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The Columbian Exchange and the slave trade affect the economies and the people in Europe, Africa, and The Americas in many ways. Columbian Exchange might have been very popular back then, especially when the Europeans explorers brought new plants and animals to Europe and Asia like corn, potatoes, tobacco, and cocoa and when Europe and Asia brought horses, cattle, and pigs to The Americas. "The Columbian exchange dramatically changed the world". This quote from the textbook explains and shows how valued and how Columbian exchange had an impact on the world. This Columbian exchange really change the world not only for good, but for bad. It all started like new items, food, and animals. But after time it all became an tragedy. The Columbian exchange had good things in the beginning this exchanged continued to improve diets and no longer life spans.But on the bad side lots of innocent people started to die. This new items, food and animals that came from the Native Americans had no natural ingredients and were not disinfected which brought a huge diseases to the Europeans and Asians. This diseases often started to expand until it was killing almost all of the population. Besides the Europeans were not getting any of this food, items, or animals for free, they started to trade their goods with the Americas for their goods, since for them the Americas goods where new and different. The Columbian exchange did not only bring diseases to the Europeans and Asians. The Americas, Asians and European started to take trading more developed. "Over time, a trading pattern involving the exchange of raw materials, manufactured products, and slaves developed among Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Europeans shipped millions of enslaved Africans to work in the colonies in the New World." Trading started to get harsh and very mean overtime. From trading goods from each other like food and animals, it started to trade their own people.
Raw materials like precious metals (gold and silver), tobacco, sugar and cotton went from the Americas to Europe. Manufactured goods like cloth and metal items went to Africa and the Americas. Finally, slaves went from Africa to the Americas to work. This trade created great profits for Europe.
Though the Spice Trade began as early as 3000 BCE, by the mid-1500s, its existence allowed European domination in the East. Until the mid-15th century, all European trade with the East was done via the Silk Road; however, once the Portuguese discovered routes around Africa to the East in 1488, the spice trade exploded. The European Age of Discovery, spearheaded by the Portuguese and developed by the Dutch, Spanish, and English, transformed the trade which allowed European traders to bring back spices such as cinnamon, black pepper, ginger, turmeric, and more into Europe.
Four most important inventions: Paper, gunpowder, printing, compass
The Columbian Exchange was important because it explained what happened when the Europeans made contact with the native population in the Americas. The result was one-sided, with the Europeans gaining tremendously, and the natives losing terribly. First of all, the Europeans gained access to rich new continents, which expanded their empires, while the natives contracted European diseases they had no immunity for, were enslaved, and had their lands and resources taken from them.
It is unknown if xanthoceras was traded during the Columbian Exchange. A list of known items traded during the Colombian Exchange can be found online.
Maize,Corn,Horses,Guns,Drugs,Cocoa, ect.
horses
oil and stock
gold and food
salt & gold
Maize (corn), beans, avocados, tomatoes, some species of squash and turkeys are some of the items brought from Mexico during the Columbian exchange.
Some of the items they traded were spices,gems e.t.c
I think it was because They neaded something to ride on?
Which of these was a result of the Colombian Exchange
-guns,gunpowder -metal tools(machetes, plows) -hammocks -wheel (carts, waqons) -precious-metal crafts --HopE thisx helped )
The Beothuk people traded items such as furs, pelts, and other animal products with Europeans in exchange for goods like metal tools, weapons, cloth, and other manufactured items. This trade exchange helped both groups acquire resources that were valuable to their respective societies.