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- Mexico (27255 bytes)
70: ...merica]] were all incorporated into Mexico from [[1822]] to [[1823]], when they declared independence, w...
78: ...investment allowed the development of the [[Petroleum|oil]] industry and the construction of the [[rai...
178: ...Trade Agreements]], including [[Japan]] and the [[European Union]]. However more than 85% of the trade...
185: ...predominantly Amerindian, and 9% is white or of [[Europe]]an descent. The remaining 1% includes black,...
201: ...Venetian language|Venetian]] dialect. While other European immigrants assimilated into the Mexican cul... - Rio de Janeiro (14538 bytes)
13: ...[Amerigo Vespucci]] in January of 1501. Since the Europeans thought at first the Bay of Guanabara was ...
15: ...ips between Brazil, the [[Africa]]n colonies, and Europe. Fortresses were built and an alliance was fo...
17: ...palicade on top of a hill, imitating the medieval European strategy of defense of fortified castles - ...
21: ... then became the only European capital outside of Europe. Since there was no physical space nor urban ...
23: ... Pedro proclaimed the independence of Brazil in [[1822]], he decided to keep Rio de Janeiro as the capit... - Jules Dumont d'Urville (2251 bytes)
6: In [[1822]] he sailed on a voyage around the world under [[...
16: ...s wife and son in a [[railroad]] accident near [[Meudon]], France. He is buried in the [[Cimetière du... - Maria Theresa of Austria (8450 bytes)
4: ...ul women of her time, ruling over most of central Europe.
6: ...nherit his united lands on his death. While many European monarchs agreed to the Pragmatic Sanction w...
16: ...-1798), married HSH Prince Albert of Saxony (1738-1822); no issue - Accordion (10069 bytes)
20: ...eds with these characteristics were first used in Europe around [[1800]] AD for organs. People used th...
22: ... China in the [[1800s]] brought this idea back to Europe. However, the [[sheng (instrument)|sheng]] us...
26: The first basic "accordion" was invented in [[1822]] by [[Friedrich Buschmann]] in [[Berlin]].
29: ...fferent patents were granted in Vienna and across Europe for accordion innovations, but it is impossib...
37: The '''piano accordion''' was developed in Europe in the late 1800s and has become the most com... - James Monroe (11107 bytes)
36: ...y to recognize the young sister republics until [[1822]], after ascertaining that Congress would vote ap...
38: ...idered as subjects for future colonization by any European Power." Some 20 years after Monroe died in ...
42: ...live with his daughter Maria Hester Monroe Gouverneur in New York City and died there peacefully from ...
112: ...ister Plenipotentiary to France | before=[[Gouverneur Morris]] | after=[[Charles Cotesworth Pinckney]]... - Ulysses S. Grant (23281 bytes)
9: ...r><td>'''Date of Birth'''</td><td>[[April 27]], [[1822]]</td></tr>
22: '''Ulysses S. Grant''' ([[April 27]], [[1822]] – [[July 23]], [[1885]]) was a [[Union ar...
45: ...sident [[Abraham Lincoln]], who appointed him [[lieutenant general]]—a new rank recently authori...
48: ...a bulldog". Although a master of combat by out-maneuvering his opponent (such as at Vicksburg and in t...
166: ...is wife, in [[Grant's Tomb]], the largest [[mausoleum]] in [[North America]]. - Brazil (12581 bytes)
8: ...ro I]] declared independence on [[7 September]] [[1822]], establishing the independent [[Empire of Brazi...
10: Brazil attracted over 5 million [[Europe]]an and [[Japanese people|Japanese]] immigran... - Elephantine (3346 bytes)
7: ...owing the nilometer (lower left) and the Aswan Museum.]]
8: ...um, that are now on display in the Elephantine Museum. Artifacts dating back to predynastic times have...
13: ...II]] and [[Amenhotep III]] on the island prior to 1822, when they were destroyed by the Ottoman governme...
17: ...ical site, the island today houses the [[Aswan Museum]], a luxury hotel, and a sizable population of N... - New Mexico (31079 bytes)
9: Motto = Crescit eundo (It grows as it goes) |
38: ...ly recognized languages in the state. In [[Spain|European]] [[Spanish language|Spanish]], the state's...
50: ...] colony on the Rio Grande in [[1598]], the first European settlement in the future state of New Mexic...
62: ...Independence, Missouri]], for Santa Fe early in [[1822]] with the first party of traders. Wagon caravans...
84: ...development of accompanying cow towns. Cattlemen feuded between each other and with authorities, most ... - Dinosaur (35313 bytes)
18: ... skeletons have become a major attraction at [[museum]]s around the world. Dinosaurs have become a par...
