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Earthquake

Index Earthquake

An earthquake (also known as a quake, tremor or temblor) is the shaking of the surface of the Earth, resulting from the sudden release of energy in the Earth's lithosphere that creates seismic waves. [1]

3009 relations: A Ghost Story, A Miser Brothers' Christmas, A Short History of Nearly Everything, Ağdaş, Azerbaijan, Aşık Çelebi, ABC Movie of the Week, Abdullah Musawi Shirazi, Abenaki mythology, Abraham Bennet, Accelerograph, Accelerometer, Acoustic metamaterial, Acoustical engineering, Acoustics, Acoustoelastic effect, Act of God, Action film, Active fault, Active structure, Acts of Andrew, AD 37, AD 63, Adam Dziewonski, Adana, Adina Mosque, AeDES (engineering), Aelia Eudoxia, Aftershock, Aftershock: Earthquake in New York, Agatha of Sicily, Aggradation, Agios Efstratios, Agios Nikolaos, Chalkidiki, Aguilera (volcano), Aiani Archaeological Museum, Aihal, Air Transport Wing 62, Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant, AKUT Search and Rescue Association, Al Hoceima, Al-Harith ibn Jabalah, Al-Kindi, Al-Zuq al-Fawqani, Alaşehir, Alaksandu, Alaska Range, Alaskan Way Seawall, Alban Hills, Albuñuelas, Alcatraz Island Light, ..., Alcor Life Extension Foundation, Aldo Parisot, Alexandria, Alignak, Alimodian, Iloilo, All Nite (Don't Stop), Almaty, Almaty Tower, Almería, Alonnisos, Alpide belt, Alpine Fault, Alquist Priolo Special Studies Zone Act, Altai Mountains, Alveolo-palatal consonant, Amazo, Amédée Guillemin, Amédée-François Frézier, Amber House, Amchitka, American Samoa, American Women's Hospitals Service, Anahim hotspot, Anaximenes of Miletus, Anazarbus, Anchor plate, Ancient Gates of Ganja, Ancient Greek religion, Andes, Andijan, Andreev Bay nuclear accident, Andrew Cassidy, Andrew Coburn (catastrophe modeller), Andrey Lyapchev, Andrija Puharich, Angalo, Aniche, Anini, Aniruddha's Academy of Disaster Management, Ankara University, Anna Fegi, Anna, Ohio, Annales Cavenses, Annihilation Earth, Anodyne (album), Antena 21, Anti-nuclear movement in the Philippines, Anti-nuclear power movement in Japan, Anti-Seismic Monument, Anti-Turkism, Antioch, Antirhodos, Antonio Vivaldi, Aon Center (Chicago), Aphian, Apostolic Gospel Church of Jesus Christ, Applied Technology Council, April 2011 Miyagi earthquake, April 2014 Ürümqi attack, Aptera, Greece, Arab fountain of Alcamo, Arauco, Chile, Arch of Galerius and Rotunda, Archaeoseismology, Archduchess Barbara of Austria, Archena, Architecture of Kathmandu, Arg e Bam, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Arkansas Geological Survey, Armenian Church, Dhaka, Arodes, Around the World Under the Sea, Arthur Casagrande, Artistes 512 Fund Raising Campaign, Ascoli Satriano, Aseismic creep, Ashbritt, Ask The Doctor, Asociación de Guías y Scouts de Chile, Assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists, Association of Bay Area Governments, Atalanta (island), Atalanti, Atarfe, Atlanta metropolitan area, Atlantis (DC Comics), Attenuation, Auburn–LSU football rivalry, Aucanquilcha, Auckland volcanic field, August 2016 Central Italy earthquake, August 2016 Myanmar earthquake, Augustine Volcano, Aurora (aircraft), Australia (continent), Avachinsky, Avalanche net, Avantiswami Temple, Avellino, Awash–Weldiya Railway, Aydın, Aykut Barka, Ayvacik (Canakkale) Swarm, Þingvellir, İzmir, Ōkubi, Štrigova, Bab-el-Mandeb, Badan Rehabilitasi dan Rekonstruksi, Baelo Claudia, Bahad 16, Bahram Akasheh, Bakersfield, California, Balasagun, Balcones Fault, Ball (bearing), Ball-and-pillow structures, Balline Station, Balut Island, Bamboo Organ, Bampton Castle, Devon, Bangabandhu Bridge, Banjawarn Station, Baramulla Bomber, Bare Mountain (Massachusetts), Barisal guns, Barnafossar, Baroque architecture, Barseen, Basal sliding, Base isolation, Basilica of Our Lady of the Angels, Cartago, Bath Consolidated School, Batman: Cataclysm, Battery Point Light, Battle Mountain, Nevada, Bayezid II Mosque, Bayou Corne sinkhole, Baywatch, Bazman, Büyükeceli, Beach evolution, Beacon Hill (Branford, Connecticut), Beam (structure), Beijing National Stadium, Beit She'an, Bellinus of Padua, Benaki Museum, Benavente, Portugal, Benignus of Dijon, Beno Gutenberg, Berja, Bernardo Storace, Besek Mountain, Betagel, Beyazıt Tower, Bhookamp, Bhutanese animation, Bi-State Vietnam Gold Star Bridges, Bibeksheel Nepali, Bibliography of the Sierra Nevada, Bident, Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, Bill McGuire (volcanologist), Bill Nye the Science Guy, Bingham Canyon Mine, Birmingham, Alabama, Bishopric of Trent, Black & White 2, Black Jack (manga character), Black Mask (comics), Black Sun Rising, Blink of an Eye (Star Trek: Voyager), Bloody Roar, Blue Mosque, Tabriz, Blythe, California, BMIR, Boa Sr, Boğaziçi University, Bob Citron, Bodega Head, Bojnord, Bomb shelter, Boneshaker (novel), Boobquake, Borik, Boris Mavashev, Braced frame, Bradley Mountain, Bradyseism, Braux, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, Brazilian Highlands, Brazzaville arms dump blasts, Breccia, Brian Atwater, Brian Kennett, Bridge bearing, Bridge River Vent, Bridge trilogy, Broad Group, Brownsville, Tennessee, Bucket toilet, Buckling-restrained braced frame, Budbrooke, Buffalo, New York, Bug (1975 film), Bugey Nuclear Power Plant, Building, Building code, Building inspection, Bukovo, Bukusu, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, Burdock piling, Burial, Busbar, Business continuity planning, Bussana, Bussana Vecchia, Butch Kinerney, Buthrotum, Buynaksk, Buzău Mountains, Caballo de Troya, Caddo Lake, Caesar III, Cairo Rail Bridge, Cajamarquilla, California, California Earthquake Prediction Evaluation Council, California landslides, California State Route 2, Callawassie Island, Calle 7, Camiguin Mindanao, Camp Hyrule, Canadian Cascade Arc, Canadian National Seismograph Network, Canary hotspot, Candide (operetta), Candon Church, Cangde Grand Bridge, Carbet Falls, CarbFix, Carbon dioxide removal, Cardiff Rift, Caribbean Plate, Caribbean Sea, Carlos Dittborn, Carlsberg Ridge, Carnegie Ridge, Carol I National College, Carsulae, Cartago, Costa Rica, Casabona, Cascade Volcanoes, Cascadia Channel, Cascadia subduction zone, Cassandra Cain, Castaic, California, Casualty estimation, Cataclysm, Catania, Catastrophe modeling, Catastrophism, Catedral de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe, Cathedral Basilica of Lima, Cathedral Basilica of St. Joseph (San Jose), Cathedral of Christ the Light (Oakland, California), Cathedral of Salta, Caucasus Mountains, Causes of landslides, Cave-in-Rock State Park, Cecropius of Nicomedia, Celano, CeNSE, Centennial Bridge, Panama, Center for Earthquake Studies, Center for Short-Lived Phenomena, Central Weather Bureau, Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters, Cepstrum, Chagos-Laccadive Ridge, Chakesar, Chambourg-sur-Indre, Champagne (wine region), Chandler wobble, Chang-Gu World Trade Center, Chao Samartín, Chaos Crags, Chaos theory, Chapman University, Charity record, Charles Francis Richter, Charles Lyell, Charlevoix Seismic Zone, Chã das Caldeiras, Chemosphere, Chennai, Chennai district, Cherufe, Chervona, Chicano Park, Chicxulub crater, Chișinău Water Tower, Chikyū, Childbirth in Japan, Children in emergencies and conflicts, Chilean Heart, Chimbote, Chimney, Chinese architecture, Chinese astronomy, Chino Hills, Chino Hills, California, Chora Church, Christ Church Cathedral, Nelson, Christian Martin (television executive), Chu-Bu and Sheemish, Church of St Demetrius of Thessaloniki, Veliko Tarnovo, Church on the Hill (Sighișoara), Cibona Tower, Cinta Fitri, Ciomadul, Cité Soleil, Civil defense, Clapboard (architecture), Clastic dike, Clathrate hydrate, Clayton-Marsh Creek-Greenville Fault, Climate appraisal, Climate of Allentown, Pennsylvania, Clyde Dam, Coalinga, California, Coastal flood, Coastal hazards, Coats Observatory, Codex Telleriano-Remensis, Collections care, Colonel Plug, Color-tagged structure, Colorado Desert, Colossi of Memnon, Comet vintages, Comparative planetary science, Compensation (engineering), Complex fluid, Composting toilet, Compton College, Concepción, Chile, Concord Fault, Concrete leveling, Conservation and restoration of shipwreck artifacts, Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura, Contents of the Voyager Golden Record, Continental margin, Continental shelf, Contra Dam, Convent of Bosco ai Frati, Convergent boundary, Cook Inlet, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, COPS (animated TV series), Coral Sea, Corbin, Kentucky, Coromandel Coast, Corona, Tennessee, Corpse Party, Coruscant, Cosmic Odyssey (documentary), Coulomb stress transfer, Council of Seleucia, Countries affected by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Covington, Tennessee, Coyote Mountains, Creepmeter, CRESTA, Crisis, Crisis camp, Crisis management, Critias (dialogue), Crush syndrome, Cryoseism, Cubagua, Cuckoo, Virginia, Culpability, Cumaná, Cumbre Vieja, Curtain Razor, Cusco Cathedral, Cusco School, Cushing, Oklahoma, Cutro, Cwmllynfell, Cyclone Vania, Cypress Street Viaduct, Cyrene, Libya, Dabbahu Volcano, Daen Lao Range, Daimajin, Daisy Johnson, Dal Lake, Dam, Dam failure, Damophon, Dancers of Delphi, Darkest Africa, Darkest Night (film), Data loss, David A. Johnston, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, David H. Geiger, David Icke, David Leeson, David Stevenson (engineer), Düren, De rerum natura, Deanna Jo, December 16, December 1924, December 2015 Hindu Kush earthquake, December 23, Deconstruction (building), Deep Core (film), Deep-focus earthquake, Degei, Deities of Slavic religion, Dekitate High School, Deluge (film), Denali, Denholme Clough Fault, Denudation, Depth of focus (tectonics), Derek Keir, Design-basis event, Destructive testing, Devastation Trail, Devil's Chimney (Gloucestershire), Devils Hole, Devils Hole pupfish, Dhul-Qarnayn, Diablo Canyon earthquake vulnerability, Diablo Canyon Power Plant, Diagnosis: Murder, Diamond Valley Lake, Diaphragm (structural system), Dibaj, Dibsi Faraj, Didier Sornette, Digicel Haiti Earthquake Relief Fund, Digne-les-Bains, Dimitrios Trichopoulos, Dingbat (building), Dinosaur Island, Disaster, Disaster film, Disaster recovery plan, Disaster research, Disaster response, Disaster!, Disasters Emergency Committee, Discover Magazine (TV series), Discovery Seamounts, Disenchantment Bay, Dissipator (building design), District Meteorological Observatory, Disturbance (ecology), Dobrá Voda, Trnava District, Doctor Cyber, Dodger Stadium, Doel Nuclear Power Station, Dog Star (short story), Don L. Anderson, Donald Duck universe, Doomed (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), Doomsday Preppers, Doublet earthquake, Doug Sutherland (American politician), Drežniške Ravne, Drunken trees, Dubh Artach, Duck and cover, Durrës, Dusky Canada goose, Earth, Earth Changes, Earth observation, Earth Revealed: Introductory Geology, Earth science, Earth Watchers Center, Earthquake (1974 film), Earthquake (disambiguation), Earthquake (Modern Family), Earthquake Baroque, Earthquake casualty estimation, Earthquake cloud, Earthquake duration magnitude, Earthquake engineering, Earthquake environmental effects, Earthquake Hazards Reduction Act of 1977, Earthquake in New York, Earthquake insurance, Earthquake location, Earthquake prediction, Earthquake preparedness, Earthquake Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority, Earthquake Relief and Rehabilitation Project, Earthquake rotational loading, Earthquake scenario, Earthquake shaking table, Earthquake swarm, Earthquake valve, Earthquake warning system, Earthquake weather, Earthquake zones of India, Earthquake-resistant structures, Earthshaker! (pinball), East African Rift, East Bay Vivarium, East Cape Lighthouse, East Haven, Connecticut, East Island / Whangaokeno, East Mountain (Massachusetts), Eastern Tennessee Seismic Zone, Ebenezer Presbyterian Church, Osu, Eco-terrorism in fiction, Economy of Istanbul, Edith Irvine, Edmund Creffield, Edmund Otis Hovey, Education in Ecuador, Educational toy, Edward L. Beach Sr., Edward Pigot, Effect of the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake on Indonesia, Effective stress, Effects of nuclear explosions, El Hierro, El Mollar, El Reno, Oklahoma, El Salvador, El Salvador Project, El Supremo (wrestler), El Tatio, El