History, asked by SerenityLambe, 8 months ago

Though unemployment during the Great Depression was widespread, it was
higher in some parts of the United States than in others. A geographer uses
unemployment data points to make a map, while an economic historian
arranges data about state-by-state unemployment levels in a table.
What information might the geographer be able to convey more clearly than
the economic historian?

O A. The relative sizes of the areas affected by each level of
unemployment

B. The percentage of each state's population that was unemployed

C. The years when unemployment was worst in each area

D. The level of unemployment in each state​

Answers

Answered by yashvi27072007
1

Answer:

A 60kg boy runs up a hill through a height of 6m in 3 seconds how much work does he do against gravitational force

a)3000

b)2528

c)3500

d)3528

(with solution)

Explanation:

Though unemployment during the Great Depression was widespread, it was

higher in some parts of the United States than in others. A geographer uses

unemployment data points to make a map, while an economic historian

arranges data about state-by-state unemployment levels in a table.

What information might the geographer be able to convey more clearly than

the economic historian?

O A. The relative sizes of the areas affected by each level of

unemployment

B. The percentage of each state's population that was unemployed

C. The years when unemployment was worst in each area

D. The level of unemployment in each state

Answered by RoxAmar
0

Answer:

A geographer would be able to convey a more detailed account of the unemployment data. The economic historian is stuck with the data for each state, but the geographer could go deeper and show the data for small towns, villages, and cities. If a person needs data for a region within a state, the geographer's map is more suitable.

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