The cry rang out amidst the bursts of canon fire; over the deafening pop-pop-pop of Brown Bess, the Mexican Cavalry’s standard firearm; and the moans of injured men whose last moments were spent on the hallowed church ground.
The Battle of the Alamo in 1836 is indubitably the most remembered fight of the Texan struggle for Independence. The Duke’s (a.k.a. John Wayne) portrayal of Davy Crockett in the 1960 film, The Alamo, only further illuminated the struggle the Texians faced as they strove to free themselves from Mexico’s tightly clenched grip.
But their struggle will be remembered for all of time—if not because of the rallying cry that echoed all throughout America, than because of the large number of spirits which still haunt its bloodshed grounds.
This is the Alamo, which remains till this day, one of San Antonio’s Most Haunted locations.
<span>The present-day medical technology that Marie Curie's work helped to develop is C. x-rays. She was a famous physicist and chemist who worked a lot on radioactivity, as well as x-rays that are used today in medicine to scan the body for harmful objects and to scan the bones for fractures. For A, a Swede named Carl-Olof Siggesson Nylen was responsible. B, Albert Sabin developed the vaccine for polio. D, John Braxton Hicks was the first one who worked in such a hospital.</span>
Answer:
b. the Inca poncho has patterns and colors that served as a form of identification; the Nava Jo blanket has patterns and colors that are decorative.
Explanation: