C Mississippian peoples cultivated corn on Mississippi Valley floodplains and created pottery and immense earthworks
The native populations living along the Mississippi Valley used clay from the floodplains to create potter and the ground provided good soil for corn production. What they are most known for are the earthworks or mounds that they built for burial and artistic works to represent their gods. Cahokia was a large mound site near current day St. Louis and demonstrates the skill and size of these mounds.
to drive out English colonists in South America
Answer:
- Their wives simply did not like the tortillas the corn hybrid made
- The farmers did not like the flavor
Explanation:
This is in relation to the <em>''The Introduction of Hybrid Corn to Spanish American Farmers in New Mexico'' </em>by<em> Anacleto Apodaca. </em>
The United States Department of Agriculture had tried to introduce a new hybrid corn to the Rio Grande valley in the 1940s to increase the yield there. They succeeded in doing so and the harvest became bountiful.
A couple of years later however most of the farmers had stopped planting the new seed and the reason they gave was because their wives did not like the tortillas made from the new corn and they did not like the flavor as well.
The Pacific Railroad<span> Act chartered the Central Pacific and the Union Pacific </span>Railroad<span>Companies, and tasked them with building a </span>transcontinental railroad<span> that would link the United States from east to west. ... This affected the Native Americans in a negative way because the Native Americans used buffalo for many things.</span>