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DochEvi [55]
3 years ago
8

CLOSER:

History
1 answer:
romanna [79]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

Environmental factors to the development of the global economy.

Explanation:

The industrial revolution changed the global economy from 170 to 1900 as it went through different stages of industrialization. The steam engine made it possible to take advantage of resources from fossil fuels, especially coal.

The need for raw materials for factories led colonies to export in exchange for manufacturing goods.

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It is B, the entire point of the removal act was a land trade. 
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The answer is B, "They were farmers who could assemble in a minute's time."

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Look at the table.
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B. arrive in Asia; arrive in the Americas

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Gradually, the Homo Sapiens managed to take over the territory of the Neanderthals, and it started to spread out more and more across Eurasia. The migrations didn't stopped there though, but the humans continued through the islands of Southeast Asia and eventually reached Australia, later continuing in the Pacific Islands.

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Although these events played out over many decades, they reached their high points during the presidency of Franklin Roosevelt (1933–1945). The Great Depression, brought about by the crash of the stock market in 1929, was one of the most severe economic downturns in American history. Many businesses failed, roughly one-third of the population was out of work, and poverty was widespread. In response, Roosevelt implemented the New Deal, a series of programs and policies that attempted to revive the economy and prevent further depression. The New Deal included increased regulation of banking and commerce and programs to alleviate poverty, including the formation of the Works Progress Administration and a social security plan. In order to implement these programs, the national government had to grow dramatically, which consequently took power away from the states.

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