1. Private Grants. Entire grant is owned by one or a few individuals as their private property. After meeting the conditions of the grant, the grantees could sell the entire grant (note that regarding sales of smaller parcels to be occupied by the purchaser, the custom of right of first refusal was often followed ).
2. Community Grants. Large tracts of land granted to a substantial number of people (usually from ten to one hundred. Both Mora grant and early version of Tierra Amarilla grant had seventy-six initial settlers ).
3. Hybrid or Quasi-Community Grants. Large tracts granted to one or few individuals with the requirement that the land be settled. Grantee induces a large group of settlers to move onto the grant and gives them each a small private lot for house and garden and grants them rights to use the remaining land for grazing, gathering fire wood, building materials, herbs, wild game, etc.
Before the civil war cities were mainly industry based. Manufacturing goods was really the only thing that was done in cities.
Jane was an unidentified 14 year old girl found in 2012 by Jamestown Rediscovery archaeologists working at a 1608 James Fort cellar. They believe that she was consumed during what is known as the “Starving Time” in the winter of 1609-1610. Marks on her skull and severed leg bone suggest that she was eaten by another person, also known as cannibalism. The Starving Time at Jamestown in the Colony of Virginia was a period where food was so scarce to the point that colonists ate everything that did not eat them. This included horses, cats, rats, and even shoe leather. Eventually, as winter raged on and the famine showed no signs of stopping, some colonists turned to cannibalism. Jane was the first physical evidence of cannibalism.
Answer:
<em>B. Tribes lived in isolation and did not interact with each other</em>
Explanation: