Answer:
The first point, and most important to the Americans, was that Britain recognize the Thirteen Colonies to be free and independent states. That Britain no longer had any claim on the land or government. The second major point was that the boundaries of the United States allowed for western expansion.
Explanation:
none
Answer:
When total diversity in the neutral model became small (similar to the number of continents), a significant increase in diversity is observed as a result of continental drift. This is because in the extreme case of low speciation rate, after a sufficiently long period of time, a fragmented set of continents necessarily maintains a separate species in each, whereas a single supercontinent would only contain one species. As the speciation rate decreases still further, the system ultimately converges to a state where there is still only one global species, because the speciation event bringing it into existence is pushed back to a time when the continents were still connected. Explanation:
Today's candidates are usually physically attractive and hold the basic ideals of their party. They are handled by campaign people who tell them when and where to be and what to say. They travel constantly and really don't have much time to think or reflect during the campaign. They are human and make mistakes at times that are usually verbal gaffs. Candidates who win go from the exhausting campaign into a short period preparing to govern. It's no cake walk.
Answer:
Many American Indians died