The correct answer is - the heliocentric system.
By using the telescope, Galileo Galilei managed to observe the movements of the Sun, Moon, the planets in the Solar System, and he was mapping their movements on the sky, and also he was comparing their movements to the Earth's position. With this, he managed to notice that insted of the popular belief that the Sun, Moon, and the other planets are moving around the Earth, that it is actually the opposite of it, and that the Sun was the center of our Solar System, and that all the planets and moons were orbiting around it, while the only object that hold its position as it was initially thought was the Moon, because it orbits around our planet. So Galileo contributed to the theory of the heliocentric system.
Answer:
The Shang Dynasty was a monarchy.
Explanation:
The kings of the Shang Dynasty, was a monarchy, where the people were ruled by a king. In this type of government, the people involved were, the king, and his noblemen, fortune tellers, and governors. The king had the power to appoint noblemen to rule each city state. Additionally, the king had the power to say when crops could be planted. Moreover, the noblemen had the authority to recruit soldiers to defend the city state from invaders. The only way to gain the throne was to inherit it, by being the king's younger brother or oldest son.
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Answer: A. to help people stay healthy
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Explanation:
Elizabeth Blackwell was born on February 3, 1821 in Bristol, England, but moved to the United States in 1831 along with her family. Elizabeth was the first woman who managed to practice a medical profession in the United States, which is why she is considered an example of the struggle for female emancipation.
It should be noted that the impulse that led her to want to be a doctor was the death of a friend, who before dying of a terminal illness told Blackwell that she wished she had been treated by a woman. This event marked her life and the idea of being a doctor emerged in her, so she sent letters of request to all the universities of New York and Pennsylvania, without receiving a response.
After ten universities rejected her application, she was admitted to Geneva Medical College (New York) and on January 11, 1849 she became the first woman to receive a medical degree in medicine in the United States.