China was surrounded to the west by mountains and deserts. These geographical features kept China isolated from the rest of the world, allowing its civilization to flourish in isolation from Europe and the rest of the world until the development of the Silk Road.
The trade routes went over land and sea.
Caravans were crucial in making the trade routes successful.
Muslim trade routes helped connect Europe with China.
Gold, ivory, and spices were traded along the routes.
Islam was spread along the trade routes.
Answer:
B.new food crops, which improved the European diet
Explanation:
Answer A, C, and D were introduced to the Americas, not Europe. Some diseases, like syphilis, were brought to Europe but the majority were brought from the Europeans which greatly impacted the population of Native Americans. Western Europe was mostly impacted by the introduction of new crops.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although the question does not provide references to task studied in class or other references, we can say that the issue that is relevant to me or that is currently being discussed in my local or national news is the official visit that the Mexican President, Andrés Manuel López Obrador made to Washington D.C. to have conversations with the United States President, The news says that this is an important visit for both countries due to the close relationship they have as neighborhoods and the importance of trade. The reporter said it was relevant because Mexico, Canada, and the United States have signed a new trade agreement called USMCA, United States, Mexico, and Canada Agreement.
Answer:Hired by English merchants, explorer Henry Hudson twice entered the Arctic Ocean in an attempt to find a Northeast Passage to Asia, only to be stymied each time by sheets of sea ice. Though unable to gain additional backing in his home country, the state-sponsored Dutch East India Company soon jumped in to green-light a third voyage. In April 1609, Hudson set off on his ship, the Halve Maen (Half Moon), but quickly reached treacherous, ice-filled waters above Norway. Choosing to disobey his instructions rather than admit defeat, he crossed the Atlantic Ocean to Nova Scotia and then roughly followed the coastline south to North Carolina before reversing course again and heading up what’s now called the Hudson River. In the end, shallow waters forced him to turn around, by which time he realized the river would not be a Northwest Passage to Asia. Based on his voyage, however, the Dutch claimed parts of present-day New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Connecticut and Delaware for the colony of New Netherland. Hudson, meanwhile, died in 1611 following a mutiny in which he was set adrift on a small lifeboat in the Canadian Arctic
Explanation: