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  1. Guinea-Bissau (9517 bytes)
    1: ...usion between itself and the [[Guinea|Republic of Guinea]].
    7: | align="center" width="140px" | [[image:Guinea bissau flag large.png|125px|]]
    8: | align="center" width="140px" | [[Image:Coaguinea-bissau.jpg|100px|]]
    10: | align="center" width="140px" | ([[Flag of Guinea-Bissau|In Detail]])
    11: | align="center" width="140px" | ([[Emblem of Guinea-Bissau|Full size]])
  2. Equatorial Guinea (13387 bytes)
    1: ...ituated near both the [[equator]] and the Gulf of Guinea.
    3: |+<big><big>'''Rep?a de Guinea Ecuatorial<br>R鰵blique de la Guin饠ɱuatoriale...
    7: ...al guinea flag large.png|125px|Flag of Equatorial Guinea]]
    10: ...gn="center" width="140px" | ([[Flag of Equatorial Guinea|In Detail]])
    16: ...cationEquatorialGuinea.png|Location of Equatorial Guinea]]
  3. Guinea pig (19730 bytes)
    1: {{Taxobox_begin | color = pink | name = Guinea pigs}}
    2: ...axobox_image | image = [[image:Guinea_1.jpg|250px|Guinea Pigs]] | caption = }}
    22: ...although there is a minority belief in the scientific community that evidence from [[mitochondrial DNA...
    24: ...f information in this article is about the common guinea pig.
    27: ...vegetable scraps as a half pet/half future meal. Guinea pigs are called ''cuy'' (pl. ''cuyes'') in Per? c...
  4. Guinea Pigs (18488 bytes)
    1: {{Taxobox_begin | color = pink | name = Guinea pigs}}
    2: ...axobox_image | image = [[image:Guinea_1.jpg|250px|Guinea Pigs]] | caption = }}
    22: ...although there is a minority belief in the scientific community that evidence from [[mitochondrial DNA...
    24: ...f information in this article is about the common guinea pig.
    27: ...vegetable scraps as a half pet/half future meal. Guinea pigs are called ''cuy'' (pl. ''cuyes'') in Per? c...
  5. New Guinea Singing Dog (1528 bytes)
    1: ... the Australian [[Dingo]] that is native to [[New Guinea]]. Discovered by Sir Edward Halistrom in 1957, N...
    4: ...ion]]s as the [[United Kennel Club]], which classifies them as a pariah dog.

Page text matches

  1. List of explorers (24013 bytes)
    1: ...eplacing the [[Ford Excursion]]). For the science fiction book, see [[Expedition (book)]].''
    12: ... Álvares]] ([[16th century]] [[Portuguese]], the first to reach [[China]])
    17: ...[Norway|Norwegian]], first at the [[South Pole]], first to navigate the [[Northwest Passage]] in a sin...
    21: ...(1796—1878), [[British Empire|British]] naval officer, several expeditions to the [[Canada|Canadian]...
    23: ...9]]), [[Spain|Spanish]], first to sight the [[Pacific Ocean]], founded Darién, oldest surviving Europ...
  2. Jules Dumont d'Urville (2251 bytes)
    1: ...ficer]], who explored the south and western [[Pacific]], [[Australia]], [[New Zealand]], and [[Antarct...
    4: ...t him much acclaim and proved to be his most significant discovery, occurred in [[1820]] during an ex...
    6: ...errey|Captain Duperrey]], and brought home a very fine collection of animals and plants.
    8: ...sent to the Pacific, surveyed the coasts of [[New Guinea]], [[New Zealand]], and other islands, and found ...
  3. Christopher Columbus (44177 bytes)
    3: ... regions. Although his explorations were not the first to reach the Americas, they inaugurated perman...
    5: ...wever, there is one thing that sets off Columbus' first voyage from all of these: less than two decade...
    9: ...[[potato]]es, [[maize]], and [[horse]]s), and the first large-scale [[colonization]] of the Americas b...
