it is caca
Rivers were used as transportation and trade routes in Europe. They were the easiest way to trade goods
Europe has easy trade by water.
Your grammar is a bit...ambiguous, but perhaps you mean "did Europe's navigable rivers and good natural harbors make trade difficult? If this is the case, then the answer is no. Rivers and harbors HELPED European trade. Goods could be moved up rivers or into natural harbors for docking, making trade easier.
it made it a world leader in trade
It is a way to travel and also to trade. The more you can trade the better your economy will be. In the early days rivers were the main source of water and also a source for food.
Europe is affected by rivers sense europe uses rivers for many reasons. - Europe uses for drinking water for the people - Europe uses it to transport goods - Europe also uses it to provide europe people with water
Europe's elongated shape allows for easy access to coastal trade routes, facilitating trade with other continents. Additionally, Europe's central location provides a strategic advantage for trade between Asia, Africa, and the Americas. The dense network of rivers and land routes in Europe further support trade by facilitating transportation of goods across the continent.
Rivers like the Danube provide a natural transportation route for goods, reducing the need for overland transportation. This can lower transportation costs and make it more efficient to move goods within Europe. Additionally, rivers can connect different regions and countries, promoting trade and economic exchange.
Deep and wide enough for boats to travel and trade more recourses
The high interior plain drops rapidly, creating waterfalls and rapids. This makes boat travel on the rivers difficult. In addition, sandbars partially block the mouths of the Limpopo and Zambezi Rivers, preventing large ships from sailing into the interior.
"The Volga, which flows nearly 2,200 miles through western Russia, is the continent's longest.For hundred of years,these and other waterways have been home to boats and barges carrying people and goods inland across great distance.
Deep and wide enough for boats to travel and trade more recourses