2. Between Mesopotamia and the Indus River Valley some of the most commonly traded things were spiritual resources such as ivory or acacia wood.
3. Between Egypt and Nubia, people traded primarily resources that they needed from the other location because those resources were not naturally found in the area. These resources were things like lumber, copper, oil, and bronze.
4. Most civilizations would trade things to each other that the other civilizations did not have and/or could not acquire by natural …show more content…
With the donkey caravan civilizations were able to trade more goods with other civilizations that were further away, with even more efficiency.
6. With the increase in trade routes as well as the increase in commerce all across the world, many resources spread to civilizations that were not in fact tangible building materials. These resources were ideas, many new ideas traveled along the trade routes of the world on the backs of the donkey caravans.
7. The ideas that were traded among civilizations were ideas surrounding activities like how to process iron to make even sharper, stronger, and more durable tools. Or ideas like that in order to greatly increase agricultural productivity and yield, one should build and use a plough. There were also religious ideas that were spread using the trade routes and donkey caravans as a medium. It was on these caravans and routes that the foundational ideas for many of the most prominent religions throughout all of history, one of the most important of those religions at the time was Buddhism.
8. Because of the trade routes, many very important ideas for some of the most major events in later history spread from civilization to civilization. Because of the trade routes, some of the most influential ideas of history formed, and those ideas changed peoples lives in everything from when and what they ate, to what jobs were available for workers in a