Brainliest Please
The correct answer is:
Answers will vary. Most students might note that it was necessary for Jefferson to prove
that the Continental Congress presented a united front to the world in order to prove that
independence was the true goal of the colonies. Others may state that since each state
provided signers to the document, it was obvious that all thirteen colonies accepted it.
As to the question of whether the 13 colonies could have declared independence if they
weren’t unanimous, answers will vary. Most students might state that independence
would be difficult without the support of all thirteen colonies, but some might say
independence without consensus was still possible. For instance, colonies that objected
could be absorbed into Canada or find a way to peacefully co-exist with those that
seceded.
Resources here: https://www-tc.pbs.org/ktca/liberty/pdf/2_questions_answers.pdf
Answer:
Steam engines use hot steam from boiling water to drive a piston (or pistons) back and forth. The movement of the piston was then used to power a machine or turn a wheel. To create the steam, most steam engines heated the water by burning coal.
Explanation:
your first question is boiling water
second question is Before steam power, most factories and mills were powered by water, wind, horse, or man. Water was a good source of power, but factories had to be located near a river.
the last one is While the Spaniard first patented a steam-operated machine for use in mining, an Englishman is usually credited with inventing the first steam engine. In 1698, Thomas Savery, an engineer and inventor, patented a machine that could effectively draw water from flooded mines using steam pressure.
Writings destroyed by the Catholic Church could easily and quickly be replaced.
<span>The Mayflower Compact was the primary administering report of Plymouth Colony. It was drafted by the Pilgrims who crossed the Atlantic on board the Mayflower, looking for religious opportunity.</span>
Friedrich August von Hayek (Vienna, May 8, 1899 - Freiburg, March 23, 1992) was an Austrian philosopher, jurist and economist. Exponent of the Austrian School, disciple of Friedrich von Wieser and Ludwig von Mises. <u><em>He is known mainly for his defense of liberalism and for his criticism of the planned economy and socialism, which, as he maintains in The Road to Serfdom, considers a danger to individual freedom that leads to totalitarianism.</em></u>