Pages

Thursday, 17 May 2018

Stone Age


Stone Age Technology!


There is evidence suggesting that the 2.5 million year limit for stone tool
manufacture might be pushed further back.
The reason is that the capacity of tool use and even its manufacture
is not exclusive of our species


In addition, some researchers have claimed that the earliest stone tools
might even have an earlier origin: 3.4 million years ago.
Although no stone tools that old have been found

The Stone Age begins with the first production of stone implements
and ends with the first use of bronze. Since the chronological limits of the Stone
Age are based on technological development rather than actual date
ranges, its length varies in different areas of the world.
The earliest global date for the beginning of the Stone Age is 2.5 million years
ago in Africa, and the earliest end date is about 3300 BCE,
which is the beginning of Bronze Age in the Near East.



Monday, 7 May 2018

`Sost`



Technology  Differences Through The Years.


Technology makes life easier

`1` Paper and Pen - Computer

`2` Horses/Bikes - Cars

`3` Landline - Cellphone


`4` Letters - Emails

`5` Horses - Bikes/Scooters
My information shows how far technology has changed
over the years!

Monday, 26 February 2018

'Social Studies'

Harriet Tubman

AMERICAN ABOLITIONIST

Alternative Title: Araminta Ross
Harriet Tubman, née Araminta Ross, (born c. 1820, Dorchester county,
Maryland, U.S.—died March 10, 1913, Auburn, New York), American bondwoman
who escaped from slavery in the South to become a leading abolitionist before the American
Civil War. She led hundreds of bondsmen to freedom in the North along the route of the
Underground Railroad—an elaborate secret network of safe houses organized for that
purpose.
Born a slave, Araminta Ross later adopted her mother’s first name,
Harriet. From early childhood she worked variously as a maid, a nurse, a field hand, a cook,
and a woodcutter. About 1844 she married John Tubman, a free black.
In 1849, on the strength of rumours that she was about to be sold,
Tubman fled to Philadelphia, leaving behind her husband, parents, and siblings.
In December 1850 she made her way to Baltimore, Maryland, whence she led her sister and
two children to freedom. That journey was the first of some 19 increasingly dangerous
forays into Maryland in which, over the next decade, she conducted upward of 300 fugitive
slaves along the Underground Railroad to Canada. By her extraordinary courage, ingenuity,
persistence, and iron discipline, which she enforced upon her charges,
Tubman became the railroad’s most famous conductor and was known as the
“Moses of her people.” It has been said that she never lost a fugitive she was leading to
freedom.
Rewards offered by slaveholders for Tubman’s capture eventually
totaled $40,000. Abolitionists, however, celebrated her courage.
John Brown, who consulted her about his own plans to organize an antislavery raid of a
federal armoury in Harpers Ferry, Virginia (now in West Virginia), referred to her as
“General” Tubman. About 1858 she bought a small farm near Auburn, New York,
where she placed her aged parents (she had brought them out of Maryland in June 1857)
and herself lived thereafter. From 1862 to 1865 she served as a scout, as well as nurse and
laundress, for Union forces in South Carolina. For the Second Carolina Volunteers,
under the command of Col. James Montgomery, Tubman spied on Confederate territory.
When she returned with information about the locations of warehouses and ammunition,
Montgomery’s troops were able to make carefully planned attacks.
For her wartime service Tubman was paid so little that she had to
support herself by selling homemade baked goods.
After the Civil War Tubman settled in Auburn and began taking in orphans and the elderly, a practice that eventuated in the Harriet Tubman Home for Indigent Aged Negroes. The home later attracted the support of former abolitionist comrades and of the citizens of Auburn, and it continued in existence for some years after her death. In the late 1860s and again in the late 1890s she applied for a federal pension for her Civil War services. Some 30 years after her service, a private bill providing for $20 monthly was passed by Congress.