He responded by saying that Galileo had no authority to determinan
which passages can or should be taken literally and which shouldn't
He was an American pioneer, explorer, woodsman, and frontiersman. He led a expedition that discovered a trail to the west through the Cumberland gap
Cactus Hill site has human remains that have been dated to around 20,000 years ago. Given its location in Virginia shows that human beings had reached America earlier than this. This contradicts the theory that postulates humans came to America from Siberia through the modern day Bring Strait. The theory asserts that at the end of the Ice age humans were able to cross to America through the Beringia land bridge and other means such as canoes and rafts around 10,000 years ago.
The incest is bad, and the main reason for that is that more often than not there's bad genetic mutation, thus there's very large portion of the offspring that is either with mental anomalies, or with physical anomalies.
If we go by the Biblical version of how the first people were created and that from them rose all others over time, means that the incest would be a must for such thing to happen. Biologically speaking, if that really happened, the human kind would have not developed as it has, as the gene pool would have become very deteriorated, with individuals with very low intelligence, and physical anomalies dominating. Over time, that would have probably led to the extinction of the human kind rather than becoming large and stronger, as the population would have been very prone to all sorts of diseases, not capable of proper thinking, not being able to develop, and simply hardly finding it possible to survive.
Answer
<h2>He governed without an elected assembly </h2><h2 /><h2>Explanation:</h2>
The New York Colony was one of the four Middle Colonies which also involved the Pennsylvania Colony, the New Jersey Colony, and the Delaware Colony. The New York Colony was basically a Dutch colony named New Amsterdam, endowed by Peter Minuit in 1626 on Manhattan Island. In 1664, England renamed the colony, New York, after the Duke of York. New York City attained distinction in the 18th century as the main selling port in the Thirteen Colonies.