<u>Answer:</u>
<em>Excavation in Catal huyuk led to the recovery of several artefacts. </em>
<u>Explanation:</u>
<em>Catal huyuk is a Neolithic site in south-central Turkey. Excavations were carried out in the site for the first time in 1958 by James Mellart.</em> These excavations gave an idea about the advanced culture of this site. Excavations revealed the typical settlements of the site.
<em>The houses were not seperated but connected in a honeycomb structure. </em>The entry to the houses was by means of holes in the ceilings or doors on the sides of houses. Doors were reached by using ladders.
Symbolic nature of the religions of that time is evident in the paintings on the walls.<em> The rooms were well plastered. The only means of ventilation was the openings in the ceilings. </em>
Skeletons recovered close to the houses and inside them gave ideas about the burial practices in Catal huyuk. The dead were buried within the village according to their rituals. <em>Caly figurines of women were also found in this site. The famous figurine ‘seated woman of catal huyuk’ is one example.</em>
In a sense, the Nazi-Soviet Pact was a brilliant move on Stalin's part, since it gave him an opportunity to drastically improve his country's strategic position along its western border, without getting involved in a larger conflict. While Hitler's Blitzkrieg<span> flattened Poland, Soviet troops took possession of the eastern half of that unlucky country, which Germany and the U.S.S.R. shortly agreed to share. Then, in October of 1939, the U.S.S.R. "convinced" the Baltic States--Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia, independent since the Revolution--to allow Soviet garrisons to come within their borders. This paved the way for these states' outright annexation to the U.S.S.R. the following year. The Soviets applied similar pressure to Finland, which had been a Grand Duchy under the rule of the Tsars; but the Finns resisted, however, and in November of '39 Stalin ordered an invasion. He expected a quick, easy war, but amid wintry conditions the Red Army (which had, after all, seen its generals purged only a few years before) suffered a series of setbacks. Not until spring of the following year did the Finns capitulate.</span>
Answer:
Mein Kampf
Explanation:
Mein Kampf is the name of Adolf Hitlers autobiographical manifesto
Answer:
Japan
Explanation:
Japan was the one that took a war with U.S