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  1. Wolf (22358 bytes)
    3: {{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = pink}}
    11: {{Taxobox_end_placement}}
    15: ...ty]]/[[country]], as well as [[conservation]]/[[exploitation]].
    41: ...bitat type, individual personalities, and food supply. Generally packs contain between two and six ani...
    43: ... not give the other wolves orders. The alphas simply have the most freedom to choose where they would...
  2. Wolf spider (726 bytes)
  3. Wolf Spiders (1517 bytes)
    3: {{Taxobox begin placement | color = pink }}
    9: {{Taxobox end placement}}
    10: {{Taxobox section subdivision | color = pink | plural_taxon = Genera}}
  4. Arctic Wolf (3212 bytes)
    3: {{Taxobox begin placement | color = pink}}
    11: {{Taxobox end placement}}
    12: {{Taxobox section subdivision | color = pink | plural_taxon = Distribution}}
    27: ... and [[lemming]]s. Due to the scarcity of grazing plants, they roam large areas to find prey, up to an...

Page text matches

  1. King Arthur (22450 bytes)
    2: ...ht|framed|Victorian image of '''King Arthur''' in plate armour with visor raised and with jousting shi...
    9: ...al Roman of the [[2nd century]], whose military exploits in Britain may have been remembered for centu...
    13: ... that another Roman Briton of the period, for example [[Ambrosius Aurelianus]], led the forces battlin...
    19: ...f Arthur" and states "we went with Arthur in his splendid labours"; and the poem "Journey to Deganwy,"...
    23: ..."Lives") of 6th-century [[saint|saints]]: for example, in the ''Life of Saint [[Illtud]]'', he is said...
  2. Diana, Princess of Wales (29391 bytes)
    7: place_of_birth=[[Sandringham]], [[Norfolk]], [[Engla...
    9: place_of_death=[[Paris]], [[France]]
    11: ...having had the right to that title, as it would imply that she was a [[princess]] by [[birthright]] ra...
    13: ...pic endeavours were overshadowed by a [[scandal]]-plagued marriage. Her bitter accusations of [[adulte...
    34: The wedding took place at [[St Paul's Cathedral]] in [[London]] on [[...
  3. Chromosome (12667 bytes)
    2: ...cessed for [[transcription]], regulation, and [[replication]]. Chromosomes were first observed by [[Ka...
    5: ...pecial structures called ''[[telomere]]s''. DNA replication begins at many different locations on the ...
    8: ...omosomes initiate replication and one origin of replication.
    19: ...romosomes are highly structured (Fig. 2). For example, genes with similar functions are often kept clo...
    23: ...>'''Table 1:''' Examples of chromosome numbers (diploid).</caption>
  4. Bassoon (11661 bytes)
    2: ...cal piece of wood, doubled over onto itself, and split into several sections so it can be disassembled...
    6: ...the modern instrument,frequently constructed of maple, with thick walls to allow finger-holes to be dr...
    10: ...knowledge made possible great improvements in the playability of the instrument. A Dutch painting, "De...
    16: ...he desired tuning. <!--The bocal, made of ... and plated with ... and must be carefully matched to the...
    18: ...istance between the widely-spaced holes with a complex system of keywork, which extends throughout nea...
  5. Contrabassoon (3761 bytes)
    5: ... support is sometimes given by a strap around the player's neck. A wider hand position is also require...
    6: ...There is considerably more air volume required in playing, and the instrument does not respond as quic...
    8: *The instrument comes in one piece (plus [[bocal]]); it does not disassemble.
    11: ...nd small ensemble situations, the sound can be completely obscured in the volume of the full orchestra...
    14: ...ras use one contrabassoonist, either as a primary player or a bassoonist who doubles, as do a large nu...
  6. Harmonica (21752 bytes)
    3: ...gs, as a '''mouth organ''', '''french harp''', simply '''harp''', or
    4: "'''Mississippi saxophone'''"), having multiple, variably-tuned [[brass]]
    24: The harmonica consists of a "comb" made of wood, plastic or metal which
    25: creates the holes into which a player blows or draws to make distinct
    26: ...e comb. Over the reedplates, there is a metal or plastic cover which projects the sound out of the op...
  7. John Quincy Adams (11783 bytes)
    10: | place of birth=[[Braintree]], [[Massachusetts]]
    13: | place of death=[[Washington, D.C.]]
    24: ...rn wife, Adams wed Louisa Johnson in 1797. The couple named one of their sons after George Washington....
    37: ...latter's quest for re-election, was sworn in to replace him.
    80: ...turned to [[Spain]], but returned home as free people.
  8. Europe (23835 bytes)
    18: ...hs]] marked the start of a period of discovery, exploration, and increase in scientific knowledge. In ...
    44: ...heart lies the [[North German Plain]]. An arc of uplands also exists along the northwestern seaboard, ...
    46: ... counted as part of Europe, while the latter are upland areas that were once joined to the mainland un...
    53: ...civilisations for millennia, Europe's animals and plants have been profoundly affected by the presence...
    55: ...at caused incalculable disruption to the original plant and animal ecosystems.
  9. Ethiopia (20233 bytes)
