Nineteenth century supporters attempted to teach the Native American children European-American ways.
Answer:
After , Mexican-Americans, and African-Americans, the ethnic group with the largest impact on Texas has been the Germans.
By 1930, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, persons born in Germany or whose parents where born there made up a full 36 percent of "foreign white stock" in Texas. The next largest group was from Czechoslovakia at 11.5 percent.
The German-Texan culture started in 1831, when Frederick Ernst acquired land in Austin County near Industry. Within a couple of years his neighbors included other German families, such as the , a family later to become associated with the King Ranch in South Texas.
The largest immigration of Germans came in the 1840s when the (The Society for the Protection of German Immigrants in Texas) organized at on the Rhine near Mainz. It assisted thousands in coming to Central Texas and establishing such settlements as New Braunfels and Fredericksburg.
Answer:
This is known as Pangaea.
Explanation:
Pangaea was a supercontinent which existed approximately 200 million years ago. All the continents we now know in the world were <em>assembled as one </em>main continent and began separating until they formed the world as we know it today.
This is based on the evidence for Plate Tectonics, which have moved throughout the centuries to create the continents we now know and which are still in movement to this day, shifting.
Answer:
In addition, ethnic conflicts have very direct effects far beyond their epicentres. Those involve refugee flows, internal displacement, regional instability, economic failures, environmental disasters, diffusion and spillover effects, and conditions favourable to organized crime and terrorism.
Explanation: