For the purposes of determining the population of a state, three out of every five enslaved people would be counted.
JUST TOOK THE TEST
Well I use whats called the "Fish Method" so it would be set up like this-
160/100 and ?/19. You cross multiply the 19 by the 160, 3040, then divide it by the 100 to get 30.4.
Answer:
We know people and people commit crimes
Explanation:
Its a human trait to commit a crime.
Answer:
They wanted to find a homeland for settlement.
Explanation:
The Netherlands was the third European country to establish a global colonial empire outside of continental Europe. Its ability to trade and transport goods, coupled with the wave of nationalism and militarism that followed the independence of Spain helped the company. Along with the British, at first the Dutch accumulated colonial possessions through capitalist business colonialism, with a predominance of the Dutch East India Company. The direct intervention of the State in the colonial company came later. Dutch merchants and sailors also participated in the wave of exploration that continued during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
New Netherlands encompassed the northern area of the Atlantic coast of the United States, which was first visited by Dutch explorers and later controlled and colonized by the Dutch West Indies Company. The settlements were initially established around the Hudson River: Fort Nassau created in 1614, abandoned in 1617 by continuous flooding and restored in 1624 under the name of Fort Orange, nowadays Albany and New Amsterdam, founded in 1625 on the island of Manhattan. The colony reached its maximum size with the absorption of the Swedish settlement of Fort Christina in 1655, ending in this way with the colony of New Sweden.
The end of the New Netherlands colony came in 1674, after the end of the Anglo-Dutch Third War the Dutch settlements became part of the British Crown and New Amsterdam was renamed New York.
This works for the written answer on E2020: <span>Incomplete definition (may be systematic or random) - One reason that it is impossible to make exact measurements is that the measurement is not always clearly defined. For example, if two different people measure the length of the same rope, they would probably get different results because each person may stretch the rope with a different tension. The best way to minimize definition errors is to carefully consider and specify the conditions that could affect the measurement.
Failure to account for a factor (usually systematic) - The most challenging part of designing an experiment is trying to control or account for all possible factors except the one independent variable that is being analyzed. For instance, you may inadvertently ignore air resistance when measuring free-fall acceleration, or you may fail to account for the effect of the Earth's magnetic field when measuring the field of a small magnet. The best way to account for these sources of error is to brainstorm with your peers about all the factors that could possibly affect your result. This brainstorm should be done before beginning the experiment so that arrangements can be made to account for the confounding factors before taking data. Sometimes a correction can be applied to a result after taking data, but this is inefficient and not always possible.</span>