Wikipedia:Articles for creation/2008-05-07
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Pigmy Chicken
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SourcesGeorge Carpenter, a specialest in bird biology who works for the Birds of Prey Center in Idaho. 70.193.214.204 (talk) 00:31, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Sunnyvale Cool Cities
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24.6.177.197 (talk) 00:35, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Josh McDougal
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2007 Cross Country (Sr.)Won all five of his races, including the first NCAA national title of his career … became Liberty’s second NCAA Division I national champion on Nov. 19, clocking a 29:22.4 to hold off Oregon’s Galen Rupp … the All-America honor was his 12th … named USTFCCCA’s NCAA Division I Men’s Athlete of the Year … became the 10th man in NCAA cross country history to win four-consecutive conference titles … broke the Pre-Nationals 8K course record (22:56.4) on his way to his third-straight meet victory … finished his Liberty career having won 23-of-27 cross country races. 2007 (Jr.)Captured five All-America awards (cross country, two indoor track, two outdoor track) … repeated as the Big South Howard Bagwell Male Student-Athlete of the Year … Big South Men’s Track & Field Athlete of the Year … 10-time Big South Male Athlete of the Week … won six Big South event titles (cross country, two indoor track, three outdoor track) and four IC4A individual crowns (indoor track, three outdoor track) … placed 27th at the NCAA national cross country meet … took third at the NCAA indoor meet in the 3K and was eighth in the 5K … finished third in the NCAA outdoor 10K and fourth in the 5K … ran the fastest indoor 5K in the world, 13:37.32, to win the IC4A title … became the fifth-fastest collegiate 5K performer of all-time with his 13:20.43 clocking at the Mt. SAC Relays … broke the prestigious 4:00 mile, running a 3:57.46 on his home track … became the first athlete in the 131-year history of the IC4A Championships to win the 1,500, 5K and 10K at the same meet. 2006 (So.)Became the first Liberty athlete to win NCAA Division I All-America honors in cross country, indoor track and outdoor track in the same academic year … earned a total of four All-America distinctions … Big South Howard Bagwell Male Student-Athlete of the Year … Big South Men’s Track & Field Athlete of the Year … USATF Men’s Cross Country Runner of the Year … placed fourth at the national cross country meet … finished fourth at the NCAA indoor meet in the 5K and was fifth in the 3K … took ninth in the 5K at the outdoor national championships … broke Meb Keflezighi’s cross country course record at Stanford … Penn Relays 5K champion … IC4A 10K titlist. 2005 (Fr.)Won two All-America recognitions as a freshman, placing 13th in cross country and taking fifth at the indoor 3,000 meters … became the first Big South freshman to win the conference cross country meet … broke Alan Webb’s cross country course record at Winthrop … placed fourth at the USATF Cross Country Championships, earning a spot at the World Championships … claimed the IC4A indoor 3K crown. PrepHome schooled … placed fourth at the Foot Locker National Cross Country Championships as a senior … represented the U.S. at the World Junior Cross Country Championships … ran 2004’s fastest indoor two-mile time by a high schooler (8:50.40) … ran the fifth-fastest all-time high school indoor 3,000 meters … finished 12th in the Junior World Championship 5K … three-time high school All-American. PersonalSon of Rob and Lisa McDougal
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Henry Laboranti (Coach and Arena Football Scout)
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Henry Laboranti is also one of the most recognized Arena Football Scouts in the area. He works locally with players from an Arena Football 2 team known as the Wilkes Barre Scranton Pioneers. Henry was only 19 years old when he first began scouting. Henry Laboranti attends college at The Pennsylvania State University. His current major is Secondary Education, Social Studies, with a minor degree in American History. Sourceswww.wnep.com www.af2.com wbsarenafan@yahoo.com - Head of Scouting Email Address West Scranton Invaders
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What I Did Last Summer
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The play is about a fourteen-year-old boy named Charlie Higgins whose father is off fighting the Japanese in World War II and who is living on lake Eerie for the summer. His best friend is a wisecracking Canadian named Ted, who bemoans the fact that since he is experiencing puberty, parents no longer trust their kids around him. He is also friends with Bonnie, a pretty girl, who thinks that is a crucial summer for her and her life will change. He has an older sister who is named Elsie, who is always a pain, partly because she is sad that her father is away. His mother, Grace, is very protective and wants Charlie to work for her this summer. But Charlie rebels and goes to work for Anna Trumbull, also known as "the Pig Woman", a supposedly crazy, eccentric art teacher, who used to teach Grace. His mother, mad that he spends so much time with Anna, clashes with Charlie, who comes to resent his rich social class. It finally ends with Charlie going to temporarily live with Anna, and Anna and Grace fighting then