Early navigation relayed on mariner's ability to read the stars, which were not always exact and led to failure, discretion and less disposition to explore.
<em>The Renaissance</em> created an intellectual ambiance that promoted exploration, bringing massive interest in science, ergo scientific methods made navigation more exact and safer while traveling by ship.
Exploration was enabled by the evolution and development of geography, the development of navigational tools such as compasses, accurate maps, sea charts, and the scientific advancement in vessel designs.
Thus "<em>explorers were able to take long and far trips across the ocean </em><em>because of the development of navigational tools"</em><em>.</em>
I’m not sure what you mean here but numbers are infinite so the bigger the number would result in more characters being written in Chinese. For example if it was 20 it would be 二十but if it was 130 then it would be this 一百三十 so the bigger the Arabic number would results in more characters being written.
It is true that for the first 50 years after the ratification of the Constitution, Representatives and Senators usually only served for short periods of time because of difficulty in travelling and accommodations.
<u>Explanation:</u>
When the constitution was ratified, for a long period of around fifty years, the officials of the government which were the senators and the representatives used to serve the period only for a very short period of time.
The reason for this is that the travelling during that time from one place to another was very tough. Moreover the condition of the capital of the United States of America was very bad and the representatives chose to return to their local offices.
Answer:
The "liberal consensus" was the tacit agreement between the Democratic and Republican Parties in the United States Congress during the 1960s, through which they would support and approve bills related to social security, with the aim of guaranteeing better and greater rights to American citizens.
These policies were mainly promoted by Democratic politicians, who held the majority of the presidency during that decade through John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. But many moderate Republicans also supported these measures, being led by, among others, Nelson Rockefeller, then-Governor of New York, who drew support from East Coast Republicans for many of the Democratic Party measures.