The pre-Colombian history of the New World can be divided into few periods, as we are talking about a very long period from the initial migrations until the contact with the Europeans.
For the first few thousand years after the migrations from Asia to the Americas too place, the people were mostly living a hunter-gatherer life. They were settled in one place, but instead they moved from one place to another in order to be able to get enough food.
Around 2,000 BC we have the first signs of the development of civilizations. The people started to practice agriculture, and that enabled them to settle as they had constant food source. Because of that, they had more time, thus they started to create pottery, later metals. They started to develop cities, construct infrastructure, build empires, get engaged into science.
Some of the civilization that are the most marking are the Mississippian, Mayan, Olmec, Muisca, Aztec, Inca, Nazca. The ones that existed when the Europeans arrived were all destroyed, and only ancient monuments and buildings witness for their existence.
Answer:
August 18, 1920: Women win the right to vote
After a 72-year-long fight, the 19th Amendment finally passed. On August 18, 1920, women's suffrage was ratified, granting women the right to vote in the U.S.
OR
resulted in passage of the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which finally allowed women the right to vote.
C. A large land mass that juts out from a continent. Think of it like a mini continent.
Very negatively, peope ultimately blamed him for all of their problems and poor people who had to build very small homes named their homes after him, calling them "Hoover Homes"