<h3>Answer:</h3>
C. 17
<h3>Explanation:</h3>
This information is readily available from a number of sources, including the auto insurance card in your glove box or the metal plate on your car's dashboard.
Answer: Here's all the land pieces I know
Louisiana Purchase: Sold by Napoleon to the US in 1803
Flordia: The Adam-Onis Treaty seceded Florida the US
CA, NV, UT, AZ: Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the Mexican-American war and these territories are called the Mexican cession.
Texas: (kinda complicated) Texas won its own independence and became the Lone Star state. Because of slave issues they did not admit Texas for a number of years. The Mexcian-American war did secure a lot of these lands
Oregon Territory: This land was previously co-ruled by Britsh and the US. They wanted this to end so they divided the land in half at the 49th parallel. President Polk tried to push for more land but was rejected.
Gadsden Purchase: Last purchase of land until Alaska or Hawaii. Bought from the Mexican government to build an easier railroad route (avoid tunning through the Rocky Mountains). This is a small portion of land below New Mexico.
The output of a wind turbine depends on the turbine's size and the wind's speed through the rotor. An average onshore wind turbine with a capacity of 2.5–3 MW can produce more than 6 million kWh in a year
To some of the scholars the creation of the federal system was an effort to preserve the ideals of the Revolution by eliminating the contention and disorder that threatened the new nation; it was an effort to create a strong national government capable of exercising real authority. The Constitution was an effort to protect the economic interests of existing elites, even at the cost of betraying the principles of the Revolution, to others. And to still others, the Constitution was designed to protect individual freedom and to limit the power of the federal government.