The North was occupied by the people of western England and mirrored their philosophy of hard word. The middle colonies were established by the people of Ireland and reflected their Celtic attitude of do enough to get the job done. The Deep South was settled by Prisoners in Georgia and political prisoners in Carolina (there was no north and south yet. These people were trying to establish a way of life that was distanced from that of Europe.
Answer:
Aarchives and manuscript material.
Photographs, audio recordings, video recordings, films.
Journals, letters and diaries.
Speeches.
Scrapbooks.
Published books, newspapers and magazine clippings published at the time.
Government publications.
Oral histories.
Business openings in the resistance area incited Mexican Americans to look for some kind of employment outside of their neighborhoods.
The Great Depression of the 1930s hit Mexican settlers particularly hard. Alongside the activity emergency and sustenance deficiencies that influenced all U.S. specialists, Mexicans and Mexican Americans needed to confront an extra risk: expelling. As joblessness cleared the U.S., threatening vibe to migrant specialists developed, and the legislature started a program of repatriating outsiders to Mexico
D is the answer to this question....
The economic importance of the Silk Road and the trade routes of spices blocked by the Ottoman Empire in 1453 with the fall of the Byzantine Empire, stimulated the exploration of a sea route around Africa and the activation of the era of discoveries.
Due to the continuous blockades on the silk road, Europeans developed the spice trade. Trade was transformed during the era of European discoveries, during which the spice trade, particularly black pepper, became a very lucrative and important activity for European merchants. The route from Europe to the Indian Ocean through the Cape of Good Hope was first explored by the Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama in 1498, giving rise to new maritime routes for trade.
This trade - which promoted the development of the world economy from the late Middle Ages to modern times - marked the beginning of a European domination in the East. Shipping and transit routes and ports such as the Bay of Bengal served as bridges for cultural and commercial exchanges between the various cultures and nations struggling to gain control of trade and spice routes.