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Laabri

6.1- Present-day Eastern Hemisphere - Practice B

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Last updated about 2 months ago
20 Nsɛmmisa
Hyɛ no nsow a efi ɔkyerɛwfo no hɔ:

Use the historical document(s) and the short readings in the left panel to answer the associated questions.

Use the historical document(s) and the short readings in the left panel to answer the associated questions.

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Geographers use maps to track how landforms, climate, and waterways shape human connections over time. The document shows major trade routes in 1200 CE, 1500 CE, and 1800 CE. Use the legend and timeline panels to answer the question.

Poster-map of the Eastern Hemisphere showing climate zones, landforms, major seas, and trade routes in 1200 CE, 1500 CE, and 1800 CE with a legend.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
1.

If a historian is looking for the clearest map evidence of increased Europe–South Asia sea connections, which time panel provides the best support?

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
2.

Which claim is best supported by comparing the 1200 CE and 1500 CE timeline panels?

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
3.

Describe one change over time shown in the trade routes (1200 CE → 1800 CE). Cite two specific map details: one physical environment feature (climate zone, landform, or body of water) and one route/connection feature. Explain how the physical environment relates to the change.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
4.

Evaluate the claim: “Even when technology and routes change, climate zones, landforms, and waterways continue to shape connections between regions.” Use evidence from at least two time panels and cite at least two map features.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
5.

Which map evidence best supports the idea that a landform limited overland travel routes in 1200 CE more than in later periods?

Regions are areas that share identifiable characteristics. This document compares the Eastern Hemisphere in 1200 CE, 1500 CE, and 1900 CE. As you review each panel, notice how climate, landforms, and trade routes shape regional connections and help explain continuity and change over time.

Poster with a 45-word caption about regions and three dated maps (1200 CE, 1500 CE, 1900 CE) labeling Eastern Hemisphere regions and showing icons for shared characteristics and trade connections.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
6.

Which poster detail is the clearest evidence that regions are defined by shared characteristics, not only political borders?

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7.

Based on the poster’s legend and icons, which region is most strongly associated with monsoon climate and ocean trade across all three time panels?

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8.

Choose one region labeled on the poster. Describe one continuity and one change in that region’s connections (trade routes or links) from 1200 CE to 1900 CE. Cite two specific pieces of poster evidence (an icon/legend item and a route or label).

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
9.

Evaluate the claim: “Because regions are based on shared characteristics, a region’s label can stay the same even when its trade connections change over time.” Use evidence from at least two of the dated panels and cite at least two poster features.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
10.

Which statement best describes a change over time shown by comparing the 1200 CE and 1500 CE panels?

Physical environments influence where people settle, how land is used, and how regions connect. This document compares three periods: 500 CE, 1500 CE, and 1900 CE. Use the maps to trace changes and continuities in rivers, trade routes, and population centers.

Poster with a 46-word caption about how physical environments shape settlement and connections, plus three dated maps (500 CE, 1500 CE, 1900 CE) showing rivers, climate zones, land use, population centers, and changing trade routes.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
11.

Which inference is best supported by the 1900 CE panel’s combination of rail/steam symbols and major river/coastal nodes?

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12.

Which poster evidence best supports the conclusion that rivers often attract dense settlement and farming across time?

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13.

Which statement best describes a change in regional connections shown from 500 CE to 1500 CE?

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14.

Choose one mapped river region (Nile, Indus, or Yellow River). Describe one continuity and one change in population distribution or land use from 500 CE to 1900 CE. Cite two specific poster details and reference at least two time panels.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
15.

Evaluate the claim: “Even when routes and technology change over time, the physical environment continues to shape economic activity and political connections.” Use evidence from at least two time panels and cite at least two poster features.

Cartoons can show how present-day regional problems have roots in the past. In the document, roots represent earlier events and decisions, and branches represent issues today. Use the dated labels to connect causes over time and explain why problems can be multi-causal.

Political cartoon poster with a 48-word caption and a tree diagram linking dated historical roots to present-day regional issues such as migration pressures, water disputes, inequality, and border tensions.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
16.

Select one branch label (a present-day issue) from the cartoon. Cite two different root labels and explain how each past factor could contribute to that issue. Use evidence from the cartoon in your explanation.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
17.

Which inference is best supported by the cartoon’s pairing of “Resource extraction systems (1800s–1900s)” with a branch labeled “economic inequality”?

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18.

Which detail from the cartoon is the clearest evidence for the idea that current problems can be connected to past decisions?

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19.

A student claims: “The cartoon argues that all modern issues have only one historical cause.” Which response best evaluates this claim using evidence?

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20.

Explain how the dated root labels help you reason chronologically about cause and effect. Cite two dated roots and describe what the timeline suggests about how regional issues develop over time.