Tigre Fault, Elastic-rebound theory, Electricity sector in Italy, Electricity sector in Japan, Elgin Marbles, Eli Stone, Elis (regional unit), Emagines, Emergency, Emergency Broadcast System, Emergency communication system, Emergency evacuation, Emergency management, Emergency Management Institute, Emergency population warning, Emergency Responder Health Monitoring and Surveillance, Emilio Rosenblueth, Emperor Ingyō, Empress Suiko, Emygdius, Encantadia, Encounters (TV series), Encyclopedia (TV series), Energetically modified cement, Energy, Energy in Ohio, Engativá, Engineering geology, Enola earthquake swarm, Enterprise, Utah, Enuma Anu Enlil, Environment of Virginia, Environmental hazard, Environmental impact of hydraulic fracturing, Environmental impact of hydraulic fracturing in the United States, Environmental impact of nuclear power, Environmental issues in Ethiopia, Environmental issues in Haiti, Environmental issues in Indonesia, Environmental issues in Pakistan, Environmental issues in Tehran, Environmental issues in Venezuela, Environmental Science Services Administration, Environmental Seismic Intensity scale, Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two, Epicenter, Episodic tremor and slip, EQ, Erasmo Janer Gironella, Erik the Viking, Erosion and tectonics, ESG Solutions, Essex County Fire and Rescue Service, Et-Tell, Ethel Bellamy, Ethiopian xeric grasslands and shrublands, Euan MacKie, Euboea, Eureka (Oz), Eureka High School (California), Eurocode 8: Design of structures for earthquake resistance, Eurocodes, European macroseismic scale, Eurymedon Bridge (Aspendos), Eusebia (empress), Evangelical Methodist Church in the Philippine Islands, Ewald Heer, Exit (video game), Expansion joint, External risk, Extinction event, Extreme Loading for Structures, Eyjafjallajökull, Ezekiel Stone Wiggins, Ștefania Mărăcineanu, Fa of Xia, Facatativá, Face Off (season 7), Faial Island, Falcon Nest, Falehau, Farmington Mountain, Fault (geology), Fault mechanics, Fault scarp, Features, events, and processes, February 1927, February 1963, February 20, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Federal Reserve Bank Building (Seattle), Federal Signal Modulator, FEMA Photo Library, Ferdinand André Fouqué, Ferdinand Verbiest, Fernandina Island, Ferndale Museum, Ferndale, California, Ferrocement, Fessenheim Nuclear Power Plant, Fifth-century Athens, Fillmore Towne Theatre, Fimmvörðuháls, Fish kill, Flash evaporation, Flash Gordon: The Greatest Adventure of All, Flat slab subduction, Flight cancellation and delay, Flinn–Engdahl regions, Flood, Flood stage, Focal mechanism, Folger Coffee Company Building, Folklore of Romania, Force majeure, Forced Labour Convention, Forces of Nature (2004 film), Foreshock, Fort Pilar, Fortifications of Kotor, Fortunatus of Casei, Fowler Mountain, Fox Islands (Alaska), Fracture mechanics, Francesco I Gattilusio, Francesco II Gattilusio, Francis Borgia, 4th Duke of Gandía, Francis Solanus, Frank Gaffney, Fred B. Walters, Frederick Inglefield, Frenchman Mountain, Frequency response, Freshmen (comics), Fukuoka, Fulton, Tennessee, Fusakichi Omori, G. Bakthavathsalam, Gagamba, Galathea expeditions, Ganja, Azerbaijan, Garibaldi Volcanic Belt, Garlock Fault, Garrotxa Volcanic Zone Natural Park, Geb, Gem Valley, Genesis II (film), Genie (feral child), Genpatsu-shinsai, Geodynamics, Geographica, Geography of California, Geography of Chile, Geography of Costa Rica, Geography of Cyprus, Geography of East Timor, Geography of El Salvador, Geography of Ethiopia, Geography of Georgia (country), Geography of Honduras, Geography of Houston, Geography of Iceland, Geography of India, Geography of Iowa, Geography of Kazakhstan, Geography of Kerala, Geography of Laos, Geography of Malaysia, Geography of Mexico, Geography of Myanmar, Geography of Nicaragua, Geography of North Korea, Geography of Pakistan, Geography of Papua New Guinea, Geography of Portugal, Geography of Puerto Rico, Geography of Rosario, Geography of Salt Lake City, Geography of Santa Maria, Bulacan, Geography of Slovenia, Geography of Tajikistan, Geography of Tamil Nadu, Geography of the Cayman Islands, Geography of the Philippines, Geography of the United States, Geography of the United States Virgin Islands, Geography of Turkey, Geography of Turkmenistan, Geography of Vatican City, Geohazard, GeoHazards International, Geologic hazards, Geological history of Earth, Geologist, Geology, Geology of Azerbaijan, Geology of Chile, Geology of Colombia, Geology of Cyprus, Geology of England, Geology of Great Britain, Geology of Hainan Island, Geology of India, Geology of Japan, Geology of Namibia, Geology of New Hampshire, Geology of New Zealand, Geology of Pakistan, Geology of Puerto Rico, Geology of the Capitol Reef area, Geology of the Grand Canyon area, Geology of the Iberian Peninsula, Geology of the Lassen volcanic area, Geology of the Netherlands, Geology of the Northland Region, Geology of the Pacific Northwest, Geology of the Pyrenees, Geology of the Western Carpathians, Geology of the Zion and Kolob canyons area, Geology of Wales, Geomathematics, Geomorphology, Geomythology, Geopark, Geophysical signal analysis, George Massey Tunnel, Geotechnical centrifuge modeling, Geotechnical engineering, Geothermal areas of Yellowstone, Geothermal energy, Gerardus Mercator, Gerhard vom Rath, Geyser, Geysir, Ghaggar-Hakra River, Ghost shirt, Giant, Gibson County, Indiana, Gimnazija Banja Luka, Ginga Legend Weed, Gingerbread house (architecture), Giovanni Battista Scalabrini, Giuseppe Mercalli, Glacial lake outburst flood, Glacier, Glacier Bay Basin, Global Disaster Alert and Coordination System, Global Earthquake Model, Global Positioning System, GlobalMedic, Glozhene Monastery, Go Jetters, Goblin shark, Godred Crovan, Godzilla (2014 film), Going to California, Gold in California, Golden Bridge, Golpayegan County, Golpayegan minaret, Goodbye California, Gorda Plate, Gorleben salt dome, Goryō, GOSCON, Gottifredo Palace, Gourbeyre, Government Cable Office, Government House, Darwin, Grace, Idaho, Gracias a la Vida, Graham Island (Mediterranean Sea), Gran Desierto de Altar, Grand Banks of Newfoundland, Grand Teton National Park, Granular convection, Grasberg mine, Graviquake, Grímsvötn, Great Lakes tectonic zone, Great Southern California ShakeOut, Greek–Turkish earthquake diplomacy, Greendale Fault, Greendale, New Zealand, Greenville, South Carolina, Gregor and the Marks of Secret, Gregory Thaumaturgus, Grid computing, Groß-Gerau, Ground zero, Ground–structure interaction, Growth fault, Guadua, Guaranda, Guardia Lombardi, Guarenas Cathedral, Guerrero, Gulf Coast of the United States, Gulf of Corinth basin, Gulf of Mexico, Gulf of Saros, Gumare, Gunning Shire, Gunning, New South Wales, Gustav Herglotz, Gutenberg–Richter law, Guy Gardner (comics), H. Jay Melosh, Haa District, Habitat, Haghpat Monastery, Haibao Pagoda Temple, Haicheng, Liaoning, Hait, Haiti Reconstruction Fund, Half-mast, Halloween in the Castro, Hamaoka Nuclear Power Plant, Hamburg Süd, Han dynasty, Handial Union, Hans Benndorf, Harmonic tremor, Harry Fielding Reid, Harry Karstens, Harvey Bullock (comics), Hasmonean royal winter palaces, Hatcher Pass, Hatchett Hill, Hawaii hotspot, Hawaiian Islands, Hawley Harvey Crippen, Hayden Geological Survey of 1871, Hayward Fault Zone, Hazard, Hazard map, HAZUS, Health Oriented Preventive Education, Heart Peaks, Hebron, Utah, Hecker Pass, Height Modernization, Hekla, Helensburgh, Hellnahellir, Helmut Landsberg, Henning, Tennessee, Herbert Mullin, Herod the Great, Higby Mountain, High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program, High-rise building, High-speed rail in East Asia, Hihifo, Hilbert–Huang transform, Hinge, Historical geology, History of Afghanistan (1992–present), History of Alaska, History of Bay Area Rapid Transit, History of Brigham Young University, History of California 1900 to present, History of Casablanca, History of Charleston, History of geology, History of geophysics, History of Greece, History of LSU Tigers football, History of Oaxaca, History of paleontology, History of Piedmont, California, History of Portugal (1640–1777), History of Queensland, History of Recreo, History of the Jews in Ancona, History of Thessaloniki, History of Xi'an, HIT Humanitarian, Hochstaufen, Hokkaido, Holocene, Holy Forty Martyrs Church, Veliko Tarnovo, Home insurance, Homeless shelter, Homelessness, Homelessness in the United States, Honda Point disaster, Hoodoo Mountain, Hopalong Casualty, Horoscopic astrology, Horrible Geography, Horton Hears a Who! (film), Hot Creek (Mono County, California), House, Howrah Bridge, Hsieh Ying-chun, Hsinchu, Huaynaputina, Hugo Benioff, Human Diastrophism, Human flesh search engine, Human response to disasters, Humanitarian response to the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, Humboldt Bay, Humboldt Bay Life-Saving Station, Huntington Beach Pier, Huntress (Helena Bertinelli), Hurricane Brenda (1973), Hurricane Earl (2010), HurriQuake, Hveragerði, Hydrate Ridge, Hydraulic fracturing, Hydraulic fracturing by country, Hydrothermal vents and seamounts of the Azores, Hypocenter, I Feel the Earth Move, I Witness Video, Ian Plimer, Iben Browning, Ibora, Ice age, ICEARRAY, Iceberg Lounge, Iceland plume, Iceland–India relations, Icelandic Association for Search and Rescue, Icelandic turf house, Ict4peace, Idosawa Fault, Idyllwild-Pine Cove, California, Ikuo Towhata, Il Bisbetico Domato, Image of the Beast (film), Imperial County, California, In Search of... (TV series), Inca architecture, Incheon Bridge, Incident Command System, InciWeb, Index of structural engineering articles, Index of wave articles, Indigenous and community conserved area, Indonesia–Philippines relations, Indonesian future capital proposal, Induced seismicity, Indus River, Infinite monkey theorem, Infrasound, INRS-EMT, Inside Outside (novel), InSight, Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Institute of technology, Instituto de Ciencias de la Tierra Jaume Almera, Insular Mountains, Insurance, Intangible asset finance, Interbay, Seattle, Interferometric synthetic-aperture radar, Internal erosion, International Building Code, International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction, International Nuclear Event Scale, International Organization for Peace, Care and Relief, International rankings of Iran, International Seismological Centre, International Society of Nephrology, Interplate earthquake, Interstate 238, Interstate 880, Intraplate earthquake, Invisibility in fiction, Ionian Sea, Ionosat-Micro, Iranian Red Crescent Society, Iranian Space Agency, IRIS Consortium, Irruputuncu, Irving Friedman, Isabela, Puerto Rico, Isidore of Miletus, Islam in China, Islamic attitudes towards science, Island arc, Isole Tremiti, Isoseismal map, Isostasy, Isparta, IsraAid, Israeli security forces, It Could Happen Tomorrow, Izu-Tobu, Jack Butler (Jiwarli), Jack Oliver (scientist), Jajce, Jake (rescue dog), James A. FitzPatrick Nuclear Power Plant, James Basevi, James Bay Project, James S. Langer, Jan Jeffcoat, Jana of the Jungle, Jannette B. Frandsen, January 1914, January 1968, January 23, Japan (1992 manga), Japan Meteorological Agency, Japan Meteorological Agency seismic intensity scale, Japan Trench, Japanese Red Cross Society, Japjup, Jérémie, Jens Christian Spidberg, Jesse & Joy, Jie of Xia, Jijel, Jin Mao Tower, Joan Toralles, Johann-Dietrich Wörner, John D. Hamaker, John Doolittle, John J. Clague, John Milne, John Muir, John Ochsendorf, John Rudnicki, Jor-El, Jose Luis Mateos, Joseph Mancinelli, Journal of Earthquake and Tsunami, Journey to Dinosaur Island, Journey to Where, Joyce, Washington, Juan de Fuca Plate, Jubilee Trail, July 1909, July 1981, June 2011 Christchurch earthquake, Jungle Cruise, Junior Woodchucks, Kaş, Kaifenheim, Kaikoura Peninsula, Kallimasia, Kandel (mountain), Karoo, Kathmandu Durbar Square, Kīlauea, Kīlauea Iki, Kırşehir Province, Kekova, Kelton, Utah, Kentucky Dam, Kerch Strait, Kermadec Plate, Kerman Province, Kerry Sieh, Kessen II, Kevork Hovnanian, Key Monastery, Keystone Pipeline, Kfarfakoud, KHCAA Golden Jubilee Chamber Complex, Khorasan Province, King Range (California), King You of Zhou, Kingdom Hospital, Kingdome, Kingston, Jamaica, Kiryat Shmona, Kisho Kurokawa, Kiyoo Mogi, Klek, Zrenjanin, Koa'e Fault Zone, Koeberg Nuclear Power