APUSH Unit 1 Progress Check: MCQ
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"On the western side of the ocean, movements of people and ideas . . . preceded the Atlantic connection. Great empires—in the Valley of Mexico, on the Mississippi River . . . —had collapsed or declined in the centuries before 1492. . . .
As Columbus embarked on his first transatlantic voyage, the Mexica, or Aztecs, were consolidating their position [in Mexico]; their city was a center of both trade and military might. Tenochtitlán [the Aztec capital] . . . held 200,000 people, a population greater than in the largest city in contemporary Europe.
". . . The Mississippian culture spread east and west from its center, the city of Cahokia, on the Mississippi River near the site of modern St. Louis. It was a successor to earlier cultures, evidence of which can be seen in the great ceremonial mounds they built. Cahokia declined and was ultimately abandoned completely in the later thirteenth century. . . . Throughout the Southeast, smaller mound-building centers continued."
Karen Ordahl Kupperman, historian, The Atlantic in World History, 2012
Which of the following contributed most significantly to the population trend in pre-Columbian Mexico described in the excerpt?
A) Migration in pursuit of fertile lands
B) Trade and settlement resulting from maize cultivation
C) Low birth rates and high death tolls as a result of European diseases
D) Internal conflict between groups causing political instability
As Columbus embarked on his first transatlantic voyage, the Mexica, or Aztecs, were consolidating their position [in Mexico]; their city was a center of both trade and military might. Tenochtitlán [the Aztec capital] . . . held 200,000 people, a population greater than in the largest city in contemporary Europe.
". . . The Mississippian culture spread east and west from its center, the city of Cahokia, on the Mississippi River near the site of modern St. Louis. It was a successor to earlier cultures, evidence of which can be seen in the great ceremonial mounds they built. Cahokia declined and was ultimately abandoned completely in the later thirteenth century. . . . Throughout the Southeast, smaller mound-building centers continued."
Karen Ordahl Kupperman, historian, The Atlantic in World History, 2012
Which of the following contributed most significantly to the population trend in pre-Columbian Mexico described in the excerpt?
A) Migration in pursuit of fertile lands
B) Trade and settlement resulting from maize cultivation
C) Low birth rates and high death tolls as a result of European diseases
D) Internal conflict between groups causing political instability
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