Other South American rodents include guinea pigs, chinchillas, and New World porcupines. |
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The voyage of Columbus is a landmark in the Age of Exploration when numerous discoverers opened up the New World. |
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The book contextualizes the slave trade and makes clear that the U.S. was not the only place where Africans were enslaved in the New World. |
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Many of the first explorers in the New World wrote home about army ants, as have more contemporary writers, natural historians, and the like. |
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These early Caribbean planters were among the first Europeans in the New World to erect such a comprehensive slave code. |
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To partner spicy or peppery dishes, New World Cabernets and Merlots generally stand up better than their European equivalents. |
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However, thanks to smuggling, piracy, and trade with the New World, England was able to thwart Napoleon's plan. |
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The thumb is small and has a vestigial claw, similar to the New World furipterids. |
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Unlike certain other New World countries, Chile has so far resisted the temptation to push up its prices. |
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Another family, the Ambystomatidae occurs in the New World from Canada to central Mexico and includes the tiger salamander and the axolotl. |
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Both Old and New World mahoganies are considered to be very good for guitar backs and sides, particularly for recording instruments. |
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The reason for this is that taro was grown long before tannia was brought over from the New World. |
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I remember him saying that it was really hard to write A Whole New World for Aladdin, when they're flying in the magic carpet over the world. |
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While on the topic of the blind spot represented by African issues in New World news media, my roommate Lauren has a great post on the problem. |
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A sinful regime passes away, and a New World Order, a fictive New Jerusalem, sort of, is created in its wake, in Mama Day. |
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For nearly 20 years it has been putting the New World to shame in terms of its competitive price and reliability. |
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The hammock is also a Taino invention discovered by the Spanish upon their arrival in the New World. |
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Therefore, we cannot support Durham's derivation of New World lunulate clades from an ancestor in common with protoscutellids, either. |
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When the first Spanish and Portuguese explorers arrived in the New World they found Asiatic chickens. |
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Poeciliids are a group of live-bearing fish, native to the New World but introduced elsewhere as mosquito control agents and ornamental fish. |
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It conjures up an image like that in the novel Brave New World, where everyone is doped up, rather than having their real problems dealt with. |
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This was a very agreeable crisp, dry wine which could stand its own against an equivalent French, Italian or New World offering. |
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The terms of access to the U.S. market are now to be decided in Geneva by Lilliputians of the New World Order. |
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To explore this idea, the investigators turned to the heterogeneous family of Phyllostomidae, the New World leaf-nosed bats. |
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This zesty, youthful craze is a happy financial coincidence for many New World wineries. |
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It may be that the problem was immoveable for a European sensibility in a New World heart. |
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Though named for a town in Spain, the Padron pepper is descendent from plants the Spaniards encountered in the New World. |
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Even the earlier buildings are referential, trying to create meaning in this New World by referring to an imaginary old one. |
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Siberian woolly mammoths made their way over the Bering land bridge to the New World long before mercantile ships made the journey. |
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When they spotted wild turkeys in the New World, William could not resist bringing a few of the gobblers back. |
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The arboreal lizard of C. and S. America, Iguana iguana, is the archetype but other members of the New World family Iguanidae bear the name. |
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The idea that we must take action to avoid a Brave New World resonates powerfully within our culture. |
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They are generally considered among the raptors, yet DNA studies show New World vultures to be ancestrally more closely related to storks. |
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The New World is not hampered by Old World restrictions and includes the white grapes in the blend and on the labels. |
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The sungrebe is a New World species found in parts of Mexico and through most of Central and South America. |
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In general, warmer New World countries, such as Australia, produce white wines of lower acidity. |
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Meanwhile, the nocturnal New World owl monkey gets by with just a single kind of photopigment. |
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That also seems to be the case with some of the other New World quail and appears to reflect a bit of Old World bias of the authors. |
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Callipepla californica are New World quail, birds that have chunky, rounded bodies and crests or head plumes. |
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His research included classic works on quail, bushtits, Mexican and South American thrushes, New World jays, and others. |
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Immigrants felt they had truly made it in the New World when they traded in their four-storey walk-up for a four-car garage. |
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This chateau makes wine for Old World claret drinkers rather than for the powerful New World wine critic, Robert Parker. |
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Chasselas is not widely planted in New World vineyards, which incessantly seek to copy the world's greatest. |
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They marry, both ultimately succeeding in the harsher social and financial climate of the New World. |
