| His fascination with the event led him to discover for himself when eclipses might occur using only an almanac and a book on geography. |
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| The geography was utterly alien to Patrick, although his unfamiliarity with the picture could have been attributed to the gaps. |
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| Geology, geography, and agronomics all study the earth, but their construction, their principle of scientific knowledge differs. |
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| Yet geography and professionalization of the judiciary have affected the status of the judges. |
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| The missing link in Kay's polemical acknowledgment of the importance of geography in globalization, however, is what constitutes this importance. |
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| I whizzed through my GCSEs, acing geography with the only perfect score in the country. |
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| By accident of history and geography, the balance of seats in Parliament never accurately reflects the balance of votes cast. |
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| Educators can creatively and imaginatively use these quarters in lessons on the geography and history of the United States. |
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| In terms of geography, both Panama City and Port of Spain are almost at the centre of the American continent. |
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| Lucia Nuti makes a clear distinction in her essay between renaissance geography and chorography. |
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| The Other Physical Sciences category includes geology, geography, hydrology, statistics, meteorology, and physics. |
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| China's economic geography was formerly heavily shaped by a socialist ideology that downplayed agglomeration economies. |
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| They were concerned with the effects of geography on human emotions and behaviour. |
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| Voting is also tied to geography here, so if you move and forget to register in your new city, you won't be able to vote when the time comes. |
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| Similar geography produces an excess of positive over negative ions in Canada's chinook winds. |
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| Not so long ago, some techies proclaimed that communications technology and the Web would make geography irrelevant. |
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| He envisioned the nature of science and understood the roles of palaeontology, zoological geography, and animal psychology. |
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| It briefly reviews the history of chiropteran viruses and discusses their emergence in the context of geography, phylogeny, and ecology. |
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| Humanity becomes a single hive mind, with a group intelligence, as geography becomes putty in the hands of the Internet sculptor. |
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| The teacher gave him an exercise book and asked him to share a copy of the geography textbook with the boy next to him. |
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| Under Duport, Barrow studied Greek, Latin, Hebrew, French, Spanish, Italian, literature, chronology, geography and theology. |
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| The rise of interest in central place theory has been an important development in urban geography research in the last few decades. |
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| I had intended, as my readers know, to inject philogyny into geography for the purpose of owning my new position. |
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| He made a direct link between Morocco's geography and hagiocracy in Moroccan history. |
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| The tundra is the coldest biome described in typical geography and biology textbooks. |
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| And we are part of Europe by geography, by history, by economics and by choice. |
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| We can certainly agree on the need for a map of Britain's new political and cultural geography. |
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| These are French names, which still sit here and are part of our geography. |
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| Namibia is a diverse country, both in its geography and the composition of its population. |
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| We are linked by our people, by our history, by geography and by our economy. |
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| Physically, the natural geography of the city resembles Scotland, with mountain ranges and lakes. |
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| Like other historians before her, Mein Smith errs when it comes to Northland geography. |
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| Plans for economic expansion inevitably had sectarian implications, given the religious and political geography of the region. |
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| It affected our language, our culture, our geography, our architecture and even the way we think. |
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| The political geography of the nineteenth-century city was a distinctive one. |
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| As such, this book will most likely to appeal to readers with a bent towards geography and mathematics. |
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| It is a fact of geography that near the equator, the earth receives more energy from the sun. |
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| Gemma Frisius applied his mathematical expertise to geography, astronomy and map making. |
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| The expo has stalls on genome geography, genetic disorders and abuse of science. |
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| It was the basis of military science and also of geography and administration. |
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| In fact, from pure geography, it is difficult to tell where the archipelago starts. |
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| He was 18 at the time and was well vested with history, geography and mathematics. |
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| For a work of economic geography, there are few maps, and none of them is very detailed. |
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| If I asked you to tell me three days later about a chapter you read in geography about weather cycles would you be able to tell me all the facts? |
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| A degree in geography won't affect your enjoyment of this film, but knowledge is its own reward. |
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| New rules to be introduced will force cabbies to take lessons in everything from manners to regional geography. |
