1. Jennifer Trucking Company operates a large rig transportation business in Texas that transports locally grown vegetables to San Diego, California. The company owns 5 large rigs and hires local drivers paid fixed salaries monthly, regardless of the number of trips or tons of cargo that each driver transports each month. The below table presents details about the number of drivers and the total cargo transported by the company at different staff levels.…
• Longevity or continuity of the organization: [What features of each form relate to forced dissolution of the business organization?]…
Since societies in the Classical World achieved a higher degree of internal organization than earlier communities, they were able to extend their focus to trade. Although the Silk Roads were the most well known trade routes during the classical era, the Spice trade was also prominent. Being affiliated with a blend of different societies and regions, the Silk Roads saw numerous amounts of goods. Similar to the Silk Roads, the Spice trade was also vast but mostly carried out by maritime traveling.…
A. Existing trade routes flourished including the Silk Roads, the Mediterranean Sea, trans-Saharan and the Indian Ocean Basin, and promoted the growth of powerful new trading cities such as Novgorod, Timbuktu, Hangzhou, Calicut, Baghdad, and Venice these trade routes carried agriculture technology and culture.…
• As in the previous chapter, this time period witnessed a tremendous growth in long-distance trade due to improvements in technology. Trade through the Silk Road, the Indian Ocean, the trans-Saharan trade route, and the Mediterranean Sea led to the spread of ideas, religions, and technology. During the period known as Pax Mongolia, when peace and order were established in Eurasia due to the vast Mongol Empire, trade and cultural interaction were at their height.…
The most significant routes were the Silk Road & sea lanes in the Indian Ocean. With the silk road, Eurasia & west Africa profited while in the sealanes, southeast Asia, India, Arabia, Africa, China, Japan, & Africa profited.…
During the 600s to the 1450s, trading was mostly done by land. There were long-distance trading occurring then, but not as much sea travel and ocean trade routes as in the 1450s to 1750s time period. The post-classical period (600-1450) included the long-distance trade from the European to the African kingdoms. However, there wasn’t any constant trading happening between the eastern and western hemisphere. On the other side, during the time frame after this (1450-1750), trading was constant with the western and eastern hemispheres now connected by sea-based travel. World trade patterns where happening due to the Atlantic Ocean trade eventually crossing of the Pacific Ocean. Trading began with small items and grew to even humans, slaves. Trade routes influenced the cultures and belief systems back then also. Connections between different people brought both positive and negative effects. Technology also improved because of necessary traveling items.…
The Silk Roads were land-based trade routes linking pastoral and agricultural peoples as well as large civilizations. How were goods transported along the Silk Roads to sustain the networks of exchange among its diverse people?…
The Silk Road is a series of trade routes that exchanged both goods and cultural influences in and around the Asian continent. Silk was the most important good that was traded in this route because of its rarity and beauty. In addition, cotton, paper making, textiles, gunpowder, and spices were important goods traded as well. Religion was the most important and influential cultural exchange in this trade route. The spread of Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all spread across Eurasia and were also tied to certain religious communities. In the Indian Ocean, the use of the Monsoons helped the Indian empires grow both economically and in their population size. Urbanization took place in Delhi and large port cities that developed them economically. Incense and horses were introduced from Arabia and Southwest Asia, while goods such as gold, ivory, and slaves came from East Asia. A change that…
Although the silk road and the Indian ocean trading network both diffused religions,technology,and the transfer of goods. However the silk road supported a strong state for defenses, primarily traded in luxury goods that did not benefit the common man, different religions diffused on each of the trade networks as well. The indian ocean network on the other hand dealt in the trade of bulk goods such as timber and spice’s. The indian ocean network was also never controlled by one large group. The Indian ocean network was often not considered a relay trade where one group gave the goods and the other side received them,but on the silk road the trade was continued one group gave goods to another and then they traded that for something else with…
| -their river for trade was the Nile-trade networks were to Nubia, east Africa, and north Africa-items traded wereebony, gems, slaves, linen, wine, wood…
One of the world’s largest and flourishing arrangements of trade came from Eurasia. It is know as the Silk Roads, this is a land based trade system and these routes have connected agriculture and pastoral people. Along with big civilizations on the continent’s border. No one knew the length of the networks’ of trade, it was a “relay trade” which is when goods are passed down the border. The Silk Roads began by blossoming in the early centuries, they provided safety for merchants and travelers, a large array of good made its way across the roads.…
Both the Trans-Saharan and Silk Road relied heavily on the use of caravans, merchants, and domesticated animals as a primary source of conducting trades and commerce along such long paths. In Africa, the domestication of camels proved to be a monumental invention to boost the flow of trade and commerce. With camels, merchants could travel across the Sahara much faster and more effectively with fewer resources. The people living on the trade route through the Sahara were able to make a living off of herding and selling domesticated camels in large quantities to merchants and create caravans to aid in the crossing of the Sahara. In Asia and the Middle East, the Silk Road was almost primarily dependent on the movement of merchants on caravans, just like in the Sahara. Horses acted as the most effective form of transportation and by the time 600 C.E. rolled around, better innovations for controlling domesticated horses arose. The most predominate of these inventions was the stirrup which is the loop at the bottom of a saddle which gave a rider more stability while riding at a high speed or at great distances. The stirrup and domesticated camels were so influential at the time of discovery that even to this day, both are still present in the areas where the Silk Road and Trans-Saharan trade routes were located.…
The Egyptian empire traded mostly through ship hulls made from planks of wood and grass. In those hulls was their main source of trade, but they still use land routes through different civilizations across the way of trading. They mostly traded in with goods more than they traded out with goods. They mostly traded silks oils and perfumes the most luxurious of trade goods was the perfumes, furniture and oils just because of the scents that followed with them and how rare it was to blend different things together to make such a divine smelling aroma. The Egyptians were very prosperous and traded their goods through Lebanon, Canaan, Arad and other regions of the country. Some pharaohs and creators had their names stamped on the furniture and cookware with a thin strip of gold to make the furniture very pricey and expensive in some other regions.…
Camel is the animal that is known by fatty mass on its back called hump. There are two species of camels. The first is the dromedary that has a single hump and lives in North Africa and the Middle East. The other is the Bactrian camel which is living in the Central Asian.Because of adaptation to living on the waterless desert; Camel known by "the ship of the desert" .Camel has a wonderful ability to bear the thirst and ability to tolerate a lack of water in the tissues of its body. Camel stores the water in its body. The hump is the natural place to store trans fats from its food surplus and also is suitable for water conservation within the synthesis of lipids and grease. Also, camel's feet are stores of water; feet tissue is working to maintain water in the form of strings. When camel needs to water, the blood absorbs water from the feet. Likewise, Camel keeps urine in the bladder as long as it is in need of water, when it needs the water; the blood absorbs urine again and pushes it into the stomach, especially bacteria converts urine to protein and water. In addition, Camel's nose is doing the condensation of water vapor that comes out with the exhaled air, so it is the only animal that restores the water in the air that comes out of it.Camel has the ability to drink sea water because the kidneys get rid of excess salts. The camel drinks profusely about 18 liters of water if it felt thirsty without being affected. All camel products are useful. Camel's milk is the most fit on vitamin C and a range of B vitamins, compared with other types of milk. For example, camel's milk contains about three times the vitamin C found in cow's milk. Camel's milk contains higher amounts of iron, calcium, potassium, compared with cow's milk. The amount of iron in camel milk about ten times those found in cow's milk. In addition, treatment by camel urine is useful .According to the research; it is useful in preventing hair loss and treatment of some types of cancer and…