Our ancestors either left Africa from Ethiopia/Djibouti across the strait to Arabia, or via Egypt to Israel. From there they went, through Iran to India, then down through South-East Asia to New Guinea, which they reached by about 40,000 years ago. Once in New Guinea, they more or less settled and were immobilised by all the other tribes around them. That's why the New Guineans resemble Africans so much.
<span>They also hooked south to Australia which they reached by about 47,000 years ago. </span>
<span>They also went from India north-east into China. From China they went up over the Bering Straits and down to the end of the Americas. They also went east from China across the Pacific Ocean, curling down from Tahita and Hawaii, reaching New Zealand as the last place on earth to be reached by humans, only about 500 years ago. </span><span>And they also hooked north-west into Europe. (hope this helped cx)</span>
<span>strict:Constitution states that the government of the United States holds only those powers specifically granted to it by the Constitution;loose:interpretation of the Constitution posits that the government of the United States hold all powers that are not specifically denied to it by the Constitution.</span>
He was interested in a sepreatist movement for blacks. He wanted them to have their own nation, government and all. He wanted reperations for Africa, for slavery, although slavery was/is still advocated by many nations.
the word is Media Saeculorum
The Bill of Rights is the name of the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution.
The bill was mostly written to address the objections of Anti-Federalists who were worried about the shortcomings of the Constitution. These amendments have added significant guarantees of personal freedom, limits to state power and other important rights that were not included in the Constitution originally.
The Bill was a result of several other documents that were also influential on the Constitution, such as the Virginia Declaration of Rights (1776), the English Bill of Rights (1689) and the Magna Carta (1215). Madison was particularly significant in the passing of these amendments, as he carefully studied the deficiencies of the Constitution.