With the development of mass transportation in the later nineteenth century in large European cities

a. workers tended to remain in the city center, while the wealthy moved into the outskirts.
b. new working class neighborhoods began to ring many cities.
c. city centers became strictly business districts as residents left for the suburbs.
d. the possibilities for worker insurrection were improved.
e. the quality of urban life actually deteriorated.


b

History

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Which one of the following is NOT true of the community of Cahokia on the Mississippi?

A) It was the most populated urban complex north of Mexico. B) Intensive farming supported the urban population. C) Cahokia had been abandoned by the 14th century. D) Written records of the nobility have survived.

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In 1790, Chesapeake planters saw falling prices for ____________________

Fill in the blank(s) with correct word

History

Within the labor movement, how did the CIO respond to the anticommunist hysteria of the late 1940s? a. It labeled it as un-American. b. It called for solidarity among all workers against management while also pledging its support for the capitalistsystem

c. It participated in it by expelling some unions for allegedly being dominated by communists. d. It denounced it as a management tool to weaken organized labor.

History

Which of the following accurately describes the relationship between foraging and farming in early human societies?

A. Even after farming was developed, most early human communities preferred foraging and engaged in organized agriculture on an infrequent basis. B. Farming was the inevitable outgrowth of foraging, a notion supported by the fact that several early hominin species developed farming techniques. C. Foraging and farming coexisted for thousands of years. D. Once communities adopted organized agriculture, farming replaced foraging within a generation or two.

History