Station, Komárno, Kortekeer, Korumburra, Koryak Okrug, Kotor, Koyna Dam, Kozani, Krak des Chevaliers, Kuldhara, Kuril Islands, Kyojuu Tokusou Juspion, Kyoto Tower, Kyrgyz Seismic Network, Kyrgyzstan Emergency Situations Ministry, Kythira, L'Aquila–Preturo Airport, La Chureca, La Purísima Mission State Historic Park, La Reforma (caldera), Lac de Gafsa, Laguna del Maule (volcano), Lahar, Lajia, Lake Baikal, Lake Balanan, Lake breakout, Lake Cahuilla, Lake Chichoj, Lake island, Lake Kariba, Lake Küçükçekmece, Lake Kohangatera, Lake Nyos, Lake Perris, Lake Timiskaming, Lake Toba, Lakeport, California, Lamentation Mountain, Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory, Land Beneath the Ground!, Land of the Lost (1991 TV series), Landfill, Landlords' insurance, Landslide, Landslide classification, Landslide dam, Laodicea on the Lycus, Lapworth Museum of Geology, Las Bovedas, Lassen Volcanic National Park, Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, Latacunga, Lauderdale County, Tennessee, Lava Beds National Monument, Lavalantula, Lawrence Blair, Lawrence Hall of Science, Lévy flight, Lōʻihi Seamount, Le Grand-Bornand, Le Vernet, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, Lee Sang-mook, Legend of Dinosaurs & Monster Birds, Legends of Oz: Dorothy's Return, Lejía Lake, Leland Stanford Winery, Lenin Peak, Leon Fortunato, Les Ondes Silencieuses, Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge, Lewes, LGBT history in Italy, Liberty Science Center, Library of Congress Classification:Class Q -- Science, Licancabur, Life or Something Like It, Limnic eruption, Lincoln, Montana, Linear elasticity, Lingxiao Pagoda, Linley, Shropshire, List group label strategy, List of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction, List of atheists in science and technology, List of California ballot propositions 1990–99, List of Cardcaptor Sakura episodes, List of CB slang, List of Chinese inventions, List of countries by natural disaster risk, List of covers of Time magazine (1970s), List of Curb Your Enthusiasm episodes, List of deadly earthquakes since 1900, List of disasters in Australia by death toll, List of disasters in Japan by death toll, List of disasters in New Zealand by death toll, List of disasters in the Philippines, List of disasters in the United States by death toll, List of distributed computing projects, List of earthquakes in 1900, List of earthquakes in 1901, List of earthquakes in 1902, List of earthquakes in 1903, List of earthquakes in 1904, List of earthquakes in 1906, List of earthquakes in 1908, List of earthquakes in 1909, List of earthquakes in 1910, List of earthquakes in 1911, List of earthquakes in 1912, List of earthquakes in 1913, List of earthquakes in 1914, List of earthquakes in 1915, List of earthquakes in 1916, List of earthquakes in 1917, List of earthquakes in 1918, List of earthquakes in 1919, List of earthquakes in 1921, List of earthquakes in 1922, List of earthquakes in 1923, List of earthquakes in 1924, List of earthquakes in 1925, List of earthquakes in 1926, List of earthquakes in 1927, List of earthquakes in 1928, List of earthquakes in 1929, List of earthquakes in 1930, List of earthquakes in 1931, List of earthquakes in 1932, List of earthquakes in 1933, List of earthquakes in 1934, List of earthquakes in 1935, List of earthquakes in 1936, List of earthquakes in 1937, List of earthquakes in 1938, List of earthquakes in 1939, List of earthquakes in 1940, List of earthquakes in 1941, List of earthquakes in 1942, List of earthquakes in 1943, List of earthquakes in 1944, List of earthquakes in 1945, List of earthquakes in 1946, List of earthquakes in 1947, List of earthquakes in 1948, List of earthquakes in 1949, List of earthquakes in 1950, List of earthquakes in 1951, List of earthquakes in 1952, List of earthquakes in 1953, List of earthquakes in 1954, List of earthquakes in 1955, List of earthquakes in 1957, List of earthquakes in 1958, List of earthquakes in 1959, List of earthquakes in 1960, List of earthquakes in 1961, List of earthquakes in 1962, List of earthquakes in 1963, List of earthquakes in 1964, List of earthquakes in 1965, List of earthquakes in 1966, List of earthquakes in 1967, List of earthquakes in 1968, List of earthquakes in 1969, List of earthquakes in 1970, List of earthquakes in 1971, List of earthquakes in 1972, List of earthquakes in 1973, List of earthquakes in 1974, List of earthquakes in 1975, List of earthquakes in 1976, List of earthquakes in 1977, List of earthquakes in 1978, List of earthquakes in 1985, List of earthquakes in 1995, List of earthquakes in 1999, List of earthquakes in 2000, List of earthquakes in 2001, List of earthquakes in 2002, List of earthquakes in 2003, List of earthquakes in 2004, List of earthquakes in 2011, List of earthquakes in 2013, List of earthquakes in 2014, List of earthquakes in 2015, List of earthquakes in 2016, List of earthquakes in 2017, List of earthquakes in 2018, List of earthquakes in Azerbaijan, List of earthquakes in Chile occurring in 2010, List of earthquakes in Costa Rica, List of earthquakes in Egypt, List of earthquakes in El Salvador, List of earthquakes in Greece, List of earthquakes in India, List of earthquakes in Japan, List of earthquakes in Mendoza Province, List of earthquakes in New Zealand, List of earthquakes in Nicaragua, List of earthquakes in Pakistan, List of earthquakes in Panama, List of earthquakes in Romania, List of earthquakes in Sichuan, List of earthquakes in South Africa, List of earthquakes in Spain, List of earthquakes in Tajikistan, List of earthquakes in the Azores, List of earthquakes in the British Isles, List of earthquakes in the Levant, List of earthquakes in the United States, List of earthquakes in Turkey, List of earthquakes in Washington (state), List of English words of Spanish origin, List of environmental films, List of eponyms (L–Z), List of fictional fish, List of films set in Las Vegas, List of films set in Los Angeles, List of films set in New York City, List of G.I. 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1580 Dover Straits earthquake, 1582 Ancuancu earthquake, 1615 Arica earthquake, 1625 El Salvador earthquake, 1626 Naples earthquake, 1627, 1638 New Hampshire earthquake, 1645 Luzon earthquake, 1647 Santiago earthquake, 1667 Dubrovnik earthquake, 1679 Sanhe-Pinggu earthquake, 1692 in England, 1700 in Canada, 1703 Apennine earthquakes, 1704, 1704 in science, 1707 Hōei earthquake, 1717, 1727, 1732 Montreal earthquake, 1737 in science, 1755 Cape Ann earthquake, 1755 in science, 1760 in science, 1761, 1761 in Great Britain, 1763, 1771 Great Yaeyama Tsunami, 1773, 1783, 1783 Calabrian earthquakes, 1810s, 1816 in Scotland, 1816 in the United Kingdom, 1819 Rann of Kutch earthquake, 1820s, 1828, 1830s, 1838 San Andreas earthquake, 1839 in Scotland, 1840s, 1843 Wanganui earthquake, 1855 Wairarapa earthquake, 1861 Sumatra earthquake, 1865 Memphis earthquake, 1867 Manhattan, Kansas earthquake, 1868 Hayward earthquake, 1872 Lone Pine earthquake, 1880 Zagreb earthquake, 1881 Nicobar Islands earthquake, 1883 eruption of Krakatoa, 1884, 1884 Colchester earthquake, 1884 in the United States, 1887 in France, 1887 in science, 1888 eruption of Mount Bandai, 1897 Mindanao earthquakes, 1899 Ceram earthquake, 19-inch rack, 1902 in science, 1903 in the United Kingdom, 1906 Ecuador–Colombia earthquake, 1906 in science, 1906 in the United Kingdom, 1906 in Wales, 1907, 1907 in science, 1907 Kingston earthquake, 1909 Borujerd earthquake, 1909 Wabash River earthquake, 1911 in science, 1915 Avezzano earthquake, 1915 Pleasant Valley earthquake, 1923 Kamchatka earthquake, 1929 in science, 1929 Murchison earthquake, 1930 Salmas earthquake, 1931 Dogger Bank earthquake, 1931 in science, 1931 Valentine earthquake, 1932 Changma earthquake, 1933 in baseball, 1934 Nepal–Bihar earthquake, 1935 in science, 1935 Quetta earthquake, 1939 Chillán earthquake, 1943 Tosya–Ladik earthquake, 1944 Bolu–Gerede earthquake, 1944 in aviation, 1946 Hsinhua earthquake, 1946 Nankai earthquake, 1946 Varto–Hınıs earthquake, 1948 Fukui earthquake, 1949 Ambato earthquake, 1949 Khait earthquake, 1949 Olympia earthquake, 1950 Assam–Tibet earthquake, 1950–51 Ashes series, 1952 Damxung earthquake, 1952 Hasankale earthquake, 1952 Hokkaido earthquake, 1952 Severo-Kurilsk earthquake, 1953 Suva earthquake, 1955 Alexandria earthquake, 1957 Abant earthquake, 1957 Andreanof Islands earthquake, 1957 Fethiye earthquakes, 1957 in the United Kingdom, 1960 Agadir earthquake, 1960 Concepción earthquakes, 1960 in science, 1963 Kuril Islands earthquake, 1964 in rail transport, 1964 Niigata earthquake, 1968 Belice earthquake, 1968 in Australia, 1968 Meckering earthquake, 1971, 1972 Qir earthquake, 1974 in Japan, 1974 Super Outbreak, 1974 Zhaotong earthquake, 1975 Haicheng earthquake, 1975 Lice earthquake, 1975 Morris earthquake, 1976 Çaldıran–Muradiye earthquake, 1976 Tangshan earthquake, 1977 Sumba earthquake, 1977 Vrancea earthquake, 1980 in aviation, 1981 Sirch earthquake, 1984 in Wales, 1984 Llŷn Peninsula earthquake, 1985 Algarrobo earthquake, 1985 Nahanni earthquakes, 1987 Ecuador earthquakes, 1989 Helena train wreck, 1990 in New Zealand, 1990–99 world oil market chronology, 1991 Limon earthquake, 1992 Cairo earthquake, 1992 Flores earthquake and tsunami, 1993 Hokkaidō earthquake, 1993 Latur earthquake, 1994 in Wales, 1997 Cap-Rouge earthquake, 1997 in architecture, 1998 Mionica earthquake, 1998 Pymatuning earthquake, 1999 Chamoli earthquake, 1999 Jiji earthquake, 1999 UNAM strike, 1st Helicopter Brigade, 2000 in Afghanistan, 2000 in England, 2000 Yunnan earthquake, 2001 India cyclone, 2001–02 San Jose Sharks season, 2002 Sumatra earthquake, 2003 in Afghanistan, 2004 in Argentina, 2004 world oil market chronology, 2005 Nias–Simeulue earthquake, 2005 Qeshm earthquake, 2005 Sunjiawan mine disaster, 2006 in Australia, 2006 Mendoza earthquake, 2006 North Korean nuclear test, 2007 Aysén Fjord earthquakes, 2007 in China, 2007 in Kenya, 2007 Noto earthquake, 2007 Solomon Islands earthquake, 2008 Chelopechene explosions, 2008 Chino Hills earthquake, 2008 Illinois earthquake, 2008 in Chile, 2008 Kyrgyzstan earthquake, 2008 Market Rasen earthquake, 2009 Cataño oil refinery fire, 2009 in Iran, 2009 in science, 2009 in Scotland, 2009 West Java earthquake, 2010 Ecuador earthquake, 2010 Elazığ earthquake, 2010 eruptions of Eyjafjallajökull, 2010 eruptions of Mount Merapi, 2010 in Afghanistan, 2010 in China, 2010 Kalgoorlie-Boulder earthquake, 2010 Mount Meager landslide, 2010 Pichilemu earthquake, 2010 San Diego Padres season, 2010 World Monuments Watch, 2010s, 2011 Christchurch earthquake, 2011 eruption of Grímsvötn, 2011 in politics, 2011 in Scotland, 2011 Nabro eruption, 2011–12 El Hierro eruption, 2012 Chiba earthquake, 2012 Costa Rica earthquake, 2012 in Europe, 2012 in Italy, 2012 in science, 2012 Kamaishi earthquake, 2012 Kermadec Islands eruption, 2012 Opunake earthquake, 2012 Pernik earthquake, 2012 Yiliang earthquakes, 2012–14 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 Bushehr earthquake, 2013 in science, 2013 North Korean nuclear test, 2014 Ecuador earthquake, 2014 in Canada, 2014 Orkney earthquake, 2014 Zenica mine disaster, 2015 Illapel earthquake, 2015 in science, 2016 Ecuador earthquake, 2016 in Indonesia, 2016 in the British Virgin Islands, 2016 Kaikoura earthquake, 2016 Kumamoto earthquakes, 2016 Southern Taiwan earthquake, 2017 in India, 2017 in Malaysia, 2017 in Mexico, 2017 Iran–Iraq earthquake, 2017 Jiuzhaigou earthquake, 2017 Lesbos earthquake, 2017 Leyte earthquake, 2017 Papua New Guinea earthquake, 2017 Surigao earthquake, 2018 Gulf of Alaska earthquake, 2018 in Indonesia, 2018 in the British Virgin Islands, 2018 in the United States, 2018 in Wales, 2018 Java earthquake, 2018 lower Puna eruption, 2018 Peru earthquake, 21st century, 24: The Game, 2nd century, 358, 362, 368, 373 BC, 422, 426 BC Malian Gulf tsunami, 445th Airlift Wing, 464 BC Sparta earthquake, 48th United States Congress, 494, 505, 518, 528, 539, 555, 557 Constantinople earthquake, 558, 5th century in architecture, 5th Medium Regiment, Royal Canadian Artillery, 684, 717, 726, 740, 748, 749, 749 Galilee earthquake, 798 Art Zone, 816 Nuclear Military Plant, 856, 856 Damghan earthquake, 869, 893 Ardabil earthquake, 956, 974, 989, 99th Reconnaissance Squadron. Expand index (2959 more) »

