A strong fortified settlement is not the push factor in migration
Explanation:
There is difference between a push and a pull factor. Push factor is the cause which forces a person to leave the country in search of better living. Depletion of resources, war and famine are some of the push factors.
Pull factors are the aspects which pulls or attracts the migrated people into the land due to the abundance of natural resources, better living conditions, employment opportunities, educational opportunities and practicing religious freedom. These are various pull factors which allures the people for migration. African Americans migrated from the southern states to union in search of better living conditions and industrialization which opened huge employment opportunities.
<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, <span>the correct response would be the one having to do with "customer support centers for American companies" being based overseas, since this shows the extent of corporate and national interconnectedness. </span></span>
Answer:
2. & 3.
Explanation:
That's my guess, this is a somewhat subjective question that really applies to your curriculum, hopefully someone who has taken the course can give a better answer.
The term Woodland Indians was created in 1932 to describe a prehistoric culture that was significantly different than the nomadic Archaic Indians that roamed the eastern third of the North American Continent from 6000 B. C. to about 1000 B. C. It is the third and final general cultural description applied to native people prior to the formation of tribes, the final stage of development of these prehistoric people. Were the Woodland Indians historic<span> or </span>prehistoric<span>? Woodland Indians, as with all later Indian nations until the Cherokee, were prehistoric. The Cherokee adopted a written language in 1820, making them a historic tribe from that time on.
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i hope this helps