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19 votes
100 POINTS

Pick ONE of the prompts to respond to. Use Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning. Also put the question in the answer.

Example: What's your fav color? A= My fav color is Blue, I like the color blue. Different people have different fav colors, mine is blue.

OPTION 1: What do you think was the most important development or invention that came out of the United States period of Industrialization? Be sure to use a Claim, Evidence Reasoning paragraph format.

OPTION 2: How were industrial developments connected to one another? In other words, how did one industrial development or invention support the growth of another development or invention?

2 Answers

7 votes

Answer:

My fav color is Blue.me too.it seems that I am in the heaven when I see blue sky.

1.agriculture. because agricultural activities is responsible for development of industry to manage products.

2.in this modern era people are being lazy.they use machines and tools to produce more food in less time.industry helps them to provide chemicals and machines. which helps to continue new invention.

User Beeender
by
3.8k points
10 votes

Answer: i picked the first one

Step-by-step explanation:

At one time, humans, fueled by the animals and plants they ate and the wood they burned, or aided by their domesticated animals, provided most of the energy in use. Windmills and waterwheels captured some extra energy, but there was little in reserve. All life operated within the fairly immediate flow of energy from the Sun to Earth.

Everything changed during the Industrial Revolution, which began around 1750. People found an extra source of energy with an incredible capacity for work. That source was fossil fuels — coal, oil, and natural gas, though coal led the way — formed underground from the remains of plants and animals from much earlier geologic times. When these fuels were burned, they released energy, originally from the Sun, that had been stored for hundreds of millions of years.

Coal was formed when huge trees from the Carboniferous period (345– 280 million years ago) fell and were covered with water, so that oxygen and bacteria could not decay them. Instead, the pressure of the weight of materials above them compressed them into dark, carbonic, ignitable rock.

Most of the Earth’s oil and gas formed over a hundred million years ago from tiny animal skeletons and plant matter that fell to the bottom of seas or were buried in sediment. This organic matter was compacted by the weight of water and soil. Coal, oil, and gas, despite their relative abundance, are not evenly distributed on Earth; some places have much more than others, due to geographic factors and the diverse ecosystems that existed long ago.

User Denis Voloshin
by
3.3k points