later, making up for what transpired between them in the past. In the end, Charlie must stop working for Anna, because she is indirectly the cause for an accident he has. She gives him back his stuff and they leave on amicable terms. In a side plot, even though the last summer, Charlie, Bonnie and Ted were friends, but this summer Charlie and Ted start fighting for Bonnie. Bonnie invites Ted sailing and later, he asks her on a date to the Cyclone, a roller coaster. Slightly uncomfortable, Bonnie asks Charlie to tag along which ends with Ted and Charlie fighting and Charlie leaving madly. Later on, Bonnie tries to cheer Charlie up by kissing him which contents both of them, and then Ted coming in, telling them that the Japanese have given up in the war, unaware of anything that has happened. The play ends with Charlie apparently staring a relationship with Bonnie after the kiss, Anna saying farewell to Charlie, Ted returning to Canada for good and Grace saddened that Anna will no longer be in their lives. It is interesting to note that cars and driving plays an important part of the play. For Charlie, driving represents freedom, and continually ask his mother if he could drive the car. Angered by this and the fact that he is swearing, Grace kicks Charlie out of the car, making him walk home, but relents and lets him back in. Charlie is slightly jealous of Ted, who drives, but who is terrible at it. Finally, Anna, who believes that cars are useless object, let's Charlie fix up and drive her old car, which results with Charlie and Bonnie having a car accident, but thankfully, neither of them is injured. During most of the play, Elsie is deathly afraid of driving a car, even though she has her license, because her father is not around to give her the confidence to drive. At the end of the play, she agrees to drive to the hospital to see Charlie because Grace is in shock.
Sourceswww.doollee/PlaywrightsG/gurney-jr-a-r.html
www.theater2.nytimes.com/mem/theater/treview.html
99.225.142.224 (talk) 02:18, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Steven Spratley
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Sylvie (1853) by Gerard de Nerval
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Sourceshttp://books.google.com/books?id=5iNKAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=Sylvie de Nerval, Gerard. Sylvie. 128.208.44.84 (talk) 04:40, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Justin Westre
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Sourceshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Forest_Academy 74.93.94.125 (talk) 04:49, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Jugeswar
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If you want to make changes and try again, copy and paste your article into a new submission and make your changes there. The Jugeswar is an endangered species that hails from the mean streets of Neveda, IA and currently can be seen in the amazing city of Ames. The Jugeswar feeds off of left-overs and Coors Original. If approached, a great deal of caution shall be taken, including not aggravating it by performing any sort of ceremonial rain dances. The Jugeswar would be considered one of America's "We Must Save Endangered Species of the World" except that nobody care whether or not they live or not. Oh yea, and Jugeswars like to suck balls Sources209.234.74.58 (talk) 06:28, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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杨献珍
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Sources参考资料 期刊:
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Stony Lake, New York
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Sourceshttp://www.placenames.com/us/p966576/ 132.15.225.80 (talk) 11:05, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Royal Gigolos
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Seth
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If you want to make changes and try again, copy and paste your article into a new submission and make your changes there. Seth is a french Black Metal band. MembresMembres
Ex-Membres
Discography
LinksSite Officiel du Vicomte Vampyr Arkames http://www.myspace.com/arkames [1]
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Sydney Richmond Burleigh
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He was born in Little Compton, Rhode Island, a descendent of the Pilgrim William Bradford. In 1875, he married Sarah Drew Wilkinson (1851-1952) and, with her encouragement and wealth, became a full-time artist. He studied in Paris with Jean-Paul Laurens from 1876 to 1880 and then returned to Rhode Island, where he spent most of his life. Burleigh rose to national prominence after receiving a bronze medal at the St. Louis Exposition in 1904 and an open prize from the Buffalo Society of Artists in 1913. He exhibited regularly at the Boston Art Club as well as the National Academy of Design, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and the Newport Art Museum. He also worked as an illustrator and collaborated with writer William Henry Frost on several children’s books. He was a painter in the realist style, consistent with the academic style of his teacher, Laurens. Mabel Ducasse, an art critic for the Providence Journal, wrote of Burleigh’s art that "there is a quality in his work which suggests that of the masters of the Renaissance when they chose to employ line and wash. It is character — born of perfect certainty of touch and flowing freedom of line. It is seldom achieved by modern watercolorists, who most often mistake the function of their medium, which is that of drawing rather than painting."