John Cabot was the first Englishman to land in North America. However, this man who legitimized England's claim to everything from Labrador to Florida, left no sea journal, no diary or log, not even a portrait or a signature. Until 1956 most learned encyclopedias and histories indicated that Cabot's first landfall in America was Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. Then a letter was discovered in the Spanish archives, making it almost certain that he had touched first at the northernmost tip of Newfoundland, within five miles of the site of Leif Ericson's ill-fated settlement at L'Anse aux Meadows. Researchers studying the voyages of Columbus, Cartier, Frobisher, and other early explorers had a wealth of firsthand material with which to work. Those who seek to recreate the life and routes used by Cabot must make do with thirdhand accounts, the disloyal and untruthful boasts of his son, Sebastian, and a few hard dates in the maritime records of Bristol, England. Select the statement that best expresses the main idea of the paragraph.
A.
John Cabot claimed all the land from Labrador to Florida for England.
B.
Much of what is known about Cabot is based on the words of his son, Sebastian, and on records in Bristol, England.
C.
The lack of firsthand accounts of Cabot's voyage has left historians confused about his voyages to North America.
D.
Historians interested in the life and routes used by Cabot recently discovered an error they made in describing his discovery of North America.