    11: Columbus remains a controversial figure. Some &ndash; including many [[Native America...
    27: ...[[1474]], Columbus joined a ship of the [[Spinola Financiers]], who were Genoese patrons of his father...
  4. List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
    5: ...ieutenant general and Japanese commander in [[New Guinea]]
    15: *[[Adam]], Biblical figure, first man
    34: *[[Abigail Adams|Adams, Abigail]], (1744-1818), [[First Lady of the United States]]
    41: ...ivil War General and president of the [[Union Pacific Railroad]]
    66: ...officer)|Adams, Samuel]], (1912-1942), US naval officer
  5. Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (35966 bytes)
    2: ...equeen.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Elizabeth II in an official portrait as [[Queen of Canada]] (on the occas...
    7: ...nada]], [[Jamaica]], [[New Zealand]], [[Papua New Guinea]], [[Saint Kitts and Nevis]], [[Saint Lucia]], [[...
    20: ...s]] was [[Marion Crawford]], better known as "Crawfie". She studied history with C. H. K. Marten, Prov...
    23: ...stances". In [[1940]] Princess Elizabeth made her first broadcast, addressing other children who had b...
    27: ...her than have them educated at home. She was the first (and as of 2005 the only) female member of the...
  6. Margaret Thatcher (46377 bytes)
    5: |'''Period in Office:'''
    27: ...servative Party (UK)|Conservative Party]] and the figurehead of a political philosophy that became kno...
    33: Her popularity finally declined when she replaced the unpopular [[R...
    36: ...cal politics, serving as an [[Alderman]] (while officially described as '[[Whig|Liberal]] Independent'...
    38: .... She was a member of the team that developed the first soft frozen ice cream.
  7. Amelia Earhart (9225 bytes)
    2: ...ious disappearance during a flight over the [[Pacific Ocean]].
    6: ...ility to provide for his family, Amelia spent the first twelve years of her life living with her mothe...
    8: ...om some of her family, in 1922 Earhart bought her first [[airplane]], a [[Kinner Airstar]]. After her ...
    10: ...the [[White House]]. From then on, flying was the fixture of Earhart's life. She placed third at the C...
    16: ...he took delivery of a [[Lockheed 10E]] "Electra," financed by [[Purdue University]], she started plann...
  8. Margaret Mead (11387 bytes)
    5: ... culture. (Source: ''The Columbia Encyclopedia'', Fifth Edition, 1993.)
    7: ... public to read and learn from her works--remains firm.
    12: ...Mead's advisor, [[Franz Boas]], wrote of its significance that
    13: ...onstitutes courtesy, modesty, good manners, and definite ethical standards is not universal. It is in...
    22: ...expected, this book upset many Westerners when it first appeared in 1928. Many American readers felt s...
  9. Mother Teresa (22682 bytes)
    6: ...] (one of only six). She was [[Beatification|beatified]] by [[Pope John Paul II]] in [[October 2003]],...
    9: ...lbanian]]. Her parents, Nikolla ( Kol렩 and Dranafile Bojaxhiu, were [[Albanian]] Catholics that emig...
    13: ... Avila]] and [[Th鲨se de Lisieux]]. She took her final vows in May [[1937]], acquiring the religious ...
    17: ...was joined by voluntary helpers, and she received financial support from church organizations and the ...
    24: With the help of Indian officials she converted an abandoned [[Hinduism|Hindu]...
  10. Orchidaceae (20056 bytes)
    14: ...ies than all vertebrates combined, excluding bony fishes. Orchids, through their floral complexity and...
    16: ...me [[terrestrial]] species. The word 'orchis' was first used by [[Theophrastos]] ([[372 BC|372]]/[[371...
    21: ...a]] and [[Central America]]. Orchids can be classified according to the way they retrieve nutrients:
    26: All orchids have these five basic features :
    29: ... [[pollinium|pollinia]], a mass of waxy pollen on filaments.