    63: ... missionaries. At the same time, the [[Oromo]] people began to migrate north into Ethiopian territorit...
    67: ...e modernisation, when the [[Italian]]s began to replace the British influence. [[Assab]], a port near...
    69: ...tually defeated in [[1991]] by the [[Ethiopian Peoples' Revolutionary Democratic Front]] (EPRDF), a co...
    77: ...suring a landslide victory for the [[Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front]] (EPRDF). Inte...
    83: ...nt began a drive to move more than two million people away from the arid highlands of the east, propos...
  10. Portugal (61755 bytes)
    15: ...s]], forming the [[Celt-Iberian]]s. Early Greek explorers named the region "[[Ophiussa]]" (Greek for "...
    21: ...radle of Portugal." The Battle of S㯠Mamede took place nearby in 1128. (courtesy IPPAR)]]
    25: An [[Islam]]ic invasion took place in [[711]]. Many of the ousted nobles took ref...
    29: ...as formally recognized. Afonso, aided by the [[Templar Knights]], continued to conquer southern lands ...
    31: ...torious John was then acclaimed as king by the people.
  11. Wolverine (3928 bytes)
    4: {{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = pink}}
    12: {{Taxobox_end_placement}}
    21: Wolverines mate in the summer, but implantation in the [[uterus]] is delayed until early ...
  12. Ancient Rome (25155 bytes)
    19: ... consuls, initially patrician but later opened to plebeians, were elected officials who exercised exec...
    21: The Romans gradually subdued the other peoples on the Italian peninsula, mostly related ''Ital...
    25: ...e of the senators, however, and was murdered in a plot organised by [[Brutus]] and [[Gaius Cassius Lon...
    27: ... any bloodshed (or even much resistance), thus completing Octavian's (now renamed [[Augustus]]) projec...
    33: .... After [[395 AD]] the empire became permanently split into a western and an eastern part.
  13. Connecticut (28543 bytes)
    56: ...t and northwest corners of the state contrast sharply with its industrial cities, located along the co...
    65: ..."[[Gold Coast, Connecticut|Gold Coast]]", for example, is often derided by residents of the rest of th...
    79: ...ly''' have been a miracle.) [[Bus]] service is supplied by [[Connecticut Transit]], owned by the [[Con...
    81: ...hey exited. A series of terrible crashes at these plazas eventually led to abandonment of the whole to...
    83: ...e daily radio broadcasts of where crashes have completely blocked traffic are a fact of life for commu...
  14. Animal (16429 bytes)
    3: {{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = pink}}
    6: {{Taxobox_end_placement}}
    7: {{Taxobox_section_subdivision | color = pink | plural_taxon = Phyla}}
    11: [[Trichoplax|Placozoa]]<br>
    31: &nbsp;Superphylum [[Platyzoa]]<br>
  15. Spider (29039 bytes)
    3: {{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = pink}}
    8: {{Taxobox_end_placement}}
    9: {{Taxobox_section_subdivision | color = pink | plural_taxon = Families}}
    20: &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Dipluridae ([[funnel-web tarantula]])<br />
    59: &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Plectreuridae ([[plectreurid spider]])<br />
  16. Asteroid (24334 bytes)
    1: ...ipse|elliptical]] orbits between those of [[Mars (planet)|Mars]] and [[Jupiter]]. [[image:433eros.jpg|...
    4: ... term to the small moons of the [[gas giant|giant planets]]. The first [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-...
    6: ...solar system, and some argue that not every minor planet should be called an "asteroid".
    10: ...em, and [[minor planet]] for a taxonomy of the subplanetary objects that include asteroids. The term '...
    14: ...360) 1981 VA]]; the last numbered and named minor planet was [[99905 Jeffgrossman]] [http://cfa-www.ha...
  17. List of painters (54090 bytes)
    1: The following list is an incomplete '''list of painters'''.
    281: *[[John Singleton Copley]] ([[1737]]-[[1815]])
    616: *[[Leon Kaplinski]] ([[1826]]-[[1873]])
    958: *[[Stefan Planinc]] ([[1925]]-)
    959: *[[Jan Bogumil Plersch]] ([[1732]]-[[1817]])
  18. Byzantine Empire (29975 bytes)
    7: ...e Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul (Constantinople).</small>
    10: | Constantine makes Constantinople his capital.
    13: | The Empire is permanently split into Eastern and Western halves, following the ...
    32: ...urch in Rome breaks with the Church in Constantinople.
    38: | Constantinople is occupied by crusaders; Latin empire formed.
  19. Animals (10378 bytes)
    7: *Heterotrophic Nutrition: Unlike plants, animals cannot synthesize their own food. Th...
    8: ...ets in cnidarians (jellyfish, for instance) to complex brains in mammals.
    11: ...ell walls, a feature that distinguishes them from plants and fungi. They have a more flexible cell mem...
    18: ...[plant]]s and [[fungus|fungi]] have cells held in place by [[cell wall]]s, so develop by progressive g...
    24: ...mals is seen in the freshwater Hydra, a small, simple organism belonging to the phylum Cnidaria. Hydra...
  20. January (2450 bytes)
    14: ...]. In England, the agricultural year began with [[Plough Sunday]] on the [[Sunday]] after [[Epiphany]]...

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