Answer is: <span>C. Soldiers from colonies around the world fought in the war.
</span>Colonies became a source of manpower and raw materials. <span>European colonies were not passive, while there was war in Europe, they were actively involved in the fight. For example </span><span>The </span>French Foreign Legion and King's African Rifles.
Answer:
Option: C. The Declaration of Independence.
Explanation:
John Locke was an English philosopher in the 18th century. He ideas and views were much more prominent in making the constitution in the United States of America. His ideas also inspired the founding fathers of America. Locke's natural rights (liberty, life, and property) given to the human by birth, cannot be taken by any government. This ideas on rights influenced Thomas Jefferson drafting the Declaration of Independence.
I don't see any answers but she founded the first school for women's higher education <span />
In human genetics, the Mitochondrial Eve (also mt-Eve, mt-MRCA) is the matrilineal most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of all living humans, i.e., the most recent woman from whom all living humans descend in an unbroken line purely through their mothers and through the mothers of those mothers, back until all lines converge on one woman.
In terms of mitochondrial haplogroups, the mt-MRCA is situated at the divergence of macro-haplogroup L into L0 and L1–6. As of 2013, estimates on the age of this split ranged at around 150,000 years ago,[note 3] consistent with a date later than the speciation of Homo sapiens but earlier than the recent out-of-Africa dispersal.[4][1][5]
The male analog to the "Mitochondrial Eve" is the "Y-chromosomal Adam" (or Y-MRCA), the individual from whom all living humans are patrilineally descended. As the identity of both matrilineal and patrilineal MRCAs is dependent on genealogical history (pedigree collapse), they need not have lived at the same time. As of 2013, estimates for the age Y-MRCA are subject to substantial uncertainty, with a wide range of times from 180,000 to 580,000 years ago[6][7][8] (with an estimated age of between 120,000 and 156,000 years ago, roughly consistent with the estimate for mt-MRCA.).[2][9]
The name "Mitochondrial Eve" alludes to biblical Eve, which has led to repeated misrepresentations or misconceptions in journalistic accounts on the topic. Popular science presentations of the topic usually point out such possible misconceptions by emphasizing the fact that the position of mt-MRCA is neither fixed in time (as the position of mt-MRCA moves forward in time as mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) lineages become extinct), nor does it refer to a "first woman", nor the only living female of her time, nor the first member of a "new species".[note 4]
Answer:
It would bring increased population to California.