Answer:
This is history, not math
Explanation:
A historian using the thinking skill of primary source analysis might try to "get in the mindset" of the writer or speaker of the source in question, in order to gain more insight into their life and environment.
Spain expelled thousands or Muslims and Jews in the late 1400s. The Moors had come in the early 800s and quickly conquered almost all of the Iberian Peninsula. They would finally be kicked out in 1492. (Yes, Columbus got to sail for Spain only because they got their country back and because he promised riches.) Despite fighting for almost 700 years, their were great times of peace where Christians, Muslims, and Jews all lived and worked together. However, upon the the end of La Reconquista (The Reconquest) Christians removed anyone unwilling to convert or follow the Catholic faith. Things could be quite violent as the Spanish Inquisition was in use to root out anyone that was not a Catholic.
Answer: B. Sibley charted paths to points further west.
Explanation:
During the Civil War, Major Sibley planned to conduct a New Mexico campaign in which he hoped to capture the cities of Albuquerque and Santa Fe as well as Fort Union.
From Fort Union, Major Sibley hoped to push further west to California and establish naval bases from which they could get supplies and escape the Union blockade of Southern ports.
B. it granted formerly enslaved men the right to vote, while women were still denied this right.