As before, it was war on a worldwide scale, with clashes throughout the Americas and as far away as India. |
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Thousands of people came to witness a mass where the pope declared Juan Diego the first indigenous or native saint in the Americas. |
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The warm water and air masses move eastward across the equatorial region, until they reach the west coast of the Americas. |
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In the Americas, the branks were a type of humiliation punishment, while in medieval Europe, they were used more as a torture device. |
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Another John is a saucy southerner who talked about two Americas while surprisingly not referring to secession. |
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While on sabbatical in 1997, the scientist collected preserved leaves from university and museum collections in Europe and the Americas. |
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Apart from Mayan and Epi-Olmec, the language groups of most of the Americas are not dealt with. |
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It is a vital contribution to the growing critical corpus on literatures of the Americas. |
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There are, accordingly, art exhibits, live concerts, light shows, workshops and dance events celebrating all of the Americas. |
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The images represent the spirits of people of African descent who died in the Middle Passage or later in the Americas. |
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A native of the tropic Americas, the cattleyas are a pseudobulb type and considered an orchid with training wheels. |
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Growing to about 12 feet, bull sharks inhabit the east coasts of the Americas and are known to swim many miles up rivers. |
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Once the Americas were kept separated from Europe, not by vast and untraversable distances, but by belief in vast and untraversable distances. |
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Black English loses its ungrammaticalness when reclassified as a Creole tongue, meshing the input from Africa, Europe, and the Americas. |
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That said, I voted for John Edwards because I'm a bit of a contrarian and because I think he's on the mark when he talks about two Americas. |
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When slavery was first practiced in the Americas during the early colonial period, it was purely for economic use. |
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Even Thomas Aquinas was a stowaway, as the Spaniards smuggled his scholasticism and rigid conceptions of social hierarchy into the Americas. |
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For more than 250 years, the yellow jack had ravaged the Americas, bringing death to millions and striking panic in entire populations. |
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However, recent research has shown conclusively that whole systems of thought were transplanted to the Americas. |
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Tens of millions of human souls were transported from their homes in Africa under appalling conditions to lives of servitude in the Americas. |
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This November in Miami, thousands are preparing to resist the ministerial meetings on the Free Trade Area of the Americas. |
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While one of the main priorities of the colonies in the Americas was profit, the importance of Ireland was more strategic. |
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They were more like colonies of runaway slaves in the Americas, and like them negotiated with the government as equals over pardons and amnesties. |
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Intriguing acoustic effects have also been noted at sites in the Americas, from Anasazi kivas in New Mexico, to Chichen Itza on Mexico's Yucatan peninsula. |
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It is a scene that has changed little from when Christopher Columbus made landfall here for supplies and water on his legendary voyage to discover the Americas. |
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Then came promotion to chief manager of Victoria central zone's business district, and a posting to New York as Executive Vice President, Americas. |
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The tribal people who had not crossed the land bridge to Alaska and colonised the Americas had lives perfectly adapted to the harsh conditions of the frozen north. |
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And then the convenience stores will start to tumble, and the vast majority of Americas will agree that this is fine. |
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We live in two Americas, where white people are presumed innocent until proven guilty, and black people the opposite. |
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Tied by geographic proximity, commerce, communities, and security, the Americas are indelibly linked. |
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The Summit of the Americas is a periodic meeting of heads of government of countries located in the Western Hemisphere. |
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Though the people were spared a life of slavery, many of them ultimately came to the Americas as indentured servants, bound by contract to a specific term of unfree labor. |
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Perry and Scott were the lunchtime entertainment at the International Economic Forum of the Americas in Palm Beach on Monday. |
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They find that the bones of the earliest colonizers of the Americas were morphologically distinct from northeast Asians and recent American Indians. |
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We walked from the hotel across the skywalk to The Plaza of the Americas. |
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In the 1560s England was jealous of Spain, because the Spaniards were taking gold and silver from the Americas and the English wanted some of that wealth. |
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That will see him traversing the Americas, covering the 25,000 kilometres from Ushuia, the world's most southern city, up to the icy wastes of Alaska. |
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China in Tibet has always been, like Britain in India and Spain in the Americas, an alien overlord. |
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While heading home to England, he is cast away on an island, which its geographical proximity to the Americas closely resembles the one in Crusoe. |
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The next time all the presidents from North and South America meet will be at the Summit of the Americas in Panama in April. |
