Common law evolves in part based on decisions in court cases.
"Common law" in English history was the body of precedents established by courts and procedures from the Middle Ages onward. It wasn't so much that there was a codified system of laws, but there were past practices and procedures that informed legal decisions to be made in the present. The American legal system still takes this sort of approach to law, letting past precedents inform decisions on new situations that arise.
I believe the Inuit lived in d. Present-day Alaska :)
the islands of the caribbean form from Volcanoes
<span>Earlier historians consider the Medial Period the 'Dark Ages' due to the absence of written records which could have survived, which would have shone some light on this otherwise unknown period in time. The Dark Ages are often thought to be the years between 500 and 1500 CE, between the endings of the Roman Empire and the beginnings of the Italian Renaissance.</span>
<span>In the Jacksonian party system, congressional caucuses were replaced by party conventions for nominating presidential candidates. The Jacksonians are sometimes called the second party system; it is created around 1824 by Andrew Jackson who has his first run for the presidency. The party convention was created to replace the caucus.</span>