This grass provides shelter and protection for small animals and insects living in coastal ecosystems
Marram Grass
The capital city of Australia?
Canberra
a situation in which there is not enough food for a great number of people, causing illness and death, or a particular period when this happens
famine
The name of the first Tudor King?
Henry VII
Who invaded Britain in 43 CE?
The Romans
an area of low, flat land, sometimes shaped like a triangle, where a river divides into several smaller rivers before flowing into the sea
delta
The capital city of Brazil?
Brasilia
Two causes of famine by nature
drought/ floods/ earthquakes and volcanoes/ plagues of insect pests or plant diseases
The wars between different parts of the English royal families in the 1400s CE were known as:
The wars of the Roses
The series of German bombing attacks on London during WWII:
The Blitz
The world's man-made largest island is in _____.
Dubai, UAE
The capital city of Pakistan?
Islamabad
Two causes of famine by people
war/ desertification/ government/ cash crops
Who is the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn?
Queen Elizabeth I
The percentage of London destroyed in the Great Fire:
80%
an area of sea water separated from the sea by a reef
lagoon
an area on the edge of a large town or city where people who work in the town or city often live
suburb
One of the illnesses that malnourished children suffer:
diarrhoea, measles, tuberculosis
The percentage of yeomen in Tudor society?
30%
The number of colonies that British Empire controlled?
56
the movement of sand and small stones, etc. along the coast by waves travelling parallel or at an angle to the coast
longshore drift
a city area containing a large number of people, formed by various towns growing and joining together:
conurbation
Two of the international organisations that help poor countries to recover from famine:
Red Cross or Red Crescent/ Oxfam/ Save the Children Fund/ Action Aid/ UNICEF
The punishment for dishonest merchants in Tudor time?
Dragging through the streets
The Great Fire of London on:
2 September, 1666 (Sunday)