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In particular, imported foodstuffs from the Americas, Australia, and eastern Europe caused a long-drawn-out depression in agricultural prices, which in turn affected industry. |
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France had a dynamic plantation economy in the Americas, but its benefits seem to have been confined to limited enclaves within the mother country. |
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For the past five years, however, malaria has reinvaded a broad swath from Asia to the Americas, with rare occurrences even reported in the United States. |
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Starting with his persona's acute consciousness of exile, Wright's poetic journeys retrace and reverse the Middle Passage from Africa to the Americas. |
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The mammee apple is native to tropical areas of the Americas. |
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And Trujillo points out trade with the Americas can be as large or larger than with China or India. |
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It is apparently absent from Triassic faunas of northeastern Asia and the Boreal region, and until now has not been reported from the Triassic of the Americas. |
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As US and Latin American writers continue to express an interest in the topic of apocalypse, they register the ongoing hold of European traditions on the Americas. |
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Consider the Sixth Summit of the Americas, held at Cartagena, Colombia, two weeks ago. |
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Over 45 distinct ethnic groups were taken to the Americas during the trade. |
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During the period of slavery, the populations of Europe and the Americas grew exponentially, while the population of Africa remained stagnant. |
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Rodney contended that the profits from slavery were used to fund economic growth and technological advancement in Europe and the Americas. |
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In the 19th century alone over 50 million people left Europe for the Americas, a far higher rate than were ever taken from Africa. |
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In 1870 Portugal ended the last trade route with the Americas where the last country to import slaves was Brazil. |
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In Brazil, however, slavery itself was not ended until 1888, making it the last country in the Americas to end involuntary servitude. |
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Agricultural slavery, such as that which was widespread in the Americas, was relatively rare. |
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Before the advent of industrialisation, this system resulted in the emigration of many rural Basques to Spain, France or the Americas. |
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The immigrants to the Americas came from every region of Europe, Africa, and Asia. |
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Between the 16th and 20th centuries, European powers controlled at various times the Americas, most of Africa, Oceania, and the majority of Asia. |
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France, the Netherlands and England soon followed in building large colonial empires with vast holdings in Africa, the Americas, and Asia. |
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The climate became so hostile for artists and art associated with modernism and abstraction that many left for the Americas. |
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The polka is a central European dance and also a genre of dance music familiar throughout Europe and the Americas. |
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The calendar includes four races in Europe, two in the Americas, two in Asia and one in the Middle East, with a possible future expansion. |
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It has become a very popular programme for children and adults and is shown in over 100 countries, including the UK, the Americas and Sweden. |
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Tijuana is the 45th largest city in the Americas and is the westernmost city in Mexico. |
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San Diego's largest outlet mall is on the international border immediately west of the crossing, Las Americas Premium Outlets, with 125 stores. |
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The Archaic period in the Americas saw a changing environment featuring a warmer more arid climate and the disappearance of the last megafauna. |
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Starting in the 15th century, Spain built a huge colonial empire in the Americas, consisting of New Spain and other viceroyalties. |
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By 1781, the Army numbered approximately 121,000 men globally, 48,000 of whom were stationed throughout the Americas. |
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In the aftermath of the first Jacobite Rising in 1715, Highlanders had begun emigrating to the Americas in increasing numbers. |
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In the early years of Spanish colonization of the Americas, a Scot named Tam Blake spent 20 years in Colombia and Mexico. |
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The first permanent English settlement in the Americas, Jamestown, was thus named for a Scot. |
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The Cross of Burgundy, a form of the Saint Andrew's Cross, is used in numerous flags across Europe and the Americas. |
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For nearly two decades before the 1745 rising, many clansmen had been leaving the Highlands to live in the Americas. |
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Positions were filled by three teams from the Americas, one from Asia, one from Africa, three from Europe and two from Oceania. |
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The retreat of the glaciers 15,000 years ago allowed groups of humans from Asia to migrate to the Americas. |
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After the European exploration and conquest of the Americas, the practice of smoking tobacco quickly spread to the rest of the world. |
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Soon after smoking was introduced outside of the Americas it began appearing in painting in Europe and Asia. |
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The European colonization of the Americas yielded the introduction of a number of ingredients and cooking styles to the latter. |
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However, they may also be viewed as a single continent known as America or the Americas. |
