Yes. Both genders were, and are, capable of working on sugar plantations, usually with the males doing more of the harder physical labor.
The two European countries that first used African slaves for their sugar plantations during the 1400s and 1500s were Portugal and Spain. Portugal began establishing sugar plantations in Brazil and the Atlantic islands, while Spain followed suit in its Caribbean colonies. This marked the beginning of a transatlantic slave trade that would significantly impact the economies and societies of both Europe and the Americas.
Becoming a cowboy in the far west
mabye maybe not...:p
Sugar and cotton plantations required many workers because these crops demanded labor-intensive tasks such as planting, weeding, harvesting, and processing. Machines were not advanced enough at that time to replace human labor. Additionally, the harsh working conditions often led to high turnover rates, requiring constant recruitment of new workers.
chesapeke
chesapeke
None because both boys and girls could be both good at any subject and it doesn't matter who is good at one thing and the other one is not.
Because they where both fighting over him so he told them they could both have him so they would stop.
could you be more specific with your question? what do you mean?
they are both cool
they are both cool
No, you cannot separate sugar from tea through filtration because both sugar and tea particles are too small to be filtered out using typical filtration methods. Sugar and tea are both dissolved in the water, so they cannot be separated through physical filtration.