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  1. Guinea-Bissau (9517 bytes)
    1: ... [[Africa]]. It is bordered by [[Senegal]] to the north, and [[Guinea]] to the south and east, with th...
    22: | [[Bissau, Guinea-Bissau|Bissau]] (Note: Former President Kumba Yala decided to change ...
    54: | [[Esta 頡 Nossa Pᴲia Bem Amada]]
    65: ...NR028133.pdf?OpenElement] , unprecedented as it denounced illegal Portuguese aggression and occupation...
    69: ...ate President of the country. Former President Nino Vieira, deposed in the 1998 coup, also has return...
  2. Equatorial Guinea (13387 bytes)
    1: ...Guinea]], the country's territory (continentally known as [[R�Muni]]) includes a number of islands, ...
    78: A November 2004 report [http://www.theaustralian.news....
    80: ==Economy==
    81: ''Main article: [[Economy of Equatorial Guinea]]''
    87: ...g predominates. The deterioration of the rural economy under successive brutal regimes has diminished ...
  3. Guinea pig (19730 bytes)
    17: ''[[Cavia anolaimae]]''<br>
    22: ...assified in order Rodentia, although there is a minority belief in the scientific community that evide...
    24: ... their common name, the animals are not [[pig]]s, nor do they come from [[Guinea]]. Although there are...
    27: ...[Andean]] region of [[South America]], in what is now [[Peru]] and [[Bolivia]]. They continue to be a...
    29: ...o the body, a stout neck, and a rounded rump with no tail of any consequence.
  4. Guinea Pigs (18488 bytes)
    17: ''[[Cavia anolaimae]]''<br>
    22: ...assified in order Rodentia, although there is a minority belief in the scientific community that evide...
    24: ... their common name, the animals are not [[pig]]s, nor do they come from [[Guinea]]. Although there are...
    27: ...[Andean]] region of [[South America]], in what is now [[Peru]] and [[Bolivia]]. They continue to be a...
    29: ...o the body, a stout neck, and a rounded rump with no tail of any consequence.
  5. New Guinea Singing Dog (1528 bytes)
    4: ...a, today populations remain only in remote mountainous areas. They are an exceptionally clever breed o...

Page text matches

  1. List of explorers (24013 bytes)
    1: ... [[travelogue]], the [[History of Science and Technology]] and [[Biography]]. Also, see [[Internationa...
    3: {{compactTOC}}__NOTOC__
    17: ...st at the [[South Pole]], first to navigate the [[Northwest Passage]] in a single ship
    22: ...y]]/[[16th century]] [[Portuguese]] explorer of [[North America]])
    26: *[[Heinrich Barth]] ([[1821]]-[[1865]]), Northern and Central Africa
  2. Jules Dumont d'Urville (2251 bytes)
    4: ...amous statues in the world. The [[Venus de Milo]] now stands in the [[Louvre]] in [[Paris]].
    10: ...[French Southern Territories|Adélie Coast]] in honor of his wife.
    14: Later, in honor of his many valuable chartings, the [[D'Urville ...
  3. Christopher Columbus (44177 bytes)
    1: ...' in [[Portuguese]]) was most probably [[Genova|Genoese]], although some historians claim he could hav...
    3: ...windless regions. Although his explorations were not the first to reach the Americas, they inaugurate...
    5: ... two decades later, the existence of America was known to the general public throughout Europe. This i...
    7: ..., including the isles of Juana ([[Cuba]]) and Espanola ([[Hispaniola]]), as well as the coasts of [[Ce...
    11: ...ope, and slavery in the [[West Indies]]. Others honour him for the massive boost his explorations gave...
  4. List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
    9: ...]], (1757-1840), U.S. soldier and statesman, governor of Kentuvky
    25: ...cki, Karol]], (1866-1933), Polish engineer and economist
    56: ...ouch Adams|Adams, John Couch]], (1819-1892), astronomer
    63: ...s (author)|Adams, Richard]], (born 1920), British novelist
    65: ...s, Samuel]], (1722-1803), American patriot & Governor of Massachusetts
  5. Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (35966 bytes)
    7: ...nited Kingdom|United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland]].
