The Nile River shows the farthest extant of Alexander's Conquests.
Hope I helped. :)
From my previously gained knowledge from my Japanese classes, the answer would be D. Because Japan didn't really that much of a population boom until the 20th century because they whole island was not yet inhabited. They didn't really feel like spreading Buddhism because it didn't become a popular religion until the 20th century, and the US had nothing to do with Japans wanting of more land. They gained land mainly from China, so the long-standing rivalry between China and Japan would be the best answer.
The military was weak, to weak to fend off the Viking invaders and protect the Mother-Country
A portion of the impacts of Imperialism on the nations of Southeast Asia were the exchange of a lot of riches out of the district, a moving of the locale's work concentrate far from horticulture to the generation of item fares and the region's once in the past independent economy winding up plainly perilously powerless against moving overall cost and request variances. A large number of Southeast Asian lives were adjusted by the financial and ecological changes that occurred accordingly of the regular asset and creature life adjusts that were revised and annoyed with the broad pilgrim ventures occurring in the area.