An overview of how European colonial development in the Americas will change the natural environment. (Earth and Its People, 474) European colonial development in the Americas not only dramatically changed the environment of the New World but also changed the environment of many countries around the world. Many plants, animals, diseases and races are scattered in the Americas. Important crops of native Americans such as potatoes and maize were brought back to the old world of Europe, where they dramatically changed the diet and lifestyle.
America's colonial diversity: British, Native American, African and German identity-forming colonies North America is a multifaceted integration of diversity. The integration of different ethnic, racial, cultural and religious organizations creates environments where British, Native American, African and German identities are far from static. The interaction between these four groups will help to establish the history of North America, so ... most of us think this is the first colony in the new world. This is only half. Jamestown is thought to be our first successful colony, but that is not our first colony attempt. There are several attempts to colonize the New World before Jamestown, what has been regarded as particularly interesting is known as Roanoke and lost colony. This colony colonialist disappeared mysteriously, so it was named.
Since America 's early history, schools have solved cultural diversity in various ways like society. In the colonial period, the New York colony tried to adjust the cultural differences, but the mainstream culture in the United States was standard in the masses and most schools. As the United States approached the nineteenth century, the necessity of a common culture became the foundation of the education forum. - The usefulness of the theory Human beings and the environment always interact and influence each other. Therefore, as an Advanced Practice Nurse (APN), you need to consider other factors that may affect physical, social, cultural, and patient-related environments.