Henry Stanley
the major players in scrambie for africa were british and the principal objective for the land to grab land for mineral resources
yes it is a mineral
is a mineral
Mineral!
It is a Mineral
There is insufficient information to answer this question. What mineral? Also, it seems hard to imagine that only one explorer used a given mineral to find his/her way.
Henry Morton Stanley (1841-1914) was a Welsh journalist and African explorer, famous for finding the lost David Livingstone in 1871. From 1874 to 1877, he explored the Congo River, sponsored in part by king Leopold II of Belgium.
Dougal Orme Malcolm has written: 'The British South Africa Company's mineral rights in Northern Rhodesia' -- subject(s): British South Africa Company, Mineral rights
the british took south Africas gold,diamonds and other mineral resources hope this helps :)
F. C. Basham has written: 'Mineral taxation in British Columbia' -- subject(s): Mineral industries, Taxation
Sure. But never mix the two. If the crankcase has synthetic in it, only top it up with synthetic, and vice-versa.
Fool's gold is not discovered by an explorer, but rather a nickname for the mineral pyrite, which has a gold-like appearance but is actually iron sulfide. The term "fool's gold" comes from its deceptive appearance, leading people to mistake it for real gold.
David Livingstone was a missionary and an explorer. He explored Malawi in 1859. More missionaries came. In 1889, Britain claimed it as a protectorate.
because they wanted to. i don't have a clue maybe it was because of mineral and economic gains.
Henry DeGroot has written: 'British Columbia' -- subject(s): Description and travel, Mines and mineral resources
The British colonized the sub continent because it was rich in natural resources and had the manpower to work the industries the British established there or enhanced. Several products in the sub continent such as tea, cotton, and mineral wealth all helped to enrich the British Empire and make it, for a time, the most powerful nation in the world.
Mineral resources made South Africa a place of interest to the international community. The Dutch and the British fought over control of South Africa's diamond and gold resources.