I'm pretty sure the answer is C.
Climate <span>made the most difference in how agriculture affected the economies of the colonies. :)</span>
C is the correct answer
Sorry if It’s wrong
<span>The unexpected reappearance of collective patriotism among the ninety-two ethnic groups in the Soviet Union.
There was no consumer boom in the USSR when Mikhail Gorbachev was in the leadership position. And the military and political elite certainly were not advocating changes. It was Gorbachev who advocated policies such as <em /><em>perestroika </em>(restructuring) to try to aid the economy, and <em>glasnost </em>(openness) to respond to the desires of the people to be able to express themselves with a greater degree of freedom.
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The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were times of
crisis for Russia. Not only did technology and industry continue to
develop more rapidly in the West, but also new, dynamic, competitive
great powers appeared on the world scene: Otto von Bismarck united
Germany in the 1860s, the post-Civil War United States
grew in size and
strength, and a modernized Japan emerged from the Meiji Restoration of
1868. Although Russia was an expanding regional giant in Central Asia,
bordering the Ottoman, Persian, British Indian, and Chinese empires, it
could not generate enough capital to support rapid industrial
development