[4] A man of versatile creativity, Burleigh designed the Fleur-de-lys Studios in Providence in collaboration with the architect Edmund Russell Willson of Stone, Carpenter, and Willson. Built in 1885 in conjunction with the Art Workers Guild, the building was to be used for art studios, including Burleigh’s own. It is an important monument to the American Arts and Crafts Movement and was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1992. It is now owned by the Providence Art Club.[5] Another of his studios was a unique and eccentric little building known as the "Peggotty." Burleigh built it over the hull of a small sailboat that had been used as a ferry between Little Compton and Middletown, Rhode Island. It featured a thatched roof, and today it is on display at the Little Compton Historical Society. [6] Burleigh was a leading member of the art community in Rhode Island. He was a founder of the Providence Art Club in 1880 and was the first president of the Providence Watercolor Club. He had a long association with the Rhode Island School of Design, serving on the board of directors (1887-1893), as a teacher (1897-1906), and as a trustee (1919-1931). He received an honorary degree from Brown University in 1912. His works are held in several private and public collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and the museums at Brown University, the Rhode Island School of Design, and the Rhode Island Historical Society SourcesFootnotes
Category:1853 births Category:1931 deaths Category:People from Rhode Island Category:American artists 70.17.104.240 (talk) 13:38, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Captain Isaac Ruddell (1837-January 1812) was a 18th century American militia officer and Kentucky frontiersman founding one of the earliest settlements in Bourbon County, Kentucky. He was also a brother-in-law to Kentucky pioneers Isaac, Joseph and John Jacob Bowman. His grandson, John M. Ruddell, was a prominent Kentucky statesman and landowner. BiographyBorn in the Colony of Virginia, Ruddell was a captain in the Washington County militia and, in 1750 or 1765, he married Elizabeth Bowman. In 1774 or 1775, he accompanied the Bowmans to Kentucky and, while living in Boonesborough, Ruddell joined his brother-in-law John Bowman who was en route to Harrodsburg with two Virginia militia companies. Ruddell would later replace John Dunkin as one of Bowman's officers. [1] He also served under General George Rogers Clark during the Illinois campaign, in charge of the Corn Island party and of the military stores left there. For his service, he was awarded 3,234 acres of Clark's Grant in the Indiana Territory. [2] In 1779, he established a fortified settlement known as Ruddell's Station in Bourbon County one mile from present-day Lair Station. The fort was built on the site of Hinkston's Station which was previously abandoned several years before. [3] Along with Martin's Station, the settlement became home to a large number of Pennsylvania German families over the next year. During the American Revolutionary War however, an Shawnee raiding party led by British officer Captain Henry Byrd left twenty settlers dead. The survivors, along with he and his wife, were force marched to Detroit where they remained prisoners until the end of the war. [3] [4] During the march to Detroit, Ruddell was separated from is wife and children. Shortly after arriving in Detroit, Ruddell protested to the commandant of Byrd disregarding his agreement of safe passage in exchange for their surrender. He was reunited with his wife and two daughters, however his two sons were turned over to the Shawnee who were eventually adopted by the tribe. Stephen Ruddell, 12-years-old at the time of the attack, was accepted into the family of Chief Blackfish and eventually became the adopted brother of Tecumseh. [5] Shortly after their arrival in Detroit, Ruddell and his family were allowed to live on a nearby island where they grew corn and supplied food for their fellow prisoners. He also reportedly helped several men to escape from the camp. He and several other prisoners were allowed to return to Virginia in 1872. Soon after arriving however, Ruddell was accused by several of his fellow prisoners to collaborating with the British and was charged with treason in Frederick County but was acquitted. [6] His friendship with the commandant is thought to have been based on Byrd's poor treatment of Ruddle's party as well as both men belonging to the Masonsic fraternity. [2] Ruddell gave a written account of the attack which began appearing in newspapers in late-1783. Returning to Bourbon County in 1784, they built a home on a branch of the Licking River four years later. He also built a grist mill on the northside of Hinkston Bridge and, in 1795, a saw mill which was operated by his son Abram. The mills are still in existence, known today as Ruddell's Mills. He also donated land to the Stoner Mouth Church and cemetery. [7] He died in January 1812, only three years after his wife. [2] References
Further reading
