Mesopotamia introduced a more sedentary way of life by means of agriculture and animal husbandry. So for example, instead of the nomadic way of life, which is/was going hunting, foraging, and/or fishing.
Hopefully this is right and helpful. Good luck!
Well, the Aztec economy was heavily reliant on agriculture and trade. The land controlled by the Aztecs was fertile, allowing farmers to grow corn, squash, beans, avocados, hemp, tobacco and peppers. The Aztecs then used this surplus of food to establish marketplaces to trade for a variety of goods and services, including jewelry, raw materials, medicine and wood. Precious metals, such as gold, were also prevalent in the Aztec Empire.
I have a picture for the Aztec for you
I believe the answer is: <span>Referent power
</span><span>Referent power in leadership context refers to the power that make a certain leader able to obtain loyalty and personal commitment from his/her followers without using force. This means that the leader has to have some sort of characteristic that make the followers like and acknowledge him/her</span><span />
here were many challenges to building the railroad east from Sacramento, CA. The first, and most difficult challenge for both companies building the transcontinental railroad, was the Sierra Nevada mountains.
But even before they could make it to the mountains, the company had to get most of the materials they needed from the eastern US. That meant the supplies had to come by boat. It took six months to sail from New York to San Francisco.
There were no significant issue building the road from Sacramento until they reached the slopes of the mountains. Open land gave way to dense forests with thick brush. The trees could be 150 feet high. (45.72 meters)
Winter in the mountains is never an easy season and the more snow, the harder it is to move around. The first summer the crews were in the Sierra range, there were 42 snow storms. The crews tunneled into the huge piles of snow and made camping spaces.
The tunnels were the hardest thing they did. The drilled holes and filled them with black powder. An average day made one foot of progress into the stone face. They built 15 tunnels from 92′ to 1,659′ for a total length of 6,213 feet. This was all through solid granite. They finally used nitroglycerin beginning in tunnel #6.
I don't know if this is what your looking for but I hope it helps...