<u>Question 1</u>
The correct answer is: "The world's population would have remained nomadic until these advances were made."
If agriculture and animal domestication had not been developed, human groups would have continued feeding themselves like in the Paleolithic era, by hunting, fishing and gathering. Therefore, once the food and resources in one site had been exhausted, the tribe would have left and sought for a new location where they could continue providing for themselves with the abovementioned activities.
Until human were able to experience technological progress and they learnt how to cultivate and take care of the cattle they were not be able to establish sedentary settlements.
<u>Question 2</u>
The correct answer is: "Consumers in developed nations spend less of their total income purchasing food".
It is in fact the false statement, the one that is not a consequence of modern commercial agriculture. Consumers in developed nations actually demand more products as their income is much higher, so they spend the same or even a larger fraction of the total income, than in subsistence or primitive trading economies.
The Romans considered the Ides of March as a deadline for settling debts. But – for our modern world – if you've heard of the Ides of March, it's probably thanks to William Shakespeare. In his play Julius Caesar, a soothsayer attracts Caesar's attention and tells him: Beware the ides of March.
<span>C) Civil Rights Act of 1964
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The question is asking to choose among the following choices that states the reason the made Germany's invasion of Europe was difficult tot stop during world war II and base on my research, I would say that the answer would be <span>Germany’s fast-moving sea attacks and powerful navy. </span>
The development of RAILROADS was one of the most important phenomena of the industrial revolution. With their formation, construction and operation, they brought profound social, economic and political change to a country only 50 years old.Over the next 50 years,America would come to see magnificent bridges and other structures on which trains would run, awesome depots, ruthless rail magnets and the majesty of rail locomotives crossing the country.