72.74.218.126 (talk) 14:13, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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BiographyBorn in Kent County, Delaware, he enlisted in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. Serving under Captain Rhodes in the 2nd Delaware Regiment, he saw action at the Battle of Cowpens and the Seige of Yorktown and was present at the execution of British spy Major John André in 1780. Captured by the British at one point, he was tied to a horse and forced to walk several miles on muddy roads. After his release, he became an aid to General George Washington. Following the war, he married Sarah Bowman in North Carolina and together had 12 children. Sarah Bowman was one of the daughters of Virginia pioneer George Bowman and, in 1785, he moved his family to Kentucky County to join his brothers-in-law Abraham, Isaac and John Jacob Bowman who had settled in the area nearly a decade before. After his wife died in 1813, he and his family moved from Gallatin County, Kentucky to Jefferson County, Indiana and later to Vernon, Indiana. He died there in 1827 and later buried in the lower part of Vernon Cemetery. [8] References
72.74.218.126 (talk) 15:23, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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The "Medusa Game"
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Sourceswww.themedusagame.weebly.com 168.169.178.149 (talk) 14:33, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Brian Gaffney
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Sourceshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golf Dr. David Leino, Minnesota history buff 64.8.188.173 (talk) 15:14, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply] There is a big dispute on the world's weakest man. Many claim to it, but only one can truely hold the title. While around the world people try to compete for it, they just are too strong. However, in the small town of Deerwood, MN, there is one who can hold the name of the World's Weakest Man. If you were see him walking along the street, you would instantly know that he is the world's weakest man. His name is Justin Edmunson. Although he wishes he was a chick magnet, his weakness makes every girl run. Sourceswww.wikipedia.org Dr. Josh Pribyl of Deerwood, MN www.wikipedia.org/wiki/brian_gaffney
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Jim Paschke
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On April 15, 1987 television viewers and Milwaukee Brewers fans heard Jim call the only no-hitter in the franchise’s history. Jim is the author of Paschketball, a blog featured on the Milwaukee Bucks website. Sourceshttp://www.nba.com/bucks/features/Broadcasters_200607.html http://www.nba.com/bucks/features/Paschketball.html 24.167.218.132 (talk) 16:09, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Sim City 3000 UK Edition
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ReleaseSim City 3000 UK Edition was released in 2000 with updated features, some especially for the UK. See Also
Sourceshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sim_City_3000 92.13.10.80 (talk) 16:35, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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DelphiBasics
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Sourceswww.DelphiBasics.co.nrThe Delphi Basics site is an organisation created on the eve on the 19th April 2008 which aims to oncrease the world's awareness of "the other high-level language", Borland Delphi. The website includes simple applications which have been coded in Delphi by the group and these are available for download.
80.42.3.204 (talk) 18:29, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Samantha Jo Jolly
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SourcesScottkelseyxx (talk) 18:31, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Italian Job
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Dr. James Still: Black Doctor of the Pinebarrens
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Doctor James Still was born in 1812 in Indian Mills, New Jersey. He was the son of runaway slaves who built a home in the area of New Jersey called the Pine Barrens. He had little formal education but his passion for learning and knowledge led to his lifetime career as a physician and healer. Dr. Still was poor and unable to persue a formal education and support his family at the same time so after spending sometime in Philadelphia, facing prejudice and fiancial strains, he returned home to the Pines. There, in the Pines, word spread that a doctor was available to the people no matter how poor they were or their background. Soon word spread wide and far and Dr. Still was in high demand. He became a very well respected in the community and became the third largest land owner in Medford, New Jersey. Dr. Still was known for blending traditional medicinal methods of the time along with practicing more unconventional methods such as herbs. Many of the sick were treated by Dr. Still with rememdies made from local South Jersey plants and it is said he was able to cure such aliments like cancer succesfully. He is buried at Jacob's Chapel AME Church, Elbo Lane, Mount Laurel and recently the state of New Jersey has bought the land his office once sat upon and plans for an education museum are slated on the site. The Still family has contributed much in the way of African-American history in America. Dr. Still's brother, William Still is known as the "Father of the Underground Rail Road". Dr. Still's son, Dr. James Thomas Still Jr., was the second black person to graduate from Harvard Medical School in 1871.
