dealing with it and surviving it requires a pioneering spirit ready to meet the challenges presented by it. Another modern example is that in Latinamerica, since it has been far away from the centers of industrial production and imported machinery parts are too expensive and take too long to get, they have become highly skilled at either repairing what they have or re-using things which were originally designed for another purpose. An example of this in Chile is industrial garage doors made out of flattened 45 gallon steel drums welded on the edges observed by the author.
Answer:
Naruto because the dude is very fast
The correct answer is Increased regional and international economic dependencies.
During the 1830s and 1840s, the slogan "Cotton is King was widely used and described American's economy growth. Cotton became one of the first luxury commodities after sugar and tobacco and also expanded its production in such a way that millions of black human beings themselves became treated as a commodity, becoming the first mass consumer commodity in the world.
Slave-produced cotton brought commercial success and great profits to New York City, stimulated territorial expansion in the Old Southwest and strengthened bonds between Europe and the U.S. for trading, being the main export America had for over a century.
It is important to note that despite its economic importance, cotton also prolonged America’s most serious social tragedy, slavery, even having a major factor for the American Civil War. It had an enormous economic importance to the economies of the United States and Great Britain.