The defining characteristics in the gilded age included individualism, urbanization, new values, art, and forms of entertainment. The Gilded Age refers to the era of rapid economic and population growth in the United States during the post?Civil War and post-Reconstruction eras of the late 19th century.
Ans: Nationalism lead people to conflict. Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated due nationalism by the Black Hand, a nationalist group that intended to liberate the Serbs from the Austro-Hungarian occupation. The death of Franz Ferdinand was one of the most important factos to cause the World War I.
The answer is: Colonial Law<span> was based on two main influences - the English </span>law<span> and culture at the time, and the religious </span>beliefs<span> of the colonists. ... The first Pilgrim </span>laws were<span> in the Mayflower Compact, the first written </span>colonial<span> plan of 1620.</span>
<span>The reason of the fall of </span>Meroë is that it was conquered by the Aksumites around the year 330 CE where in this period Meroitic written and spoken language died. The Aksumites over-used Meroe's resources specifically their land which led to desertification. Meroe drastically declined as a city by the 5th centuy.
Answer: Marie Curie studied the radiation of all compounds containing the known radioactive elements, including uranium and thorium, which she later discovered was also radioactive. She also found out that:
- you can exactly measure the strength of the radiation from uranium;
- the intensity of the radiation is proportional to the amount of uranium or thorium in the compound - no matter what compound it is;
- the ability to emit radiation does not depend on the arrangement of the atoms in a molecule; it must be linked to the interior of the atom itself - a revolutionary discovery!
When she realized that some uranium and/or thorium compounds had stronger radiation than uranium, she made the following hypothesis: there must be an unknown element in the compound which had a stronger radiation than uranium or thorium. Her work aroused the interest of her husband, Pierre Curie, who stopped his own research on crystals and joined the "detective work" with his wife. And Marie was proven right