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marusya05 [52]
3 years ago
11

Picking up sediment and moving it to another area is called?

Social Studies
2 answers:
VladimirAG [237]3 years ago
7 0
Picking up sediment and moving it to another area is called a deposit.
tatyana61 [14]3 years ago
3 0
Deposits. :)
Hope this helps. 
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What are differences and similarities between the feudal pyramiding and the roman catholic church pyramid
LiRa [457]

Answer:

The difference is that the catholic church pyramid is more complex, having seven levels, from bottom to up: the laity, deacons, priests, bishops, archbishops, cardinals, and the pope.

The feudal pyramid is simpler, having three levels or estates: the nobles, the clergy, and the commoners. Some authors add a fourth level: the knights, which are above the commoners but below the clergy. However, the knights themselves were nobles, and even if many of them were low-level nobles, they can be still considered to be under the nobles estate.

The similarity is that both are hierarchical: social structures with a clear-cut separation of castes or classes of people, each level being subordinate to the one above and subordinating the one below.

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3 years ago
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"On April 20, 2010, an explosion at the BP Deepwater Horizon oil rig released over 130 million gallons of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico." How do you think this affected the rest of the United States?

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People who violate folkways are considered to be evil or bad. <br> a. True <br> b. False
Digiron [165]

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B. False is the correct answer.

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4 years ago
How does buddhism spread throughout asia.
faust18 [17]

Explanation:

Buddhism spread across Asia through networks of overland and maritime routes between India, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, and China. The transmission of Buddhism to Central Asia and China corresponded with the development of the silk routes as channels for intercultural exchanges. After a Buddhist community was established in the Chinese capital at Loyang by the second century C.E., Buddhist monasteries emerged near irrigated oases at Khotan, Kucha, Turfan, and Dunhuang on the northern and southern branches of the silk routes.

The earliest waves of Parthian, Sogdian and Indian translators of early Chinese Buddhist texts came to Loyang via the silk routes. Dhamaraksa (ca. 233-311 C.E.) and Kumarajiva (344-413 C.E.) came directly from Buddhist centers in the Tarim Basin. Anonymous foreign monks who traveled between India and China along the silk routes were responsible for the transmission of Buddhism at sub-elite levels. Faxian (between 399-414 C.E.) and Xuanzang (between 627-645 C.E.), the most famous Chinese pilgrims to India, reported valuable details about social, political, and religious conditions along the silk routes.

Stupas, cave paintings, and manuscripts reflect the movement of Buddhism across Central Asia on the silk routs. Stupas at Buddhist sites on the southern route in the Tarim Basin adopted northwestern Indian architectural features. A Gandhari manuscript of the Dharmapada from Khotan and about one thousand Kharosthi documents show that the Gandhari language of northwestern India, Pakistan and Afghanistan continued to be used along the southern silk route until the 4th century C.E. Numerous Buddhist paintings in caves on the northern silk route display close stylistic affinities with the art of Gandhara, western Central Asia, and Iran, while others incorporate more Chinese and Turkish elements.

Buddhist Sanskrit manuscripts from the 2nd-6th centuries C.E. found at northern silk route Buddhist centers generally belonged to Shravakayana (Hinayana) schools (particularly the Sarvastivadins), but Mahayana manuscripts were prevalent in southern silk route centers such as Khotan. Buddhist literature was written in Central Asian vernacular languages, including Khotanese Saka, Tocharian, Sogdian, Uighur, Tibetan, and Mongolian, after the 6th century. Buddhist artistic and literary traditions continued to flourish in Central Asia along with Zoroastrian, Manichaean, and Nestorian Christian traditions in the middle to late 1st millennium C.E. With the exceptions of the surviving Buddhist traditions in Tibet and Mongolia, Buddhism disappeared from the Silk Road regions of Central Asia in the 2nd millennium C.E.

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3 years ago
The Declaration of Independence included these three major ideas:
Levart [38]

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that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable

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