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Question
which factor best explains why the black death spread along mediterranean ports before reaching interior europe?
sea routes enabled faster movement than land routes
a vaccine slowed spread in inland regions
sparse populations limited inland transmission
storms blocked travel into central europe
To determine the factor explaining the Black Death's spread along Mediterranean ports before interior Europe, we analyze each option:
- "Sea routes enabled faster movement than land routes": Sea trade was dominant, so the plague spread quickly via Mediterranean ports (sea routes) but slower inland (land routes were less efficient for fast spread).
- "A vaccine slowed spread in inland regions": Vaccines didn’t exist during the Black Death (14th century), so this is invalid.
- "Sparse populations limited inland transmission": Sparse populations would limit spread, but the question is about why it spread along ports first, not why inland was slow. This is about inland limits, not port - interior difference.
- "Storms blocked travel into central Europe": Storms are short - term and not the main reason for the port - interior spread pattern; the core is transport efficiency between sea and land.
So the best explanation is that sea routes allowed faster movement than land routes, enabling the plague to spread along ports before reaching interior Europe.
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Sea routes enabled faster movement than land routes