Examples of Migration Period in the following topics:
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- Different theories explain the Vedic Period, c. 1200 BCE, when Indo-Aryan
people on the Indian subcontinent migrated to the Ganges Plain.
- Other origin hypotheses include
an Indo-Aryan Migration in the period 1800-1500 BCE, and a fusion
of the nomadic people known as Kurgans.
- Most history of this period is derived
from the Vedas, the oldest scriptures in Hinduism, which help chart the
timeline of an era from 1750-500 BCE, known as the Vedic Period.
- The Indo-Aryans settled various parts of the plain during their migration and the Vedic Period.
- Describe the defining characteristics of the Vedic Period and the cultural consequenes of the Indo-Aryan Migration
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- Cell migration is a central process in the development and maintenance of multicellular organisms.
- Eukaryotic cell migration typically is far more complex and can consist of combinations of different migration mechanisms.
- The migration of cultured cells attached to a surface is commonly studied using microscopy.
- Other eukaryotic cells are observed to migrate similarly.
- Phase images of BSC 1 cells migrating in a scratch assay in the absence of serum over a period of 15 hours.
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- People also frequently migrated to cities where they had family.
- African American migrants were often resented by the urban European American working class, often recent immigrants themselves, because African Americans migrated in large numbers over a short period of time.
- As African Americans migrated, they became increasingly integrated into society.
- Stereotypes ascribed to black people during this period and ensuing generations were often derived from African American migrants' rural cultural traditions, which were maintained in stark contrast to the urban environments in which they resided.
- Many African-Americans migrated North in search of a better life.
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- The Yayoi period is an Iron Age era in the history of Japan traditionally dated 300 BCE to 300 CE.
- Chinese expansion under the Qin (221-206 BCE) and Han (206-220 CE) Dynasties is said to have been one of the primary impetuses for migrations to the Japanese archipelago.
- Pottery from the Yayoi period also tends to be smoother than that of the Jōmon period, and it more frequently features decorations made with sticks or combs, rather than rope.
- A jar from the Yayoi period (1st - 3rd century CE)
- Discuss how Chinese expansion under the Qin and Han Dynasties contributed to the migrations to the Japanese archipelago during the Yayoi period.
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- Migration is the movement by people from one place to another.
- During this period, emigration rates were especially high in Italy, Norway, Ireland and the Guangdong region of China.
- Yet another kind of migration, forced migration refers to the coerced movement of a person or persons away from their home or home region.
- Positive migration rates are indicated in blue; negative migration rates in orange; stable in green; and no data in gray.
- Discuss the types of migration in society and the various theories that explain migration
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- Civilization in America began during the last Ice Age when nomadic Paleo-Indians migrated across Beringia.
- While some researchers may debate the “why” and “when” of
migration patterns, all can agree that migration would not have been possible
without a glacial epoch.
- The Last
Glacial Maximum (LGM), which occurred between approximately 18,000 and 20,000
years ago, was the last period in the Earth's climate history when ice sheets
were at their greatest extension.
- During this period, early inhabitants are believed to have
traversed the ice into what is now North America.
- While
there is general agreement that the Americas were first settled from Asia, the pattern of
migration, its timing, and the place(s) of origin in Asia of the peoples who
migrated to the Americas remain unclear.
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- Connecticut was formed as a migration from the Massachusetts colony.
- It includes the territorial disputes between Connecticut and its neighbors during that time period.
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- Metallic properties tend to decrease across a period and increase down a periodic group.
- Recall that in the periodic table, each row is called a period.
- Each of the columns of the periodic table is called a group.
- The simplest conception of metals is a lattice of positive ions immersed in a "sea of electrons" that can migrate freely throughout the solid.
- Families of the periodic table are often grouped by metallic properties.
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- Migration is the long-range seasonal movement of animals.
- Wildebeests migrate over 1800 miles each year in search of new grasslands .
- Although migration is thought of as an innate behavior, only some migrating species always migrate (obligate migration).
- Animals that exhibit facultative migration can choose to migrate or not.
- Additionally, in some animals, only a portion of the population migrates, whereas the rest does not migrate (incomplete migration).
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- Historians still debate the exact point in time at which the so-called nadir took place, but a
commonly cited period spans the late 1880s to just after World War I, when lynchings—extra-judicial killings of black people—were common.
- During this period, the popular
and academic understandings of slavery in the United States, the Civil War, and
Reconstruction supported a Confederate, pro-slavery point of view.
- In what became known as
the Great Migration, more than 1.5 million black people left the South, and, while they
faced difficulties, their chances overall were better in the North.
- In the
South, white people worried about the loss of their labor force and so frequently tried
to block the black migration.
- The years during and after World War I saw profound social tensions in the
United States, not only because of the effects of the Great Migration and European immigration
but also due to demobilization and
the competition for jobs with returning veterans.