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Christopher Columbus sailed across the Atlantic Ocean to the West Indies in 1492, sparking a period of European exploration of the Americas. |
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These economic difficulties spurred mass emigration, primarily to the Americas, during the 19th and first half of the 20th century. |
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France obtained many overseas possessions in the Americas, Africa and Asia. |
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German emigration to the Americas totalled 200,000 people during the eighteenth century. |
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The last Moorish kingdom fell in the same year Columbus reached the Americas. |
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This represented one of the largest movements of European populations to their colonies in the Americas during colonial times. |
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This trend started in Europe but soon spread to the Americas and Australia. |
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There are four flamingo species in the Americas and two species in the Old World. |
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Five years later Bolognini Zaltieri issued a map showing a narrow and crooked Strait of Anian separating Asia from the Americas. |
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The 18th century saw an expansion of England's role in the Atlantic trade in Africans taken for slavery to the Americas. |
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A family from the Americas with two very rare vagrants recorded in Britain. |
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In the Americas, rather an expansion of immigrant lineages of ancestral typical owls occurred. |
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The success of the Clyde at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution was driven by the location of Glasgow, being a port facing the Americas. |
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Humans first settled the Americas from Asia between 42,000 and 17,000 years ago. |
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The first known European settlement in the Americas was by the Norse explorer Leif Ericson. |
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Diseases introduced from Europe and West Africa devastated the indigenous peoples, and the European powers colonized the Americas. |
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Widespread habitation of the Americas occurred during the late glacial maximum, from 16,000 to 13,000 years ago. |
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The first Spanish settlement in the Americas was La Isabela in northern Hispaniola. |
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Migration continued as people moved to the Americas fleeing religious persecution or seeking economic opportunities. |
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Millions of individuals were forcibly transported to the Americas as slaves, prisoners or indentured servants. |
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The northernmost point of the Americas is Kaffeklubben Island, which is the most northerly point of land on Earth. |
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With coastal mountains and interior plains, the Americas have several large river basins that drain the continents. |
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Mexico City is the largest city in the Americas and the Western Hemisphere and Northern Hemisphere. |
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The population of the Americas is made up of the descendants of four large ethnic groups and their combinations. |
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There are no alternative words to distinguish between things relating to the United States or to the Americas. |
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Dutch uses the local alternative for things relating to elsewhere in the Americas, such as Argentijns for Argentine, etc. |
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Countries in the northern part of the Americas tend to have healthier and stronger economies than countries in the southern part of the Americas. |
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The Indian Ocean provides major sea routes connecting the Middle East, Africa, and East Asia with Europe and the Americas. |
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The decolonization of the Americas was the process by which the countries in the Americas gained their independence from European rule. |
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At least a thousand different indigenous languages are spoken in the Americas. |
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Doug Elix, currently general manager of IBM Global Services Americas, will replace Palmisano as Global Services chief. |
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Competing with Spain, the first English colony in the Americas was founded in 1585 by explorer Walter Raleigh in Virginia and named Roanoke. |
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He landed on a continent uncharted by Europeans and seen as a new world, the Americas. |
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It was soon understood that Columbus had not reached Asia but had found a new continent, the Americas. |
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In the Americas the Spanish found a number of empires that were as large and populous as those in Europe. |
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On 9 January 1793, Blanchard conducted the first balloon flight in the Americas. |
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New crops that had come to Asia from the Americas via the Spanish colonizers in the 16th century contributed to the Asia's population growth. |
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Latin is taught in many high schools, especially in Europe and the Americas. |
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The retreat of the glaciers allowed groups of Asians to migrate to the Americas and populate them. |
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The peoples of the Americas and the Pacific mostly retained the Neolithic level of tool technology until the time of European contact. |
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In the Americas, the Eneolithic ended as late as the 19th century AD for some peoples. |
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Columbus' discoveries inaugurated the Spanish colonization of the Americas. |
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Eventually the world's stock of precious metal was doubled or even tripled by silver from the Americas. |
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But it was internal tensions that ultimately ended the empire in the Americas. |
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The Constitution of 1812 recognised indigenous peoples of the Americas as Spanish citizens. |
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Hundreds of towns and cities in the Americas were founded during the Spanish domination. |
