Answer:
d. glad to see sheep and cattle
Explanation:
You can confirm the answer in the following excerpts:
<em>“This land [of South America] is very pleasing, full of an infinite number of very tall trees which never lose their leaves and throughout the year are fragrant with the sweetest aromas and yield an endless supply of fruits, many of which are good to taste and conducive to bodily health."</em>
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and also, here:
<em>"What shall we say of the multitude of birds and their plumes and colours and singing and their numbers and their beauty? I am unwilling to enlarge upon this description, because I doubt if I would be believed. . . . We saw so many . . . animals that I believe so many species could not have entered Noah’s ark."</em>
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He was very pleased with everything that he was seeing and, right after, he Amerigo Vespucci mentions that he wasn't seeing domestic animals.
<em>"We saw many wild hogs, wild goats, stags and does, hares, and rabbits, but of domestic animals, not one.”</em>
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He was enjoying very much this experience.
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the correct answer is <u><em> South Africa</em></u>
Answer:
Or rather, they became revolutionaries because a crisis in a single colony spiraled out of control in 1773-1774, and the empire's harsh response to the challenge to its authority persuaded colonists everywhere that the British government really was bent on abridging their basic rights and liberties.
Social change has historically had a great influence on government in that it can cause the government to be replaced, overthrown, or changed--especially when this social change comes in the form of a revolution or uprising.
They failed because nobody cared about the railroad. The railroad had to be a government project with leases to companies but the government was too much involved in the slavery issue that it didn't have time to deal with railroads. That's why railroads boomed after the civil war ended.
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