3. I'd choose this option: <span>North America’s distinct regional climates led to great cultural and economic diversity among American Indians. Cause I remember that the great tribes of the Anasazi were demised because of dry climate.
4. I'm pretty sure that the most suitable option that proves how Aztec and Inca civilizations were </span>different from American Indian civilizations in North America before contact with European explorers is: <span>They were generally larger and more politically intricate. At their best times they had big cities and advanced code of laws.
5. In my view the main difference between the northeastern Indian tribes from those who </span>lived in the Mississippi River valley prior to contact with Europeans is that they <span>created permanent agricultural villages. Other tribes preferred nomadism as the way of life.</span>
When the western Roman empire collapsed in 476 AD, the unifying force for most of Europe was gone. Along with the loss of the government, much of the engineering abilities and "modern amenities" were also lost. The "barbarians" of Europe did not, for the most part, have the abilities or knowledge to build roads, aqueducts or the other marvels of the Roman Empire, which is why the period immediately after Rome's collapse is often referred to as the "Dark Ages".
The only unifying force of any sort left would be Constantine's Roman Catholic church, which did manage to preserve some of the knowledge and vestiges of the empire. As the only thing left really, it became the main power in the European world throughout the Middle Ages, functioning almost as an imperial government until Luther set off the Reformation in 1546.
<span>If I'm not mistaken it was Henry VIII. Have you tried other sources?</span>
Mark Twain would have most likely used the phrase as B) a period of ridiculous excess. During this period there was rapid economic expansion and growth, but this did not extend to the working poor. The wealth expansion also created very corrupt politics. These factors came to define this period as the "Gilded Age." Twain was very critical of this period and its economic and political characteristics.
After George W. Bush was successfully reelected
as president of the U.S. in 2004, he chose fundamental Social Security reform
as his top domestic priority. The idea of PRIVATE ACCOUNTS was at
the heart of President George W. Bush's 2005 plan for social security reform.