Answer:
Stars
Explanation:
I think back then that ancient civilizations trusted the night sky or more advanced ones used compasses before maps were made and trusted. The Mayans I believe practiced astrology (astronomy?) and we still do know because the sky is always there for us.
B. Legend / correct on edmentum
Mexico is south of the US and speaks Spanish
Answer:
Responses to a shrinking population are birth bonuses, governments reducing taxes or paying for part of daycare for new parents, and policies or rules that allow for parents to work flexible hours, part-time and/or take leaves from work without losing their jobs.
Explanation:
A is correct because by giving bonuses to the parents for every child they have, the governments are trying to stimulate them economically to do so.
B is not correct because advertising to take your children somewhere doesn't help people deciding to have or not have children.
C is correct because the governments are trying to reduce the economic burden on the parents and help them out with the raising of their children.
D is correct because through this measure the governments are giving the parents economic security and stability while enabling them to be with their children whenever necessary.
E is not correct because such a measure will have a countereffect.
The so-called “Toledo War” had its roots in the shortcomings of 18th century geography. In 1787, Congress drafted the Northwest Ordinance, which stipulated that 260,000 square miles of territory surrounding the Great Lakes would eventually be carved into a handful of new states. Specifically, the law decreed that the border between Ohio and Michigan was to run on “an east and west line drawn through the southerly bend or extreme of Lake Michigan” until it intersected with Lake Erie. There was just one problem: the best available maps depicted Lake Michigan’s southern tip as being several miles north of its true location. As a result, the original border placed the mouth of the Maumee River and the future city of Toledo in northern Ohio rather than in southern Michigan.