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Most Hispanics in the Americas have mixed European and Indigenous ancestry. |
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Tobacco was introduced from the Americas and in 1863 the first plantation was established by the Dutch. |
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He led another voyage to the Americas the following year, but nothing was heard of him or his ships again. |
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In his reign, the Plantation of Ulster and British colonization of the Americas began. |
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The major change in international trade was the rapid expansion of the Americas as a market. |
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American soles are found in both freshwater and marine environments of the Americas. |
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Columbus simply expanded the triangle outwards, and his route became the main way for Europeans to reach, and return from, the Americas. |
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Instead, the cash crops were transported mainly by a separate fleet which only sailed from Europe to the Americas and back. |
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Cabot led another voyage to the Americas the following year but nothing was ever heard of his ships again. |
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The Napoleonic Wars were the direct cause of wars in the Americas and elsewhere. |
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The Code influences a quarter of the world's jurisdictions such as that of in Continental Europe, the Americas and Africa. |
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It is first attested in 1845 to refer to the North and South Americas, before they were regarded as separate continents. |
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The modern descendants of the Gaels have spread throughout Britain, the Americas and Australasia. |
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Spanish is the official or national language in Spain, Equatorial Guinea, and 19 countries in the Americas. |
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Human migration started with the migration out of Africa into the Middle East, and then to Asia, Australia, Europe, Russia, and the Americas. |
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Sizable minorities are also found in India, China, Russia, Ethiopia, the Americas, Australia and parts of Europe. |
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In the Americas, Charles sanctioned the conquest by Castillian conquistadors of the Aztec and Inca empires. |
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The sweat lodge is a ceremony common to many Indigenous peoples of the Americas. |
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Some true castles were built in the Americas by the Spanish and French colonies. |
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Dartmouth College, Harvard University, and the College of William and Mary, offer leading examples of Georgian architecture in the Americas. |
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Later, his encounters with the Indigenous peoples of the Americas made a deep impression. |
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Wood officially joined the Rolling Stones in 1975 for their upcoming Tour of the Americas as the Faces dissolved. |
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The 1975 Tour of the Americas kicked off in New York City with the band performing on a flatbed trailer being pulled down Broadway. |
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Germany is also the only European nation that has won a FIFA World Cup in the Americas. |
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In the Americas, the catalyst that brought about this change in meaning was the influence of the African diaspora and its people in other states. |
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Today, around 800 million people are native speakers worldwide, mainly in Europe, Africa and the Americas, but also elsewhere. |
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The first European sighting of the Virgin Islands was by Christopher Columbus in 1493 on his second voyage to the Americas. |
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In 1526, the Portuguese completed the first transatlantic slave voyage from Africa to the Americas, and other countries soon followed. |
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Slavery was practiced in some parts of Africa, Europe, Asia and the Americas for many centuries before the beginning of the Atlantic slave trade. |
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The second leg of the triangle exported enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas and the Caribbean Islands. |
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The third and final part of the triangle was the return of goods to Europe from the Americas. |
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In the Americas, slaves were denied the right to marry freely and masters did not generally accept them as equal members of the family. |
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The different ethnic groups brought to the Americas closely corresponds to the regions of heaviest activity in the slave trade. |
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Castilian was eventually carried to the Americas in the 16th century by the conquistadors. |
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The migration of peoples from Europe to the Americas allowed for European populations to increase as well. |
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Its use as a food originated in Mexico, and spread throughout the world following the Spanish colonization of the Americas. |
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After the Spanish colonization of the Americas, the Spanish distributed the tomato throughout their colonies in the Caribbean. |
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Although tomatoes originated in the Americas, they have become extensively used in Mediterranean cuisine. |
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Mexican resorts are popular with many North American residents, with Mexico being the second most visited country in the Americas. |
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In most of South Korea, the Americas, the Philippines and the Caribbean, only odd multiples are used. |
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Europe's exploration of the Americas served as one impetus for the development of capitalism. |
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In the Americas, humans had left the Paleoindian phase and were now in the Archaic. |
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The main powers set up colonies in most of the Americas and Africa, and parts of Asia. |
