Answer:
The Von Thunen Model describes an urban/ rural set up by showing the connection between costs of transporting agricultural goods to places where they can be marketed, and the distance traveled in the transport of said goods (in other words, from farm to market). Basically, it predicts how people will use the agricultural areas surrounding a city.
The rings:
First/ Center ring (dot in the middle) = the central city
Second ring out = Intensive farms and dairy farms
Third ring out = Forests for timber and firewood
Fourth ring out = Extensive field crops/ crop rotation
Fifth ring out = Ranching/ livestock
Explanation:
<u>What effect did having a bureaucracy of scholar-officials have on the song dynasty in medieval China</u>? It created a stable and efficient government. The position occupied by the scholar elite in Chinese society has led to social and political change in China. The virtues of the scholars were appreciated in times of cultural upheaval, when their role was to defend moral values. The imperial bureaucracy was the main road to success (academic). This bureaucracy was useful to the extent that placed the public good above the private. The art of the scholar was encouraged by the demands of Chinese society.
<em>In the early Northern Song, the government bureaucracy was staffed entirely by scholar-officials (civil examination system). The counties, divided into provinces, were governed through an imperial bureaucracy of ranked degree-holding officials. Because the governmental superstructure was thinly spread, it was heavily invested in the binding social force and in the use of harsh punishment.</em>
Answer:
Abraham was the father of sarah or the husband
Explanation:
and i dont know what hansards are
Answer:
B. a private good or a club good.
Explanation:
People can be prevented from using a private good or a club good because they are excludable goods.
Excludable goods or services are goods that public can be prevented from using or enjoying. On the contrary, non excludable goods are those goods and services that it is impossible to prevent the public from using/enjoying. Examples of excludable goods are private properties such as a personal phone, fish in a fish farm, the services of a gym or golf club. examples of nonexcludable goods are fish in a public river, the services of the police, a concert on a national television network.