Answer:
<em>After the increase in technology, machinery and equipment became the most valuable sources of capital.</em>
Explanation:
During Pre-Industrial societies the most valuable sources for generating income and wealth were Land and labor. Anyone with abundant agriculture land could hire people to work on them and earn a good living.
However, with the industrial revolution, automation and efficiency became more valuable and only those who could employ and run the latest machinery and churn out high-demand products, would become wealthy.
The answer is 2: to increase the amount of land available for agriculture.
Reason:
If I remember correctly from Geography last year that is called terrace farming. Common practice in hilly areas where you would be unable to plant crops. Instead, they flatten that out and have “steps” that gives them flat land to grow crops, often rice.
The answer is asexually.
The reason why plants that reproduce asexually than plants that reproduce sexually is because in asexual reproduction only one parent is needed, so there is no need for pollination and it is time and energy efficient. That means that farmers can grow large quantities for less time.
Answer:
The best description of the Domino Effect in relation to US policy in Indochina during the Cold War is the fear among U.S. policy makers that if communism succeeded in Vietnam, it would sweep through the rest of the region .
Explanation:
The Domino Effect Theory was a theory in the foreign policy of the United States of America during the Cold War, which assumed that a communist state would induce communist governments to take power in neighboring states, such as the impact of falling dominoes. The idea was first used by President Harry S. Truman to justify sending military aid to Greece and Turkey in the 1940s, and was an important part of President Dwight D. Eisenhower's foreign policy in the 1950s. The United States government was particularly concerned about the spread of communism in South East Asia, and the theory was used to justify the military intervention in the Vietnam War.
answer by francocanacari(from brainly)
In his book, A People's History of the United States, Howard Zinn cites examples from US colonial history of the gap between rich and poor in colonial life.
A key study cited by Zinn examined tax registers from Boston, showing that the top 1% of the population held 25% of the wealth in 1687, and that by 1770, the top 1% of property owners in Boston owned 44% of the wealth. The study also noted that the bulk of Boston's population were not property owners. The percentage of adult males in Boston who owned no property doubled between 1687 and 1770 (from 14% to 29%).
Zinn cited additional items, regarding overcrowding of poorhouses (giving a notable example from New York) and a general increase throughout the colonies of the "wandering poor" who had no real means of support. He also cited examples of workers' strikes against employers in the colonies because of low wages.