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By the 1490s a series of oceanic explorations marked the Age of Discovery, establishing direct links with Africa, the Americas, and Asia. |
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This aspect of Spanish rule in the Philippines appears much more strongly implemented than in the Americas. |
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Elsewhere in the Americas, French settlement took place in the 16th to 20th centuries. |
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This year's shortlist features designs from South Africa, the Americas and China. |
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In the Americas, both the Inca Empire and the Aztec Empire reach the peak of their influence. |
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There was, though, some Russian colonization of the Americas across the Bering Strait. |
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Europeans brought transportation technology to the practise, bringing large numbers of African slaves to the Americas by sail. |
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One of the first European exports to the Americas, the horse, changed the lives of many Native American tribes in the mountains. |
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Similarly, yellow fever is thought to have been brought to the Americas from Africa via the Atlantic slave trade. |
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While many Europeans migrated to the Americas, it was enslaved Africans that dominated the North and South American continents. |
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The Spanish conquest of the indigenous peoples in the Americas included using the Natives as forced labour. |
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An estimated 12 million Africans arrived in the Americas from the 16th to the 19th centuries. |
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The Spanish colonization of the Americas sparked a discussion about the right to enslave Native Americans. |
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The following nations lie outside the Americas yet are partially or entirely within the Western Hemisphere. |
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Castile gained lands including most of the Americas, which in 1494 had little proven wealth. |
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The Spanish soon realized that the lands of the Americas were not a part of Asia, but a new continent. |
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Various places in Africa and the Americas have been named after the imagined cities made of gold, rivers of gold and precious stones. |
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It is the first known European cartographic representation of the Americas. |
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The only part of the Americas that is included in the map is a reference to Greenland which is mentioned by the name of Grolanda. |
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Unlike other groups in the Northeastern area of the Americas, the Beothuk never established sustained trading relations with European settlers. |
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By the terms of GDP per capita, the Bahamas is one of the richest countries in the Americas. |
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Before the arrival of the Spanish, Cuba was inhabited by three distinct tribes of indigenous peoples of the Americas. |
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This ranks Cuba 55th in the world and 5th in the Americas, behind Canada, Chile, Costa Rica and the United States. |
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It was an important port in the Americas for goods and products flowing to and from France and Europe. |
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As is well known, instead of reaching Asia, Columbus stumbled upon the Caribbean islands of the Americas. |
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This made Seville the best defended port to bring the riches from the Americas. |
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In 1630, Indian West Islands Company once again turned its interest to the Captaincies of the Dutch colony in the Americas. |
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The map is drafted on a modification of Ptolemy's second projection, expanded to accommodate the Americas and the high latitudes. |
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These lands were initially known as the New World, and were later named the Americas. |
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Political observers consider Uruguay the most secular country in the Americas. |
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By becoming the rabbi of the community, Aboab da Fonseca was the first appointed rabbi of the Americas. |
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Bolivia is geographically the largest landlocked country in the Americas, but remains a relatively small country in economic and military terms. |
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The Aconcagua, the highest mountain in the Americas and in the entire world outside the Himalayas, Argentina. |
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In 1872, Colombia established the Colombian Academy of Language, the first Spanish language academy in the Americas. |
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Freemasonry had gained a generous following in Europe and the Americas during the 19th century and found its way to the Philippines. |
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It shows the whole east coast of the Americas but of the west coast only the area from Guatemala to Ecuador. |
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In 1577, Elizabeth I sent Francis Drake to start an expedition against the Spanish along the Pacific coast of the Americas. |
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In order to settle and trade with these islands from the Americas, an eastward maritime return path was necessary. |
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Galleons transported the goods to be sold in the Americas, namely in New Spain and Peru as well as in European markets. |
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Wolf Schoenborn purchased large amounts of undeveloped land and Albert Pullen built the Las Americas Hotel. |
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The capital of Viceroyalty of New Spain, Mexico City, was one of the principal centers of European cultural expansion in the Americas. |
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Due to its rich culture and history, Mexico ranks first in the Americas and seventh in the world by number of UNESCO World Heritage Sites. |
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Goods were taken from Veracruz to Atlantic ports in the Americas and Spain. |
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The Academy of San Carlos was the first major school and museum of art in the Americas. |
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The discovery of the Americas brought to the rest of the world many widely used food crops and edible plants. |