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| Forty-four percent of eighth grade teachers reported that they were very prepared to teach geography. |
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| He studied languages and geography, developing a keen interest in other cultures. |
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| On the southern flank a cluster of students formed a curvilinear outline that resembled the geography of India. |
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| The crackle-glaze boulder shapes, the crinkum-crankum ledges, the skewed pagoda silhouettes of the mountains belonged to no Occidental geography. |
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| The geography department is also counting the project as credits towards Rogers' degree. |
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| I was rushing to get to class-and trying to cram for my next period's geography quiz. |
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| He is the author of numerous books and articles on forestry and historical geography. |
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| These facts are easy to miss in the real world where we can blame space and geography for our involvement with others. |
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| The report suggests there might be what it calls a new geography of foreign investment in the making. |
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| The claims of contiguity, and geography more generally, would continue to make themselves felt. |
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| When I was a young fella my geography teacher lamented that Ireland had no natural resources. |
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| To be sure, the territories share important commonalities of climate, geography, demography, economy and identity. |
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| The second of these texts deals with physical geography, while the third is a text on spherical astronomy. |
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| It covers science, through physical geography and geology, and humanities, through economic and historical geography. |
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| More important for archaeologists in the field is the apparent loss to most school children of geology and physical geography. |
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| Yep indeedy, being a geography geek I have always wanted to go, and now I am. |
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| Much of this, I gladly confide, derives from my lifelong inclination for historical geography. |
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| For readers unfamiliar with Brazilian geography this inattention will be confusing. |
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| Apologies to any readers who are not familiar with the geography of Aberdeen's suburbs. |
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| All around it is limestone, which anyone who has studied geography at school will know is pervious and water disappears through it. |
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| She persuasively notes a shift from geography to subjectivity in the formation of national consciousness. |
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| Upon further inquiries, I was told that humanities combines the study of geography and history. |
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| As their pen pal, my postcards and letters helped them with reading, writing, geography, and math. |
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| Virginians and Pennsylvanians were more alike than is captured in the physical similarities of geography and climate. |
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| Now retired, he spent his time teaching geography and coaching soccer, a life he loved very much. |
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| Its scientific agenda brought back invaluable information about flora, fauna, hydrology and geography. |
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| The geography is much bigger, but it allowed me to juxtapose this massive Alaskan landscape with this very claustrophobic situation. |
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| Five hundred years ago, the available tools for enquiry were distinctly limited by parochial geography and religious culture. |
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| In contrast with other subareas of the discipline, the human geography of the service sector has often remained curiously undersocialized. |
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| An expert on human geography has demonstrated significant economic roll-on effects from having only three more families in town. |
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| Prefiguring later surges in academic research, he discussed the urban and global spaces of capital, and the politics of human geography. |
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| The case study is detailed and will be of interest to those in anthropology, human geography, and related fields. |
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| None of these criticisms, however, detract significantly from what is a major contribution to human geography and urban studies. |
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| Readers should not turn to these books if they are expecting original essays on key themes in contemporary human geography. |
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| A quiet and persistent thinking is certainly one virtue that I have tried to exemplify in my own contributions to the field of human geography. |
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| It has affected the human geography of our place more than any other force. |
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| Research in human geography and related environmental disciplines has not always done much better. |
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| There are no street addresses in Iraq because people define the terrestrial geography using human geography. |
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| He said that although Bradford had a lot of brown-field sites these were restricted by geography such as hillsides and valleys. |
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| The live scene over there is very active, but the geography doesn't make touring easy. |
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| Why can English and maths not be taught within subjects like history and geography rather than separately? |
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| The project is even a little ironic, considering the history of the discipline of geography. |
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| Miss Owen became a fashion stylist in London after graduating from Northumbria University with a degree in economics, sociology and geography. |
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| We have resigned ourself to the hand that geography and history has dealt our people. |
