Tell me the answer its d on tuesday
they were first made in 1900's by Articus the the third.
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Along the flood plane of the Nile river and in the Nile delta.
In many cultures - ancient Egyptian or Chinese, for example - the dead weren't "gone" completely; they had crossed into a different plane or realm of existence, and they would continue to need physical things from the "real" world. In Egypt, food and wine were placed in the tombs so that the deceased would have food for their next journey. In China, paper replicas of the physical goods were burned, and the smoke of the paper image would serve as the real item in the afterlife.
The Roman's had red and yellow shields so they could show them selves. This is so that there rivals would plane a sneak attack. The roman' would here them but act like they diden't. Then it happen there rivals attack but the roman's are ready so they attack to.
the ancient Egyptians used the inclined plane to build there amazing pyramids.
The first person to use the inclined plane is not definitively known as it can be traced back to ancient civilizations such as the Egyptians and Mesopotamians. These early societies used ramps and inclined planes to move heavy objects like stones and building materials.
in ancient romew
they are used in ancient Egypt by using a lever and inclined plane to build the pyramids in ancient Egypt.
The thread running around the screw is an inclined plane. If you were to straighten it out, it would be an inclined plane. The screw itself can be considered a combination of wedge and inclined plane.
The inclined plane is one of several simple machines that have been known to us since ancient times. No way to know where it was first used and who invented it. The inclined plane was already well known by the time of the ancient Egyptians (3000b.c.e.)
In geometry an inclined plane would be infinite and so would not have and edge. And edge does not need an inclined plane. In school mechanics (physics or mathematics), an inclined plane is often used to study forces. But in almost all cases the edges of the inclined plane are "out-of-bounds".
Yes. Since an inclined plane is slanted, the stairs fit the definition. Another example of an inclined plane would be the seats of a stadium.
A steep inclined plane is worse than a more flat inclined plane.
The inclined plane was used by prehistoric peoples. Though they did not understand it as we do, they knew what could be accomplished with it. In this light, the inclined plane was not "invented" by anyone. Only later as our knowledge of science grew did we come to "tag" this simple machine with the name by which it is now known.
Lesser the height of inclined plane, and more the length of it, More will be the mechanical advantage of inclined plane i.e less effort would be applied.
The early Egyptians used inclined planes to move heavy stones for the pyramids.