The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached, we can say the following.
No, the settlers could have not been interested in the political events in the east because they had many issues and problems to resolve as the pioneers they were, trying to settle in those new and unknown lands.
Pioneer Daniel Boone helped opened a new portion of land for settlement purposes through the Cumberland Gap in the Northwest Territory.
Daniel Boone(1734-1820) was an explorer from Pennsylvania that took some settlers to those territories in the Northwest, although he had the rejection of the Cherokee tribes of the region.
Some of the best known European explorers are: Christopher Columbus, Vasco Da Gama, James Cook, among others.
<h3>How are the voyages of these explorers organized chronologically?</h3>
To organize the voyages of explorers chronologically, we must identify who was the first explorer to make a discovery and organize the others according to the year in which they made their discoveries from oldest to most recent.
- Christopher Columbus: First voyage (August 3, 1492-March 15, 1493)
- Vasco da Gama: First Voyage: Discovery of the Sea Route to India (1497-1499)
- James Cook: First voyage across the Pacific Ocean (1768-71)
Note: This question is incomplete because the options are missing. However I can answer it based on my general prior knowledge.
Learn more about explorers in: brainly.com/question/3421131
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D. When the battle of Yorktown happened General Washington kept the British at bay on land and the French kept the British at bay on the sea. Please Mark as Brainliest.
Answer:
To defend the southern border.
Explanation:
in 1721 the British army under the command of Col. John Barnwell built Fort King George, the southernmost Outpost of the British Empire in North America. The fort was used to defend the southern border of South Carolina against French and Spanish expansion into the area and against attack by the guale Indians
Answer:
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
Explanation:
On March 29, 1951, the court convicted Julius and Ethel Rosenberg of conspiracy to commit espionage. On April 5, Judge Kaufman sentenced them to death, and sentenced Sobell to 30 years in prison.