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| Bad historical luck could lock a group into the wrong skills or geography, causing retarded growth and structural unemployment. |
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| A racial group is based on hereditary physical traits often identified with geography. |
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| The poll laid out headshots of all the chefs, in three groups based on geography. |
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| Other disciplines have been brought to bear on the subject, including archaeology, cartography, and historical geography. |
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| These in turn led to advances in geography and cartography and the colonization of new lands. |
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| Unlike most explorers, these two leaders had no Aboriginal guides to help them, no skill in geography, cartography, or living off the land. |
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| First, he knew very little about either geography, astronomy, or cartography. |
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| Mercator had studied geography, cartography and mathematics at the University of Louvain in Belgium. |
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| Opportunity refers to the occasion suitable for or conducive to the behavior, including such factors as geography and time. |
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| Should we care about them any less, because of a quirk of geography and statecraft? |
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| Some days it was a geography or a spelling bee, other days a math competition. |
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| Walden is the locus of such pilgrimages for some visitors, a node in a network of places connected by sacred geography. |
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| The bell rang loudly, sounding the beginning of the first period, geography class. |
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| It is a geography that depends upon Romantic constructions of childhood as utopic. |
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| On further search this juxtaposition seems to be the result of the usual confusion between uranography and geography. |
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| Ives said any efforts to tackle the problems must be linked to human sciences such as anthropology, social science, and human geography. |
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| At the other end, exactly reproducible images revolutionized the study of subjects like geography, astronomy, botany, anatomy, and mathematics. |
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| If reality is defined by consensus, he reasoned, here was a new unmapped geography he wanted to conquer. |
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| In addition to languages, Murray taught himself geography, history, bookbinding, drawing and science. |
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| Today, it is pursued by artists, writers, urban theorists and mythologers and, on an academic level, geography researchers. |
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| One bulky geography master, built like a wrestler, spent most of a term slippering lads and talking about volcanoes. |
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| Astronomy, geography, and ergonomics are the three scientific bolsterers of Chinese feng shui theory. |
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| This symbolic geography, of course, typifies the upper division course in any discipline, where the field of study is the central topic. |
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| He modestly does not draw attention to the fact that his own work has redrawn the geography of art. |
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| Her contemporaries wrote books in which a hero, bent on a specific goal, triumphed over, or was defeated by, geography. |
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| Lucy will be taking A-level examinations in maths, chemistry, biology and geography this year. |
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| With an interest in trigonometry, mathematical instruments, astronomy, and geography, Regiomontanus was in a good position to give a lead. |
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| Astronomy, time-keeping and geography provided other motivations for geometrical and trigonometrical research. |
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| For those of a certain tribal cast of Irish-Australian mind, such questions of geography and chronology are trifling. |
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| You totally said that to Mr. Roberts last week when he was running through the geography prep quiz in fourth period. |
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| On the way to geography I heard footsteps behind me and it sounded as if someone was trying to sneak up on me. |
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| Some schools in the early 19th century had wide curricula, including geography, physics, metallurgy and European languages. |
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| Is it like geography, hundreds of years before we can build a working model? |
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| Two broad approaches to this question can be identified in the literature, much of which is outside economic geography sensu stricto. |
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| Political geography may have been shaped in the mind as well as on the ground and the battlefield. |
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| Continued practices of duplicating programs when geography and demand dictate otherwise clearly points to a segregational vestige. |
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| Due to the mountain range and its threatening weather, we've decided to drive awhile to more friendly geography. |
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| Dozens of early explorers met their deaths down there, baffled by the mazy, alien geography, plagued by hunger, thirst and insolent kangaroos. |
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| One listen to this album, though, and such doubts will be banished from the minds of all but the most cynical of geography buffs. |
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| In the fall of 1965, I was working on a term paper for a geography class at the University of Alaska. |
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| Even if they bring back memories of geography teachers schlepping around in the same faded pair for years, you can't budge for cords this winter. |
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| Amish was driven towards technical drawing, geography, social studies and principles of business. |
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| Did your mark on your grade five geography project really make or break your admittance into university? |
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| These can be taken in place of subjects such as history, geography and modern languages. |
