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  1. Dew point (1180 bytes)
    1: ...] or [[hoar frost]] by [[deposition (meteorology)|deposition]].
    3: ...e of air. The formation of dew would occur at the dew point even if the only gas present was water vap...
    6: ...ent temperature. As relative humidity falls, the dew point becomes lower, given the same air temperat...
  2. List of countries by highest point (12398 bytes)
    24: |11||[[Chile]]||[[Ojos del Salado]]||6,880m
    42: |20||[[Mexico]]||[[Pico de Orizaba]]||5,700m
    56: |26=||[[Democratic Republic of the Congo]]||Margherita Peak ...
    64: |31||[[Italy]]||Mont Blanc ([[Monte Bianco de Courmayeur]])||4,748m
    68: |33||[[Ethiopia]]||[[Ras Dejen]]||4,620m

Page text matches

  1. Mexico (27255 bytes)
    2: ...is a [[country]] located in [[North America]], bordered by the [[United States]] to the north, and [[B...
    17: national_anthem = ''[[Mexicanos, al grito de guerra]]'' |
    21: government_type = [[Federal Republic]] |
    22: leader_titles = [[President of Mexico|President]] |
    23: leader_names = [[Vicente Fox ]] |
  2. Costa Rica (12931 bytes)
    1: ...inent|continental]] neighbors, Costa Rica, alongside [[Uruguay]], is seen as an exceptional example of...
    5: ...ackground: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;"
    6: |+<big><big>'''Rep?a de Costa Rica'''</big></big>
    9: {| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
    13: ...er" width="140px" | ([[Coat of Arms of Costa Rica|Detail]])
  3. Periodic table (7298 bytes)
    1: ...chemical element]]s. First created by [[Dmitri Mendeleev]], the elements are arranged by [[electron]] ...
    3: ...s for displaying the chemical elements]] for more details or different perspectives.
    9: ... The IUPAC scheme was developed to replace both older Roman numeral systems as they confusingly used t...
    15: ... (standard)|standard table]] (same as above) provides the basics.
    17: *The [[Periodic table (big)|big table]] provides the basics plus full element names.
  4. Lighthouse of Alexandria (3491 bytes)
    1: ...it resided), was considered one of the [[Seven Wonders of the World]].
    3: ... BC and remained operational until it was largely destroyed by two [[earthquake]]s in the 14th century...
    5: ...e Pharos of Alexandria, an ancient lighthouse, is depicted in this hand-coloured engraving by Martin H...
    7: ...s built of blocks of white stone. The tower was made up of three stages, a lower square with a central...
    9: ...ver, this is highly unlikely due to the lack of modern optics and reflective technology in the time pe...
  5. Persepolis (15450 bytes)
    6: ...eyond dispute at least since the time of [[Pietro della Valle]].
    8: ...nd one of those at ''Nakshi Rustam'' is expressly declared in its inscription to be the tomb of [[Dari...
    12: ...ngs buried at ''Nakshi Rustam'' are probably, besides Darius, [[Xerxes I]], [[Artaxerxes I]] and [[Dar...
    18: ...he city until it was taken and plundered by Alexander the Great.
    20: ...es of having been destroyed by fire. The locality described by Diodorus after [[Cleitarchus]] correspo...
  6. Christopher Columbus (44177 bytes)
    1: ...ached the [[Americas]] on October 12th [[1492]] under the flag of [[Castile|Castilian]] [[Spain]]. He ...
    2: ...Christopher_columbus_2.jpg|thumb|200px|Image provided by [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom Clip A...
    3: ... time accepted that the earth was round. The main debate was over whether it would be possible to get ...
    5: ...first voyage from all of these: less than two decades later, the existence of America was known to the...
    7: Columbus landed in the [[Bahamas]] and later explored much of th...
  7. Ibn Battuta (16481 bytes)
    2: ...orer]], whose account documents his travels and side-excursions over a period of almost thirty years, ...
    4: His name may alternatively be rendered '''ibn Batuta''', '''ibn Batuda''' or '''ibn B...
    6: ...lated as ''A Gift to Those Who Contemplate the Wonders of Cities and the Marvels of Travelling'', but ...
    10: ==The Hajj (with detours)==
    11: ...eadth of the Muslim world, and beyond (about 44 modern countries).
  8. Industrial Revolution (30001 bytes)
    1: ...t of all-metal machine tools in the first two decades of the nineteenth century enabled the manufactur...
    3: ...wth of the [[internal combustion engine]] and the development of [[Electric power|electrical power gen...
    5: ...red to the [[Neolithic revolution]], when mankind developed [[agriculture]] and gave up its [[nomad|no...
    10: ...he accompanying development of international [[trade]], creation of [[financial market]]s and accumula...
    12: ...h often imposed tolls and [[tariff]]s on goods traded among them.
  9. Steel (28384 bytes)
    3: ...iron, but is also more [[brittle]]. One classical definition is that steels are iron-carbon alloys wit...
    5: ... [[plasticity (physics)|plastically]] formed (pounded, rolled, etc.).
    8: ...l><sub>2</sub></small>&mdash; [[Pyrite]]. Iron oxide is a soft [[sandstone]]-like material with limite...
    11: ...similarly soft and metallic but can dissolve considerably more carbon (as much as 2.04 wt% carbon at 1...
    13: ...ry similar unit cell structure to austenite, and identical chemical composition. As such, it requires...
  10. Puritan (15882 bytes)
    1: ...mbers of a group of radical [[Protestants]] which developed in [[England]] after the [[Reformation]].
    4: ...list]]": Puritanism was a movement rather than a denomination.
    5: ...at "Puritan" was most often used by opponents and detractors of the group, rather than by the practiti...
