Answer:Spanish explorers mapped the North American coastline north of Florida up to Newfoundland, Labrador, and Greenland by 1501. Ponce de Leon made the first major effort to establish a permanent settlement in North America in 1521.
The characteristic of English government that originated during the Glorious Revolution is the Parliament.
The Glorious Revolution consisted of the arrival of two new kings of England by the abdication of King James II, William of Orange and Mary Stuart, along with the English political parties of the Whigs and Tories, developed a document known as Bill of Rights where they agreed to give parliament the competence to create and legitimize laws within the competent geographical limits of English territory, thus giving rise to a new form of State, the parliamentary monarchy.
It is called the Glorious Revolution because, unlike other revolutions, not a single drop of blood was shed, England went from having an absolute monarchy to a controlled monarchy and then evolving into a parliamentary monarchy, as it is today. Government is divided into three powers separated from each other, executive power by the king and his cabinet, legislative power by Parliament and a judiciary.
Answer:
Pakistan and Thailand
Explanation:
Most of the SEATO member states were countries located elsewhere but with an interest in the region or the organization. Australia and New Zealand were interested in Asian affairs because of their geographic position in the Pacific. Great Britain and France had long maintained colonies in the region and were interested in developments in the greater Indochina region. For Pakistan, the appeal of the pact was the potential for receiving support in its struggles against India, in spite of the fact that neither country was located in the area under the organization's jurisdiction. Finally, U.S. officials believed Southeast Asia to be a crucial frontier in the fight against communist expansion, so it viewed SEATO as essential to its global Cold War policy of containment.
The action by the state of Maryland which led to McCulloch v. Maryland was that it attempted to stop a branch of the Second Bank of the United States from bringing in notes that were not made in Maryland, as they were taxed if they were from out of state.
This case led to the necessary and proper clause being used and is one of the most famous Supreme Court cases in the history of the United States.