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| From his works we know that Kushyar was primarily an astronomer who wrote texts on astronomy and geography. |
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| Yet the burden of geography has not changed, while the Russian state has changed profoundly since the ascension of Putin. |
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| It discusses topics such as geometry, geography and algebra with applications to the longitudes of the planets. |
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| The theme is York's environment, which takes in science, geography, history and arts topics. |
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| Further, Mansfield has embarked upon an intellectual quest, an adventure in locating Erasmus within the geography of twentieth-century thought. |
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| He supported his genetic arguments with inferences from anthropology, archeology, geography, and linguistics. |
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| Between them, racism and migration had ensured that my longing for a sense of belonging would in all likelihood not be satisfied by geography. |
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| Maybe it takes riding the landscape with a native or old-timer who can point something out, to let you know how the geography has changed. |
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| My father was fond of relating a story about a professor lecturing on geography. |
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| The geography of the Philippine archipelago forced the Army and Navy to collaborate on amphibious operations. |
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| He looked around, recognizing the familiar landmarks and geography of Pommer Inn. |
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| Such distinctions of geography and genre are far from academic, since one of the first things to confront in writing about performance poetry is its internal diversity. |
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| She explains that the Navajos' ceremonial hogan, an east-facing round hut of wood and mud, mirrors the geography of Black Mesa and its surrounding Four Sacred Mountains. |
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| Although the basic position of geography as a chorographic science has been questioned, the challenge does not appear to have produced dissension. |
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| As Home Minister between 1947 and 1950, Vallabhbhai Patel integrated the princely states, thus altering the politics and geography of modern India. |
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| History and geography have destined the two sides to be neighbors. |
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| She was a geography teacher at the ladies grammar school at Bridlington. |
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| Not only was the geography of Egypt all rather dodgily presented, but they couldn't even get the basic geography of London right in the bus chase seen. |
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| With Strong systematic features and a firm Sciolistic basis, the geography of the time had the tendency to isolate itself and refused a confrontation with philosophy. |
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| Rebecca Greenfield went through a long list, including geography, building code limitations, and affluence. |
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| He draws evidence from genetics, geography, paleontology, anatomy, and elsewhere. |
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| Even in the smallest of Indian locales, the divisions of geography and nationalism are played out on a micro scale. |
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| In this case, the geography of industrial organization ratchets up a sequence of scales from local to regional to national, and ultimately to global. |
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| Several women incorporate woven grasses and native timber such as totara and kauri, and use these media to interpret their particular geography and history. |
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| School geography books talked of the Pampas, horses were on every page and cattle were lassoed before being killed for the Argentinian staple diet. |
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| If Huckabee runs, the hurdles he faced the last time out, namely geography and money, would still be there. |
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| The reported rates of association have differed widely, probably because of varying study design, oral versus cutaneous lichen planus and geography. |
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| From impeachment logic to immigration geography, yet another week in far-out theories from our fearless leaders. |
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| For those whose memories of geography lessons begin and end with vague notions about ox-bow lakes and limestone pavements, this may be hard to believe. |
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| These trends will affect everything from geography to culture and politics. |
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| Much of the appeal of the Bay Area is a result of happy coincidence of history and geography. |
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| Bonnett has been a risk taker since his early days in the field of geography. |
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| The town owes its unusual geography to the Rio Trejo, which eroded the gorge that the town is built in. |
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| And grouping them by geography, socioeconomic status, and ethno-national background is yet another. |
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| In 1980 he added Trois Villes Saintes, a barely readable exercise in shamanistic geography. |
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| Second only to psychological drama and angst, geography is important to Walker, who falls madly in love with places and stores them up for future plots. |
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| Together they meld their knowledge of geography, satellite navigation, and weapons systems technology into a readable blend of techno-thriller and futures analyses. |
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| The territory in dispute is grand in the imaginings of history and infinitesimal in geography. |
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| Maybe someday we'll have a financial system like some sort of neural network, that can make geography not matter. |
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| Japanese geography and sea power, therefore, collectively pose an inherent obstacle to Chinese expansion into the Pacific as long as Taiwan remains free of mainland control. |
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| The island populations of the Pacific Ocean have historically been divided, on the basis of geography and culture, into Polynesians, Micronesians, and Melanesians. |
