Answer:
Hunter-gathers: people who lived off wild animals and plants.
Farmers: people who lived in a single location, grew plants, and often raised animals.
Nomadic Herders: people who kept groups of domesticated animals and traveled from place to place in search of grass and water
Explanation:
- The key word in hunter-gathers, hunter explains that this include people hunting animals.
- Farmers are people who need to look after the farm to make sure the plants are growing sufficiently, which means that they have to stay in a single location.
- Nomadic means that they move place from place and herder is someone that looks after animals. These link to the the third answer (people who kept groups of domesticated animals and traveled from place to place in search of grass and water).
Answer:
Sanders, 376 U.S. 1 (1964), was a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case in which the Court ruled that districts in the United States House of Representatives must be approximately equal in population.
Explanation:
Answer: I don’t know what blank you are trying to say, but the Mongolian empire used Mongolian Horses, which are bigger and have a more work pull for pulling tents and other things. They used these because they were ver nomadic people, moving every few days even. Camels were most likely used in the invasions of Northern Africa in the 1200’s, and most likely take back to Asia.
Explanation:
World Series, baseball.
Cricket and soccer aren’t very common to watch in the US, and the Winter Olympics is often worldwide.
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR)
The decision to erect a memorial to Thomas Jefferson was passed by Congress in 1934. Controversy occurred when the Tidal Basin was chosen in 1937 as the site for the memorial. The Tidal Basin is a reservoir between the Potomac River and the Washington Channel. Putting the memorial there required the removal of flowering cherry trees, and there was some objection to that. There was some controversy also over the design of the memorial itself. But FDR, who had been the one who had, in 1934, suggested to the Commission of Fine Arts that a memorial to Jefferson be built, approved the pantheon design for the memorial and gave the project permission to proceed.