the transportation is like....horses like when they grow the ppl like ride them and sometimes they like go inm these houses with wheels its like totally rad! :p :DD
horses
Colonial America was definitely the place to be during the colonization. busineses boomed because there was no competition. But the colonies WERE eventually divided into zones based on the type of crops and other industries that were prominent in the regions. For example, from presentday Maryland down to Georgia, cash crops like tobacco and eventually cotton were produced. it was in these colonies that The South was born. Meanwhile, The Middle colonies (New York and down) were producing mostly lumber products like sailing equipment, as well as a minor tobbaco and fur trade. Finally, the New England colonies were deep in the fur and sailing industries, which were extremely profitable to them, considering the value of fur and good ship lumber.
southern colonies
furs,iron,rum, and ships because people need them at that time
Fur trade
Trade among the 13 British Colonies were important to themselves and to their founding nation Great Britain. Waterfalls in the Northern colonies fostered water powered manufacturing. The goods produced could be traded and sold to colonies in the southern areas where there was much less manufacturing but more crop lands. These southern colonies could sell and trade cotton and tobacco to England, Europe and among the other colonies. The fishing trades in the New England colonies and those in the middle colonies were sources of food and of course revenue. The colony of New Jersey was famous for its smaller berry crops. Basically the colonists traded and sold numerous products even the fur trade was a prosperous business. At the time of the 13 colonies transport by ships across the Atlantic or on major rivers and canals helped their economies.
Colonial America was definitely the place to be during the colonization. busineses boomed because there was no competition. But the colonies WERE eventually divided into zones based on the type of crops and other industries that were prominent in the regions. For example, from presentday Maryland down to Georgia, cash crops like tobacco and eventually cotton were produced. it was in these colonies that The South was born. Meanwhile, The Middle colonies (New York and down) were producing mostly lumber products like sailing equipment, as well as a minor tobbaco and fur trade. Finally, the New England colonies were deep in the fur and sailing industries, which were extremely profitable to them, considering the value of fur and good ship lumber.
Cattle, crops, salt, fur, lumber, shells, beads, jewels, tobacco, and spices!
Colonial America was definitely the place to be during the colonization. busineses boomed because there was no competition. But the colonies WERE eventually divided into zones based on the type of crops and other industries that were prominent in the regions. For example, from presentday Maryland down to Georgia, cash crops like tobacco and eventually cotton were produced. it was in these colonies that The South was born. Meanwhile, The Middle colonies (New York and down) were producing mostly lumber products like sailing equipment, as well as a minor tobbaco and fur trade. Finally, the New England colonies were deep in the fur and sailing industries, which were extremely profitable to them, considering the value of fur and good ship lumber.
The 13 colonies had numerous natural resources. These includes trees, fur, and fish. There were also whales as well as thick forests.
lumber,fur,tea
The answer would be fur.
fishing, fur trading, lumber and whaling.
yes and no. Fur was found in other countries as well. Of course fur was found in the middle of Colonies.
According to Historians, the colony of Georgia earned money by growing cash crops such as rice and indigo with the use of slave labor. The colony also sold lumber and fur as well.
southern colonies
southern colonies
fish, beaver, fur, skins, flour, rice, indigo, rum, lumber, water, wood, swamps, coal, deer, hogs, forests, mapletrees, sap, and whales