Answer:
if im right the answer is 1800
Explanation:
Answer:
There is little doubt that the widespread use of the automobile, especially after 1920, changed the rural and urban landscapes in America. It is overly simplistic to assume, however, that the automobile was the single driving force in the transformation of the countryside or the modernization of cities. In some ways automobile transport was a crucial agent for change, but in other cases it merely accelerated ongoing changes.
In several respects, the automobile made its impact felt first in rural areas where cars were used for touring and recreation on the weekends as opposed to replacing existing transit that brought people to and from work in urban areas. Some of the earliest paved roads were landscaped parkways along scenic routes. Of course, rural people were not always very pleased when urban drivers rutted unpaved roads, kicked up dust, and generally frightened or even injured livestock. Yet, cars potentially could help confront rural problems—isolation, the high cost of transporting farm products, and the labor of farm work. Although farmers may have resisted the automobile at first, by the 1920s per capita automobile ownership favored the rural family. Adoption was uneven in rural areas, however, depending on income, availability of cars, the continuing reliance on horses, and other factors. Automobile manufacturers did not lose sight of this market and courted potential customers with advertisements touting that cars were “Built for Country Roads” or promoting vehicles that would lead to “The Passing of the Horse.”
Explanation:
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The silk road, I do believe. lolol
Actually no one holds the patents award in 1950s automatic video scanning and inspection methods , because in 2005, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has sided with a federal judge in Nevada that concluding barcode scanning patents claimed by the estate of late inventor named Jerome Lemelson and held by Lemelson Medical, Education and Research Foundation LP in January 2004 were absolutely invalid and unenforceable.
In the early 18th century, the Agricultural Revolution in Great Britain resulted in
urbanization because "(3) displaced rural workers migrated to find jobs".