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It has changed over time, but currently it is Mexico and China or India, but if the question is based off past information it is India, China, and Germany.
Answer:
1. Without a calendar we could not know when to celebrate any of the festivals on particular days. We would even get the days of the week confused after a while. We would not be able to tell when a year had gone by, so it would be hard to keep track of someone's age.
2. Without numbers we wouldn't be able to count or measure anything. We would forget our age one day, and possibly forget how to count. Also we wouldn't be able to tell time, unless we used the sun. It would make life very problematic.
3. It would take very long to get us somewhere. We could no longer travel with airplanes, since they use wheels to take off. Such a simple thing as going to the grocery store, would turn into a huge task. Traveling would take very long to do, or might be non-existent if we didn't use horses.
Overgrazing results when too many animals graze, eating the grass faster than it can grow.
Answer:
D.
Explanation:
The Great Lakes and Mississippi River were and are important routes of trade and transportation in the Midwest.
When the Industrial Revolution hit America, the Great Lakes and Mississippi River both played important roles in industry, trade, and transportation. Each of the Great Lakes provided some sort of benefit during the Industrial Revolution, such as the mining production and sources of raw materials from Lake Superior, trade with indigenous people from Lake Michigan, timber logging from Huron, and heavy industrialization from Erie <em>(Burnell, 2018, pg. 3)</em>.
The Mississippi River also had a tremendous impact. Not only did it provide the means of bulk transport from the Great Lakes to the 10 states it reached, but it also benefitted the industries along it as well.
Today, the Mississippi River is still a transportation source, but it also is being used for green hydroelectric power.
And, to quickly cap off the answer to this question, the Midwest was never a hub for business and finance, it was always an industrial hub.
<em>https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/144760/Burnell_Alison_IP_Thesis.pdf?isAllowed=y&sequence=1</em>