India’s first settlements were in the Indus River region. Homo-sapaians occupied Australia and South-east Asia.
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Answer: the Second-person Narrative
Explanation:
The narrative modes a write may use include:
the First-Person Narrative: this is when the story is narrated using "I." Here, the author assumes the viewpoint of the protagonist, or the main character and uses "I" to reference this person.
the Second-person Narrative: this uses "You" to describe the protagonist. This is not as common as the other forms and is a way to draw in the audience.
the Third-person Narrative: this is a common form of narrative that uses "he", "she", "they" to describe the protagonist(s).
Answer:
They were originally banned from the Georgia colony, but when 42 Jewish immigrants from Europe arrived in Savannah on this day in 1733, James Oglethorpe welcomed them.
Explanation:
The migrants arrived onboard the ship William and Sarah on a trip financed by members of a London synagogue. Of the 43, 34 were Sephardic Jews, of Spanish and Portuguese heritage. The rest were Ashkenazic, of German descent. A Torah scroll they brought with them survives to this day at the Congregation Mickve Israel in Savannah, created in 1735, two years after their arrival. It is the oldest Jewish congregation in the South and the third oldest in the country. Oglethorpe’s enthusiastic welcome was due, in part, to Dr. Samuel Nunes, a Jewish physician whom the Georgia founder credited with saving the lives of many colonists suffering from yellow fever.
These Jews and their descendants would play a central role in the development of our state, after the first Jewish settlers arrived on July 11, 1733, Today in Georgia History.
Hope this Helps!
Answer: the ability of the witness to explain the probability that no other person, except an identical twin has the same DNA type as that discovered at the crime scene.
Explanation:
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) can be obtained from blood, hair, and many biological materials.
DNA evidence is one of the most secure methods applied to criminal cases, even for offenses from before the advancements in DNA-testing technology.
However, identical twins share the same DNA, so their DNA is not useful as evidence of a crime, nor a paternity test.