Answer:
The American colonization society was established in the early nineteenth century with the goal of transporting african americans to africa.
Answer:
a. open land in the Southeast to American farmers.
Explanation:
Congress passed the Indian Removal Act in 1830. The purpose of this Act is to "open land in the Southeast to American farmers."
This is evident in the fact that the United States Congress preferred to make more land accessible in the Southeast to white settlers, thereby ensuring that the law or Act made compelled the Native Americans living east of the Mississippi River to move to the western part of the River.
As the demand for slaves grew, the Portuguese began to enter the interior of Africa to forcibly take captives; as other Europeans became involved in the slave trade, generally they remained on the coast and purchased captives from Africans who had transported them from the interior.