They were all afraid. They had more and more weapons but were more and more afraid because they knew that if any of them attacked, the others would retaliate and that monstrosities would be committed. They had many nukes but nobody used them out of fear of what the other one would do since they wouldn't be able to defeat the opponent before he launched his nukes.
At the time of the arrival of Europeans, the indigenous population was estimated to be just below 40 million people. After the contact with European diseases it is said to be significantly reduced and estimates suggest that in 1650 this population could be around 8-9 million people. (this is just an estimate, but it's the best from all the offered answers).
Hey Cleary423,
The Battle of Bunker Hill was a battle in the Revolutionary War. It occurred on June 17, 1775, in Boston. 2,200 British forces under the command of Major General William Howe, landed on the Charlestown peninsula, and marched towards Bunker Hill. The British won the battle, and Charlestown Peninsula became under British control. Although the British had been victorious, the battle was a morale builder for the inexperienced Americans, who were outnumbered almost 3:1 and managed to wound and kill almost half of the British troops!
Hope this helps!
<span>Hi there the only thing that remained of the Western Roman Empire was the Christian Church. The military was the only thing holding the country together at that point and it fell apart, losing everything save Northern France and Northwest Africa. The trade networks and the provincial elite were completely lost, leading to the Dark Ages of little economic growth and little to no cultural expression because it was actively repressed by anti-Roman sentiment.
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This is a statement, not a question. Try rephrasing.