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| On the other hand, you could say that he stands there like some kind of glam-rock geography teacher with a gutful of meths, talking toss at a hundred words a minute. |
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| The nature of these relationships has been central to human ecology and geography, microeconomics, and the anthropological and political sciences. |
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| Once they have sketched the outlines of the basic chronology, geochemistry and geography, the rest will probably fall, microfossil by microfossil. |
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| The answers to the eighth-grade geography midterm are in her hands. |
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| Before the advent of roads or railways, the sheer difficulty in traversing Peru's geography was one of the greatest obstacles to solidifying a national identity. |
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| Alexander von Humboldt of course made lasting contributions to the fields of physical geography and biogeography, adding to our knowledge of plants, animals, and the earth. |
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| The introduction provides an up-to-date description of Sinitic languages in terms of history and geography, placing the goals of the volume into perspective. |
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| He is a mountaineer, ice climber, expedition skier, guide, father of three, and intellectual authority on the singular history and geography of his beloved Iceland. |
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| Our most competitive subjects at undergraduate level are medicine, law, English, computer science, history, engineering, geography, economics, physiotherapy and midwifery. |
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| More deaths on Everest underscore its problems with overcrowding and unstable weather and geography, writes Nick Heil. |
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| Economic geography supposedly has a wide spectrum of subjects, ranging from agrarian and pastoral economies to resource utilization and changes in land use. |
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| One of the significant developments of widespread uptake of the Internet is the emergence of virtual communities based on attributes that go well beyond shared geography. |
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| We must continue to develop traditional and virtual communities based on industry, geography, or special interest that serve as conduits of technology information. |
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| The book gives you a detailed introduction to Beijing, such as geography, palaces, temples, bystreets and well-known persons with more than 200 photos. |
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| Sweatshop monitoring groups say other areas handicapped by geography and poor infrastructure, like Swaziland, saw nearly half their factories closed. |
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| Long before she set out for the Ganga, Katrin Simon knew that to steer a course down the great river would be to navigate, not only a geography, but also a mythology. |
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| This mix, accompanied by a sticky heat, climate and geography completely separate from the rest of the USA, creates a romantic mystery for the whole state. |
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| So there is good reason to say that during the war, military geography and military cartography emerged as full-fledged sciences in their own right. |
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| Cosmographia provided a layman's introduction to such subjects as astronomy, geography, cartography, surveying, navigation and mathematical instruments. |
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| Egypt's magical and mystical other-worldly presence captivates our curiosity with an appeal that crosses all boundaries of time, geography and culture. |
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| As the great shift from rural to urban living continues, creating alternatives to moving to large urban areas can make a more distributed lifestyle and human geography viable. |
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| A major branch of study within archaeology that draws on archaeological, historical geography, human geography, ecology, anthropology, and place-name studies. |
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| Add a little data storage and we can traverse the terrain of human geography, logging our footprints in the sands of time and recounting the meaning of our passages. |
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| Such an approach would have permitted an analysis of the relationship between levels of homicides and the development of the California economy and human geography. |
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| After completing an honours degree in human geography, Philip managed transport and distribution for a large Sydney-based importer of footwear and other fashion goods. |
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| For that matter, only the changing seasons clue us in to our geography. |
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| They're coached for the tests all the way through year six when music, art, history and geography are all sacrificed in favour of a curriculum of exam preparation. |
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| Jain and Getis argued that Internet-based instruction in a physical geography course offered a viable alternative to traditional classroom teaching. |
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| It allows them to reach across the boundaries of geography and time to be in intimate communion with people they will never meet, but whom they hope to lead to God. |
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| However, since the Korean immigrant population is concentrated in a few metropolitan areas in the United States, we do not include geography as a variable. |
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| The unique geography of two gulfs separated by vast inland tracts of inhospitable country led the early Australian settlers to rely entirely on coastal trading. |
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| My geography is the laying out of a great flatness peopled with cairns. |
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| Students, postdocs, and colleagues were inevitably the beneficiaries of lessons in geography and foreign cultures as an added bonus of his trips abroad. |
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| After broken hearts, geography is country music's biggest fascination. |
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| From rock 'n' roll funerals to cryogenics, people's preferences for final arrangements now vary according to demographics, geography, and personal style. |
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| How, if Christie wrote such rubbish, can we explain the fact that her works have resonated even at the farthest extremes of geography and history? |
