Cadernos de Questões

Provas Favoritas

Filtros Salvos

Foram encontradas 50 questões.
#2856327
Texto da Questão:

O texto a seguir é referência para as questões de 11 a 13.


We are accustomed to thinking of military success as determined by quality of weaponry, rather than by food supply. But a clear example of how improvements in food supply may decisively increase military success comes from the history of Maori New Zealand. The Maori are the Polynesian people who were the first to settle New Zealand. Traditionally, they fought frequent fierce wars against each other, but only against closely neighboring tribes. Those wars were limited by the modest productivity of their agriculture, whose staple crop was sweet potatoes. It was not possible to grow enough sweet potatoes to feed an army in the field for a long time or on distant marches. When Europeans arrived in New Zealand, they brought potatoes, which beginning around 1815 considerably increased Maori crop yields. Maori could now grow enough food to supply armies in the field for many weeks. The result was a 15-year period in Maori history, from 1818 until 1833, when Maori tribes that had acquired potatoes and guns from the English sent armies out on raids to attack tribes hundreds of miles away that had not yet acquired potatoes and guns. Thus, the potato’s productivity relieved previous limitations on Maori warfare, similar to the limitations that low-productivity corn agriculture imposed on Maya warfare.


(Diamond, J. (2006). Collapse. London: Penguin.)

How did the arrival of Europeans change Maori warfare?

  • They stopped fighting and started to grow potatos.
  • They began to fight only against neighboring tribes.
  • They were able to fight other tribes that lived further away.
  • They became united and fought against the Europeans.
  • They colonized distant areas that were previously uninhabited.
Fale com IAgo
IAgo - Assistente IAProva
IA
Olá! Sou o IAgo, seu assistente aqui no IAProvatec 😊
Veja como posso te ajudar:
Agora