Impact of industrial revolution
Essential Questions:
How did the shift from the Agricultural Revolution to the Industrial Revolution create our "challenge" in my ancient empire?
It created an economic challenge. Instead of everyone making their own things, and farming their own food, they started buying things. Another challenge was the inequality and unfairness. Big boss companies took over factories, and made the most money, but using cheap and poorly paid labor. This made sure they (the rich) stayed rich and the poor stayed poor. It also made a new idea that you work to get money, and they made having money the whole goal in life.
-My notes are my citation
How does the ongoing flux of the Industrial age continue to impact our "challenge" in its current form?
The change of the growing age continues to impact overfishing in its current form because as time goes on overfishing continues to happen overtime. Overfishing can impact entire ecosystems. It can change the size of fish remaining, as well as how they reproduce and the speed at which they mature. When too many fish are taken out of the ocean it creates an imbalance that can erode the food web and lead to a loss of other important marine life, including vulnerable species like sea turtles and corals. (Retrieved from World Life)
How does this impact our "challenge" in its local version of Hawaiʻi nei?
This impacts our “challenge” in it’s local version of Hawai’i nei by with the problems that were happening and still happening till this day also have an effect in Hawai’i nei. In Hawai’i, overfishing is a big problem maybe because we think that since we are surrounded by the ocean we have all the fish in the world, but we need to realize we should only take what we need. scientists blamed overfishing for the steep decline, which affects three-quarters of the species once commonly found on coral reefs, delighting snorkeling tourists and feeding subsistence fishermen in Hawaii’s coastal communities.
Hawaiian reef fish are in decline. (2008, July 9). Retrieved from https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2008-jul-09-na-reef9-story.html.
Overfishing. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.worldwildlife.org/threats/overfishing.
How did the shift from the Agricultural Revolution to the Industrial Revolution create our "challenge" in my ancient empire?
It created an economic challenge. Instead of everyone making their own things, and farming their own food, they started buying things. Another challenge was the inequality and unfairness. Big boss companies took over factories, and made the most money, but using cheap and poorly paid labor. This made sure they (the rich) stayed rich and the poor stayed poor. It also made a new idea that you work to get money, and they made having money the whole goal in life.
-My notes are my citation
How does the ongoing flux of the Industrial age continue to impact our "challenge" in its current form?
The change of the growing age continues to impact overfishing in its current form because as time goes on overfishing continues to happen overtime. Overfishing can impact entire ecosystems. It can change the size of fish remaining, as well as how they reproduce and the speed at which they mature. When too many fish are taken out of the ocean it creates an imbalance that can erode the food web and lead to a loss of other important marine life, including vulnerable species like sea turtles and corals. (Retrieved from World Life)
How does this impact our "challenge" in its local version of Hawaiʻi nei?
This impacts our “challenge” in it’s local version of Hawai’i nei by with the problems that were happening and still happening till this day also have an effect in Hawai’i nei. In Hawai’i, overfishing is a big problem maybe because we think that since we are surrounded by the ocean we have all the fish in the world, but we need to realize we should only take what we need. scientists blamed overfishing for the steep decline, which affects three-quarters of the species once commonly found on coral reefs, delighting snorkeling tourists and feeding subsistence fishermen in Hawaii’s coastal communities.
Hawaiian reef fish are in decline. (2008, July 9). Retrieved from https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2008-jul-09-na-reef9-story.html.
Overfishing. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.worldwildlife.org/threats/overfishing.