no they never found the north west passage because there was never one
No, and the Spanish "conquistadors" never looked for the Northwest Passage. The Northwest Passage was the - mythical - passage from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific. The explorers who searched for it were primarily English. No navigable passage was ever discovered. With modern icebreaking ships, it's SOMETIMES possible to transit the "Northwest Passage" along the northern edge of the North American continent, but this is more like sailing through the Arctic Ocean than a true "passage". It is rarely ice-free.
I think they did not find it
The northwest passage was never found because it simply doesn't exist. There is no one waterway that can take a person for eastern North America to western North America.
There is no record that Captain Robert Falcon Scott ever 'did' the Northwest Passage.
Not Human explorers.
The Spanish wanted to spread their religion, to find gold, and to get glory.
no
Coins have been used in North America ever since European explorers first settled the continent. If the question is supposed to be about when the US started making its own coins, then the answer is 1793.
Henry Hudson was left behind by his men on Hudson Bay in what is now Canada. He was unable to find the Northwest Passage and his ship was stranded in James Bay by a harsh winter.
No not in the Grad
The first ever WWE European Champion was The British Bulldog
The North Star is a star that where ever you are, when you look at it, that is north. It helped explorers to know which way is north;)