The Berlin Conference of 1884–1885 marked the climax of the European competition for territory in Africa, a process commonly known as the Scramble for Africa. During the 1870's and early 1880's European nations such as Great Britain, France, and Germany began looking to Africa for natural resources for their growing industrial sectors as well as a potential market for the goods these factories produced. As a result, these governments sought to safeguard their commercial interests in Africa and began sending scouts to the continent to secure treaties from indigenous peoples or their supposed representatives. Similarly, Belgium’s King Leopold II, who aspired to increase his personal wealth by acquiring African territory, hired agents to lay claim to vast tracts of land in central Africa. To protect Germany’s commercial interests, German Chancellor Otto Von Bismarck, who was otherwise uninterested in Africa, felt compelled to stake claims to African land.
Answer:
John Muir- Father of our national park system
Alfred Wegener- Pangaea, the origin of continents
Aldo Leopold- Notice the natural world
Garrett Hardin- The Tragedy Of The Commons
Rachel Carson- Environmental Movement
Explanation:
They lost 174 in both years
The number of games lost is greater than the number of games won.
Muhheakantuck translates to Hudson, referring to the river's natural flow of both ways. <span />