Answer:
sample response
Step-by-step explanation:
Meyer’s theory of sequent occupance is based on his observations of the Kankakee Marsh and Calumet regions of Indiana and Illinois. His theory is that successive groups change the landscape. He noted that different groups are able to leave their own mark on a territory. In this region, he decided that four groups had affected the landscape as they moved into this territory. The first stage was the fur trading stage, during which Native Americans, the Potawatomi, were trading with one another for goods. Their settlements often were temporary. The second stage, the “subsistence agriculture stage,” involved the pioneer settlers moving into the region. Farmers grew crops for themselves and their families. The third stage, the commercial agriculture stage, represented the Corn Belt farmer who grew larger volumes of crops to sell. The final stage, the conurbanization stage, occurred as modern cities grew and spread across the land.