Rivers provide food, water for drinking and crops, transportation .
Cities developed along waterways because water provided essential resources for human settlement such as drinking water, irrigation for agriculture, transportation for trade, and food from fishing. Additionally, waterways facilitated communication and connected cities to other settlements, making them strategic locations for economic and cultural exchange.
The first people to live in the area that is now El Paso, Texas were various indigenous tribes, such as the Jumano, Suma, Manso, and Apache. These tribes had established settlements along the Rio Grande and engaged in trading and agricultural practices.
First Nations people in the Cordillera region of North America primarily lived in villages or settlements along rivers and in valleys. They made use of the natural resources in the region for sustenance, such as fishing, hunting, and gathering plants. The interior of British Columbia was an important area for First Nations peoples in the Cordillera.
The Willamette Valley was settled by a variety of Native American tribes long before European settlers arrived. The first European settlers in the Willamette Valley were missionaries and fur trappers in the early 19th century. Oregon City, established in 1829, was one of the first settlements in the valley.
The area along the Mississippi River was some of the first land in America's interior explored by Europeans. The French territory of Louisiana was claimed by Robert de La Salle on his voyage through the Great Lakes and down the Mississippi River.
The first ancient societies arose in Mesopotamia and Egypt in the Middle East, in the Indus Valley ... It not only made settlements possible--and ultimately the building of cities--but it also made ... The first great civilizations grew up along rivers.
near the highlands
Agricultural Society
Ease of traveling and shipping along with a supply of running water.
Early Australian settlements consisted of rough wooden lean-tos or shacks, spread out sparsely. The first roads were rough dirt tracks, and convicts could be seen in road gangs working to imrove the roads, or build stone bridges. Early settlements were not planned, and tended to sprawl randomly, usually along creek banks or water courses. The bushland was thick, close to the early settlements until it could be cleared further, and in the unfamiliar Australian heat, they would have smelt strongly of the eucalyptus.
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it was their highway for transportation and trade
i wish i knew
The first settlement in Newfoundland by Europeans was established early in the 11th century by Leif Eriksson, sailing out of Iceland.
because its easy to transport goods and the ocean has an abundance of resources.
The Mesopotamians were one of the first peoples to begin domesticating plants and animals. The Mesopotamians lived in desert settlements along the Nile River.
String theory was first develop in late 1960s and early 1970s.