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Chesser examined the molecular systematics of the New World suboscines and included three antpitta genera and one antthrush in the study. |
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His published record was the first documentary evidence in Europe of the existence of the New World. |
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The Yellow Wagtail is widely distributed throughout the Old World and has colonized Alaska in the New World. |
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In many parts of the New World, harvest can be a time of heavy physical work for moderately low pay under trying conditions. |
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Europeans usually built defensive stockades immediately upon arrival in the New World in order to protect their foothold on the shore. |
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It was a tayra, a large, weasel-like mustelid, one of the real gems of New World rainforests. |
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Most are unaware of the quality Gamays being produced in the New World, most notably in the Okanagan. |
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For the next 1500 years Western medicine was termed Galenical and extended its influence throughout Europe and into the New World. |
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In recent trials, they tested New World squirrel monkeys and Old World pig-tailed macaques for their olfactory sensitivity to aliphatic alcohols. |
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Someone or something put a curse on Edmund that followed his family to the New World and took root in Dudleytown. |
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The most widely distributed vulture in the New World, the Turkey Vulture is a large, predominantly blackish-brown bird. |
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His essay concludes with a look at the Netherlands' largely fruitless efforts to establish a New World empire. |
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Bordeaux merchant houses must start cutting deals not only with their Burgundian brothers but with New World partners. |
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In your 20s, you get more sophisticated and drink heavily oaked, New World wine. |
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The New World vintner's goal is to produce a uniform taste through the entire production run. |
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The French crown was forced to pay for its Canadian expenditures by borrowing or taxing in France and shipping specie to the New World. |
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Europeans come to the New World, Europeans buy big operations, Europeans lose buckets of money. |
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The Cactaceae are among the flowering plants that dominate the vegetation of arid and semiarid zones of the New World. |
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The New World howler monkey, which has a notably folivorous diet, evolved full trichromaticity independently of Old World primates. |
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Trinidad was named by Christopher Columbus on his third voyage to the New World. |
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It was the abundant land and the unexploited natural resources of the New World that attracted most of the capital. |
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The settlers of Jamestown brought cottonseed to the New World, but they were unable to produce the fiber in significant quantities. |
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But in this New World, dogmatism and its blood brother, religious fundamentalism, are thriving as never before. |
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In the New World such a process is likely to involve the assembly of blends of various different quality levels and character. |
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The city was Moorish territory for many years and regained importance and economic standing with the discovery of the New World. |
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The description of him dancing the twist with his wife in an effort to come to terms with the New World Order is almost too sad to contemplate. |
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The Erethizontidae is a family of rodents commonly known as the New World porcupines. |
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Yet knowledge of the peacock flower and its use as an abortifacient remained confined, by and large, to the slave camps and backwoods villages of the New World colonies. |
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A long list of favorite books includes Animal Farm, Brave New World, The Wizard Of Oz, Aesop's Fables, and The Odyssey. |
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But in his 1932 novel Brave New World, he created one of the truly memorable 20th-century dystopias, which is also one of the most frighteningly pessimistic. |
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There's a decent range of Spanish and Mexican dishes on offer too, including three paellas and staple New World offerings such as fajitas, enchiladas and tacos. |
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This was Gullah country, the preserve of a people who have retained one of the least-diluted West African cultures and dialects still found in the New World. |
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Brave New World shows how dehumanizing it would be for human beings to be so designed that they gave up individual freedom for the stable order of a social insect colony. |
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At the time of his marriage in May of 1747 Hamilton had struggled for almost eight years to create a comfortable niche in a primitive New World environment. |
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The New World Symphony players covered themselves with glory! |
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Both are made from Cabernet franc, but are much lustier than conventional Bourgueil wines, veering towards the fleshiness of New World Merlot in the Valinieres Cuvee. |
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Scotland exported the Ku Klux Klan and the fiery cross to the New World. |
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One can never appreciate or even understand Burgundy simply by pitting it against the lush fruit-forward styles of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay from the New World. |
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The conventional view held that cultural impress on the New World was rudimentary, artless, too recent to have mellowed the garish profusion of nature. |
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Some seem silly now, like his campaign to rid the New World of periwigs. |
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This would mean that a number of groups of people using early Paleolithic stone tools entered the New World at the same time as the Clovis people. |
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Suboscines, which include flycatchers, ant-birds, woodcreepers, and ovenbirds, are now diverse in the New World, with about 1,100 species, nearly all of them in South America. |
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Omland, Lanyon, and Fritz also found that it was important to sample more than one individual to accurately infer species relationships in New World orioles. |
