the observations made in the 1600s and the 1700s were that of spontaneous generation. This was the "vital force".
yes
1. Whooping Cough. Treated with Sarsaparilla roots by the Penobcot indians. Roots were boiled and tea was sipped. 2. Mecury Chloride aka "Calomel". Was used to "clean" patient from toxins or poisoning by causing bloody stool, vomiting, excessive salivation. 3.Peruvian Bark aka "Chincona" Boiled as a tea to treat fevers. 4. Onions. Boiled;steamed near patient or placed by patients bed to treat colds. 5. Blood-letting Used to get rid of "bad" blood containing yellow fever or various "other" contaminates.
We are a very organized species, I suppose. But it is much easier to find something or think of something when it is organized. Categories are like filing cabinets, they organize.
As a result, it made no sense to ask how organisms have evolved through time. Similarly, it was inconceivable that two animals or plants may have had a common ancestor or that extinct species may have been ancestors of modern ones.
They used indigo.
The people in Europe decided to move to the colonies during the 1600s and 1700s because they wanted religious freedom.
new England was were people from England settled in during the 1700s.
The land enclosure in the 1600s and the 1700s resulted in larger farms.
In the 1600s and 1700s, Delaware was predominantly Christian, with Quakerism, Anglicanism, and Presbyterianism being some of the main religious groups in the region. There was also a significant presence of Lutherans and Catholics in Delaware during this time.
When western merchants reached China in the 1600s and 1700s they were amazed at the splendor of the Chinese civilization.
they wanted a better life for family and start a new life
The conflicts were...
They wore clothes!
the ink pen
fishing
English settlers of Massachusetts in the 1600s and German settlers of the 1700s both wanted religious freedom.