    9: ...ist of Lords of the Isle of Man|Lord of Mann]]<!--Note on spelling: the Isle of Man has one "n", but h...
    20: ...ge|Eton]], and also learned modern languages. She now speaks fluent [[French language|French]], as she...
    23: ...sed to consider this, saying, "The children could not possibly go without me, I wouldn't leave without...
    27: ...itary, though other royal women have been given honorary ranks.
  6. Margaret Thatcher (46377 bytes)
    7: &ndash; [[28 November]] [[1990]]
    24: |'''Retirement honour:'''
    27: ...figurehead of a political philosophy that became known as [[Thatcherism]], which involves reduced gove...
    31: ...ccured that led to an improvement in Britain's economic performance. Supporters of Margaret Thatcher a...
    33: ...ical approach to [[European Union|European]] [[Economic and Monetary Union]]. Her leadership was chall...
  7. Amelia Earhart (9225 bytes)
    2: ...a famous [[United States|American]] [[aviator]], known for breaking new ground for female pilots, and ...
    8: ...d in flying and began taking lessons from [[Neta Snook]]. With financial help from some of her family,...
    10: ...n attorney from Boston, but in November of 1928 announced that the engagement had been broken and soon...
    14: ...s of Knight of the [[L駩on d'honneur|Legion of Honor]] from the French Government, and the Gold Medal...
    16: ...to fly solo across the [[Pacific Ocean]] from [[Honolulu]] to [[Oakland, California]]. Later that year...
  8. Margaret Mead (11387 bytes)
    3: ...aret Mead''' ([[December 16]], [[1901]] &ndash; [[November 15]], [[1978]]) was an [[United States|Amer...
    5: ... curator, eventually serving as its curator of ethnology from 1946 to 1969. In addition, she taught a...
    7: ...nthropologist--one who wrote clearly and vividly enough for the general public to read and learn from ...
    9: She died in [[New York]] on [[15 November]] [[1978]], aged 76.
    13: ...tandards is not universal. It is instructive to know that standards differ in the most unexpected way...
  9. Mother Teresa (22682 bytes)
    4: ...[September 5]] [[1997]]) was an internationally renowned and controversial [[Catholic]] [[nun]] and fo...
    6: ...[[Bharat Ratna]] in [[1980]]. She was made an [[Honorary Citizen of the United States]] in [[1996]] (o...
    9: ...[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] province of [[Kosovo]] (now [[Skopje]] in the [[Republic of Macedonia]]), wh...
    11: Little is known of Teresa's early life except from her own remi...
    13: ... there, choosing the name Sister Mary Teresa in honour of [[Teresa of Avila]] and [[Th鲨se de Lisieux...
  10. Orchidaceae (20056 bytes)
    2: ...age | image = [[Image:Orchin_P622.jpg|250px|Phalaenopsis hybrid]] | caption = Orchid}}
    5: ...obox_divisio_entry | taxon = [[Flowering plant|Magnoliophyta]]}}
    6: {{Taxobox_classis_entry | taxon = [[Monocotyledon|Liliopsida]]}}
    14: ...me sources give 30,000) [[species]], and perhaps another 60,000 [[hybrid]]s and varieties produced by ...
    21: These [[monocotyledon]]ous plants are [[cosmopolitan]] in dist...
  11. Rhododendron (3464 bytes)
    5: ...obox_divisio_entry | taxon = [[Flowering plant|Magnoliophyta]]}}
    6: {{Taxobox_classis_entry | taxon = [[Magnoliopsida]]}}
    32: ...entration of diversity occurs in the [[Himalaya|Sino-Himalayan]] [[mountain]]s of southeast [[Asia]] f...
    34: ...uinea]]. They grow well in [[acid soil]], and are noted for their many clusters of large trumpet-shape...
    40: ...a flowers. All parts of the rhododendron are poisonous to [[horse]]s, especially the leaves.
  12. Placenta (1967 bytes)
    5: ...rm the fetus. However, many other substances are not filtered out, including [[alcohol]]. Most [[vir...
    9: ...in the center of the front of the [[abdomen]] is known as the [[umbilicus]], or navel, or belly-button...
