because
Amerigo Vespucci dreamt of becoming a successful merchant and explorer. He yearned to travel to unknown lands and make significant discoveries for the betterment of his career and reputation. Ultimately, his dreams led him to explore the New World and play a key role in establishing the name America for the continent.
more accurately represent and understand what had already been explored.
Farmers (in a general sense) sold their land and travelled to more fertile lands in the wast, such as California. This led to there being many migrant workers through the drought and didn't help the Great Depression much. The area became virtually unhabitable, so not just farmers left. When the drought came the lands where practically deserted, in a way taking them back in time to the days before the Europeans colonised America, when the lands where knows as the Great Plains or the Great Desert.
Yes, Amerigo Vespucci died in 1512 on land in Seville, Spain, and not on a ship. He was an Italian explorer known for popularizing the idea that the newly discovered lands by Europeans were part of a separate continent and not connected to Asia.
TO expand thir lands
Americas
spice gold
what is the answer pleas tell me
because they wanted to
It made Europeans eager to explore new lands. More investments were aimed at exploration of new lands and discovery of new wealth.
The period in the 1500s when Europeans started searching for lands they did not know is called the?
Explorer
The changing conditions were that: There was a big storm so they could not cross the ocean to get to the unknown lands in the 1400s
Other explorers helped Europeans learn about new lands by sharing their maps, navigational techniques, and information about geography and resources. They also provided firsthand accounts of their experiences in uncharted territories, which inspired other explorers to venture out and discover new lands. Additionally, explorers like Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta popularized the idea of exploration through their travel narratives.
Europeans approached the lands and peoples they discovered as new possessions they had gained. In this view the riches of the land, along with its people belonged to them by right of conquest.
Europeans were motivated to travel to distant lands primarily for economic reasons, such as the search for new trade routes and access to valuable resources like spices, gold, and silks. The desire for territorial expansion and the spread of Christianity also played significant roles. Additionally, advancements in navigation technology and a spirit of exploration fueled curiosity about the world beyond Europe. These factors combined to drive European exploration during the Age of Discovery.