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| In astronomy and geography Arabic influence was even more pronounced. |
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| Bonwick's first writings were school texts in geography and history. |
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| I think it's very important to know the geography of our planet. |
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| The report categorizes the feed acidifier market based by type, by livestock, and geography. |
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| Others arose through the faulty positioning of actual islands, or other errors in geography. |
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| The Berber identity is usually wider than language and ethnicity, and encompasses the entire history and geography of North Africa. |
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| Its diverse geography and ecology ranges from coastal savannahs to tropical jungles. |
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| These result as much from geography and history as from culture and economics. |
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| The geography of Morocco spans from the Atlantic Ocean, to mountainous areas, to the Sahara desert. |
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| In this study the RCP market is segmented based on their type, application and geography. |
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| Achieving highly precise longitude remained a problem in geography until the application of Galileo's Jovian moon method in the 18th century. |
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| We should not ignore the pan-Slavism and Orthodox solidarity in this geography. |
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| Denmark has a well covered motorway system today, which has been difficult to build due to the county's geography with many islands. |
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| In geography and geology, fluvial processes are associated with rivers and streams and the deposits and landforms created by them. |
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| The geography and climate of Pakistan are extremely diverse, and the country is home to a wide variety of wildlife. |
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| The climate, geography, and environment of Finland favours bog and peat bog formation. |
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| Tim is a company director and diving instructor and Liz is a geography teacher at Almondbury High School as well as a divemaster. |
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| Chile, by default of its geography, was unaffected by phylloxera, a louse which decimated much of Europe's vines in the 19th century. |
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| Celtic art is a difficult term to define, covering a huge expanse of time, geography and cultures. |
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| Ordnance Survey publishes a quarterly journal, principally for geography teachers, called Mapping News. |
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| Aberystwyth says it was the first department to offer students single honours degrees in human geography and physical geography. |
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| Spelling bees, science fairs, and geography fairs can also be organized through a support group. |
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| Second, close readings of grammarians and polymaths betray a fascination with the relation of vernacular language to pedagogy and geography. |
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| Many species are restricted in their distribution ranges, and live in separate populations or fish stocks based on geography. |
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| The global Thermoplastic Elastomer market has been segmented on the basis of product type, end-user applications and geography. |
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| It is an ethnically and linguistically diverse country, with a similarly diverse geography and wildlife. |
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| The choropleth map, which shows distributions by area, is one of the most frequently used maps in geography. |
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| She does this by eliding the boundaries between a splintered world, her body's geography and a wounded people. |
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| Homophily analysis further demonstrates the positive influence of geography as a forecaster of cooperation during response activities. |
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| The geography and small size of the island makes the climbing easily accessible. |
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| From within geography there is a pervasive dualism of human geography and physical geography. |
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| Ten years after its publication, the book remains a vivid lesson in human geography. |
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| I got my O-level in geography and my hunter-gatherer genes from well before Stone Age times, so perhaps last night's dinner was quite normal. |
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| Despite its attractive location as a port and naval base, San Francisco was still a small settlement with inhospitable geography. |
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| The geography of the North has been heavily shaped by the ice sheets of the Pleistocene era, which often reached as far south as the Midlands. |
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| In geography, temperate or tepid latitudes of Earth lie between the tropics and the polar regions. |
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| Splitsville Genetics bolstered the idea that musical taste, rather than geography, split Africa's indigobirds into multiple species. |
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| The similarities of both geography and history are matched by some elements of the current political process. |
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| Despite the great differences in geography, nature and intensity of insurgencies, the results from all three countries was remarkably similar. |
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| To help you get an even better grip on the geography of the muscles, look at the other hip flexor muscles. |
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| He also discussed human geography and the planetary habitability of the Earth. |
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| I attended a one-room school next door to the palace and studied English, Xhosa, history and geography. |
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| The foundations of geography can be traced to the ancient cultures, such as the ancient, medieval, and early modern Chinese. |
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| In cultural geography there is a tradition of employing qualitative research techniques, also used in anthropology and sociology. |