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Within 10 million years of that event the procyonid group split into Old World procyondis represented today by the red panda and the New World procyonids. |
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It just so happened that two weeks ago I was in the Matamata New World. |
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The plant is a member of the family Solanaceae and therefore a relation of the New World capsicum peppers and potato, and of the Old World aubergine. |
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Spain was raking in huge profits with their New World colonies, mainly by extracting gold and silver. |
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The mindsets of both Cavalier and Puritan took root in the New World, and the experiment launched in 1776 continues. |
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This is expensive but very interesting, and anybody wanting to taste a wine that has Burgundian complexity from the New World should search this one out. |
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To the Western Europeans who came to the New World, treaties were documents that essentially codified agreements made between two or more sovereignties. |
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From the start, Hershel, who is driven by his deep faith in God, guides Rick to make peace with the New World. |
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Under the universal name of moidore it became the most commonly traded coin in the New World and was internationally the principal gold coin of the 18th century. |
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Almost all Egyptian mummies contained parasites which caused amoebic dysentery and bilharzia, and mummies in the New World had whipworm and roundworm eggs. |
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The story centers on Aedes albopictus, aka the tiger mosquito, a newcomer to the New World. |
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We are living under the New World Order where might is right and the propaganda machine creates the truths and facts to serve the cause of that right. |
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Chapter two covers the process of enslavement in Africa, the middle passage and ship-board rebellions, and briefly touches on the sale of slaves in the New World. |
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During particularly harsh beginnings upon landing in the New World, desperate colonists resorted to human flesh for sustenance. |
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In contrast, most New World primates, such as the tamarins and marmosets of South America, are dichromatic, having just blue-sensitive and green-sensitive opsins. |
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These and other attributes have been used to develop scenarios for the origin and evolution of New World sand dollar clades, notably the lunulate forms. |
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Postulated as basal lunulate taxa, the monophorasterids are very important to our understanding of major events in the origins of the New World sand dollar faunas. |
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The Delaware roamed the fields and woods of the Northeastern United States for many centuries before white Europeans came to the shores of the New World. |
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A circumtropical family of eight species, including two in the New World, jacanas inhabit freshwater swamps, lakes, lagoons and seasonally flooded pastures. |
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Now, like others generationally-distanced from Africa, they have reforged a New World ideology, hybridized of history, culture, and African American subjectivity. |
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In very hot regions of the lucky, sun-kissed New World, colours, tastes and textures have to be big, highly contrasted and sharp to be seen at all. |
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To the early settlers, squash was just another mysterious New World food that they ate to survive the hard winters, but today's winter squashes are not such a puzzle. |
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Shaped by the fastidious Harnoncourt, the central andante movement opens with a horn theme that whispers an affinity to the Largo from the New World symphony. |
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Both the EU and the French government will come under pressure to fork over handouts to struggling vintners and to push for quotas on New World imports. |
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The jack bean is a bushy, semi-erect annual legume originated in the New World and which is grown mainly as green manure and as cover crop in soil erosion control programs. |
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On 17 October 1528, Alonso became the first person in the New World to be burned alive at the stake. |
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This would be to that date the largest and most complete expedition to leave Spain for the New World. |
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Capsicum chinense or 'Chinese capsicum' is a misnomer since all capsica originate in the New World. |
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Species of opiine braconids are often the most abundant and diverse elements in New World parasitoid guilds attacking Anastrepha spp. |
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More details about the program can be found on The Brave New World Program's Facebook page and Twitter. |
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Europeans brought cattle, horses, and sheep to the New World, and from the New World Europeans received tobacco, potatoes and maize. |
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Although the bulk of imports to China were silver, the Chinese also purchased New World crops from the Spanish Empire. |
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Mercantilism grew, and monopoly trading companies such as the East India Company were established, with trade expanding to the New World. |
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The Roman use of the term corn is not to be confused with maize, which did not come to Europe until the discovery of the New World. |
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When English colonists left for the New World, they brought royal charters that established the colonies. |
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The discovery in 1492 of the New World by Christopher Columbus challenged the classical worldview. |
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Philip had a son from a previous marriage and was heir apparent to vast territories in Continental Europe and the New World. |
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Despite Mary's marriage to Philip, England did not benefit from Spain's enormously lucrative trade with the New World. |
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Spain passed some laws for the protection of the indigenous peoples of its New World territories. |
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In the face of the impossibility of the Castilian institutions to take care of the New World affairs, other new institutions were created. |
