The options are missing in the question statement. However, I managed to find from another source. These are
A.they ruled much of West Africa
B.they built large cities in the West African rain forest
C. they controlled the gold for salt exchange
D. they grew powerful through trade
Answer:
B. They built large cities in the West African rain forest.
Explanation:
"They built large cities in the West African rain forest" doesn't describe all three kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai. Ghana, Mali, and Songhai were three of the greatest western African trading states. They controlled the trade of gold, salt, and merchandise between North Africa and sub-Saharan Africa in the 16th century. Their strong trade grew them powerful.
<span>The half-life of a radioactive isotope describes the amount of time that it takes half of the isotope in a sample to decay. In the case of radiocarbon dating, the half-life of carbon 14 is 5,730 years. This half life is a relatively small number, which means that carbon 14 dating is not particularly helpful for very recent deaths and deaths more than 50,000 years ago. After 5,730 years, the amount of carbon 14 left in the body is half of the original amount. If the amount of carbon 14 is halved every 5,730 years, it will not take very long to reach an amount that is too small to analyze. When finding the age of an organic organism we need to consider the half-life of carbon 14 as well as the rate of decay, which is –0.693.</span>
There is a difference between the stem of these two plants because Ranunculus is dicot and Zea mays is a monocot. <span>Zea mays does not have a vascular cambium and has scattered vascular bundles composed of xylem and phloem tissue. On the other hand, Ranunculus has its vascular bundles in a ring arrangement and ground tissue is differentiated hypodermis, cortex, endodermis, pericycle and pith (there is no differentiation in Zea mays).</span>
Like starch, cellulose is a complex carbohydrate made up of many molecules of glucose linked together. But unlike starch, plants do not use cellulose to store energy. Instead, plants use cellulose as a structural molecule. It forms the cell wall that gives plant cells shape and support.