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    What is the Columbian Exchange? What was “exchanged?” The Columbian Exchange is an important event that has taken place in fifteenth and sixteenth century. It started when the Europeans came across the Atlantic Ocean. Who we know as Christopher Columbus, was the explorer who “discovered” the Americas. During the voyages, he had taken from Spain he was able find a different culture. He was able to see what he hadn’t yet discovered until 1492. I will be going in depth about the Columbian Exchange.…

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    As I would see it, the Europeans profited more from the Columbian Exchange. The Columbian trade of harvests influenced both the Old World and the New. Amerindian trims that have crossed seas—for instance, maize to China and the white potato to Ireland—have been stimulants to populace development in the Old World. The last's yields and animals have had much a similar impact in the Americas—for instance, wheat in Kansas and the Pampa, and meat steers in Texas and Brazil. The full story of the…

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    The Columbian Exchange is one of our most significant events in the history of our world. It all started when Christopher Columbus returned to Spain in 1493 with plants and animals he had found in the New World. Columbus had sparked an era of global exploration that has changed the world to this day through the exchange of plants, animals, and disease. The most important item in the Columbian Exchange was corn. It is important because it was a staple crop in many colonies. Through the Columbian…

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    exchange of diseases and resources between the New and Old World, impacted the Atlantic World drastically. Amazingly, once Christopher Columbus struck the Bahamas in 1492, he brought two extremely separate biological worlds together once again. This creating a long, intensive cycle of triangular trade across the Atlantic World. However, the effects of the Columbian Exchange were not all necessarily positive or helpful. Once Columbus arrived in the Americas, new diseases broke out to an American…

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    between Europe, Africa, and the Americas also called the New World. The Columbian Exchange had positive and negative effects on Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Throughout the Columbian Exchange, Europe encountered many positive and negative effects. One of the positive effects, was the introduction of maize to Europe. Maize helped feed European animals and people, resulting in huge amounts of population growth. It gave the Europeans a new ingredients for their food, and eventually became…

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    The Columbian Exchange had both a positive and negative effect on the New World. First off, when Columbus arrived in the Americas in 1492, Europeans began an exchange of ideas, plants, people and animals. In the PBS LearningMedia Article, the text explicitly states, “But throughout the 21st Century, other views on Columbus and what happened once Europeans landed in the Americas began to be heard. Native Americans, people descended from enslaved Africans, and others made the case that Columbus,…

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    the Old World meets the New and changed life for both sides with the transfer of crops, livestock, and disease is commonly called the Columbian Exchange. The Columbian Exchange or the Great Exchange occurred after europeans touched shore on the New World after the initial Christopher Columbus voyage. In 1972 historian Alfred W. Crosby coined the term “The Columbian Exchange” with his book called the same title where he wrote about the ecological ramifications of Columbus to the New World.…

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    Meaning of the Title, “When Worlds Collide” In the first chapter of US History, the title, “When Worlds Collide” is given to describe this chapter. This represents that the Europeans and Natives had different cultures, diseases, plants, animals, and technology, as if they were in 2 completely different worlds, then met up with each other once Columbus set foot in the Americas. These worlds collided when Columbus, rather than sailing to India, accidentally sailed to the Americas in 1492,…

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    Before 1492, Europeans had mapped out the world as they knew it and used that knowledge to dominate trade and wealth. There was a never-ending struggle for power among much of Europe. Asia and the Middle East were contenders as well. Spain, France, and England were the boldest and had the most resources at the time. To gain the upper hand, Spain financed many voyages to find shorter trade routes to the West indies and Asia. The monarchs of Spain, Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabel I of Castile,…

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    arriving to the New World. His appearance to the New World brought about the agricultural lifestyle and influenced the way people lived. Tobacco, turkeys silver, and potatoes were various products that were exchanged to the Europeans. Earthworms also became noteworthy. Accidentally exchanged by the Europeans, earthworms impacted the agriculture by packing nutrients in the previously worm-free soil. Although there are many positive aspects of this trade of plants, animals, and new forms of…

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