A Ghost Story

A Ghost Story is a 2017 American supernatural drama film written and directed by David Lowery.

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A Miser Brothers' Christmas

A Miser Brothers' Christmas is a stop motion spin-off special based on some of the characters from the 1974 Rankin-Bass special The Year Without a Santa Claus.

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A Short History of Nearly Everything

A Short History of Nearly Everything by American author Bill Bryson is a popular science book that explains some areas of science, using easily accessible language that appeals more so to the general public than many other books dedicated to the subject.

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Ağdaş, Azerbaijan

Ağdaş (transliterated, Aghdash; until 1919, Arash Mahal or Aresh Mahal) is a city in and the capital of the Agdash Rayon of Azerbaijan.

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Aşık Çelebi

Aşık Çelebi ("Gentleman Bard" in Turkish) was the name of Pir Mehmed ("Mehmed the Pir"; 1520–1572), an Ottoman biographer, poet, and translator.

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ABC Movie of the Week

The ABC Movie of the Week is a weekly television anthology series, featuring made-for-TV movies, that aired on the ABC network in various permutations from 1969 to 1975.

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Abdullah Musawi Shirazi

Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Abdullah Al-Musawi Al-Shirazi (February 25, 1892 – September 29, 1984) was a Grand Ayatollah of Twelver Shi'a Islam.

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Abenaki mythology

The Abenaki people are an indigenous peoples of the Americas located in the northeastern United States and Eastern Canada.

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Abraham Bennet

Abraham Bennet FRS (baptised 20 December 1749 - buried 9 May 1799) was an English clergyman and physicist, the inventor of the gold-leaf electroscope and developer of an improved magnetometer.

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Accelerograph

An accelerograph can be referred to as a strong-motion instrument or seismograph, or simply an earthquake accelerometer.

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Accelerometer

An accelerometer is a device that measures proper acceleration.

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Acoustic metamaterial

An acoustic metamaterial is a material designed to control, direct, and manipulate sound waves as these might occur in gases, liquids, and solids.

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Acoustical engineering

Acoustical engineering (also known as acoustic engineering) is the branch of engineering dealing with sound and vibration.

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Acoustics

Acoustics is the branch of physics that deals with the study of all mechanical waves in gases, liquids, and solids including topics such as vibration, sound, ultrasound and infrasound.

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Acoustoelastic effect

The acoustoelastic effect describes how the sound velocities (both longitudinal and shear wave velocities) of an elastic material change if subjected to an initial static stress field.

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Act of God

In legal usage throughout the English-speaking world, an act of God is a natural hazard outside human control, such as an earthquake or tsunami, for which no person can be held responsible.

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Action film

Action film is a film genre in which the protagonist or protagonists are thrust into a series of challenges that typically include violence, extended fighting, physical feats, and frantic chases.

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Active fault

An active fault is a fault that is likely to become the source of another earthquake sometime in the future.

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Active structure

An active structure (also known as a smart or adaptive structure) is a mechanical structure with the ability to alter its configuration, form or properties in response to changes in the environment.

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Acts of Andrew

The Acts of Andrew (Acta Andreae), is the earliest testimony of the acts and miracles of the Apostle Andrew.

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AD 37

AD 37 (XXXVII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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AD 63

AD 63 (LXIII) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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Adam Dziewonski

Adam Marian Dziewoński (November 15, 1936 – March 1, 2016) was a Polish-American geophysicist who made seminal contributions to the determination of the large-scale structure of the Earth's interior and the nature of earthquakes using seismological methods.

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Adana

Adana (Ադանա) is a major city in southern Turkey.

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Adina Mosque

The Adina Mosque is the ruins of the largest mosque in the Indian subcontinent, located in the Indian state of West Bengal near the border with Bangladesh.

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AeDES (engineering)

AeDES (Agibilità e Danno nell'Emergenza Sismica) is a printed Rapid Post-Earthquake Damage Evaluation form, from GDNT (Italian national seismic protection group).

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Aelia Eudoxia

Aelia Eudoxia (died 6 October 404) was a Roman Empress consort by marriage to the Roman Emperor Arcadius.

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Aftershock

An aftershock is a smaller earthquake that occurs after a previous large earthquake, in the same area of the main shock.

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Aftershock: Earthquake in New York

Aftershock: Earthquake in New York is a 1999 miniseries that was broadcast in the United States on CBS in two parts, with the first part aired on November 14 and the second on November 16.

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Agatha of Sicily

Saint Agatha of Sicily (c. 231 – c. 251 AD) is a Christian saint and virgin martyr.

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Aggradation

Aggradation (or alluviation) is the term used in geology for the increase in land elevation, typically in a river system, due to the deposition of sediment.

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Agios Efstratios

Agios Efstratios or Saint Eustratius (Άγιος Ευστράτιος), colloquially Ai Stratis (Άη Στράτης) is a small Greek island in the northern Aegean Sea about southwest of Lemnos and northwest of Lesbos.

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Agios Nikolaos, Chalkidiki

Agios Nikolaos (Άγιος Νικόλαος, meaning Saint Nicholas) is a village located 120 kilometers south-east from Thessaloniki on the Chalkidiki peninsula in Macedonia, Greece.

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Aguilera (volcano)

Aguilera (e. 2546 m/8353 ft.) is a stratovolcano in southern Chile, which rises above the edge of the Southern Patagonian Ice Field.

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Aiani Archaeological Museum

The Aiani Archaeological Museum is a museum in Aiani, West Macedonia, Greece.

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Aihal

Aihal is the true name of a fictional character in Ursula K. Le Guin's Earthsea realm.

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Air Transport Wing 62

Air Transport Wing 62 (Lufttransportgeschwader 62) is a wing of the German Air Force (Luftwaffe).

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Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant

The Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant (Akkuyu Nükleer Güç Santrali) is a nuclear power plant under development at Akkuyu, in Büyükeceli, Mersin Province, Turkey.

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AKUT Search and Rescue Association

AKUT Search and Rescue Association (AKUT Arama Kurtarma Derneği) is a Turkish non-governmental organization for disaster search and rescue relief.

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Al Hoceima

Al Hoceima (in the Berber language: Eřḥusima or Elḥusima, Taɣzut, Taghzut and also Tijdit, in Arabic: الحسيمة, in Spanish: Alhucemas) is a city in the north of Morocco, on the northern edge of the Rif Mountains and on the Mediterranean coast.

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Al-Harith ibn Jabalah

Al-Ḥārith ibn Jabalah (الحارث بن جبلة; Arethas (Ἀρέθας) in Greek sources;. Khālid ibn Jabalah (خالد بن جبلة) in later Islamic sources),.

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Al-Kindi

Abu Yūsuf Yaʻqūb ibn ʼIsḥāq aṣ-Ṣabbāḥ al-Kindī (أبو يوسف يعقوب بن إسحاق الصبّاح الكندي; Alkindus; c. 801–873 AD) was an Arab Muslim philosopher, polymath, mathematician, physician and musician.

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Al-Zuq al-Fawqani

Al-Zuq al-Fawqani was a Palestinian Arab village in the Safad Subdistrict.

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Alaşehir

Alaşehir, in Antiquity and the Middle Ages known as Philadelphia (Φιλαδέλφεια, i.e., "the city of him who loves his brother") is a town and district of Manisa Province in the Aegean region of Turkey.

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Alaksandu

Alaksandu or Alaksandus was a king of Wilusa who sealed a treaty with Hittite king Muwatalli II ca.

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Alaska Range

The Alaska Range is a relatively narrow, 650-km-long (400 mi) mountain range in the southcentral region of the U.S. state of Alaska, from Lake Clark at its southwest endSources differ as to the exact delineation of the Alaska Range.

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Alaskan Way Seawall

The Alaskan Way Seawall is a seawall which runs for approximately along the Elliott Bay waterfront southwest of downtown Seattle from Bay Street to S. Washington Street.

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Alban Hills

The Alban Hills are the site of a quiescent volcanic complex in Italy, located southeast of Rome and about north of Anzio.

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Albuñuelas

Albuñuelas is a village at the head of the Lecrin Valley, Granada, Spain.

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Alcatraz Island Light

Alcatraz Island Lighthouse is a lighthouse – the first one built on the U.S. West Coast – located on Alcatraz Island in California's San Francisco Bay.

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Alcor Life Extension Foundation

The Alcor Life Extension Foundation, most often referred to as Alcor, is a nonprofit organization based in Scottsdale, Arizona, USA.

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Aldo Parisot

Aldo Simoes Parisot (born September 30, 1921) is a Brazilian-born American cellist and cello teacher, was formerly a member of the Juilliard School faculty, and currently is serving as a professor of music at the Yale School of Music.

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Alexandria

Alexandria (or; Arabic: الإسكندرية; Egyptian Arabic: إسكندرية; Ⲁⲗⲉⲝⲁⲛⲇⲣⲓⲁ; Ⲣⲁⲕⲟⲧⲉ) is the second-largest city in Egypt and a major economic centre, extending about along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea in the north central part of the country.

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Alignak

In Inuit mythology, Alignak is a lunar deity and god of weather, water, tides, eclipses, and earthquakes.

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Alimodian, Iloilo

, officially the, is a settlement_text in the province of,. According to the, it has a population of people (40, 176 in 2017).

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All Nite (Don't Stop)

"All Nite (Don't Stop)" is a song recorded by American singer Janet Jackson for her eighth studio album, Damita Jo (2004).

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Almaty

Almaty (Алматы, Almaty; Алматы), formerly known as Alma-Ata (Алма-Ата) and Verny (Верный Vernyy), is the largest city in Kazakhstan, with a population of 1,797,431 people, about 8% of the country's total population.

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Almaty Tower

The Almaty Television Tower, or simply Almaty Tower, is a steel television tower built between 1975 and 1983 in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

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Almería

Almería is a city in Andalusia, Spain, located in the southeast of Spain on the Mediterranean Sea, and is the capital of the province of the same name.

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Alonnisos

Alonnisos (Αλόννησος), also transliterated as Alonissos or Alonisos, is a Greek island in the Aegean Sea.

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Alpide belt

The Alpide belt or Alpine-Himalayan orogenic beltK.M. Storetvedt, K. M., The Tethys Sea and the Alpine-Himalayan orogenic belt; mega-elements in a new global tectonic system, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, Volume 62, Issues 1–2, 1990, Pages 141–184 is a seismic belt and orogenic belt that includes an array of mountain ranges extending along the southern margin of Eurasia, stretching from Java to Sumatra through the Himalayas, the Mediterranean, and out into the Atlantic.

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Alpine Fault

The Alpine Fault is a geological fault, specifically a right-lateral strike-slip fault, that runs almost the entire length of New Zealand's South Island.

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Alquist Priolo Special Studies Zone Act

The Alquist-Priolo Earthquake Fault Zoning Act was signed into California law on December 22, 1972, to mitigate the hazard of surface faulting to structures for human occupancy.

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Altai Mountains

The Altai Mountains (also spelled Altay Mountains; Altai: Алтай туулар, Altay tuular; Mongolian:, Altai-yin niruɣu (Chakhar) / Алтайн нуруу, Altain nuruu (Khalkha); Kazakh: Алтай таулары, Altai’ tay’lary, التاي تاۋلارى Алтайские горы, Altajskije gory; Chinese; 阿尔泰山脉, Ā'ěrtài Shānmài, Xiao'erjing: اَعَرتَىْ شًامَىْ; Dungan: Артэ Шанмэ) are a mountain range in Central and East Asia, where Russia, China, Mongolia, and Kazakhstan come together, and are where the rivers Irtysh and Ob have their headwaters.

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Alveolo-palatal consonant

In phonetics, alveolo-palatal (or alveopalatal) consonants, sometimes synonymous with pre-palatal consonants, are intermediate in articulation between the coronal and dorsal consonants, or which have simultaneous alveolar and palatal articulation.

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Amazo

Amazo is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Amédée Guillemin

Amédée Guillemin (born July 5, 1826 in Pierre-de-Bresse, died January 2, 1893 in Pierre-de-Bresse, France) was a French science writer and a journalist.

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Amédée-François Frézier

Amédée-François Frézier (1682 – October 26, 1773) was a French military engineer, mathematician, spy, and explorer who is best remembered for bringing back five specimens of Fragaria chiloensis, the beach strawberry, from an assignment in South America, thus introducing this New World fruit to the Old.

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Amber House

Amber House is one of the older two storey villas in New Zealand's third founded city of Nelson in the top of the South Island at 46 Weka Street.

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Amchitka

Amchitka (Amchixtax̂) is a volcanic, tectonically unstable island in the Rat Islands group of the Aleutian Islands in southwest Alaska.

