Final answer:
Francisco Vásquez de Coronado led an expedition to find the golden city of Quivira in 1540, but he never found it. Option (d) is correct: Coronado's two-year expedition did not yield the wealth he sought, and it left him bankrupt.
Step-by-step explanation:
The key attributes of Spanish activity in the New World include the relentless quest for land, gold, and the conversion of native people to Catholicism. Francisco Vásquez de Coronado, a Spanish conquistador, set out in 1540 on an expedition to find the golden city of Quivira. His expedition was part of Spain's broader efforts to emulate the conquests of Cortés in the Aztec Empire and Pizarro in the Inca Empire, both of whom had acquired vast amounts of wealth and land for Spain.
Regarding the question about Francisco Vásquez de Coronado's expedition, option (d.) despite a two-year expedition that got as far north as modern-day Kansas, Coronado never found Quivira, is true. His expedition did not uncover the fabled golden city; rather, it left him bankrupt without discovering notable gold or silver. The lands he explored were already populated and controlled by various indigenous peoples, and his quest did not yield the riches he had anticipated.