Sixth grade G.3 The medieval Silk Road7XQShare skillCopy the link to this skillshare to facebookshare to twitterTime to get in the zone!Your teacher would like you to focus on skills in .Let's pick a skill from these categories.Let's go!Get started!Stage 1Answer 3 out of 4 questions correctly.StartIncomplete answerYou did not finish the question. Do you want to go back to the question?Go backSubmitThe map below shows a network of trade routes known as the Silk Road. Between 200 BCE and 1350 CE, merchants, or traders, traveled along many parts of these routes.Look at the map, which shows the Silk Road around the year 1300 CE. Then answer the question below.Based on the map, what was true about the Silk Road around the year 1300 CE? Select the two that apply.The Silk Road included both land and sea routes.The Silk Road connected East Asia and the Americas by sea.The Silk Road was made up of only land routes.The Silk Road connected parts of East Asia, the Middle East, and Europe.SubmitBack to practiceref_doc_title.Excellent! You got that right!Jumping to stage 1 of 1Excellent!Now entering the Challenge Zone—are you ready?Teacher toolsGroup JamLive ClassroomLeaderboardsWork it outNot feeling ready yet? These can help:G.1The ancient Silk Road: geography and transportationG.1The ancient Silk Road: geography and transportation - Sixth grade HRY G.2The ancient Silk Road: goods and ideasG.2The ancient Silk Road: goods and ideas - Sixth grade TF5
Work it outNot feeling ready yet? These can help:G.1The ancient Silk Road: geography and transportationG.1The ancient Silk Road: geography and transportation - Sixth grade HRY G.2The ancient Silk Road: goods and ideasG.2The ancient Silk Road: goods and ideas - Sixth grade TF5