Answer:
Until the Mexican-American War (1846–48) only a few Americans—explorers, soldiers, trappers, sheep drivers—visited Arizona. In 1851 the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers sent several expeditions into Arizona to find a suitable route on which to build a wagon road to California. To protect travelers, miners, and other settlers from Native Americans, the U.S. government began to locate army posts at key sites. In 1883 workers completed the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway across northern Arizona, thereby linking St. Louis, Missouri, with California; that same year the Southern Pacific Railroad completed a line from New Orleans to Los Angeles by way of Tucson and Yuma.
Explanation:
Answer:
[✓]Sir Francis Drake claimed the coast
[✓]Lewis and Clark explored and mapped the interior
[✓]John Jacob Astor made one of the first settlements
The Tet Offensive, The battle of Khe Sanh, My Lai massacre
Since he lived in a theocratic government, he was tried by the Holy Office for teaching that the Earth revolves around the Sun which was deemed a heretic by the Catholic Church.
It was the the Viking.
Actually, the first person known to have settled in Greenland was Erik the Red, from Norway, who first sailed to Iceland and then to Greenland.