Eurasia Essay

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    The Silk Road Essay

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    The Silk Road was an intricate and evolving network of overland trade routes that linked China, India, and western Eurasia for centuries. The trade route was key to the diffusion and transportation of technology, goods, religions, and language throughout Asia, the Mediterranean, Africa and southern Europe. As the strongest link between major population centers in the largest landmass on earth, the Silk Road was one of the most important of all long-distance trade routes in human history. Study of

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    were found in Eurasia during the time that the third-wave civilizations flourished, which included horses, camels, mules, yaks and oxen; however no such animals were found in the Americas. Therefore the Eastern hemisphere was able to

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    feat and create one of the largest empires in history, the Mongol Yuan Dynasty lasted from 1279-1368. And by the end of the Mongol Empire they had made a huge impact by helping in the spread ideas, technology, raw materials and disease across Afro-Eurasia. The Chinggis Khan, or Supreme Ruler with support from the unified tribes started his campaign across Asia in 1206 and began conquering and unifying all the kingdoms under a single empire. Under his successors, the Mongol Empire spread even further

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    CCOT Eurasia developed an integrated network of economic activity by the year 1200 C.E.. Between 1000 BCE and 1200 CE, it expanded greatly. The principle relied heavily on changes in trade networks, governmental alliances, religion and the continuity of warfare and social hierarchies. Trade networks are crucial to any economic scenario. They allow for the free flow of goods and services to be carried out over wide expanses of land and both within and throughout cultures. Examples of this are most

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    double-sided exchange between the “New World” of the Americas and the “Old World” of the Afro-Eurasia. The opening of the routes between two “Worlds” distributed a wide range of new crops and livestock. According to many environmentalists, this biological expansion brought a lot of damage to different ecosystems. However, in general, The Columbian Exchange led to the growth of the population. Ships returned to Afro-Eurasia with the sunflowers, tomatoes, and pumpkins. The most considerable organisms, which

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    Roots Of Inequality Essay

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    The Roots of Inequality Why where 200 spaniards able to conquer an entire civilization. It was in direct correlation with what kind of crops eurasia was able to grow, what animals they had access to domesticate, their immunity to smallpox, and their access to resources to make steel. The world would be so vastly different then it is today if it weren't for some key factors. The Europeans had a semi-arid climate which let them be able to grow wheat. They also had 13 of the 14 domesticable animals

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    war was of neither importance nor consequence. At the beginning of the novel “Oceania was at war with Eurasia and in alliance with Eastasia.” According to records it had always been that way. Though “Winston well knew, it was only four years since Oceania had been at war with Eastasia and in alliance with Eurasia…… Officially the change of partners had never happened. Oceania was at war with Eurasia: therefore Oceania had always been at war

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    The age of exploration was a period of time that European ships traveled around the world to find new trading routes and find gold. The world at that time was separated into two worlds the “Old World” (the Americas) and the “New World”(Eurasia). The Age of Exploration impacted the world in many ways. First, socially the Europeans new contact with the new world resulted in a cultural and religious change among the people. The need to spread Christianity plays a big part of this cultural change. Europeans

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    with the first known inhabitants of Eurasia and Australia/New Guinea. Human colonization of new continents and islands links to the extinction of many species, known as the overkill hypothesis or as some believe the climate hypothesis. Humans continued to spread to lands like Siberia and the Americas via Berlin Strait/Berlin Land Bridge leading to Alaska. Although the conditions of each continent were vastly different, someone could not have guessed that Eurasia would be the one to develop the quickest

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    The Earth continents are all different in some way. The most important are their physical differences. Most of them are wider from north to south than they are from east to west, so their “major-axis” is the north-south axis. Also, the differences in shapes and sizes of the continents results in big differences between their civilizations. In world history, agriculture arose in certain areas and then spread to other areas. How quickly and the ease with which it spread varied greatly. It’s thought

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