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Question
how did georgias geography impact the blockade of georgias ports? a the islands, inlets, and coves allowed union blockade runners to slip in and out. b the islands, inlets, and coves allowed confederate blockade runners to slip in and out. c the islands, inlets, and coves prevented union blockade runners from slipping in and out. d the islands, inlets, and coves prevented confederate blockade runners from slipping in and out.
During the Civil War, Georgia was part of the Confederacy. The geography with islands, inlets, and coves provided hiding spots and narrow passages that allowed Confederate blockade runners (those trying to get supplies in or out despite the Union blockade) to slip through the Union's blockade. Union blockade runners weren't a thing in this context as the Union was the one imposing the blockade. Options A is incorrect as Union didn't need to run their own blockade, C is incorrect as the geography helped, not prevented Confederates (and Union runners aren't relevant here), D is incorrect as it's the opposite of what happened. So B is correct.
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B. The islands, inlets, and coves allowed Confederate blockade runners to slip in and out.