The answer is most likely D
Explanation:
I used my best judgement to answer this as well as process of elimination, I immediately eliminated b and c. then it was between a and d for answers. I thought D made the most sense from what I know about ancient civilizations, and prehistoric history.
The Muslim scholars of what historians call the School of Toledo (12th century) were responsible for the translation of many Greek texts to the Arabic and then to Latin. Because of these translations, the studying of those texts increased and they started to be read on European universities.
Many Toledo translations were important for major Renaissance scientists as Roger Bacon (c. 1219/20 – c. 1292) and Copernicus (1473-1543), for example.
The re-discovery of ancient Greek texts due to their translation from the School of Toledo is an example of cultural diffusion. The work done in Toledo kept those texts alive and being read until they found interested audiences in the rest of Europe.
Answer:
The Atacama Desert and Sahara Desert are known for its extreme aridity. These deserts don’t experience rainfall and the air is usually very dry with little or no water humidity. These conditions makes it very difficult for plants and animals to thrive in.
Since they don’t support animal and plant life they are usually empty with occasional plants and animals adapted in water conservation bring present in the region.
The Court of Private Land Claims in the United States was
created in order to guarantee and decide the land claims from the Treaty of
Hidalgo, territories of New Mexico, Utah, Arizona, and even in Nevada, Wyoming,
and Colorado. It was effective until 1904.
Answer:
Explanation:
At independence, African countries had to decide what type of state to put in place, and between 1950 and the mid-1980s, thirty-five of Africa's countries adopted socialism at some point. The leaders of these countries believed socialism offered their best chance to overcome the many obstacles these new states faced at independence. Initially, African leaders created new, hybrid versions of socialism, known as African socialism, but by the 1970s, several states turned to the more orthodox notion of socialism, known as scientific socialism. What was the appeal of socialism in Africa, and what made African socialism different from scientific socialism?