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In 1607 the London Company established the Colony of Virginia as the first permanent New World English colony. |
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The Queen and Raleigh intended that the venture should provide riches from the New World. |
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On the second leg, ships made the journey of the Middle Passage from Africa to the New World. |
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Once the ship reached the New World, enslaved survivors were sold in the Caribbean or the American colonies. |
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New England also made rum from the Caribbean sugar and molasses, which it shipped to Africa as well as within the New World. |
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England returned to Protestantism and continued its growth into a major world power by building its navy and exploring the New World. |
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Concurrently, Spanish and Portuguese explorers and missionaries spread the Church's influence through Africa, Asia, and the New World. |
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By contrast, African workers, both in Africa and in the New World, were widely noted to sing while working. |
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In August 2009, Scott planned to direct an adaptation of Aldous Huxley's Brave New World set in a dystopian London with Leonardo DiCaprio. |
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It was through the Spanish empire in the New World that Genoa became rich again. |
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This change occurred in the New World as Africans were brought as enslaved peoples. |
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After Spain sent Columbus on his first voyage to the New World in 1492, other explorers followed. |
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The Portuguese were the first to engage in the New World slave trade in the 16th century. |
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These slaves were managed by a factor who was established on or near the coast to expedite the shipping of slaves to the New World. |
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Exporting crops and goods from the New World to Europe often proved to be more profitable than producing them on the European mainland. |
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The number of enslaved people sold to the New World varied throughout the slave trade. |
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This, combined with injection of bullion from the New World, increased the money supply in England, which led to continuing price inflation. |
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George's, was established in 1612 and is the oldest continuously inhabited English town in the New World. |
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The archipelago's limited land area and resources led to the creation of what may be the earliest conservation laws of the New World. |
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This was largely caused by the sudden influx of gold and silver from the New World into Habsburg Spain. |
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Deer are plentiful in the south, and many species of New World monkeys are found in the northern rain forests. |
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They sought to reform the Church of England by creating a new, pure church in the New World. |
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Thirty thousand people were evicted between 1840 and 1880 alone, many of them forced to emigrate to the New World. |
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The first Scots recorded as having set foot in the New World were a man named Haki and a woman named Hekja, slaves owned by Leif Eiriksson. |
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In the New World, lead was produced soon after the arrival of European settlers. |
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In 1939 Wolfgang Paalen was the first to leave Paris for the New World as exile. |
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The arts of these cultures eventually became a hallmark for Europe and the New World. |
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The British sentiment followed in the cookbooks brought to the New World as well. |
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As many of the New Englanders were originally from England, game hunting was useful when they immigrated to the New World. |
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The slaves and poor of the south often ate a similar diet, which consisted of many of the indigenous New World crops. |
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The year 1492 also marked the arrival of Christopher Columbus in the New World, during a voyage funded by Isabella. |
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The Pilgrim Fathers also spent time there before their voyage to the New World. |
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The expedition resulted in the construction of Fort Caroline, the first French colony in the New World. |
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This similarity was used to support a theory that a Welsh party colonized the New World in the 12th century. |
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Smith says the Chronicles say Madoc then went back to Wales to get more people and made a second trip back to the New World. |
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Bristol was a starting place for early voyages of exploration to the New World. |
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A group of small, often colourful passerine birds restricted to the New World. |
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Other famous New World crops include the cashew, cocoa, rubber, sunflower, tobacco, and vanilla, and fruits like the guava, papaya and pineapple. |
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Together, they make up most of the land in Earth's western hemisphere and comprise the New World. |
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Cossacks were warriors organized into military communities, resembling pirates and pioneers of the New World. |
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The European immigrants, mostly English, Scots, Irish and French, built a society in the New World unlike the ones they had left. |
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As one of the first places in the New World where Europeans settled, Newfoundland also has a history of European colonization. |
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The coastal migration models provide a different perspective on migration to the New World, but they are not without their own problems. |
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One is the name of the sweet potato, which was domesticated in the New World. |
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The authors Robert Lomas and Christopher Knight believe some carvings in the chapel to be ears of New World corn or maize. |
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Since the discovery of the New World, various authors have tried to link the Brendan legend with an early discovery of America. |