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It offers broadcast, telephone and telecommunication services to 37 countries in the Americas, from Canada to Argentina. |
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In the 2017 Travel and Tourism Competitiveness Report, Mexico was ranked 22nd in the world, which was 3rd in the Americas. |
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Because of these achievements the country earned the hosting rights for the 2015 FIBA Americas Championship. |
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The Trinidad sailed east from the Philippines, trying to find a maritime path back to the Americas, but was unsuccessful. |
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This makes Saavedra the first navigator to cross the Pacific Ocean from the Americas. |
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Malaria is widespread in tropical and subtropical regions, including parts of the Americas, Asia, and Africa. |
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Puerto Rico hosts consulates from 41 countries, mainly from the Americas and Europe, with most located in San Juan. |
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Maya art has many regional styles, and is unique in the ancient Americas in bearing narrative text. |
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It is one of the most outstanding works of indigenous literature in the Americas. |
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The Olmecs, one of the oldest cultures in the Americas, became dominant in the southern part of Veracruz. |
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In the Americas, Charles sanctioned the conquest by Castillian conquistadores of the Aztec and Inca empires. |
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Its immense pyramid is the largest such structure in the Americas, and the largest pyramid structure by volume in the world. |
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The conquest of Mexico was a critical stage in the Spanish colonization of the Americas. |
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The Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire was one of the most important campaigns in the Spanish colonization of the Americas. |
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The largest of them, the Lima Metropolitan Area, is the seventh largest metropolis in the Americas. |
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Trujillo was one of the first cities in the Americas founded by the Spanish conquistadors. |
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Throughout the conflict and years of the Spanish colonization of the Americas, many Incas died of smallpox. |
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The city is known as the Gastronomical Capital of the Americas, mixing Spanish, Andean and Asian culinary traditions. |
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The Transatlantic crossings are passages of passengers and cargo across the Atlantic Ocean between the Americas and Europe or Africa. |
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This document, the Guanabara Confession of Faith, became the first Protestant confession of faith in the whole of the Americas. |
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Jacques Cartier and others claimed lands in the Americas for France and paved the way for the expansion of the first French colonial empire. |
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Cabrillo benefited from the encomienda system that enslaved the Native peoples of the Americas. |
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The conquest of Siberia is often compared with the Spanish conquest of the Americas. |
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In Africa, Australia, the Americas, and parts of Europe and Asia predators are a serious problem. |
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Following the arrival of the Europeans to the Americas, tobacco became increasingly popular as a trade item. |
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Wild potato species can be found throughout the Americas from the United States to southern Chile. |
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It was believed that beginning about 2500 BC, the crop spread through much of the Americas. |
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Later, maize spread from this region over the Americas along two major paths. |
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The plant is a shrub native to tropical and subtropical regions around the world, including the Americas, Africa, and India. |
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During the 16th century, the French colonization of the Americas began with the creation of New France. |
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During the 16th century, Europe began to outpace the Arab world in the export traffic, with its slave traffic from Africa to the Americas. |
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The great majority were shipped to the Americas, but some also went to Europe and Southern Africa. |
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Although slavery was illegal inside the Netherlands it flourished throughout the Dutch Empire in the Americas, Africa, Ceylon and Indonesia. |
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According to a 1670 report, annually 2,500 to 3,000 slaves were transported from Offra to the Americas. |
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The population figures for indigenous peoples in the Americas before the 1492 voyage of Christopher Columbus have proven difficult to establish. |
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The population of African and Eurasian peoples in the Americas grew steadily, while the indigenous population plummeted. |
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The indigenous population of the Americas in 1492 was not necessarily at a high point and may actually have been in decline in some areas. |
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Indigenous populations in most areas of the Americas reached a low point by the early 20th century. |
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The data also show that there have been genetic exchanges between Asia, the Arctic and Greenland since the initial peopling of the Americas. |
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The epidemics had very different effects in different regions of the Americas. |
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Potosi became the second largest city, and the site of the first mint, in the Americas. |
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As Zero Degrees Latitude begins, the camera moves in on an old-style map of the Americas, written over with pseudoarchaic calligraphy. |
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A simple sign language called Plains Indian Sign Language was used by indigenous peoples of the Americas. |
