The New England following The Whaling Industry.
Answer:
History (from the Greek ἱστορία, meaning 'a learning or knowing by inquiry') can be broadly taken to indicate the past in general but is usually defined as the study of the past from the point at which there were written sources onwards.
There are obstacles that make it so we do not have a crystal clear, uninterrupted view of the past. Firstly, we have to remember that everyone – not just us, but also people throughout history – is shaped by their upbringing and the societies and times they live in, and we need to be careful not to stick our own labels and values onto past periods. Secondly, our view of the past is made up from the total of things that somehow happened to survive the test of time, which is due to coincidences and decisions made by people before our time. So, we only get a fragmentary, distorted view; it is like trying to complete a puzzle with a lot of oddly shaped and missing pieces
Explanation:
Answer:
C) By buying from catalogs
Explanation:
Many people in rural areas used catalogs that they received by mail to buy things. Perhaps the most famous of these catalogs was the Sears Catalog.
In a way, Sears was like the Amazon of the past: they sent you the catalog, you order things from it, and received them days or weeks later. Even houses could be ordered from the Sears catalog, but they had to be assembled by the customer.
Providing women, girls and men with equal access to education, health care, decent work, and representation in political and economic decision-making processes.
The Titanic was in fact called "the unsinkable ship".
The Titanic was the biggest and most luxurious passenger ship, whose construction finished in 1909. It was designed to include the latest technologies in terms of safety. Its double-platted bottom was divided in compartments, and each compartment had doors that would close if water had entered inside, so that the flooding could be isolated in a single section and the ship could remain afloat.