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American Samoa

American Samoa (Amerika Sāmoa,; also Amelika Sāmoa or Sāmoa Amelika) is an unincorporated territory of the United States located in the South Pacific Ocean, southeast of Samoa.

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American Women's Hospitals Service

The American Women's Hospitals Service (AWHS) is a charitable organization that promotes the relief of suffering worldwide by supporting independent clinics to provide care to high risk populations and by providing travel grants to medical students and residents to perform clinical projects abroad in under-served areas.

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Anahim hotspot

The Anahim hotspot is a volcanic hotspot located in the West-Central Interior of British Columbia, Canada.

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Anaximenes of Miletus

Anaximenes of Miletus (Ἀναξιμένης ὁ Μιλήσιος; c. 585 – c. 528 BC) was an Ancient Greek Pre-Socratic philosopher active in the latter half of the 6th century BC.

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Anazarbus

Anazarbus (Ἀναζαρβός, medieval Ain Zarba; modern Anavarza; عَيْنُ زَرْبَة) was an ancient Cilician city and (arch)bishopric, which remains a Latin Catholic titular see.

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Anchor plate

An anchor plate or wall washer is a large plate or washer connected to a tie rod or bolt.

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Ancient Gates of Ganja

The Ancient Gates of Ganja were a masterpiece of craftsmanship of the 10th to 11th centuries.

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Ancient Greek religion

Ancient Greek religion encompasses the collection of beliefs, rituals, and mythology originating in ancient Greece in the form of both popular public religion and cult practices.

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Andes

The Andes or Andean Mountains (Cordillera de los Andes) are the longest continental mountain range in the world.

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Andijan

Andijan (sometimes spelled Andizhan in English) (Andijon / Андижон / ئەندىجان; اندیجان, Andijân/Andīǰān; Андижан, Andižan) is a city in Uzbekistan.

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Andreev Bay nuclear accident

The Andreev Bay nuclear accident took place at Soviet naval base 569 in February 1982.

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Andrew Cassidy

Andrew Cassidy (c. 1817 – November 25, 1907) was an early settler of San Diego, California.

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Andrew Coburn (catastrophe modeller)

Andrew William Coburn (born 1956 in Chester, England) is known in the discipline of catastrophe modeling and is the Director of External Advisory Board, Centre for Risk Studies at the University of Cambridge.

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Andrey Lyapchev

Andrey Tasev Lyapchev (Tarpov) (Андрей Тасев Ляпчев (Tърпов)) (30 November 1866 – 6 November 1933) was a Bulgarian Prime Minister in three consecutive governments.

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Andrija Puharich

Andrija Puharich (February 19, 1918 – January 3, 1995) — born Henry Karel Puharić — was a medical and parapsychological researcher, medical inventor, physician and author, known as the person who brought Israeli Uri Geller (born 1946) and Dutch-born Peter Hurkos (1911-1988) to the United States for scientific investigation.

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Angalo

Angalo is a legendary creation giant from Ilocano mythology with prehispanic origins in the Ilocos region of the Philippines.

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Aniche

Aniche is a commune in the Nord department in the Hauts-de-France region of northern France.

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Anini

Anini (अनिनी) is the headquarters of the Dibang Valley district in the state of Arunachal Pradesh in Northeast India.

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Aniruddha's Academy of Disaster Management

Aniruddha's Academy of Disaster Management (AADM) is a non-profit organization incorporated in Mumbai, India with 'disaster management' as its principal objective.

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Ankara University

Ankara University (Ankara Üniversitesi) is a public university in Ankara, the capital city of Turkey.

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Anna Fegi

Anna Fegi (born April 18, 1977) is a Filipina singer and actress from Cebu, Philippines.

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Anna, Ohio

Anna is a village in Shelby County, Ohio, United States.

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Annales Cavenses

The Annales Cavenses are a chronicle compiled at the La Trinità della Cava abbey in Cava de' Tirreni, province of Salerno, southern Italy.

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Annihilation Earth

Annihilation Earth is a 2009 science fiction television film for Syfy, directed by Nick Lyon, written by Rafael Jordan, and starring Luke Goss, Marina Sirtis, and Colin Salmon.

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Anodyne (album)

Anodyne is the fourth and final studio album by alternative country band Uncle Tupelo, released on October 5, 1993.

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Antena 21

Antena 21 is a Spanish-language broadcast television station in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic on UHF channel 21.

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Anti-nuclear movement in the Philippines

The anti-nuclear movement in the Philippines aimed to stop the construction of nuclear power facilities and terminate the presence of American military bases, which were believed to house nuclear weapons on Philippine soil.

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Anti-nuclear power movement in Japan

Long one of the world’s most committed promoters of civilian nuclear power, Japan's nuclear industry was not hit as hard by the effects of the 1979 Three Mile Island accident (USA) or the 1986 Chernobyl disaster (USSR) as some other countries.

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Anti-Seismic Monument

The Anti-Seismic Monument or Tangshan Earthquake Monument is located in the eastern part of the center square in Tangshan City, and the Tangshan Earthquake Memorial Hall museum is on the western part of the square.

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Anti-Turkism

Anti-Turkism, also known as Turkophobia or anti-Turkish sentiment, is hostility, intolerance, or racism against Turkish or Turkic people, Turkish culture, Turkic countries, or Turkey itself.

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Antioch

Antioch on the Orontes (Antiókheia je epi Oróntou; also Syrian Antioch)Ἀντιόχεια ἡ ἐπὶ Ὀρόντου; or Ἀντιόχεια ἡ ἐπὶ Δάφνῃ, "Antioch on Daphne"; or Ἀντιόχεια ἡ Μεγάλη, "Antioch the Great"; Antiochia ad Orontem; Անտիոք Antiok; ܐܢܛܝܘܟܝܐ Anṭiokya; Hebrew: אנטיוכיה, Antiyokhya; Arabic: انطاكية, Anṭākiya; انطاکیه; Antakya.

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Antirhodos

Antirhodos (sometimes Antirrhodos or Anti Rhodes) was an island in the eastern harbor of Alexandria, Egypt, on which a Ptolemaic palace was sited.

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Antonio Vivaldi

Antonio Lucio Vivaldi (4 March 1678 – 28 July 1741) was an Italian Baroque musical composer, virtuoso violinist, teacher and cleric.

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Aon Center (Chicago)

The Aon Center (200 East Randolph Street, formerly Amoco Building) is a modern supertall skyscraper in the Chicago Loop, Chicago, Illinois, United States, designed by architect firms Edward Durell Stone and The Perkins and Will partnership, and completed in 1974 as the Standard Oil Building.

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Aphian

Saint Aphian (Apphian, Apian, Appian, Amphianus, Amphian; and Amfiano) is venerated as a martyr by the Catholic Church and by the Eastern Orthodox Church.

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Apostolic Gospel Church of Jesus Christ

Apostolic Gospel Church of Jesus Christ is a church in the Oneness Pentecostalism movement that was founded in Bell Gardens, California in 1963 by Donald Abernathy.

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Applied Technology Council

The Applied Technology Council is a nonprofit research organization based in California which studies the effects of natural hazards on the built environment and how to mitigate these effects, particularly earthquakes.

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April 2011 Miyagi earthquake

The April 2011 Miyagi earthquake (Japanese) was a magnitude 7.1 Mw earthquake, with an epicentre off the coast of Miyagi Prefecture, approximately east of Sendai, Japan.

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April 2014 Ürümqi attack

On 30 April 2014, a knife attack and bombing occurred in the Chinese city of Ürümqi, Xinjiang.

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Aptera, Greece

Aptera (Ἄπτερα or Ἀπτερία; more anciently, Ἄptaϝra) also called Apteron was an ancient city, now an archaeological site in western Crete, a kilometre inland from the southern shore of Souda Bay, about 13 km east of Chania in the municipality of Akrotiri.

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Arab fountain of Alcamo

The Arab fountain of Alcamo is very ancient (together with Cuba delle Rose, the Arab Cuba of Vicari and the Piccola Cuba of Palermo), and is still functional: it was built during the period of the Arab domination of the town.

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Arauco, Chile

Arauco is a city and commune (comuna) in Chile, located in Arauco Province in the Bío Bío Region.

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Arch of Galerius and Rotunda

The Arch of Galerius (Gr.: Αψίδα του Γαλερίου) or Kamara (Gr.: Καμάρα) and the Rotunda (Ροτόντα) are neighbouring early 4th-century AD monuments in the city of Thessaloniki, in the region of Central Macedonia in northern Greece.

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Archaeoseismology

Archaeoseismology is the study of past earthquakes deriving from the analysis of archaeological sites.

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Archduchess Barbara of Austria

Barbara of Austria (30 April 1539 – 19 September 1572) was Duchess consort of Ferrara, Modena, and Reggio by marriage to Alfonso II d'Este, Duke of Ferrara.

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Archena

Archena is a municipality of Spain in the autonomous community and province of Murcia.

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Architecture of Kathmandu

The architectural heritage of Kathmandu city is integral to that of the Kathmandu valley since all monuments have evolved over centuries of craftsmanship influenced by Hindu and Buddhist religious practices.

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Arg e Bam

The Arg-e Bam (ارگ بم) is the largest adobe building in the world, located in Bam, a city in Kerman Province of southeastern Iran.

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Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

The Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (A.U.Th.; often called the Aristotelian University or University of Thessaloniki; Αριστοτέλειο Πανεπιστήμιο Θεσσαλονίκης) is the sixth oldest and among the most highly ranked tertiary education institutions in Greece.

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Arkansas Geological Survey

The Arkansas Geological Survey (AGS), formerly the 'Arkansas Geological Commission' (AGC), is a government agency of the State of Arkansas.

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Armenian Church, Dhaka

The Armenian Church (also known as Armenian Apostolic Church of the Holy Resurrection) is a historically significant architectural monument situated in the Armanitola area of old Dhaka, Bangladesh.

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Arodes

Arodes (Greek: Αρόδες) is a village in the North West of Cyprus close to the Akamas peninsula.

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Around the World Under the Sea

Around the World Under the Sea is a 1966 science fiction film directed by Andrew Marton and starring Lloyd Bridges, with Marshall Thompson, Shirley Eaton, Gary Merrill, and David McCallum.

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Arthur Casagrande

Arthur Casagrande (August 28, 1902 – September 6, 1981) was an Austrian-born American civil engineer who made important contributions to the fields of engineering geology and geotechnical engineering during its infancy.

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Artistes 512 Fund Raising Campaign

Artistes 512 Fund Raising Campaign was a major fund raising campaign held in Hong Kong for the victims of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake.

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Ascoli Satriano

Church of San Rocco. Ascoli Satriano (Pugliese: Àsculë) is a town and comune in the province of Foggia in the Apulia region of southeast Italy.

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Aseismic creep

In geology, aseismic creep or fault creep is measurable surface displacement along a fault in the absence of notable earthquakes.

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Ashbritt

AshBritt Environmental, commonly referred to as AshBritt or AshBritt, Inc., is located in Deerfield Beach, Florida and is a company specializing in disaster relief operations.

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Ask The Doctor

AskTheDoctor.com, Inc., doing business as Ask The Doctor is a medical information website that was founded in Toronto, Canada.

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Asociación de Guías y Scouts de Chile

The Association of Guides and Scouts of Chile (AGSCH) began in 1978 when the Scout Association of Chile (ASCH) and the Girl Guides Association of Chile (AGCH) combined.

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Assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists

Four Iranian nuclear scientists—Masoud Alimohammadi, Majid Shahriari, Darioush Rezaeinejad and Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan—were assassinated between 2010 and 2012.

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Association of Bay Area Governments

The Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) is a regional planning agency incorporating various local governments in the San Francisco Bay Area in California.

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Atalanta (island)

Atalanta (Ancient Greek: Ἀταλάντη), the modern Talandonísi (Ταλαντονήσι), is a small island off Locris, in the Opuntian Gulf, said to have been torn asunder from the mainland by an earthquake.

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Atalanti

Atalanti (Αταλάντη Atalantē) is the second largest town in Phthiotis, Greece.

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Atarfe

Atarfe is a Spanish city, that belongs to the province of Granada, in Andalusia.

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Atlanta metropolitan area

Metro Atlanta, designated by the United States Office of Management and Budget as the Atlanta–Sandy Springs–Roswell, GA Metropolitan Statistical Area, is the most populous metro area in the US state of Georgia and the ninth-largest metropolitan statistical area (MSA) in the United States.

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Atlantis (DC Comics)

Atlantis is a fictional aquatic civilization appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Attenuation

In physics, attenuation or, in some contexts, extinction is the gradual loss of flux intensity through a medium.

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Auburn–LSU football rivalry

The Auburn–LSU football rivalry, sometimes called the Tiger Bowl, is an American college football rivalry between the Auburn Tigers and the LSU Tigers.

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Aucanquilcha

Aucanquilcha (pronounced: OW-kahn-KEEL-chuh) is a massive stratovolcano located in the Antofagasta Region of northern Chile, just west of the border with Bolivia and within the Alto Loa National Reserve.

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Auckland volcanic field

The Auckland volcanic field is an area of monogenetic volcanoes covered by much of the metropolitan area of Auckland, New Zealand's largest city, located in the North Island.

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August 2016 Central Italy earthquake

An earthquake, measuring 6.2 ± 0.016 on the moment magnitude scale, hit Central Italy on 24 August 2016 at 03:36:32 CEST (01:36 UTC).

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August 2016 Myanmar earthquake

A magnitude 6.8 earthquake struck Myanmar west of Chauk on 24 August 2016 with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VI (Strong).

