Mary Douglas Leakey was recognized in her lifetime as one of the world’s most distinguished fossil hunters. In 1974 Mary BEGINS work at Laetoli, 30 miles from Olduvai Gorge. It is here that Mary and her team found amazingly well preserved hominid footprints in volcanic beds, known as tuffs. The footprint tuff of 1976 has a potassium argon date of 3.5-3.8 mya, evidence of upright walking that supported Donald Johansen's find, Lucy, also known as Australopithecus Afarensis, though Mary Leakey has rejected this( she believe that the belong to the genus homo). Eighty feet of trail had been uncovered by 1979, leaving researchers to speculate that it was three hominids, possibly a family, that left their mark millions of years ago.
Sears decided to use catalogs to sell products because A. Farmers could now afford more<span>products</span>
Middle class European societies, North America. The "Allies," that were against Germany and the Soviet Union depending on which time era/war era you are looking at.
I hope this helps!
Answer:
membership in NATO
Explanation:
The majority of the post-communist Eastern European countries changed significantly after the end of the Cold War and the fall of the Soviet Union. Most of these countries (apart from Belarus) became democracies, reformed their economies and made them market economies, opened up to the world, and started to become more Westernized and lean toward the West as their ally. They also tried to make everything in the power to become part of NATO, as it was the strongest military alliance that was going to guarantee their safety, especially from the very frustrated Russia. Unlike them, Russia remained the arch enemy and rival of NATO, so it did not took advantage to get into it, but instead did everything to stop some nations of becoming its members and still does.
Consideration of American responses to Nazism during the 1930s and 1940s raises questions about the responsibility to intervene in response to persecution or genocide in another country. As soon as Hitler assumed power in 1933, Americans had access to information about Nazi Germany’s persecution of Jews and other groups. Although some Americans protested Nazism, there was no sustained, nationwide effort in the United States to oppose the Nazi treatment of Jews. Even after the US entered World War II, the government did not make the rescue of Jews a major war aim.