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Test Bank for A People and a Nation A History of the United States, Volume I To 1877, 9th Edition

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Test Bank for A People and a Nation A History of the United States, Volume I To 1877, 9th Edition

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  • July 28, 2022
  • 248
  • 2021/2022
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Chapter 1—Three Old Worlds Create a New, 1492-1600


SHORT ANSWER
Instructions:
 Identify each item. Give an explanation or description of theitem. Answer thequestions
who, what, where, and when.
 Explain thehistorical significance of each item. Establish thehistorical context in which
theitem exists. Establish theitem as theresult of or as thecause of other factors existing in
thesociety under study. Answer this question: What were thepolitical, social, economic,
and/or cultural consequences of this item?
1. Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca
ANS:
2. Paleo-Indians
ANS:
3. Teotihuacán
ANS:
4. the Mayas
ANS:
5. the Pueblos
ANS:
6. the Mississippians
ANS:
7. the City of theSun (Cahokia)
ANS:
8. Monks Mound
ANS:
9. The Aztecs
ANS:
10. Huitzilopochtli
ANS:
11. Tenochtilán
ANS:
12. sexual division of labor
ANS:
13. Upper Guinea
ANS:
14. Lower Guinea
ANS:
15. dual-sex principle
ANS:
16. the Sandé and Poro cults
ANS:
17. the Black Death
ANS:

,18. the Hundred Years' War
ANS:

19. the lateen sail, thecompass, theastrolabe, and thequadrant
ANS:
20. Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile
ANS:
21. movable type and theprinting press
ANS:
22. Travels by Marco Polo
ANS:
23. the Mediterranean Atlantic
ANS:
24. the Azores, theMadeiras, and theCanaries
ANS:
25. the Northeast Trades and theWesterlies
ANS:
26. Prince Henry theNavigator
ANS:
27. São Tomé
ANS:
28. Christopher Columbus
ANS:


29. Amerigo Vespucci
ANS:
30. Leif Ericsson
ANS:
31. John Cabot
ANS:
32. Hernán Cortés
ANS:
33. Malinche
ANS:
34. the Spanish model of colonization
ANS:
35. the encomienda system
ANS:
36. Spanish missionaries
ANS:
37. the Columbian exchange
ANS:
38. smallpox

, ANS:


39. syphilis
ANS:
40. sugar, thehorse, and tobacco
ANS:
41. maize
ANS:
42. John Hawkins and Sir Francis Drake
ANS:
43. Richard Hakluyt
ANS:
44. Sir Walter Raleigh
ANS:
45. Roanoke
ANS:
46. A Briefe and True Report of theNew Found Land of Virginia
ANS:


MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Which of thefollowing were thefirst to cultivate food crops in theAmericas?
a. European colonists in South America
b. Indians along theAtlantic seaboard of North America
c. Jesuit missionaries in southern California
d. Indians living in central Mexico
ANS: D

2. Which of thefollowing was a consequence of thespread of agricultural techniques among Indian
groups?
a. Cultural differences among groups of Indians disappeared.
b. Most groups began to live a more sedentary existence.
c. The various groups began to engage in almost constant warfare.
d. Political power within thevarious groups fell into thehands of land-owning elite.
ANS: B
3. Why did thepractice of settled agriculture lead to theemergence of more complex civilizations?
a. People practicing settled agriculture needed a more structured political system.
b. People with a steady supply of food were free to devote their energy to accumulating
wealth, producing art, and creating ceremonies and rituals.
c. An increase in thenumber of children in such societies gave rise to theeducational
institutions associated with complex civilizations.
d. Property owners in such societies demanded laws and institutions that protected their
property rights.
ANS: B
4. What did thecity-states of Mesoamerica and theurban clusters known as theMississippian culture have
in common?

, a. Each practiced a form of township democracy.
b. Each was engaged in extensive trade in theCaribbean basin.
c. Each had religious beliefs that were monotheistic.
d. Each reached theheight of its power only after achieving success in agriculture.
ANS: D
5. Which of thefollowing best explains thedifferences in themeans of subsistence and lifestyles that
emerged among Indian groups in theNew World?
a. Disagreements over political beliefs caused groups to separate.
b. The various tribes migrated to theAmericas separately and came from widely divergent
cultures.
c. Different Indian groups adapted their means of subsistence and lifestyles to
theenvironment in which they settled.
d. Geographic barriers in theNew World made interaction between different Indian tribes
impossible.
ANS: C
6. Which of thefollowing best explains thefact that bands of Indian hunters remained small in thearea of
theGreat Basin (present-day Nevada and Utah)?
a. The disease environment dramatically lowered thelife expectancy of theinhabitants of
theGreat Basin.
b. The tribes of theGreat Basin enacted laws that imposed strict limitations on thesize of each
band within thetribe.
c. The inadequate supply of large game made it difficult to find food in sufficient quantity to
support large groups.
d. The practice of human sacrifice significantly reduced thepopulation of thebands and tribes
of theGreat Basin.
ANS: C

7. North American Indian agricultural societies were alike in which of thefollowing respects?
a. They all defined theextended family matrilineally.
b. The clans that made up these societies were defined patrilineally.
c. They all allocated agricultural chores to women.
d. Women were allowed to be chiefs in all these societies.
ANS: A
8. The design of pre-Columbian Indian villages indicates which of thefollowing?
a. These societies had an extensive trade network with one another.
b. Native Americans once had a common culture because there are no differences among
thevillages of hunter-gatherer societies, agricultural societies, and fishing societies.
c. The design of Indian villages around a central place of worship indicates that, although
widely separated, all Indians had thesame religious beliefs.
d. The defensive design of villages indicates that North American Indians fought with each
other long before thearrival of Europeans.
ANS: D
9. Women were most likely to hold political positions in
a. hunting tribes.
b. tribes that had no sexual division of labor.
c. nomadic tribes.
d. agricultural tribes.
ANS: D
10. Which of thefollowing is true of theAlgonquians?

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