Answer:
U.S. trade increased with France and Spain.
Explanation:
The cotton boom was the effect of the invention of the cotton gin, the cotton gin made work faster and better, which made cotton a lot more profitable, this led to farmers to produce only cotton. With this, many settler went to the South, this increased slavery in the South and increased the textile industry in the north.
Answer:
There is excess supply and quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded.
Explanation:
They will keep raising the prices as long as they have enough stock (supply) and so there is more supply than what reaches the demand (the amount of people buying).
A. Security
Because it invades his privacy, which is supposed to be secured, though it could also be access, though, I think that would have to come first. so its A.
I hope this helps... UWU
The transcontinental railroad started on May 10 , 1869.
Also known as the "Father of History". While many men are credited with "shaping" the story, one can be said to have "created" it. Herodotus developed the means by which we in the Western world can know and evaluate history and its most important moments. Born in Halicarnassus, Asia Minor, he played an important role in the revolution against tyrant Lydames. He later moved to Athens, where he began to systematically write down the history of his own time - particularly the wars between Greece and Persia - and the facts that preceded it. Although previous events had already been recorded, Herodotus is considered the "Father of History" because he was the first man to attempt an orderly and objective study of the interrelationships between historical events. Herodotus traveled to Egypt and traveled the Mediterranean, studying the cultures of these regions and recording the facts as faithfully as possible for the time. In theorizing about history, he applied the traditional Greek idea of moderation, or middle ground, that equilibrium is desirable, and excess and imbalance are the recipe for disaster. Because of this theory, the arrogant Xerxes I was inevitably doomed to defeat.