This sound a lot like a project question to me... go Google it and find your answer there..
The Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, which provided fertile soil and water to grow abundant food, were the two main physical features that supported settlement in Mesopotamia
Since the human body can't live without water all early civilizations must have had a way to transfer fresh water to their location.
Italy has a mild climate. It has river valleys to grow food and some mountains for defense. It is in the middle of the Mediterranean for good harbors and access to other civilizations.
It is called that because it is the place that nomadic tribes began building villages, becoming civilized with a language and rules, and starting modern society.The lands between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers supported some of the earliest organized human settlements, which eventually evolved into a complex of towns and cities.In other words people there built stationary dwellings that were meant to survive beyond a human generation, if not several generations, as opposed to a temporary dwelling meant only to last no more than a season. Generally, this was the main difference being from hunter-gatherer/nomadic and agrarian or "civilized" societies. The arguments are based on archaeological remains of buildings and artifacts that have been recognized as supporting these theories. Evidence supports such settlements from at least 5000 BC, giving rise to the Sumerian, Akkadian, Babylonian, and Assyrian civilizations. These were some of the earliest known civilizations in which human habitation takes on an a highly complex and organized state of affairs, akin to modern cities, as opposed to mere villages or towns.However, sites of similar ages are found around the Indus valley, and in Egypt.(see the related links section for information regarding the Indus Vally and the Mehrgarh Period I -- both of which were located in the same region.)EgyptOstensibly, Mesopotamia is not the "cradle of civilization."The Nile Valley Civilization, present day Egypt and Ethiopia, is recognized by the scientific communities of egyptologists, anthropologists, and archaeologists as the cradle of civilization. The concept of social order and the concept of an organized society came out of the Nile Valley Civilization before there was any other society known to man functioning any other place in the world.The significance of the Nile Valley Civilization is that it was that civilization that set a standard of performance untouched by the other civilizations of the world. The Nile valley stretches 4000 miles into the physical body of Africa and the Nile River was the first cultural highway.Ostensibly, Mesopotamia is not the "cradle of civilization."The Nile Valley Civilization, present day Egypt and Ethiopia, is recognized by the scientific communities of egyptologists, anthropologists, and archaeologists as the cradle of civilization. The concept of social order and the concept of an organized society came out of the Nile Valley Civilization before there was any other society known to man functioning any other place in the world.The significance of the Nile Valley Civilization is that it was that civilization that set a standard of performance untouched by the other civilizations of the world. The nile valley stretches 4000 miles into the physical body of Africa and The Nile Valley River was the first cultural highway.The lands between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers supported some of the earliest organized human settlements, which eventually evolved into a complex of towns and cities.In other words people there built stationary dwellings that were meant to survive beyond a human generation, if not several generations, as opposed to a temporary dwelling meant only to last no more than a season. Generally, this was the main difference being from hunter-gatherer/nomadic and agrarian or "civilized" societies. The arguments are based on archaeological remains of buildings and artifacts that have been recognized as supporting these theories. Evidence supports such settlements from at least 5000 BC, giving rise to the Sumerian, Akkadian, Babylonian, and Assyrian civilizations. These were some of the earliest known civilizations in which human habitation takes on an a highly complex and organized state of affairs, akin to modern cities, as opposed to mere villages or towns.However, sites of similar ages are found around the Indus valley.(see the related links section for information regarding the Indus Vally and the Mehrgarh Period I -- both of which were located in the same region.)it is called that because it is the place that nomads came out and started building villages, becoming civilized with a language and rules, and started being more sophisticated like they invented stuff
Fascists advocate the creation of a totalitarian single-party state that seeks the mass mobilization of a nation through indoctrination, physical education, and family policy including eugenics.
No, there are no permanent settlements in Antarctica. There may be survey and scientific teams from colleges in Antarctica, but not a physical institution like Harvard.
Rivers
rivers
Rivers
The desert.
Yes it is it's not reversible but physical changes are
Their mono-brows.
Appalachian mountains
The most important physical features are location and geography.
people with permanent physical and/or brain injuries The disability must be permanent and total.
Isolation from other early civilizations
Jackie Robinson came from and supported the African American culture. But he supported the Physical culture.