Before the advent of modern technology, early civilizations found it too precarious to
maintain a stable equilibrium while situated exactly on a line of latitude, where the
slightest perturbation could, typically with little or no warning, send them careening
down one side or the other. For that simple reason, history and anthropology agree
that the development of civilization received the greatest natural impetus in the vast
numberless open spaces between the lines.
Answer: East Africa's early trading civilizations developed on or near a coastline, providing access to important markets in Arabia, India, and East Asia ;)
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it helped us because they past down their traditions
imgine it is'nt easy and by the way i am hot
Early civilizations emerged between the Tigris, Euphrates, Nile, and (sorry, blanking out out on the fourth...) Rivers.
In order for early civilizations to develope they needed a good source of water. With water they could irrigate their crops and improve travel. If they did not have a solid source of water to develop farming early civilizations like the Egyptians(Nile River), Mesopotamians (Tigrus and Euphrates Rivers), or Indus river civilizations would not have survived.
Physical geography and fear of the unknown.
they were both getting ranked
They were all early African civilizations!
the early civilizations began in Africa but most exact in Zambia
The economy of early civilizations was based around agriculture.
Water is essential to life. It helped provide silt for crops and also a mean of transportation. Water allowed early civilizations to provide food to sustain the growth of the city.
the Fall Line
Inca
The Nile River was the axis of two early African civilizations
The early settlements of Mesopotamia were in between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.