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Augustine Volcano

Augustine Volcano is a central lava dome and lava flow complex, surrounded by pyroclastic debris.

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Aurora (aircraft)

Aurora was a rumored mid-1980s American reconnaissance aircraft.

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Australia (continent)

The continent of Australia, sometimes known in technical contexts by the names Sahul, Australinea or Meganesia to distinguish it from the country of Australia, consists of the land masses which sit on Australia's continental shelf.

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Avachinsky

Avachinsky (also known as Avacha or Avacha Volcano or Avachinskaya Sopka) (Авачинская сопка, Авача) is an active stratovolcano on the Kamchatka Peninsula in the far east of Russia.

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Avalanche net

Avalanche nets (snow avalanche protection nets, snow nets) are flexible snow supporting structures for avalanche control, constructed of steel or nylon cables or straps held by steel poles, optionally supplied with compression anchors downhill.

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Avantiswami Temple

Awanti Swami Temple was a Hindu temple located in Awantipora in the Indian state of Jammu & Kashmir.

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Avellino

Avellino is a town and comune, capital of the province of Avellino in the Campania region of southern Italy.

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Awash–Weldiya Railway

The Awash–Weldiya Railway is a standard gauge railway under construction, that will serve as a northward extension of the new Ethiopian National Railway Network.

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Aydın

Aydın (EYE-din;; formerly named Güzelhisar), ancient Greek Tralles, is a city in and the seat of Aydın Province in Turkey's Aegean Region.

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Aykut Barka

Aykut Barka (December 16, 1951, Fatih, Istanbul – February 1, 2002) was a Turkish earth scientist specialized in earthquake research.

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Ayvacik (Canakkale) Swarm

The Ayvacik (Canakkale, Turkey) earthquake swarm was a series of earthquakes that occurred in 2017 at the Ayvacik – Gurpinar earthquake zone in Marmara region of Turkey.

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Þingvellir

Þingvellir, anglicised as Thingvellir,The spelling Pingvellir is incorrect, as the letter “p” should never be used to represent the letter “þ” (thorn), which is pronounced as "th".

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İzmir

İzmir is a metropolitan city in the western extremity of Anatolia and the third most populous city in Turkey, after Istanbul and Ankara.

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Ōkubi

In Japanese folklore, Ōkubi (大首) are giant heads of either men or women.

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Štrigova

Štrigova (Stridau; Stridóvár) is a village and municipality in Međimurje County, in northern Croatia.

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Bab-el-Mandeb

The Bab-el-Mandeb (Arabic: باب المندب, "Gate of Tears") is a strait located between Yemen on the Arabian Peninsula, and Djibouti and Eritrea in the Horn of Africa.

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Badan Rehabilitasi dan Rekonstruksi

Badan Rehabilitasi dan Rekonstruksi (BRR) NAD-Nias, or Agency for the Rehabilitation and Reconstruction of Aceh and Nias, was an Indonesian government agency which coordinated and jointly implemented the recovery programme following the December 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami that mostly affected Aceh and the March 2005 Nias–Simeulue earthquake.

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Baelo Claudia

Baelo Claudia is the name of an ancient Roman town, located outside of Tarifa, near the village of Bolonia, in southern Spain.

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Bahad 16

Bahad 16 (lit: Education Base 16) is a training base (Bahad) belonging to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).

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Bahram Akasheh

Bahram Akasheh (born 1936) is an Iranian geophysicist and seismologist and Professor of Geophysics at University of Tehran.

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Bakersfield, California

Bakersfield is a city in and the county seat of Kern County, California, United States.

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Balasagun

Balasagun was an ancient Soghdian city in modern-day Kyrgyzstan, located in the Chuy Valley between Bishkek and Issyk-Kul Lake.

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Balcones Fault

The Balcones Fault or Balcones Fault Zone is a tensional structural system Edwards Aquifer in the U.S. state of Texas that runs approximately from the southwest part of the state near Del Rio to the north central region near Dallas along Interstate 35.

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Ball (bearing)

Bearing balls are special highly spherical and smooth balls, most commonly used in ball bearings, but also used as components in things like freewheel mechanisms.

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Ball-and-pillow structures

Ball-and-pillow structures are masses of clastic sediment that take the form of isolated pillows or protruding ball structures.

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Balline Station

Balline Station is a pastoral lease that operates as a sheep station in Western Australia.

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Balut Island

Balut Island, also known as Malulong, is a volcanic island south of the tip of Davao Occidental province in the Mindanao region, Southern Philippines.

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Bamboo Organ

The Las Piñas Bamboo Organ in St. Joseph Parish Church in Las Piñas City, Philippines, is a 19th-century church organ with unique organ pipes; they are made almost entirely of bamboo.

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Bampton Castle, Devon

Bampton Castle in the parish of Bampton, Devon was the seat of the feudal barony of Bampton.

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Bangabandhu Bridge

Bangabandhu Bridge, commonly called the Jamuna Multi-purpose Bridge (যমুনা বহুমুখী সেতু Jomuna Bohumukhi Setu) is a bridge opened in Bangladesh in June 1998.

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Banjawarn Station

Banjawarn Station is a remote cattle station that previously operated as a sheep station in Western Australia.

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Baramulla Bomber

Baramulla Bomber is a science fiction espionage thriller and India's first mythological thriller written by Clark Prasad.

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Bare Mountain (Massachusetts)

Bare Mountain, above sea level, is a prominent peak of the Holyoke Range of traprock mountains located in the Connecticut River Valley of Massachusetts, and part of the greater Metacomet Ridge that stretches from Long Island Sound to nearly the Vermont border.

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Barisal guns

Barisal Guns refer to a series of loud sonic booms heard near the Barisal region of East Bengal (currently in Bangladesh) in the 19th century.

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Barnafossar

Barnafoss is also known as Bjarnafoss, which was its previous name.

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Baroque architecture

Baroque architecture is the building style of the Baroque era, begun in late 16th-century Italy, that took the Roman vocabulary of Renaissance architecture and used it in a new rhetorical and theatrical fashion, often to express the triumph of the Catholic Church.

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Barseen

Barseen or also spelled as Barsin (Hindi: बरसीन) is a village near City of Fatehabad, Haryana (India).

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Basal sliding

Basal sliding is the act of a glacier sliding over the bed due to meltwater under the ice acting as a lubricant.

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Base isolation

Base isolation, also known as seismic base isolation or base isolation system, is one of the most popular means of protecting a structure against earthquake forces.

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Basilica of Our Lady of the Angels, Cartago

The Basílica de Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles (Our Lady of the Angels Basilica) is a Roman Catholic basilica in Costa Rica, located in the city of Cartago and dedicated to the Virgen de los Pardos, officially known as Virgen de los Ángeles (the Lady of the Angels).

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Bath Consolidated School

Bath Community School was a school in Bath Township, Michigan, USA.

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Batman: Cataclysm

"Cataclysm" is an 18 chapter DC Comics crossover story arc that ran through the various Batman family comics from March to May, 1998.

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Battery Point Light

Battery Point Light is a lighthouse in Crescent City, California, United States.

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Battle Mountain, Nevada

Battle Mountain is an unincorporated town in and the county seat of Lander County, Nevada, United States.

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Bayezid II Mosque

The Bayezid II Mosque (Beyazıt Camii, Bayezid Camii) is an Ottoman imperial mosque located in the Beyazıt Square area of Istanbul, Turkey, near the ruins of the Forum of Theodosius of ancient Constantinople.

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Bayou Corne sinkhole

The Bayou Corne Sinkhole was created from a collapsed underground salt dome cavern operated by Texas Brine Company and owned by Occidental Petroleum.

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Baywatch

Baywatch is an American action drama series about the Los Angeles County lifeguards who patrol the beaches of Los Angeles County, California, starring David Hasselhoff.

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Bazman

Bazman (بزمان, also known as Kuh-e Bazman) is a stratovolcano in a remote desert region of Sistan and Baluchestan Province in south-eastern Iran.

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Büyükeceli

Büyükeceli is a town in Mersin Province, Turkey.

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Beach evolution

The shoreline is where the land meets the sea and it is continually changing.

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Beacon Hill (Branford, Connecticut)

Beacon Hill, (est.) above sea level, is a traprock outcrop located southeast of New Haven, Connecticut overlooking the mouth of the Farm River 1.2 miles north of Long Island Sound.

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Beam (structure)

A beam is a structural element that primarily resists loads applied laterally to the beam's axis.

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Beijing National Stadium

Beijing National Stadium, officially the National Stadium, also known as the Bird's Nest, is a stadium in Beijing.

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Beit She'an

Beit She'an (בֵּית שְׁאָן; بيسان,, Beisan or Bisan), is a city in the Northern District of Israel which has played an important role in history due to its geographical location at the junction of the Jordan River Valley and the Jezreel Valley.

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Bellinus of Padua

Saint Bellino Bertaldo (d. 26 November 1145) was an Italian Roman Catholic prelate who served as the Bishop of Padua from 1128 until his murder.

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Benaki Museum

The Benaki Museum, established and endowed in 1930 by Antonis Benakis in memory of his father Emmanuel Benakis, is housed in the Benakis family mansion in downtown Athens, Greece.

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Benavente, Portugal

Benavente is a municipality and parish in Santarém District in Portugal.

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Benignus of Dijon

Saint Benignus of Dijon (Saint Bénigne) was a martyr honored as the patron saint and first herald of Christianity of Dijon, Burgundy (Roman Divio).

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Beno Gutenberg

Beno Gutenberg (June 4, 1889 – January 25, 1960) was a German-American seismologist who made several important contributions to the science.

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Berja

Berja is a municipality, former bishopric and Latin titular see in Almería province, in the autonomous community of Andalusia, southern Spain. It is located on the south-eastern slope of the Sierra de Gádor, 10 miles north-east of Adra by road.

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Bernardo Storace

Bernardo Storace (fl. 1664) was an Italian composer.

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Besek Mountain

Besek Mountain also known as Black Mountain, est.

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Betagel

Betagel (βゲル in Japanese) is a high-tech Japanese invention.

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Beyazıt Tower

Beyazıt Tower, also named Seraskier Tower, from the name of the Ottoman ministry of War, is an fire-watch tower located in the courtyard of Istanbul University's main campus (formerly Ottoman Ministry of War) on Beyazıt Square (known as the Forum Tauri in the Roman period) in Istanbul, Turkey, on top of one of the "seven hills" which Constantine the Great had built the city, following the model of Rome.

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Bhookamp

Bhookamp (English: Earthquake; Hindi: भूकम्प) is a 1993 Bollywood Action film, produced by Markand Adhikari under the Sri Adhikari Brothers banner and directed by Gautam Adhikari.

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Bhutanese animation

Bhutanese animation is a relatively new industry in Bhutan.

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Bi-State Vietnam Gold Star Bridges

The Bi-State Vietnam Gold Star Twin Bridges, usually referred to as simply The Twin Bridges, connect Henderson, Kentucky and Evansville, Indiana along U.S. Route 41 (US 41), south of the (temporary) southern terminus of Interstate 69 (I-69).

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Bibeksheel Nepali

Bibeksheel Nepali Dal (विवेकशील नेपाली दल), the Bibeksheel Sajha Party, was a political party in Nepal.

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Bibliography of the Sierra Nevada

The following is a bibliography of the Sierra Nevada of California, United States, including books on recreation, natural history, and human history.

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Bident

A bident is a two-pronged implement resembling a pitchfork.

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Big Thunder Mountain Railroad

Big Thunder Mountain Railroad is a mine train roller coaster located in Frontierland at several Disneyland-style Disney Parks worldwide.

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Bill McGuire (volcanologist)

William J. "Bill" McGuire (born 1954) is Emeritus Professor of Geophysical & Climate Hazards at University College London and is one of Britain's leading volcanologists.

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Bill Nye the Science Guy

Bill Nye the Science Guy is an American half-hour live action science program that originally aired on PBS from September 10, 1993 to June 20, 1998 and was also syndicated by Walt Disney Television to local stations.

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Bingham Canyon Mine

The Bingham Canyon Mine, more commonly known as Kennecott Copper Mine among locals, is an open-pit mining operation extracting a large porphyry copper deposit southwest of Salt Lake City, Utah, in the Oquirrh Mountains.

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Birmingham, Alabama

Birmingham is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Alabama and the seat of Jefferson County.

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Bishopric of Trent

The Prince-Bishopric of Trent or Bishopric of Trent for short is a former ecclesiastical principality roughly corresponding to the present-day Northern Italian autonomous province of Trentino.

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Black & White 2

Black & White 2 is a video game developed by Lionhead Studios and published by Electronic Arts.

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Black Jack (manga character)

is a fictional character created by Osamu Tezuka, introduced in Weekly Shōnen Champion on November 19, 1973.

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Black Mask (comics)

Black Mask (Roman Sionis) is a fictional supervillain appearing in comic books published by DC Comics.

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Black Sun Rising

Black Sun Rising, published in 1991, is a fantasy novel by American writer C. S. Friedman.

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Blink of an Eye (Star Trek: Voyager)

"Blink of an Eye" is the 12th episode from the sixth season of the science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager, 130th episode overall.

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Bloody Roar

is a series of fighting games created by Hudson Soft, and developed together with Eighting.

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Blue Mosque, Tabriz

The Blue Mosque (گؤی مسجید., Goy Masjed; مسجد کبود, Masjed-e Kabūd) is a famous historic mosque in Tabriz, Iran.