  11. Rhododendron (3464 bytes)
    32: ...st to [[Yunnan]] and [[Sichuan]], with other significant areas of diversity in the mountains of [[Indo...
    34: ...pecies occur as far south as [[Borneo]] and [[New Guinea]]. They grow well in [[acid soil]], and are noted...
  12. Placenta (1967 bytes)
    5: ...he fetus. However, many other substances are not filtered out, including [[alcohol]]. Most [[virus]]...
    11: ...ing mammals only found in [[Australia]] and [[New Guinea]], and the [[marsupial]]s, which are found primar...
  13. Chromosome (12667 bytes)
    1: [[image:chromosome.png|frame|'''Figure 1:''' Chromosome. (1) <font color="#0000FF">C...
    2: ...regulation, and [[replication]]. Chromosomes were first observed by [[Karl Wilhelm von N䧥li]] in [[1...
    8: ...tion between plasmids and chromosomes is poorly defined, though size and necessity are generally taken...
    17: [[image:chromatin_chromosome.png|frame|none|'''Figure 2:''' Different levels of DNA condensation. (...
    19: ...ir appearance, chromosomes are highly structured (Fig. 2). For example, genes with similar functions a...
  14. Parasite (2795 bytes)
    1: ...s parasitism, since it requires that the host benefit from the interaction as well as the parasite.
    16: *** [[Candiru]] (Vampire fish of Brazil)
    18: *** [[Dracunculiasis]] (Guinea Worm Disease)
    45: ...ship, society or system without contributing significantly to it, although they could; however this us...
  15. Continent (6440 bytes)
    2: ...s a large continuous [[land mass]]. The world was first divided into continents by the geographers of ...
    4: ... consisting of a thin [[basalt]]ic layer of solidified mantle, and covered by a sea punctuated with ba...
    13: Geographers and historians find it useful to define larger land masses connected with a [[land brid...
    19: Africa-Eurasia is less commonly defined than the Americas. These land masses are usua...
    23: These definitions give the following alternate models:
  16. Africa (35389 bytes)
    16: ...'ph'' to ''f'' in Greek is datable to about the [[first century]], so this cannot really be the origin...
    18: ... was considered part of Asia by the ancients, and first assigned to Africa by the geographer [[Ptolemy...
    55: ...acial based categorization and philosophies was a fixture of the European culture of that time. The te...
    57: ...nd determining ones ancestoral past based on superficial features was highly innaccurate.
    59: ... created civil war and unrest between those identified as Hutu and Tutsi which culminated with the Rwa...
  17. Australia (39438 bytes)
    8: official_languages =[[English language|English]]|
    48: ...Kingdom of Great Britain|British]] in 1770, and officially settled as a British colony on [[January 26...
    50: ...es of the waterway across the border by Papua New Guinean people and [[Torres Strait Islander]]s.
    54: ...refer to the whole South Pacific region, not specifically to the Australian continent. In 1793 [[Georg...
    56: ...lly accepted that the continent should be known officially as Australia.
  18. Indo-Australian Plate (2019 bytes)
    3: ...]. [[India]], [[Meganesia]] ([[Australia]], [[New Guinea]], and [[Tasmania]]), [[New Zealand]], and [[New ...
    5: ...]] with the subducting [[Pacific Plate]]. The Pacific Plate subducting under the Australian Plate form...
  19. Land bridge (3351 bytes)
    6: ...th and the [[South American Plate]] to the south, first an [[island arc]], and then continuous dry lan...
    16: * There were land bridges between [[New Guinea]], [[Australia]], and [[Tasmania]]. The combined...
  20. Sub-Saharan Africa (3920 bytes)
    7: ...onsidered part of Africa. According to this classification scheme, the countries of sub-Saharan Africa...
    49: * [[Equatorial Guinea]]
    53: * [[Guinea-Bissau]]
    64: * [http://travel.state.gov/tips_sub-saharanafica.html USA State department travel tips]

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