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Traces of coca and nicotine found in some Egyptian mummies have led to speculation that Ancient Egyptians may have traveled to the New World. |
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This became a popular topic in fringe literature and the media and was seen as proof of contact between Ancient Egypt and the New World. |
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Among the ruins were the corpses of 11 of the 39 Spaniards who had stayed behind as the first colonists in the New World. |
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He was eventually freed and allowed to return to the New World, but not as governor. |
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There is evidence that the men of the first voyage also brought syphilis from the New World to Europe. |
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Columbus did not reach Asia but rather found what was to the Europeans a New World, the Americas. |
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Christopher Columbus, on his third voyage to the New World in 1498, traveled along part of what would later become Venezuela. |
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Ship owners transported enslaved West Africans to the New World to be sold into slave labour. |
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Due to the often much more fertile New World growing conditions, attention has focussed heavily on managing the vine's more vigorous growth. |
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Such techniques have made possible the development of wine industries in New World countries such as Canada. |
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Numbers of New World vineyard plantings have been increasing almost as fast as European vineyards are being uprooted. |
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At least 11 separate regions of the Old and New World were involved as independent centers of origin. |
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This is also the case for some New World monkeys outside the family of great apes, as, for example, the capuchin monkeys. |
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It constituted back then the second receptor of French immigrants in the New World after the United States. |
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Neither was strong enough to pull a plough which limited the development of agriculture in the New World. |
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He brought to the American popular attention the idea that Viking explorers discovered the New World and was the originator of Leif Erikson Day. |
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Of all the New World plants introduced to Italy, only the potato took as long as the tomato to gain acceptance. |
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Still, the effects of the introduction of European livestock on the environments and peoples of the New World were not always positive. |
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European exploration of tropical areas was aided by the New World discovery of quinine, the first effective treatment for malaria. |
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Some of the invasive species have become serious ecosystem and economic problems after establishing in the New World environments. |
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In the New World, populations of feral European cats, pigs, horses and cattle are common, and Burmese pythons are considered problematic. |
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In order to establish itself as an American empire, Spain had to fight against the relatively powerful civilizations of the New World. |
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He traveled to the New World in 1500 and, after some exploration, settled on the island of Hispaniola. |
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They took a canoe for a short reconnaissance trip, thus becoming the first Europeans to navigate the Pacific Ocean off the coast of New World. |
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This form of tribute was later also applied by the Spanish empire to their territories in the New World. |
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According to molecular data, the New World and Old World camelids diverged 11 million years ago. |
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It was during this time that Spanish and Portuguese explorers first set foot on the New World. |
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At around the same time, Christopher Columbus returned from the New World, he described to investors new spices available there. |
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With the discovery of the New World came new spices, including allspice, chili peppers, vanilla, and chocolate. |
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Spain began to sell opium, along with New World products such as tobacco and maize, to the Chinese in order to prevent a trade deficit. |
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They did not populate North America as much as the English did, as they did not allow the Huguenots to travel to the New World. |
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Palos would play a pivotal role in the settlement and Christianization of the New World in succeeding centuries. |
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La Navidad was the first European colony established in the New World during the Age of Discovery, though it was destroyed the following year. |
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European nations were competing for control in the New World, in the Caribbean as well as in North America. |
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Juan de la Cosa sailed with Christopher Columbus on his first three voyages to the New World. |
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In 1509 Juan de la Cosa set out for the seventh and last time for the New World. |
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These lands were initially known as the New World, and were later named the Americas. |
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It was the first New World viceroyalty and one of only two in the Spanish empire until the 18th century Bourbon Reforms. |
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By this time, news of the exciting discoveries of Christopher Columbus in the New World was streaming back to Spain. |
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Researchers concluded that syphilis was carried from the New World to Europe after Columbus' voyages. |
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In September 1493, some 1,200 sailors, colonists, and soldiers joined Christopher Columbus for his second voyage to the New World. |
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During the 16th and 17th centuries, Europeans, still fascinated by the New World, believed that a hidden city of immense wealth existed. |
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When his possessions were visited by Spanish explorers in 1522, they were the southernmost part of the New World yet known to Europeans. |
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The flow of income from the New World proved vital to his militant foreign policy, but nonetheless his exchequer several times faced bankruptcy. |
