through anal intercourse
Africa - African
The discovery of the Americas led to increased demand for labor in the New World, resulting in the transatlantic slave trade. This fueled further expansion of the slave trade in Africa, with European traders actively seeking slaves to meet the demand in the Americas. The triangular trade system emerged, with goods from Europe exchanged for African slaves who were then transported to the Americas to work on plantations.
The Christian people in Africa are the ones who want to change the religion of Africa to Christianity, so that culture in the African continent will change for the better away from high crime rates.
The South African industial Revolution started after the discovery of diamonds in 1867 and gold in 1886. These discovers change te future of South Africa forever.
no, all though African elephants migrate to Africa's flood plain in summer
Slavery existed in African trade long before europeans arrived
how did AfricanAmericans rights change before, during, and after reconstruction?
because one of the most important reasonsfor this change was that there weren't enough workers in the Americas.
Many people around the world were disgusted with the South African practice of apartheid. They used economic sanctions to get South Africa to change its policies.
It is a chemical change :)
Africa is too vast and different in its makeup to have single "values and traditions." They change from the north to south and east to the west. Better question would be asked about the different countries in Africa, or the different tribes in those countries in Africa.
The Columbian Exchange significantly altered standards of living in Africa, the Americas, and Europe by facilitating the transfer of crops, livestock, and technologies. In Europe, the introduction of new staple crops like potatoes and maize led to improved nutrition and population growth. Conversely, the Americas experienced devastating population declines due to diseases brought by Europeans, coupled with the exploitation of indigenous peoples. In Africa, the exchange intensified the slave trade, dramatically affecting social structures and economies.