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Blythe, California

Blythe is a city in Riverside County, California, United States, in the Palo Verde Valley of the Lower Colorado River Valley region, an agricultural area and part of the Colorado Desert along the Colorado River.

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BMIR

BMIR 94.5 FM (Burning Man Information Radio) is the unlicensed community radio station for Burning Man, an event held annually in Black Rock Desert, Nevada.

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Boa Sr

Boa Sr (circa 1925 – 26 January 2010) was an Indian Great Andamanese elder.

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Boğaziçi University

Boğaziçi University (also known as Bosphorus University, Boğaziçi Üniversitesi, "Boğaziçi" literally meaning Bosphorus in Turkish) is a major research university located on the European side of the Bosphorus strait in Istanbul, Turkey.

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Bob Citron

Robert A. Citron, often called Bob Citron (September 14, 1932 – January 31, 2012) was an American entrepreneur and aerospace engineer who was born in Brooklyn, New York, and educated at the University of the Philippines (liberal arts) and aeronautical engineering from Northrop University (1953–1959).

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Bodega Head

Bodega Head is a small promontory on the Pacific coast of northern California in the United States.

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Bojnord

Bojnord (Persian: بجنورد) (also spelled Bojnūrd, Bujnūrd, Bojnoord, Bojnord or Bujnurd, the medieval Buzanjird.) is the capital city of North Khorasan province, Iran.

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Bomb shelter

A bomb shelter is a structure designed to provide protection against the effects of a bomb.

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Boneshaker (novel)

Boneshaker is a science fiction novel by Cherie Priest combining the steampunk genre with zombies in an alternate history version of Seattle, Washington.

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Boobquake

Boobquake was a rally which took place on April 26, 2010.

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Borik

Borik is an urban neighborhood in the city of Banjaluka, Bosnia and Herzegovina (Republika Srpska entity).

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Boris Mavashev

Boris Mavashev (born 9 May 1939 in Tashkent) is a seismologist, doctor of geology and ecology, specializing in the geochemical and meteorological precursors of earthquakes.

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Braced frame

A braced frame is a structural system designed to resist wind and earthquake forces.

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Bradley Mountain

Bradley Mountain,, is a traprock mountain located west of New Britain, Connecticut, United States, in the towns of Southington and Plainville.

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Bradyseism

Bradyseism is the gradual uplift (positive bradyseism) or descent (negative bradyseism) of part of the Earth's surface caused by the filling or emptying of an underground magma chamber and/or hydrothermal activity, particularly in volcanic calderas.

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Braux, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence

Braux is a commune in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department in southeastern France.

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Brazilian Highlands

The Brazilian Highlands or Brazilian Plateau (Planalto Brasileiro) are an extensive geographical region, covering most of the eastern, southern and central portions of Brazil, in all approximately half of the country's land area, or some 4,500,000 km² (1,930,511 sq mi).

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Brazzaville arms dump blasts

On 4 March 2012, a series of blasts occurred at an army arms dump in Brazzaville, the capital of the Republic of the Congo.

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Breccia

Breccia is a rock composed of broken fragments of minerals or rock cemented together by a fine-grained matrix that can be similar to or different from the composition of the fragments.

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Brian Atwater

Brian Franklin Atwater (born September 18, 1951) is a geologist who works for the United States Geological Survey and is also a research professor at the University of Washington.

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Brian Kennett

Brian Leslie Norman Kennett FAA, FRS (born 7 May 1948 in Croydon, Surrey, UK) is a mathematical physicist and seismologist.

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Bridge bearing

A bridge bearing is a component of a bridge which typically provides a resting surface between bridge piers and the bridge deck.

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Bridge River Vent

The Bridge River Vent is a volcanic crater in the Pacific Ranges of the Coast Mountains in southwestern British Columbia, Canada.

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Bridge trilogy

The Bridge trilogy is a series of novels by William Gibson, his second after the successful Sprawl trilogy.

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Broad Group

Broad Group is a private manufacturer of central air conditioning non-electric absorption chillers that are powered by natural gas and waste heat based in Changsha, China.

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Brownsville, Tennessee

Brownsville is a city in Haywood County, Tennessee, United States.

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Bucket toilet

A bucket toilet is a basic form of a dry toilet whereby a bucket (pail) is used to collect excreta.

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Buckling-restrained braced frame

Buckling-restrained braced frame (BRBF) is a structural steel frame that provides lateral resistance to buckling, particularly during seismic activity.

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Budbrooke

Budbrooke is a small village and civil parish in the Warwick district of Warwickshire, England, about 2½ miles west of Warwick town centre.

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Buffalo, New York

Buffalo is the second largest city in the state of New York and the 81st most populous city in the United States.

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Bug (1975 film)

Bug is a 1975 American horror film in Panavision, directed by Jeannot Szwarc and written by William Castle and Thomas Page, from Page's novel The Hephaestus Plague (1973).

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Bugey Nuclear Power Plant

The Bugey Nuclear Power Plant is located in Bugey in the Saint-Vulbas commune (Ain), about 75 km from the Swiss border.

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Building

A building, or edifice, is a structure with a roof and walls standing more or less permanently in one place, such as a house or factory.

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Building code

A building code (also building control or building regulations) is a set of rules that specify the standards for constructed objects such as buildings and nonbuilding structures.

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Building inspection

A building inspection is an inspection performed by a building inspector, a person who is employed by either a city, township or county and is usually certified in one or more disciplines qualifying them to make professional judgment about whether a building meets building code requirements.

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Bukovo

Bukovo (Буково, pronounced) is a village in the Bitola municipality approximately three kilometers distance from the city of Bitola in the Republic of Macedonia.

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Bukusu

The Bukusu are one of the seventeen Kenyan tribes of the Luhya Bantu people of East Africa.

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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America

Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (BSSA) is a bimonthly peer reviewed scientific journal published by the Seismological Society of America.

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Burdock piling

is an advanced Japanese technique for building stone walls, named after the resemblance of the rough stones used to the ovate shapes of the blossoms of Japanese burdock plants.

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Burial

Burial or interment is the ritual act of placing a dead person or animal, sometimes with objects, into the ground.

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Busbar

In electric power distribution, a busbar (also bus bar, and sometimes misspelled as buss bar or bussbar) is a metallic strip or bar, typically housed inside switchgear, panel boards, and busway enclosures for local high current power distribution.

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Business continuity planning

Business continuity planning (or business continuity and resiliency planning) is the process of creating systems of prevention and recovery to deal with potential threats to a company.

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Bussana

Bussana is an Italian village and hamlet (frazione) of the municipality of Sanremo in the Province of Imperia, Liguria.

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Bussana Vecchia

Bussana Vecchia is a former ghost town in Liguria, Italy.

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Butch Kinerney

Butch Kinerney is Chief of Communications for the Federal Insurance and Mitigation Administration of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and an expert in risk and crisis communications.

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Buthrotum

Butrint (Buthrōtum; from Bouthrōtón) was an ancient Greek and later Roman city and bishopric in Epirus.

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Buynaksk

Buynaksk (Буйна́кск; Шура; Шура/Темирхан-Шура, Shura/Temirkhan-Shura) is a town in the Republic of Dagestan, Russia, located at the foothills of the Greater Caucasus on the Shura-Ozen River, southwest of the republic's capital Makhachkala.

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Buzău Mountains

The Buzău Mountains are a set of five mountains ranges in Romania which are part of the Curvature Carpathians region of the Outer Eastern Carpathians.

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Caballo de Troya

Caballo de Troya (Spanish for Trojan Horse) is a novel (the first of a series of nine so far) written in 1984 by Spanish journalist, writer and ufologist Juan José Benítez.

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Caddo Lake

Caddo Lake (Lac Caddo) is a lake and bayou (wetland) on the border between Texas and Louisiana, in northern Harrison County and southern Marion County in Texas and western Caddo Parish in Louisiana.

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Caesar III

Caesar III is a video game that was released on September 30, 1997, developed by Impressions Games and published by Sierra Studios.

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Cairo Rail Bridge

Cairo Rail Bridge is the name of two bridges crossing the Ohio River near Cairo, Illinois.

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Cajamarquilla

The Cajamarquilla archaeological site is located 25 km inland from the coastal city of Lima, Peru; in the Jicamarca Valley, 6 km north of the Rímac River.

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California

California is a state in the Pacific Region of the United States.

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California Earthquake Prediction Evaluation Council

The California Earthquake Prediction Evaluation Council (CEPEC) is a committee of earthquake experts that reviews potentially credible earthquake predictions and forecasts.

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California landslides

Landslides in California occur mainly due to intense rainfall but occasionally are triggered by earthquakes.

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California State Route 2

State Route 2 (SR 2) is a state highway in the U.S. state of California.

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Callawassie Island

Callawassie Island is one of hundreds of barrier and sea islands in the southeast corner in the outer coastal plain, making up a portion of Beaufort County, South Carolina.

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Calle 7

Calle 7 was a Chilean television program, shown by TVN from Monday to Friday at 6 pm.

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Camiguin Mindanao

Camiguin Mindanao is an active volcanic group within the Philippines.

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Camp Hyrule

Camp Hyrule was an annual online virtual camp that was sponsored and moderated by Nintendo of America.

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Canadian Cascade Arc

The Canadian Cascade Arc, also called the Canadian Cascades, is the Canadian segment of the North American Cascade Volcanic Arc.

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Canadian National Seismograph Network

The Canadian National Seismograph Network is a network of seismographs to detect earthquakes across Canada.

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Canary hotspot

The Canary hotspot, also called the Canarian hotspot, is a volcanic hotspot believed to be located at the Canary Islands off the north-western coast of Africa, although alternative theories have also been suggested to explain the volcanism there.

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Candide (operetta)

Candide is an operetta with music composed by Leonard Bernstein, based on the 1759 novella of the same name by Voltaire.

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Candon Church

The Saint John of Sahagun Parish Church, locally known as the Candon Church, is a church situated in the city of Candon, Ilocos Sur, Philippines.

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Cangde Grand Bridge

Cangde Grand Bridge is the world's fourth longest bridge.

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Carbet Falls

Carbet Falls (Les chutes du Carbet) is a series of waterfalls on the Carbet River in Guadeloupe, an overseas department of France located in the Leeward Islands of the eastern Caribbean region.

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CarbFix

CarbFix is a project in Iceland intended to lock away carbon dioxide by reacting it with basaltic rocks.

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Carbon dioxide removal

Carbon dioxide removal (CDR) refers to a number of technologies, the objective of which is the large-scale removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

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Cardiff Rift

The Cardiff Rift is a fictional wormhole in the science fiction television series Doctor Who and Torchwood, one end of which is located in Cardiff Bay, Wales.

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Caribbean Plate

The Caribbean Plate is a mostly oceanic tectonic plate underlying Central America and the Caribbean Sea off the north coast of South America.

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Caribbean Sea

The Caribbean Sea (Mar Caribe; Mer des Caraïbes; Caraïbische Zee) is a sea of the Atlantic Ocean in the tropics of the Western Hemisphere.

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Carlos Dittborn

Carlos Dittborn Pinto (1924–1962) was a Chilean football administrator.

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Carlsberg Ridge

The Carlsberg Ridge is the northern section of the Central Indian Ridge, a divergent tectonic plate boundary between the African Plate and the Indo-Australian Plate, traversing the western regions of the Indian Ocean.

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Carnegie Ridge

The Carnegie Ridge is an aseismic ridge on the Nazca Plate that is being subducted beneath the South American Plate.

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Carol I National College

The Carol I National College (Colegiul Național Carol I din Craiova) is a high school located in central Craiova, Romania, on Ioan Maiorescu Street.

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Carsulae

Carsulae is an archaeological site in the region of Umbria in central Italy.

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Cartago, Costa Rica

Cartago is a city in Costa Rica, about east of the capital, San José.

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Casabona

Casabona (Calabrian: Casivonu) is a comune and town with a population of about 4,000 people in the province of Crotone, in Calabria, southern Italy.

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Cascade Volcanoes

The Cascade Volcanoes (also known as the Cascade Volcanic Arc or the Cascade Arc) are a number of volcanoes in a volcanic arc in western North America, extending from southwestern British Columbia through Washington and Oregon to Northern California, a distance of well over.

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Cascadia Channel

Cascadia Channel is the most extensive deep-sea channel currently known (as of 1969) of the Pacific Ocean.

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Cascadia subduction zone

The Cascadia subduction zone (also referred to as the Cascadia fault) is a convergent plate boundary that stretches from northern Vancouver Island to Northern California.

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Cassandra Cain

Cassandra Cain (also known as Cassandra Wayne) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, commonly in association with the superhero Batman.

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Castaic, California

Castaic, California (also spelled Castec, or Kashtiq; pronunciation is a source of contention between older and newer residents, see below) is an unincorporated community located in the northern part of Los Angeles County, California.

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Casualty estimation

Casualty estimation is the process of estimating the number of injuries or deaths in a battle or natural disaster that has already occurred.

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Cataclysm

Cataclysm is derived from the Greek κατά kata, "down, against" and κλύζω klyzō, "wash over, surge." It may refer to.

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Catania

Catania is the second largest city of Sicily after Palermo located on the east coast facing the Ionian Sea.

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Catastrophe modeling

Catastrophe modeling (also known as cat modeling) is the process of using computer-assisted calculations to estimate the losses that could be sustained due to a catastrophic event such as a hurricane or earthquake.

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Catastrophism

Catastrophism was the theory that the Earth had largely been shaped by sudden, short-lived, violent events, possibly worldwide in scope.