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Other colonial powers followed, such as Britain, France and the Netherlands, as they colonized the New World. |
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In 1620, a successor to the Plymouth Company sent colonists to the New World aboard the Mayflower. |
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On July 30, 1619, burgesses met at Jamestown Church as the first elected representative legislative assembly in the New World. |
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Between 1600 and 1606, he had promoted the concept that a main goal of the company should be establishing colonies in the New World. |
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Plancius was closely acquainted with Henry Hudson, an explorer of the New World. |
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The common origin of humans was generally accepted, but it posed the problem of the origins of human settlements in the New World. |
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The people captured on these expeditions were shipped by European traders to the colonies of the New World. |
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For every 100 Africans captured, only 64 would reach the coast, and only about 50 would reach the New World. |
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Many elite Africans visited Europe on slave ships following the prevailing winds through the New World. |
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The first enslaved Africans arrived in Hispaniola in 1501 soon after the Papal Bull of 1493 gave almost all of the New World to Spain. |
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In the 16th century, people began using pepper to also mean the unrelated New World chili pepper. |
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In fact, it was not until the discovery of the New World and of chili peppers that the popularity of long pepper entirely declined. |
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His Spanish inheritance included all the Spanish possessions in the New World and around the Mediterranean. |
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The growth of Spain's empire in the New World was accomplished from Seville, without the close direction of the leadership in Madrid. |
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Also during this time Spanish and Portuguese brought a large amount of gold from the New World to Europe. |
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North American French is the result of French colonization of the New World between the 17th and 18th centuries. |
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It is also reportedly the oldest continuously used Protestant church in the New World. |
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Peter's is the oldest Anglican, and the oldest Protestant, church in the New World. |
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The Native Americans colonized the New World in several waves from Asia, and thus they are considered part of the same Mongoloid race. |
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Together with the Spaniards, the technology spread to the New World in Mexico and South America following Spanish expansion. |
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As early as 1600, French, Dutch, and English traders began exploring the New World, trading metal, glass, and cloth for local beaver pelts. |
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Some emigrated to the New World, especially to the Thirteen Colonies and Canada. |
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Blood samples collected from the specimens were tested for evidence of IgG antibodies to New World hantaviruses and arenaviruses. |
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Description of the first genus of physoderine assassin bugs from the New World. |
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It also hosted the annual International Malaria and Environmental Health Course for New World malariologists. |
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They had grown from eggs planted by the fly, a New World Army screwworm fly, in Peru. |
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In its singular majesty, the marimba is an organic ink between cultures that stretch from the Orient and Africa to the New World. |
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Approaching its 80th year of publication, Brave New World explores a potentially frightening reality that is not incomparable to our world today. |
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He presents Brave New World, a global exploration of the scientific breakthroughs that are transforming our lives in the 21st century. |
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The French have always put great store in terroir and maintain it is a key point of difference to New World wines. |
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A catalogue of the Trombiculid, or chigger mites, of the New World, with new genera and species and a key to the genera. |
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In the 1920's it was agreed that candidates at least in the New World did not have to demonstrate nobiliary proofs. |
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And like Brezhnev-era Soviet commissars, Scarr eagerly denounces opposition to the Brave New World she envisions as a form of illness. |
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Its nearest living relative is the sunbittern of the New World tropics, although it appears closer kin to extinct New Zealand birds. |
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Soon the raccoon line divided further into the Old World raccoons and New World raccoons. |
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The status of the crocodylid genera Procaimanoidea and Hassiacosuchus in the New World. |
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Revision of New World Platgiognathus Fieber, with comments on the Palearctic fauna and the description of a new genus. |
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The Brave New World scenario would mean women no longer need to carry a baby from conception, using ectogenesis instead. |
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This showy plant is the first with scented blooms to be found among New World members of the genus Erythronium. |
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Orioles, along with grackles, blackbirds, meadowlarks, and oropendolas, belong to a family called the Icteridae, which are found only in the New World. |
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Mastodons fed on trees and shrubs in both the boreal and tropical rain forests of the New World while giant ground sloths and glyptodonts fed in Mexican deserts. |
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Cabral was the first captain to touch four continents, leading the first expedition that connected and united Europe, Africa, the New World, and Asia. |
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How it came to imply the enslavement of black Africans in the New World, while characterizing Africans as Hamites and Hamites as hypersexual, is the burden of this book. |
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Dyes from the New World such as cochineal and logwood were brought to Europe by the Spanish treasure fleets, and the dyestuffs of Europe were carried by colonists to America. |
