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In-s [12.5K]
3 years ago
7

According to the map, slaves were MAINLY A) taken to Europe from the Americas in exchange for cotton. B) taken from Africa to Eu

rope in exchange for manufactured goods. Eliminate C) taken from Africa to the Americas in exchange for agricultural goods. D) taken to the west coast of Africa from Europe in exchange for textiles
History
2 answers:
mario62 [17]3 years ago
6 0
Hi !!

The answer is C

Slaves were mainly taken from Africa to the Americas in exchange for agricultural goods

It was called "Triangular trade" or "Transatlantic Slave Trade" as ships were leaving Europe to join African coasts to carry slaves to the Americas to work in cotton fields for example, and came back to Europe with cane sugar, rhum, tobacco, cotton and other goods

hope I helped :)
alexira [117]3 years ago
6 0

the answer is C } taken from Africa to the Americas in exchange for agricultural goods.

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With its rectangular stone platform, front and back porches (the pronaos and the opisthodomos) and rows of columns, the Parthenon was a commanding example of Greek temple architecture. Typically, the people of ancient Greece did not worship inside their temples as we do today. Instead, the interior room (the naos or the cella) was relatively small, housing just a statue of the deity the temple was built to honor. Worshippers gathered outside, entering only to bring offerings to the statue.

The temples of classical Greece all shared the same general form: Rows of columns supporting a horizontal entablature (a kind of decorative molding) and a triangular roof. At each end of the roof, above the entablature, was a triangular space known as the pediment, into which sculptors squeezed elaborate scenes. On the Parthenon, for example, the pediment sculptures show the birth of Athena on one end and a battle between Athena and Poseidon on the other.

So that people standing on the ground could see them, these pediment sculptures were usually painted bright colors and were arrayed on a solid blue or red background. This paint has faded with age; as a result, the pieces of classical temples that survive today appear to be made of white marble alone.

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The architects of classical Greece came up with many sophisticated techniques to make their buildings look perfectly even. They crafted horizontal planes with a very slight upward U-shape and columns that were fatter in the middle than at the ends. Without these innovations, the buildings would appear to sag; with them, they looked flawless and majestic.

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Not many classical statues or sculptures survive today. Stone statues broke easily, and metal ones were often melted for re-use. However, we know that Greek sculptors such as Phidias and Polykleitos in the 5th century and Praxiteles, Skopas and Lysippos in the 4th century had figured out how to apply the rules of anatomy and perspective to the human form just as their counterparts applied them to buildings. Earlier statues of people had looked awkward and fake, but by the classical period they looked natural, almost at ease. They even had realistic-looking facial expressions.

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