Horse-mounted warriors
iron weapons
Military innovations
iron weapons
Iron weapons and horse-mounted warriors are two advances credited to the Assyrians.
iron weapons
Iron weapons
Assyrians
No, the Assyrians did not invent written law. The Sumerians, a group that inhabited Southern Mesopotamia, did. The Assyrians are descendants of those who are credited to such inventions.
Leroy Hood is a well known biologist in America. He is credited with his advances with DNA and forensic science.
a Dutch spectacle-maker from Middlburg credited with inventing, or contributing advances towards the invention of the first telescope. Jansen is sometimes credited for inventing the first truly compound microscope.
yes
Daniel Bernoulli came from a family of mathematicians. Daniel was credited with advances in fluid mathematics as well as probability and statistics.
Yes as long as the runner advances Assuming you mean the runner tags up on a fly ball and advances to second, it is not scored as a sacrifice, but, simply as a fly out and the batter is charged with a time at bat. If the batter bunt a ground ball, the runner would not be required to "tag up" to advance and the batter would be credited with a sacrifice. If the batter is attempting a sacrifice bunt and pops up and the runner, tags up and somehow advances to second the batter is not credited with a sacrifice.
they used iron weapons so they were stronger and held an edge better, they also invented the chariot, organized there armies into subunits of uniform size, and they were the first to create a calvary.