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Specialist feather lice of the genus Piagetella are found in the pouches of all species of pelican, but are otherwise only known from New World and Antarctic cormorants. |
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The Spanish received a large influx of gold from the colonies in the New World as plunder when they were conquered, much of which Charles used to prosecute his wars in Europe. |
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However, emigrants did have a use for such dogs in the New World. |
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Trading was the only ongoing contact between most New World cultures. |
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Johannes Ruysch an explorer, cartographer, astronomer and painter from the Low Countries produced the second oldest known printed representation of the New World. |
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Like many New World romaleids, these insects, which are called bush locusts, are often social in the nymphal or hopper stage and become more solitary as adults. |
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The historical powers became involved in global trade, as the exchange of goods, plants, animals, and food crops extended to the Old World and the New World. |
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Contact with the New World led to the European colonization of the Americas, in which millions of immigrants from the Old World eventually settled in the New World. |
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The Crown of Castile organized the expedition of Christopher Columbus to compete with Portugal for the spice trade with Asia, but instead, landed in a New World. |
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It is the oldest continually inhabited English town in the New World. |
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Bristol's location on the west side of Great Britain gave its ships an advantage in sailing to and from the New World, and the city's merchants made the most of it. |
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Africans knew of the harsh slavery that awaited slaves in the New World. |
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The result of this meeting would be the famous Treaty of Tordesillas, which sought to divide all newly discovered lands in the New World between Spain and Portugal. |
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Once the slaves set foot in the castle, they could spend up to three months in captivity under these dreadful conditions before being shipped off to the New World. |
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In colonial times, sugar formed one side of the triangle trade of New World raw materials, along with European manufactured goods, and African slaves. |
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Two of the five Galliform families, the cracids and the New World quails, are confined to the Americas, with most species in Central and especially South America. |
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Almagro lost his left eye battling with coastal natives in the New World. |
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By this time, however, other European powers had overwhelmingly rejected the notion that the Pope had the right to convey sovereignty of regions as vast as the New World. |
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He also appealed to Spain for help, but Spain was eager to be on good terms with the papacy to obtain the title to the recently discovered New World. |
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In the wake of Columbus's landing in the New World, Pope Alexander was asked by the Spanish monarchy to confirm their ownership of these newly found lands. |
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It was an auspicious choice for Northeast, because he was a lover of the arts, a versatile and competent talent, with a deep interest in the New World. |
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In 1617, he returned to the New World on a second expedition, this time with Kemys and his son, Watt Raleigh, to continue his quest for El Dorado. |
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The Crown regretted the sweeping powers that had been granted to Columbus and his heirs and sought to establish more direct control in the New World. |
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It is the oldest known European map that shows the New World. |
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New Spain was the New World terminus of the Philippine trade, making the viceroyalty a vital link between Spain's New World empire and its Asian empire. |
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It was conceived by the Venezuelan revolutionary Francisco de Miranda as a reference to all the New World, but especially to those portions under Spanish and Portuguese rule. |
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Later, increasing imports of silver from New World sources resulted in Japanese exports to the Philippines shifting from silver to consumer goods. |
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The study may put to rest an idea, known as the Solutrean hypothesis, that ancient Europeans crossed the Atlantic and established the Clovis culture in the New World. |
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In Brave New World you find the pointless hedonism of our binge-drinking young professionals in the city centres and the uncouth savagery of housing-estate charvers. |
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A New World ingredient, chilies were introduced to us by Columbus. |
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Speakers of English generally refer to the landmasses of North America and South America as the Americas, the Western Hemisphere, or the New World. |
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The pattern was also used by Spanish colonizers in America following strict rules by the Spanish monarchy for founding new cities in the New World. |
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Paleoindians invaded and occupied the New World, the last glacial period came to an end, and a large fraction of the megafauna of both North and South America went extinct. |
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From this valley came many of the early Quakers who emigrated to Pennsylvania, driven from their homes by persecution to seek freedom of worship in the New World. |
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The French Revolution had a major impact on Europe and the New World. |
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The only way they could reach the New World was by the Bering land bridge. |
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The 3,000 to 5,000 radiocarbon year gap between the Solutrean period of France and Spain and the Clovis of the New World also makes such a connection problematic. |
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Saint Augustine quickly became a strategic defensive base for the Spanish ships full of gold and silver being sent to Spain from its New World dominions. |
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In 1513, Balboa crossed the Isthmus of Panama, and led the first European expedition to see the Pacific Ocean from the West coast of the New World. |
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