SourcesEarly Recollections and Life of Dr. James Still’ by James Still
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Non-trophic networks
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Historically, species interactions have been considered primarily in terms of trophic interactions. More recently, mutualisms such as pollination and seed dispersal have been scrutinized within the framework of ecological networks. Currently, networks that integrate both types of interactions are being constructed and analyzed. Species InteractionsBiological interactionresult from the fact that organisms in an ecosystem interact with each other, and that no organism is isolated from its surroundings. There are six possible combinations: mutualism, commensalism, neutralism, amensalism, and antagonism, and competition. These range from mutually beneficial through neutral to mutually harmful interactions. Observing and estimating the fitness costs and benefits of species interactions is very problematic. The way interactions are interpreted can profoundly affect the ensuing conclusions. Interactions CharacteristicsDirect vs. indirect
Physically involved vs. not
Prevalence
Negative/ Positive
Strength
Relationship in space and time
By analyzing network structures, one can determine keystone species that are of particular importance. A different class of keystone species is what are termed ‘ecosystem engineers’. Certain organisms alter the environment so drastically that it affects many interactions that take place within a habitat. This term is used for organisms that “directly or indirectly modulate availability of resources (other than themselves) to other species, by causing physical state changes in biotic or abiotic materials”. Beavers are an example of such engineers. Other examples include earthworms, trees, coral reefs, and planktonic organisms. Such 'network engineers' can be seen as “interaction modifiers”, meaning that a change in their population density affects the interactions between two or more other species. Interesting examples
Questions
SourcesC.G. Jones, J.H. Lawton and M. Shachak, Positive and negative effects of organisms as physical ecosystem engineers, Ecology 78 (1997), 1946–1957. V. Vasasa, F. Jordan. Topological keystone species in ecological interaction networks: Considering link quality and non-trophic effects. Ecological Modelling 196 ( 2006 ) 365–378. Fath B. Network mutualism: Positive community-level relations in ecosystems. Ecological Modelling. 208, 1 (2007), 56-67. Patten, B.C., 1995. Network integration of ecological extremal principles: exergy, emergy, power, ascendency, and indirect effects. Ecol. Model. 79, 75–84. 128.196.193.112 (talk) 19:26, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Little Teeth
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see myspace.com/littleteethmusic
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Pie
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Sourceswww.pie.com 98.26.206.18 (talk) 22:34, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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Crash Test 032
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Male Performer
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If you want to make changes and try again, copy and paste your article into a new submission and make your changes there. Sourceshttp://www.quasistellar.gr/home/index.htm ,http://www.dimitrispapaioannou.com/ ,http://www.ellthea.gr/show_event?id=140&lang=en , http://www.ozonweb.com/52/ozon52.pdf
78.149.199.27 (talk) 23:20, 7 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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1575 Chile Earthquake
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On march 17 of 1575 there was a little shaking of the earth and was not of a high magnitude nor so destructive, but did shake and crack some walls on buildings and houses. Some people took this as a message of god to warn them to a greater problem. The 16 of December, the Earth began to shake with a very large and disastrous force. With that being the problem the earthquake began to demolishing tiled ceilings and walls. The way of this terrible earthquake cannot be painted or written exactly how it was. This also caused many live to be lost and most people died while still alive under the great destructions of this horrible earthquake and falling on the people the great machines of the buildings. There were a lot of dead fish for when the earthquake shocks hit the waters and raised the rocks and stabbed the fish and trapped others and smashed many eggs. The people that lived in Chile at the time of the massive earthquake were thrust into the world of total poor where money was not necessary and the only need was food, water, and shelter of which none had. The magnitude of this earthquake was 8.5 as shown in the chart below.the epicenter was between 39.8°′″S, 73.2°′″W, and the time was at 2:30 that was also shown below.
Date Time Magnitude Epicenter
1575 Valdivia earthquake
1575-12-16
14:30 8.5 39.8°′″S, 73.2°′″W
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