30: ...Buzz''] hosted by [[University of California]] Museum of [[Paleontology]]</blockquote>
44: ...plodocus carnegiei]]'', outside the [[Carnegie Museum of Natural History]]]]
49: ...in [[Pittsburgh]]'s [[Carnegie Natural History Museum]] in 1907.
126: ...hica]]'' on display at the [[Oxford University Museum of Natural History]]]] - Comet (30542 bytes)
9: ...ile the solid body of the comet (called the ''nucleus'') is generally less than 50km across, the coma ...
11: ...t]] of [[England]] in [[1066]].{{hnote|Reading Museum, scene 1}}
15: ...nd to be very dark, like [[tar]] or crude [[Petroleum|oil]]. The very darkness of cometary surfaces al...
31: ...d independently by the [[IRAS]] satellite and amateur astronomers Genichi Araki and George Alcock. In...
57: ...[[November 14]], [[1680]]. Astronomers throughout Europe tracked its position for several months. In ... - List of painters (54090 bytes)
36: *[[Tadeusz Ajdukiewicz]] ([[1852]]-[[1916]])
171: *[[Rosa Bonheur]] ([[1822]]-[[1899]])
185: *[[Eugene Boudin|Eugène Boudin]]
216: *[[Tadeusz Brzozowski (painter)|Tadeusz Brzozowski]] ([[1818]]-[[1887]])
330: *[[Eugène Delacroix|Eugène Delacroix]] ([[1798]]-[[1863]]) - Cell (biology) (28190 bytes)
21: ...structures of eukaryotic cells, including the nucleus (''light blue''), the nucleolus (''intermediate ...
27: ...cells are placed in the domains [[Archaea]] and [[Eubacteria]].
29: ...nelle]]s with their own membranes. Single-celled eukaryotic organisms such as [[amoeba]]e and some [[...
32: ...elle]]s: (1) [[nucleolus]] (2) [[cell nucleus|nucleus]] (3) [[ribosome]] (4) [[vesicle (biology)|vesic...
34: All cells whether prokaryotic or eukaryotic have a [[cell membrane|membrane]], which ... - Galileo Galilei (33761 bytes)
10: ...ically. There was no tradition of such methods in European thought at that time; the great experimenta...
18: ...ch [[1610]] in a short treatise entitled ''[[Sidereus Nuncius]]'' (''Sidereal Messenger'').
20: ... Galileo published a full description in ''[[Sidereus Nuncius]]'' in March [[1610]].]]
22: ...ites]] (moons): [[Io (moon)|Io]], [[Europa (moon)|Europa]], and [[Callisto (moon)|Callisto]]. [[Ganyme...
26: ...e discovery of sunspots led to a long and bitter feud with [[Christoph Scheiner]]; in fact, there can ... - Timeline of United States history (1820-1859) (8457 bytes)
9: *[[1822]] - [[Denmark Vesey]] executed
10: *[[1822]] - [[Cumberland Road]] Bill - Michigan (29427 bytes)
40: Michigan was explored and settled by French voyageurs in the 17th century. In [[1701]], explorer [[A...
42: ... [[Toledo War]] when Michigan and Ohio militia maneuvered in the area. Ultimately, Congress awarded t...
54: === Early European history ===
56: ...blished [[Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan]], the first European settlement in Michigan
57: ...701]] [[Antoine de Lamothe Cadillac]], with his lieutenant [[Alphonse de Tonty]], established a tradin... - January 17 (12233 bytes)
9: ...l [[Daniel Morgan]] defeat British forces under Lieutenant Colonel [[Banastre Tarleton]] at the Battle...
39: ...[Czech Republic]] applies for membership of the [[European Union]].
50: ...[1763]] - [[John Jacob Astor]], American entrepreneur (d. [[1848]])
123: ...]], 19th [[President of the United States]] (b. [[1822]]) - January 2 (10888 bytes)
17: *[[1871]] - [[Amadeus I of Spain|Amadeus I]] becomes King of [[Spain]].
28: *[[1921]] - [[DeYoung Museum]] in [[Golden Gate Park]] San Francisco opens.
60: *[[1822]] - [[Rudolf Clausius]], German physicist, contri... - List of chemists (10401 bytes)
16: *[[Claude Louis Berthollet]], (1748-1822), French chemist
52: *[[Hans von Euler-Chelpin]], (1873-1964), Swedish chemist, winne...
140: *[[Louis Pasteur]], (1822-1895), French [[biochemistry|biochemist]]
157: *[[Tadeus Reichstein]], (1897-1996), chemist, 1950 [[Nobel...
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