Answer:
Rivers of the Coastal Plain were a major means of commercial transportation during the 1700s and early 1800s. Cities founded along the fall line, called “fall line cities,” are located at the places where these rivers crossed the fall line, marking the upstream limit of travel. The city of Columbus, for example, was established where the Chattahoochee River crosses the fall line; Macon, Milledgeville, and Augusta are similarly located at the crossings of the Ocmulgee, Oconee, and Savannah rivers, respectively. These cities became important transportation hubs because traders could only travel upstream until they reached the waterfalls of the fall line. At that point they were forced to disembark and reload their cargo on the other side of the falls in order to continue their journeys. Columbus served as the upstream head of navigation for the Chattahoochee, as did Augusta for the Savannah River and Macon for the Ocmulgee River. After the first steamship arrived in 1828, Columbus became a gateway city for cotton. Above the fall line, flatboats and barges moved goods around the state. Below the fall line, steamships had unimpeded access to move goods, mostly cotton, into the Gulf of Mexico.
The answer is D. New Delhi
Answer:
1. Egypt
2. South Africa
3. Libya
4. Sudan
5. Kenya
6. Nigeria
7. ?
8. Rwanda
9. Arabian Sea
10. Strait of Gibraltar
11. I don't see it??
12. Sahara Desert
13. Sahel
14. Cape Town
15. ?
16. Lake Victoria
17. Atlantic Ocean
18. Indian Ocean
19. Mediterranean Sea
20. Niger River
21. Congo River
22. Nile River
23. Cairo
24. Pretoria
25. Mt. Kilimanjaro or Nairobi?
26. Lagos
27. I don't see 27??
28. Rabat
Explanation: I'm going to do some more research lol
Answer: C) Earth’s Interior
Explanation:
Answer:
About 3500 meters of summit of a composite volcano collapsed after an explosive eruption of about 500 cubic kilometers of pyroclastic material. Later the caldera was eventually filled with water.
Explanation:
Crater Lake is one that is found to occupy a basin in Mount Mazama in south-central Oregon in the western United States. Mount Mazama, which is about 12,000 ft (roughly 3,700m) collapsed during an intense volcanic eruption, which led to the formation of volcanic depression called caldera.
Pyroclastic flows of pumice and ash affected the nearby areas which also included the water body that drained the mount Mazama.