Which of the following is a true statement about African building materials during the first millennium C.E.?
a. Stone was increasingly used in West Africa during in the first millennium C.E.
b. The only construction material used during that period was dried mud.
c. Mosques were always constructed of wood.
d. The heavy use of mortar was predominant in buildings constructed at Great Zimbabwe.
e. Metal became an important building material as early as 1000 B.C.E.
a
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What was the most popular pastime during the Great Depression?
A) ?watching television. B) ?going to the movies. C) ?taking a leisurely drive. D) ?attending baseball games.
The new cabinet-level agency charged with protecting America against foreign terrorist attacks was the
a. Department of Homeland Security. b. Federal Bureau of Investigation. c. USA-Patriot Act. d. Central Intelligence Agency. e. Coast Guard.
What was the main political goal of the Great Powers during the Congress of Vienna?
a) to create a “Concert of Europe” run on harmonious values and traditions from the ancien régime b) to create large nation-states that the smaller states of Europe would never challenge Consider This: The guiding principle of the Congress of Vienna was legitimacy, and for diehard conservatives, that meant turning the European clock back to 1789. See 8.1.2: Winners and Losers. c) to carve up the Ottoman Empire to limit its ability to threaten Europe in the future Consider This: The guiding principle of the Congress of Vienna was legitimacy, and for diehard conservatives, that meant turning the European clock back to 1789. See 8.1.2: Winners and Losers. d) to recompense the Russian tsar for the damage to his territory when Napoleon marched on Moscow Consider This: The guiding principle of the Congress of Vienna was legitimacy, and for diehard conservatives, that meant turning the European clock back to 1789. See 8.1.2: Winners and Losers.
Which of the following was a proposal to extend the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific?
a) Crittenden Compromise b) Emancipation Proclamation c) Enrollment Act d) Kansas-Nebraska Act