    11: The only non-placental mammals are the [[monotreme]]s, which are egg-laying mammals only found ...
  13. Chromosome (12667 bytes)
    2: ...ith an optical [[microscope]]. [[Prokaryote]]s do not possess histones or nuclei. In its relaxed state...
    17: ...[[prophase]]. (Two copies of the DNA molecule are now present) (5) Chromosome during [[metaphase]].]]
    37: <td>[[Drosophila melanogaster|Fruit fly]]</td>
    122: ...over]]), and thus create new chromosomes that are not inherited solely from either parent. When a male...
    127: ...mans have special [[XY sex-determination system|gonosomes]] (sex chromosomes, in
  14. Parasite (2795 bytes)
    1: ...e of [[symbiosis]], by one definition, although another definition of symbiosis excludes parasitism, ...
    4: ...e life cycle guarantees the death of the host are not called parasites, but are [[parasitoid]]s.
    17: *** ''[[Clonorchis sinensis]]'' (the Chinese liver fluke)
    23: *** [[Gymnosporangium]] and other rusts
    30: ...' (''ecto'' = outside; parasites that live on but not within their hosts, for example, attached to the...
  15. Continent (6440 bytes)
    2: ...d north of the [[Mediterranean Sea]], and Libya, known by the Romans as [[Africa (province)|Africa]], ...
    4: ... covered by a sea punctuated with basaltic [[volcano]]s. There are six large continental plates, which...
    8: # [[North America]] mostly on the [[North American Plate]]
    16: ...mericas]] (or America): the combined land mass of North America and South America
    21: ...rians may subdivide Africa-Eurasia into Eurasia-[[North Africa]] and [[Sub-Saharan Africa]].
  16. Africa (35389 bytes)
    8: ...fri" (plural, or "Afer" singular) &mdash; for the northern part of the continent, as the [[Africa (pro...
    12: ...be&mdash;possibly [[Berber]]&mdash;who dwelt in [[North Africa]] in the Carthage area;
    16: ...atable to about the [[first century]], so this cannot really be the origin of the name.
    18: ...nent, the idea of ''Africa'' expanded with their knowledge.
    26: ...us of Suez, 130 km (80 miles) wide. From the most northerly point, Ras ben Sakka in [[Morocco]], a lit...
  17. Australia (39438 bytes)
    7: national_motto =None (formerly Advance Australia)|
    13: ...a|Queen]]<br>[[Governor-General of Australia|Governor-General]]<br>[[Prime Minister of Australia|Prime...
    38: footnotes=|
    44: footnotes=<sup>1</sup>There are some minor variations from these three timezones, see [[Aus...
    50: ...etres; however, the [[Extreme points of Australia|northernmost inhabited island]], [[Boigu Island]], i...
  18. Indo-Australian Plate (2019 bytes)
    3: ...spreading]] separated these land masses from one another, but as the spreading centers became inactive...
    5: ...central part of Tasmantis sank below the sea, and now constitutes the [[Lord Howe Rise]].
    7: ...north and the [[African Plate]] to the south. The northerly side of the Indian Plate is a [[convergent...
    9: The north-east side of the [[Australian plate]] forms a ...
  19. Land bridge (3351 bytes)
    1: ...Africa. A land bridge doesn't have to be narrow enough to be called an [[isthmus]].
    4: ...the last glaciation, is part of the edge of the [[North American plate]]. For causes of sea level cha...
    6: ... boundary]] under the North American Plate to the north and the [[South American Plate]] to the south,...
    9: * [[Bering land bridge]] connected North Asia and Alaska.
    10: * [[Sinai Peninsula]] connects North Africa ([[Egypt]]) and Southwest Asia.
  20. Sub-Saharan Africa (3920 bytes)
    1: ...' corresponds with the standard representation of North as above and South as below. '''Tropical Afric...
    3: ...much of the interior of the continent remained unknown to the outside world until the colonial era.
    5: ...of the [[least developed countries]]. (See ''[[Economy of Africa]]''.)
    7: ...n of the dividing line between the two regions is not clearly defined because of discontinuous and blu...

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