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These cities are the only cities on the continent to exceed eight million, and two of three in the Americas. |
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Oceania was originally conceived as the lands of the Pacific Ocean, stretching from the Strait of Malacca to the coast of the Americas. |
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Subsequent immigration has been chiefly from the British Isles, but also from continental Europe, the Pacific, The Americas and Asia. |
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The islands were among the first parts of the Americas to fall under the control of the Spanish Empire. |
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The older South Terminal underwent renovations in 2009 for use as a VIP entrance point during the 5th Summit of the Americas. |
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Jesuits participated in the expansion of the Church in the Americas and Asia, by their missionary activity. |
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Nicaragua is located in the middle of the Americas and this privileged location has enabled the country to serve as host to a great biodiversity. |
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Nicaragua's minimum wage is among the lowest in the Americas and in the world. |
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By the end of the 16th century, cotton was cultivated throughout the warmer regions of Asia and the Americas. |
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The regional human rights instruments of Europe, Africa and the Americas recognise the right to protection of property to varying degrees. |
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After Europeans had achieved influence and control over the Americas, imperial activities turned to the lands of Asia and Oceania. |
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By the late 16th century, silver from the Americas accounted for the Spanish empire's wealth. |
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The domesticated bottle gourd reached the Americas from Asia by 8000 BCE, most likely due to the migration of peoples from Asia to America. |
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The packhorse, mule or donkey was a critical tool in the development of the Americas. |
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Cholera was not known in the Americas for most of the 20th century, but it reappeared towards the end of that century. |
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The oldest known textiles found in the Americas are remnants of six finely woven textiles and cordage found in Guitarrero Cave, Peru. |
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Kendal Green was also worn by slaves in the Americas, and is mentioned in songs and literature from that time. |
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Dippers are found in suitable freshwater habitats in the highlands of the Americas, Europe and Asia. |
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And the bells chimed for victory at 1211 avenue of the Americas. |
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Television production company Zero Point Zero Productions has expanded its footprint at 875 Avenue of the Americas. |
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Jordan Pedelty and Dee Kimmings were awoken every morning by drilling and banging at the Columbus Aparthotel, Playa de las Americas, Tenerife. |
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Breard was a technical sales representative, regional sales manager and a product manager for Autotype Americas, Inc. |
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The first chapter describes Ladinos, Gelofes, and Mandingas in the Americas. |
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He started off in search of the Golden Lancehead which we were assured was the most venomous snake in all of the Americas. |
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Some of the new species were found during field work in parts of the tropical Americas poorly explored by lepidopterists. |
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So, why no Jewess in the mix of more recent and diverse Miss Americas? |
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Daikin Applied Americas said it is acquiring a minority ownership stake in Riptide IO, a California-based software company. |
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They are thought to have entered the Americas sometime after 17,000 years ago from that land mass, called Beringia. |
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It was David Hopkins's grand syntheses of the Beringian landscape that changed our understanding of the peopling of the Americas. |
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A group led by Joseph Bernstein owns an L-shaped parcel fronting 42nd Street and the Avenue of Americas. |
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Historical review of Asiatic clam invasion and biofouling of waters and industries in the Americas. |
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Team for the World Championships this year and in 2012 completed the longest Bivy flying adventure in the Americas. |
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The firm said that it has hired Jason Sheller as head of Sales for Fund Services in the Americas, within its Global Transaction Banking division. |
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Gene Buer will now have responsibility for hoist products in all the Americas. |
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The ancestor of corn that was used by peoples in the Americas for quite a long time was called teosinte. |
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Halenia is a herbaceous genus with tetramerous, mostly spurred flowers distributed in high-altitude areas of Asia and the Americas. |
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Paul Rettinger has accepted the position of Technology Manager, Thermosets Americas. |
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I looked across the bay to Ushuaia, the most southernly city in the Americas, and saw reflections of mountains on the water. |
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Americas sued in what's called a motion for preliminary injunction to block Richmond and MRP from using eminent domain. |
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Baird will join Citigroup in August and report to John Chirico and Richard Zogheb, the co-heads of capital markets origination for the Americas. |
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Papal bulls from the 1400s condoned the conquest of the Americas and other lands inhabited by indigenous people. |
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They are endangering stability, security, governability, in individual countries and in the region of the Americas. |
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Dave Doupe, Larry Krasner and Cheri Pierce of Jones Lang LaSalle Americas represented G REIT in the transaction. |
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