During the nineteenth century, immigrants from Europe and from Mexico often settled in rural parts of the United States—Europeans in the Great Plains and Mexicans in the Southwest. The experiences of the two groups were similar in that members of both groups often worked on farms. What is one way in which the experiences of the two groups differed? A. European immigrants to the Great Plains tended to settle in mixed communities that included several nationalities. B. European immigrants to the Great Plains often found work in the timber industry. C. Mexican immigrants to the Southwest tended to settle in towns of their own that were far from other ethnic groups. D. Mexican immigrants to the Southwest often found work in the mining industry.