Yes but only for a short period. Many people followed him and recent digs show that they took fox furs from Baffin Island and almost certainly fish and logs from father down the coast of Canada.
Did they trade with the Aboriginals? Not likely, at least not very much. The Vikings were violent, as were Aboriginals, in particular the Skraelings, who would later cleanse Greenland of Vikings. Trade would have been limited.
Ones which go by land rather than waterways.
It gave routes for trading goods or for sailing OR for giving routes to travelers but I'm not sure which one it is.
Leif Ericson traveled to Iceland because, he wanted to go home and say hi.
North America.
Yes, But in St Lucie County between 2008 and 2011, in public schools, They do not go to school on leif erikson day.
go to boin, hentai, and hentie
He was searching for new lands to colonize.
He was searching for new lands to colonize.
Leif Ericson did not go to school. He was a Viking. He "studied" by learning the trade from the adult men in the village.
because it lead them to were they wanted to go
Ones which go by land rather than waterways.
Trade routes in ancient Greece and Rome were walked by people with beasts of burden. Today we have airplanes, ships, railroads, and trucks that can go much faster.
If you mean Who was Leif Ericsson, he was a viking from 1000ad. His father was Eric the Red, another famous explorer who discovered Greenland. Leif was born in Iceland. With some help from Bjarni Herjolfsso, Leif set sail and landed somewhere in Canada, most likely Labrador, or Newfondland. He named it Vinland (probably because of the vines), and left to go back to Greenland and tell the rest of the Vikings to come to Vinland. They did but the Vikings quickly died out.
Leif Juster went by Lange-Leif.
because there wasnt enough wood to build boats
The growth of Persian trade was contributed to by many different things. Some of these are the invention of standardized coins, the ability to go further distances to trade, and better trade routes.
it struggled for transportIt was brought to European countries on trade ships. Countries that were not part of the trade routes didn't get it.