QUESTION IMAGE
Question
what impact would chad’s location have on its overall ability to exchange goods? (options visible: chad has access to water routes, allowing for easy trade with countries outside of africa; chad will have more to transport goods because they only trade with the yellow - shaded countries; ...) map of africa with yellow - shaded regions
To solve this, we analyze Chad's location and the map (yellow - shaded regions likely represent a group, maybe a trade - related grouping like a trade bloc or region with shared trade characteristics):
Step 1: Analyze the first option
If Chad is in many trade routes (allowing more trade with countries outside the yellow - shaded area), this would increase its ability to exchange goods as more trade routes mean more opportunities for trade. But we need to check the other options too.
Step 2: Analyze the second option
Saying Chad can only trade with yellow - shaded countries is incorrect. Geographically, Chad is in a region where it can trade with non - yellow - shaded countries too (e.g., neighboring countries not in the yellow shade, or through international trade routes).
Step 3: Analyze the third option (partially visible, but from context)
If it's about being landlocked and having no trade, that's incorrect. Landlocked countries can still trade (e.g., through neighboring countries' ports or overland trade).
The correct option is the first one (the one stating "Chad has access to many routes, allowing its more trade with countries outside of Africa" - assuming the option is about more trade due to location in trade routes).
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The correct option is the one with the explanation "Chad has access to many routes, allowing its more trade with countries outside of Africa" (the option that says Chad can trade more due to its location in trade routes).