In the 1800s, the Tasmanian Aborigines started to be systematically decimated by the Europeans. Their land was taken, and many were relocated to some of the Tasmanian islands. The last full-blooded Aborigine died in 1876.
Both the kangaroo and the dingo were in Australia in the 1800s. The kangaroo is native to Australia, and dingoes were brought over by the Aborigines, although it is not certain when.
yeet
In the early 1800s, around mines & quarries.
Immigrants who came from Europe were processed at Ellis Island.
They were persecuted, exiled, or kicked out of a country.
In the 1800s, the Tasmanian Aborigines started to be systematically decimated by the Europeans. Their land was taken, and many were relocated to some of the Tasmanian islands. As a race, they were wiped out. The last full-blooded Aborigine died in 1876.
They didn't. A large number of Tasmanian Aborigines were indeed massacred during the 1800s, but one of the main problems was the relocation of the remainder to poorly-resourced islands, where they died from neglect, after being promised they would be looked after. This all occurred during the 1800s. The last fullblooded Tasmanian Aborigine, Truganini, died in 1876.
Both the kangaroo and the dingo were in Australia in the 1800s. The kangaroo is native to Australia, and dingoes were brought over by the Aborigines, although it is not certain when.
It means that it happened in that time period:)
In America, slavery.
yeet
The Tasmanian Forester kangaroo, which is actually a sub-species of the Eastern grey kangaroo, has seen its population reduce by up to 90% since the 1800s. As of late 2010, the population of the Tasmanian Forester kangaroo was estimated at 26 000, with only 18 000 of those being adults.
skiing was around long before the 1800s
the California gold rush
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lots of things
No.