cause of you
in late 1800s and early 1900s the industrial revolution took place
Was that word even invented then? They didnt have the means to measure pollution as they do now, and then their biggest pollution problems were waste removal and drainage. Because of high consumerism now we have plastic waste, chemical waste and many more.
Germany and Great Britain were involved in a naval rivalry in the early 1900s.
Railroad tracks that were built in the early 1900s were constructed from steel. The steel was used to replace rail tracks and railway cars that were built from iron prior to the early 1900s.
They are types of architectural styles of the early 1900s.
The Hudson River, with ships on it standing for early trade with the colony of New Amsterdam.
It is named for Henry Hudson, an English mansailing for the Dutch East India Company, who explored it in 1609. The Hudson River was originally named the Mauritius River, which is claimed to be the name given by Hudson in honor of Prince Maurice of Nassau. Alternatively, it is said to be the name given by Sixteenth Century European adventurers, explorers, and fishermen who knew the river as River Mauritius, 'The River of Mountains'.The Hudson River was named after the explorer Henry Hudson who explored that area in the early 1600's for the Dutch.
Hudson River Valley
Hudson is it I just took a quiz and it was correct so it's Hudson river.
Because he discovered the Hudson river, the Hudson bay, and the Hudson strait.
in late 1800s and early 1900s the industrial revolution took place
Was that word even invented then? They didnt have the means to measure pollution as they do now, and then their biggest pollution problems were waste removal and drainage. Because of high consumerism now we have plastic waste, chemical waste and many more.
Both had policies of empire-building in the Pacific in the early 1900s.
Both had policies of empire-building in the Pacific in the early 1900s.
Both had policies of empire-building in the Pacific in the early 1900s.
Hudson Valley
No, Henry Hudson did not discover silk. He was an English explorer known for his voyages in the early 17th century, particularly his exploration of the Arctic and the river that now bears his name, the Hudson River. Silk, on the other hand, has been produced in China for thousands of years and was already known to the world well before Hudson's time.