Cultures, people, and goods spread out and mixed.
apex! ;)
cultures, people, and goods spread out and mixed.
cultures,people,andgoods spread out and mixed
by:a Mexican lol
the world got smaller and cultures mixed (apex)
The oceans became highways. -Apex
Cultures, people, and goods spread out and mixed
The world got smaller and cultures mixed, and international trade provided increased economic growth.
the world got smaller and cultures mixed APEX
the world got smaller and culture mixed
Human history is tied directly to our understanding of the oceans. Once people learned how to use the oceans as roadways instead of as barriers, the whole world opened up. Immigration expanded. Exploration made the world bigger. Trade between countries allowed for economic growth. The ocean became a highway.
When using ocean-centered geography, the world appears interconnected with a focus on the vast ocean as a unifying element rather than the traditional land-centered perspective. This perspective highlights the importance of maritime trade, environmental issues like climate change and marine conservation, and the impact of oceans on global weather patterns and ecosystems. It also emphasizes the significance of coastal areas and island nations in global geopolitics and economics.
Look at oceans as highways
Mainly the international trade that increased when the oceans connected distant lands for travel, conquest, and trade. Advances in transportation and communication, industrial development, and the growth of global trade have all contributed to making world economies and cultures more interdependent. In modern times, the internet has been a new and powerful method of intercultural communication.
The country that has the most highways is the Netherlands. Belgium has the second highest number of highways in the world.
Interstate 10 in the US, MI5 in England, and the Autobahn in Europe rate among the world's biggest highways.
During the Age of Discovery (or, Exploration) in the 15th to 17th centuries, circumnavigation changed European understandings of the world dramatically. For one thing, their world became larger, as previously unknown land and water emerged on their maps. For another thing, it became rounder, as the ocean "highways" to east and west, which connected eastern and western civilizations, were finally discovered during the explorers' courageous circumnavigations of the globe.