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| In addition to all of the other subdisciplines of geography, GIS specialists must understand computer science and database systems. |
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| It can be said, without much controversy, that cartography is the seed from which the larger field of geography grew. |
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| A sequence of maps for different ages can give an insight in the development of the regional geography. |
|
| Regional geography is concerned with the description of the unique characteristics of a particular region such as it natural or human elements. |
|
| However, geography is a much more important determinant of dialect than religious background. |
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| Integrated geography is concerned with the description of the spatial interactions between humans and the natural world. |
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| Human geography is a branch of geography that focuses on the study of patterns and processes that shape the human society. |
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| This can also be a form of imagined human geography because Cyprus used this identity to justify its revolts and nationalist movements. |
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| Just as all phenomena exist in time and thus have a history, they also exist in space and have a geography. |
|
| Traditionally, geography has been associated with cartography and place names. |
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| The existing system of canals was inexpensive but was too slow and too limited in geography. |
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| He wrote not about England, but of the ancient world with a heavy emphasis on geography. |
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| Geography is often defined in terms of the two branches of human geography and physical geography. |
|
| Newfoundland and Labrador has a wide range of climates and weather, due to its geography. |
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| The flamingo is located on the land, and the marlin on the sea, indicating the geography of the islands. |
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| This means they appealed to theory where their knowledge of the American and Asiatic geography was lacking. |
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| Its geography varies from the peaks of the Andes in the West, to the Eastern Lowlands, situated within the Amazon Basin. |
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| The geography of the country exhibits a great variety of terrain and climates. |
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| A geographer is a scholar whose area of study is geography, the study of Earth's natural environment and human society. |
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| Francis Drake in 1578 and a Dutch VOC expedition in 1616 learned more about the geography. |
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| His earlier exploration had confirmed the presence of gold and gave him a good understanding of the geography of the island. |
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| The dominant feature of Panama's geography is the central spine of mountains and hills that forms the continental divide. |
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| The cultural geography of colonial Virginia gradually evolved, with a variety of settlement and jurisdiction models experimented with. |
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| Baja California encompasses a territory which exhibits diverse geography for a relatively small area. |
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| During his stay in Rome, Dmitri related details to Giovio of the geography of Russia and the northern countries. |
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| These encounters may well have provided the stimulus to put aside his problems with theology and commit himself to geography. |
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| Several other research projects, mostly pertaining to geography and climatology, are carried out less regularly. |
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| The Yakuts are divided into two basic groups based on geography and economics. |
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| Stefansson considered those with advanced knowledge in the fields of geography and science for this expedition. |
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| The state is divided into five regions, taking into consideration geography and climate. |
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| The Sierra Gorda is part of the Sierra Madre Occidental, with extreme variations in its geography and climate. |
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| This is particularly true when comparing with British English, due to that country's dramatically different geography. |
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| According to paleontologist Peter Dodson, this is primarily due to stratigraphy, climate and geography, human resources, and history. |
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| The practice of sports and outdoor activities in Quebec was influenced largely by its geography and climate. |
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| Hawaii, although being in the tropics, experiences many different climates, depending on latitude and its geography. |
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| Concerns about diversity focused on geography, to represent all regions of the country, rather than religious, ethnic, or gender diversity. |
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| One theory of Europe's rise holds that Europe's geography played an important role in its success. |
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| In some places, depending on geography, region, climate, and culture, hay is gathered loose and stacked without being baled first. |
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| It is less defined by physical geography, and is more a description of human geography and resources. |
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| In geography and geology, a cliff is a vertical, or nearly vertical, rock exposure. |
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| Each book starts with a description of the geography of the area and ends with Some personal notes in conclusion. |
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| He was noted for his knowledge of the Lakeland fells, their structure and their geography. |
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| On 23 October 2016 McDermid, who is gay, married Jo Sharp, a professor of geography at Glasgow University and McDermid's partner of two years. |
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| The inner are located in Tuscany and Umbria and correspond well with the geography, comprising the Apuan Alps and Umbrian Apennines. |
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| It was not until around 6,000 BC that the approximate geography of Denmark as we know it today had been shaped. |
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