    8: ...nacceptably subservient to politics. Persecuted under [[Mary I of England]] ("Bloody Mary"), Protestan...
    10: ...ble|biblical]] supremacy, and they shared, to one degree or another, a belief in the [[priesthood of a...
  11. Timeline of the united states history 1990 to present (16426 bytes)
    1: Presidency of Barack Obama
    3: ... Timeline of the Barack Obama presidency and Presidency of Barack Obama
    4: ...pwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico explodes, spilling millions of gallons of oil into the se...
    5: ...licans retake the House of Representatives as the Democrats lose 63 seats.
    6: ...Representative Gabrielle Giffords is severely wounded in an assassination attempt
  12. China (38909 bytes)
    1: ...e [[3rd century BC]] to protect the north from raiders on horseback.]]
    3: ...nding on one's point of view, modern China can be described as a single [[civilization]] or multiple c...
    5: ...of China]] in [[1912]]; however the next four decades were marred by warlordism, the [[Second Sino-Jap...
    7: ...utes on [[Chinese reunification]]/[[Taiwan independence]] issues.
    14: ...of China at the centre of her known world, surrounded by lesser tributary states.
  13. Hatshepsut (9070 bytes)
    2: ...beknefru]] and Pharaoh [[Nitocris]] actually preceded her (though the latter is not certain to have ru...
    4: ...ghout Egypt. She also began rebuilding Egypt's trade networks which had been disrupted by the [[Hyksos...
    10: ...fe of Amun'' before either parent died. After the death of her father in [[1492 BC]] she married her h...
    11: ...ose III]], by a lesser wife named Isis before his death.
    13: ...t it soon became apparent that she had only one model in mind, Sobekneferu, the last monarch of the Tw...
  14. Cleopatra VII of Egypt (8634 bytes)
    4: ...l name, "Cleopatra Thea Philopator" means "the Goddess Cleopatra, Beloved of Her Father."
    6: ...ly '''Cleopatra''', all of her similarly-named predecessors having been largely forgotten. Cleopatra w...
    9: ...lowing the deaths of her brothers she named her eldest son co-ruler as Ptolemy XV [[Caesarion]] ([[44 ...
    10: ...ge:The-cleopatra2.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Image provided by [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom Clip A...
    11: ... seeking sanctuary, Ptolemy had him murdered in order to ingratiate himself with Caesar. Caesar was so...
  15. Boudicca (6973 bytes)
    7: ...[47]]). Hoping to preserve his line, Prasutagus made the [[Roman emperor]] co-heir, along with his two...
    9: ... this, but does single out [[procurator]] [[Catus Decianus]] for criticism for his "rapacity".
    11: ... the rebels destroyed it, besieging the last defenders in the temple for two days before it fell. The ...
    13: ...us. [[Verulamium]] ([[St Albans]]) was next to be destroyed.
    15: ... German king [[Ariovistus]] is reported to have made the same mistake in [[Julius Caesar]]'s [[Gallic ...
  16. Performance (3170 bytes)
    4: Examples of performance [[genre]]s include:
    22: ... a [[scientific]] setting, the carrying out of predetermined [[action (philosophy)|action]]s in a cont...
    24: ...ot require payment, but do welcome it. See [[extended technique]].
    28: The word '''performance''' may also describe the way in which an [[actor]](ess), or [[ar...
    35: ...Transwiki:Monitoring monitoring] performance include:
  17. Melisende of Jerusalem (16880 bytes)
    1: ...al, possibly Melisende herself, from the [[Melisende Psalter]]]]
    3: '''Melisende''' ([[1105]] - [[September 11]], [[1161]]) was [[...
    5: ... was named after her paternal grandmother, Melisende of Montlhery, wife of Hugh I, [[Count of Rethel]]...
    9: ...reginam, cui jure hereditario competebat." Melisende was no mere regent-queen (for her son Baldwin III...
    11: ...hter as a capable successor to himself and Melisende enjoyed the support of the ''[[Haute Cour of Jeru...
  18. Agnes of Courtenay (6051 bytes)
    3: ...]], and it seems that they waited until Fulcher's death to marry. Agnes bore Amalric two children, fir...
    5: .... Despite the annulment, their two children were declared legitimate.
    7: Amalric ascended the throne after the marriage was annulled. Agne...
    11: ...s to maintain her own household, which later included several nobles as clients, such as [[Amalric II ...
    13: ...s an opponent of Raymond III of Tripoli she persuaded Baldwin IV not to allow him to enter the kingdom...
  19. Sibylla of Jerusalem (11497 bytes)
    1: ...Melisende of Jerusalem|Queen Melisende]] had provided an example of successful rule by a queen regnant...
    5: ... former Queen [[Melisende of Jerusalem]], who founded the convent of St. Lazarus in Bethany for her si...
    9: ...t cousin of Sibylla, arrived in [[1177]] and demanded to have the princess married to one of his own v...
    11: ...tween the princess and his prisoner, Saladin demanded a large ransom, which Baldwin himself could not ...
    19: ...he accord between Jerusalem and Egypt. Baldwin IV deposed Guy as regent in [[1183]] and attempted to h...
  20. Eleanor of Aquitaine (11927 bytes)
    3: '''Eleanor of Aquitaine''' ([[Bordeaux]], [[France]], c. [[1124]] &ndash; [[March 31]...
    6: ...], [[Duke of Aquitaine]], and her mother was Ʈor de Chⴥllerault, the daughter of Aimeric I, Vicomte...
    8: ... and richest of the provinces that would become modern [[France]], when her brother, William Aigret, d...
    10: ...uld remain independent of France, and Eleanor's eldest son would be both King of France and [[Dukes of...
    12: ...paign, with her, the Queen of France, as their leader.

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