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In the seventeenth century, Brazil was one of the world's leading exporters of sugar. This was very profitable for Portugal, which colonized Brazil in the early 1500s. Sugar also caused conflict between European powers trying to control the region, particularly the island of Jamaica.
What was one result of these economic developments during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries?
A.
New European agricultural techniques led to rapid indigenous population growth.
B.
Brazil grew economically and gained its independence by revolting against Spain.
C.
The transatlantic slave trade grew as Europeans demanded labor for the plantations.
D.
Portugal's power grew and the Spanish lost their colonies in the Americas.
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C. The transatlantic slave trade grew as Europeans demanded labor for the plantations.
Explanation: Large sugar plantations required vast labor, and European colonists increasingly relied on enslaved Africans, which expanded the transatlantic slave trade.
Explanation: Large sugar plantations required vast labor, and European colonists increasingly relied on enslaved Africans, which expanded the transatlantic slave trade.
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