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SSSSS [86.1K]
2 years ago
9

In what century did American archaeology become a professional scientific discipline?

History
1 answer:
irina [24]2 years ago
8 0

Answer:

d) late 19th century

Explanation:

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They hoped to find new land
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How does Tecumseh’s speech illustrate differences between Indian and American views of land as private property?
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Towards the end of the 1780s Tecumseh, together with his brother Elskwatawa or Tenskwatawa, who was called "the prophet", created an alliance of the native peoples against the expansion of the American colonists in the territories of the great lakes, north of the Midwest and the Ohio River Valley. The alliance suffered some changes over time, but was formed by several important Indian peoples.

In September 1809, William Henry Harrison, governor of the newly formed Indiana Territory, negotiated the Fort Wayne Treaty in which a delegation of Indians yielded 3 million acres (12,000 km²) of Native American territory to the government of the United States. U.S. The negotiations of the treaty were questionable since they did not have the support of the then US President James Madison, and involved what some historians have compared with a bribe, consisting of the offer of large subsidies to the tribes and chiefs involved, and the previous distribution, among the indigenous participants, of copious amounts of liquor before the negotiations to "dispose the temperaments" to them.

Tecumseh's opposition to the landmark Fort Wayne Treaty marked the emergence of the Shawnee warrior as an outstanding leader and earned him the respect of several tribes. Although Tecumseh and his people, the Shawnees had no claim to the land sold, the indigenous leader was alarmed by the massive sale, since many of the followers who accompanied him in his capital Prophetstown ("Town of the Prophet"), belonged to the tribes Piankeshaw, Kikapú and Wea, which were habitual moradores of the tramposamente negotiated land. As an argument, Tecumseh revived an idea exposed in previous years by the Shawnee leader, Blue Jacket, and by the Mohawk leader, Joseph Brant, according to which Indian land was common property of all tribes, and no fraction of it could be sold. without the consent of all, or only by decision of a few.

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2 years ago
Select the correct answer.
Ksenya-84 [330]

Answer:

The dangers of the military-industrial complex.

Explanation:

"...a threat to democratic government." - Stephanie Mannino

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How did President Bush respond to environmental damage to Louisiana in 2005? A.The president established a base in the state to
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Answer:

D. The president called for the Department of Homeland Security to solve the issue.

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  • The speed of the winds of Katrina, the most destructive hurricane in the recent history of the United States. On August 29, 2005 it climbed to category 4 and made landfall with winds over 225 kilometers per hour.
  • The deaths caused by Katrina: 1,577 in Louisiana, 238 in Mississippi, 2 in Alabama, 2 in Georgia and 14 in Florida.
  • In the metropolitan area of New Orleans lived 1.3 million people. The mayor of the city ordered to evacuate it on August 28. 80% of the population left their homes.
  • 13, was The number of visits that the then president, George W. Bush, made to New Orleans after Katrina. His slow and clumsy reaction overshadowed the final phase of his presidency. "I take pride in my ability to make clear and effective decisions, but even after Katrina, that did not happen, the problem was not that I made bad decisions, it was that I took a lot of time to decide," he wrote in his memoirs.
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