1.) Better roads
2.) Tracks si it was better to navigate
Hi! I think there's no image of the chart but I'd like to answer about the Columbian exchange that might be the answer. The Columbian Exchange started was the widespread of trading of Americans and Afro-Asians and was followed by the voyage of Christopher Columbus to the Americas in 1492. They were exchanging plants, animals, technology, ideas, diseases and human populations.
True.
This was evidenced by the Neutrality Acts of 1930s.
The 1st Neutrality Act was the prohibition of export of "arms, ammunition, and implements of war" from the U.S. to foreign nations at war. The act requires arms manufacturer in the United States to apply for export license before they can exports arms to foreign nations.
The Neutrality Act of 1937 forbids U.S. Citizens from boarding belligerent ships. American ships were also prevented by this Act to transport arms to belligerents even if the arms were made outside the U.S. The Act also gave the President the right to bar belligerent ships from all U.S. waters.
However, there was an exception to this Act. Belligerent nations were allowed, at the discretion of the president, to acquire any items except arms from the United States, as long as they immediately pay for these items and carry them on non-American ships. This provision is called the "cash-and-carry".
The final Neutrality Act was passed on November 1939. This act lifted the arms embargo and put all trade with belligerent nations under the terms of "cash-and-carry". The ban on loans and barring of American ships transporting goods to belligerent nations still remain in effect.
Answer:
Modern racially segregated neighborhoods in the United States
Explanation:
De facto segregation is a kind of racial segregation that happens by fact rather than through law requirements. In the 1960s when schools when efforts were being made for racial integration in schools, de facto segregation was a term used in situation where students were not segregated by their race by the law.
Modern racially segregated neighborhoods in the United States had nothing to do with the law.