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Catedral de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe

The Catedral de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe (English: Cathedral of Our Lady of Guadalupe) or simply, Ponce Cathedral, is the cathedral for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ponce located in downtown Ponce, Puerto Rico.

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Cathedral Basilica of Lima

The Basilica Cathedral of Lima is a Roman Catholic cathedral located in the Plaza Mayor of downtown Lima, Peru.

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Cathedral Basilica of St. Joseph (San Jose)

The Cathedral Basilica of St.

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Cathedral of Christ the Light (Oakland, California)

The Cathedral of Christ the Light, also called Oakland Cathedral, is the cathedral of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland in Oakland, California.

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Cathedral of Salta

Salta Cathedral (Catedral Basílica de Salta, Catedral de Salta) is a Roman Catholic cathedral in Salta, Argentina, and the seat and the metropolitan cathedral of the Archbishop of Salta.

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Caucasus Mountains

The Caucasus Mountains are a mountain system in West Asia between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea in the Caucasus region.

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Causes of landslides

The causes of landslides are usually related to instabilities in slopes.

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Cave-in-Rock State Park

Cave-In-Rock State Park is an Illinois state park, on 240 acres, in the town of Cave-in-Rock, Hardin County, Illinois in the United States.

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Cecropius of Nicomedia

Cecropius of Nicomedia was a bishop of Nicomedia and a key player in the Arian controversy.

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Celano

Celano is a town and comune in the Province of L'Aquila, central Italy, east of Rome by rail.

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CeNSE

CeNSE or the Central Nervous System of the Earth is a project by Hewlett-Packard, and others to place sensors everywhere.

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Centennial Bridge, Panama

Panama's Centennial Bridge (Puente Centenario) is a major bridge crossing the Panama Canal.

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Center for Earthquake Studies

The Center for Earthquake Studies (CES), is an academic earth science, earthquake studies and mathematical national research institute, located in Islamabad, Pakistan.

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Center for Short-Lived Phenomena

The Center for Short-Lived Phenomena (CSLP) was an office at the Smithsonian Institution from 1968 to 1975 designed to assist Smithsonian scientists in studying unusual short-lived natural phenomena such as meteorite impacts, volcanic events, earthquakes, and unusual ecological events such as plagues, extinctions, fish rains, and the effects of oil spill events.

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Central Weather Bureau

The Central Weather Bureau (CWB) is the government meteorological research and forecasting institution of the Republic of China (Taiwan).

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Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters

The Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) is a research unit of the Université catholique de Louvain (UCL).

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Cepstrum

A cepstrum is the result of taking the inverse Fourier transform (IFT) of the logarithm of the estimated spectrum of a signal.

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Chagos-Laccadive Ridge

The Chagos-Laccadive Ridge (CLR), also known as Chagos-Laccadive Plateau, is a prominent volcanic ridge and oceanic plateau extending between the Northern and the Central Indian Ocean.

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Chakesar

Chakesar is a town of the Shangla District in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.

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Chambourg-sur-Indre

Chambourg-sur-Indre is a French commune the department of Indre-et-Loire in the region of Centre-Val de Loire.

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Champagne (wine region)

The Champagne wine region (archaic Champany) is a wine region within the historical province of Champagne in the northeast of France.

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Chandler wobble

The Chandler wobble or variation of latitude is a small deviation in the Earth's axis of rotation relative to the solid earth, which was discovered by American astronomer Seth Carlo Chandler in 1891.

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Chang-Gu World Trade Center

The Chang-Gu World Trade Center, also known as Grand 50 Tower, is a tall skyscraper in Sanmin District of Kaohsiung, Taiwan.

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Chao Samartín

Chao Samartín is a Castro located in the municipality of Grandas, (Grandas de Salime - Asturias).

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Chaos Crags

Chaos Crags is the youngest group of lava domes in Lassen Volcanic National Park, California.

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Chaos theory

Chaos theory is a branch of mathematics focusing on the behavior of dynamical systems that are highly sensitive to initial conditions.

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Chapman University

Chapman University is a private non-profit university located in Orange, California, United States.

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Charity record

A charity record (also known as a charity single) is a release of a song for a specific charitable cause.

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Charles Francis Richter

Charles Francis Richter; April 26, 1900 – September 30, 1985) was an American seismologist and physicist. Richter is most famous as the creator of the Richter magnitude scale, which, until the development of the moment magnitude scale in 1979, quantified the size of earthquakes. Inspired by Kiyoo Wadati’s 1928 paper on shallow and deep earthquakes, Richter first used the scale in 1935 after developing it in collaboration with Beno Gutenberg; both worked at the California Institute of Technology. The quote “logarithmic plots are a device of the devil” is attributed to Richter.

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Charles Lyell

Sir Charles Lyell, 1st Baronet, (14 November 1797 – 22 February 1875) was a Scottish geologist who popularised the revolutionary work of James Hutton.

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Charlevoix Seismic Zone

The Charlevoix Seismic Zone is a seismically active area in the Charlevoix region of northeastern Quebec, Canada.

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Chã das Caldeiras

Chã das Caldeiras (“Plain or Plateau of the Calderas”) is a small community of approximately 1,000 inhabitants within the crater of the volcanic Pico do Fogo on the island of Fogo, one of nine inhabited islands comprising Cape Verde and a volcanic plateau being the largest in Cape Verde, it is at the foot of the rim mountain of Bordeira.

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Chemosphere

The Chemosphere is a modernist house in Los Angeles, California, designed by John Lautner in 1960.

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Chennai

Chennai (formerly known as Madras or) is the capital of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

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Chennai district

Chennai district, formerly known as Madras district or "Madarasapattinam", is a district in the state of Tamil Nadu, in India.

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Cherufe

The Cherufe is a large man-eating mythical creature found in the Mapuche mythology of the indigenous Mapuche people of south-central Chile.

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Chervona

Chervona is a multi-ethnic, Russian and Eastern European-inspired band from Portland, Oregon, that formed in 2006.

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Chicano Park

Chicano Park is a 32,000 square meter (7.9 acre) park located beneath the San Diego-Coronado Bridge in Barrio Logan, a predominantly Mexican American and Mexican-immigrant community in central San Diego, California.

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Chicxulub crater

The Chicxulub crater is an impact crater buried underneath the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico.

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Chișinău Water Tower

The Chișinău Water Tower is an architectural monument of Chișinău, Moldova, located at 2 Mitropolit Bănulescu-Bodoni Street and built at the end of 19th century after a project by Alexander Bernadazzi.

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Chikyū

is a Japanese scientific drilling ship built for the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP).

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Childbirth in Japan

This article deals with childbirth in Japan, and the specific details of childbirth exclusive to Japan in relation to beliefs, attitudes and healthcare.

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Children in emergencies and conflicts

Children in emergencies and conflicts constitutes the effects of situations that pose detrimental risks to the health, safety, and well-being of children.

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Chilean Heart

Chilean Heart (Spanish: Corazón del Chileno, lit. Chilean's Heart) is a FIRST robotics team based in Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan Region, Chile.

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Chimbote

Chimbote is the largest city in the Ancash Region of Peru, and the capital of both Santa Province and Chimbote District.

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Chimney

A chimney is a structure that provides ventilation for hot flue gases or smoke from a boiler, stove, furnace or fireplace to the outside atmosphere.

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Chinese architecture

Chinese architecture is a style of architecture that has taken shape in East Asia over many centuries.

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Chinese astronomy

Astronomy in China has a long history, beginning from the Shang Dynasty (Chinese Bronze Age).

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Chino Hills

The Chino Hills are a mountain range on the border of Orange, Los Angeles, and San Bernardino counties, California, with a small portion in Riverside County.

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Chino Hills, California

Chino Hills is a city located in the southwestern corner of San Bernardino County, California, United States.

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Chora Church

The Church of the Holy Saviour in Chora (Ἐκκλησία τοῦ Ἁγίου Σωτῆρος ἐν τῇ Χώρᾳ, Kariye Müzesi, Kariye Camii, Kariye Kilisesi) is a medieval Byzantine Greek Orthodox church preserved as the Chora Museum in the Edirnekapı neighborhood of Istanbul.

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Christ Church Cathedral, Nelson

Christ Church Cathedral is an Anglican cathedral in upper Trafalgar Street, Nelson, New Zealand with seating for 350 people.

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Christian Martin (television executive)

Christian Martin (born 1967) is a Vice President of Broadband Strategy and Development at A+E Networks.

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Chu-Bu and Sheemish

Chu-Bu and Sheemish are characters in a short story of the same name by Lord Dunsany.

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Church of St Demetrius of Thessaloniki, Veliko Tarnovo

The Church of St Demetrius of Thessaloniki (църква "Св., tsarkva "Sv. Dimitar Solunski") is a medieval Bulgarian Orthodox church in the city of Veliko Tarnovo in central northern Bulgaria, the former capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire.

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Church on the Hill (Sighișoara)

The Church on the Hill (Biserica din Deal) is an architecturally significant church located in Sighişoara, Mureș County in Romania.This church is the most important monument of religious architecture in Sighisoara and is one of the great churches of Transylvania, being the third largest.

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Cibona Tower

The Cibona Tower in a high-rise building located in the center of Zagreb, Croatia on Dražen Petrović Square 3, near the Savska and Kranjčevićeva street intersection.

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Cinta Fitri

Cinta Fitri (Fitri's Love) is an Indonesian soap opera with 7 seasons and 1,002 episodes that ran for 4 years. It was produced by MD Entertainment headed by Manoj Punjabi and Dhamoo Punjabi. It aired at 20:30 on SCTV between 2 April 2007 until 28 November 2010. The show moved to Indosiar on 11 January 2011 until 8 May 2011 between durated 4 years how much a 7 season and 1,002 episode, was re-run network on RCTI, MNC International, MNCTV, Global TV and SINDOtv was television network by MNC Media was subsidiary owner by Media Nusantara Citra, Believing strongly in the provision of wholesome entertainment, good family and community values, good corporate citizenship, and the promotion of national integration, the station works on an appointment-based programming concept reflecting its philosophy of being East or West, Cinta Fitri Farrel is The Best. MediaCorp TV12 Suria from MediaCorp TV12 was launched television series long running drama Cinta Fitri sister channel on MediaCorp TV Channel 5, MediaCorp TV HD5, MediaCorp TV12 Suria, Astro Aruna and Sensasi media television market via MediaCorp TV, MediaCorp TV12, mio TV and StarHub TV a media television cable network in Singapore was produced by SCTV now Indosiar later re-run on RCTI, MNCTV and Global TV was television network by MNC Media was subsidiary owner by Media Nusantara Citra an Indonesian free-to-air television channel names terrestrial television network in Jakarta will be telecast since on New Year's Day from 2008 to 2014 is a 1002 episode and 7 season for Indonesian drama series Cinta Fitri (from SCTV now Indosiar later re-run on RCTI, MNC International, MNCTV, Global TV and SINDOtv was television network by MNC Media was subsidiary owner by Media Nusantara Citra) with Singapore English dubbing and Singapore English-Malay subtitles of their Indonesian version. This series was somewhat criticized when it was first aired in Indonesia, commissioner meeting high viewership in Singapore, Malaysia and Brunei. MediaCorp TV was programmes produced by RCTI productions were exported to the Singapore cable television market via Media Nusantara Citra is a via the newly established MediaCorp TV Channel 5 and MediaCorp TV HD5 a pay television channel names cable television network in Singapore was introduced by Cinta Fitri Season 2 was started and character by Shireen Sungkar was launched in 2008.

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Ciomadul

Ciomadul is a volcano in Romania, and is known as Csomád in Hungarian.

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Cité Soleil

Cité Soleil (Site Solèy; English: Sun City) is an extremely impoverished and densely populated commune located in the Port-au-Prince metropolitan area in Haiti.

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Civil defense

Civil defense or civil protection is an effort to protect the citizens of a state (generally non-combatants) from military attacks and natural disasters.

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Clapboard (architecture)

Clapboard or clabbard, also called bevel siding, lap siding, and weatherboard, with regional variation in the definition of these terms, is wooden siding of a building in the form of horizontal boards, often overlapping.

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Clastic dike

A clastic dike is a seam of sedimentary material that fills an open fracture in and cuts across sedimentary rock strata or layering in other rock types.

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Clathrate hydrate

Clathrate hydrates, or gas clathrates, gas hydrates, clathrates, hydrates, etc., are crystalline water-based solids physically resembling ice, in which small non-polar molecules (typically gases) or polar molecules with large hydrophobic moieties are trapped inside "cages" of hydrogen bonded, frozen water molecules.

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Clayton-Marsh Creek-Greenville Fault

The Clayton-Marsh Creek-Greenville Fault is a fault located in the eastern San Francisco Bay Area of California, in Alameda County and Contra Costa County.

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Climate appraisal

A climate appraisal is a unique, location-based report for a specific property on climate change (from global warming) and other environmental risks.

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Climate of Allentown, Pennsylvania

The climate of Allentown, Pennsylvania is classified as a humid continental climate (Köppen Dfa).

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Clyde Dam

The Clyde Dam, New Zealand's third largest hydroelectric dam, is built on the Clutha River near the town of Clyde.

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Coalinga, California

Coalinga is a city in Fresno County and the western San Joaquin Valley, in central California.

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Coastal flood

Coastal flooding occurs when normally dry, low-lying land is flooded by seawater.

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Coastal hazards

Coastal Hazards are physical phenomena that expose a coastal area to risk of property damage, loss of life and environmental degradation.

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Coats Observatory

Coats Observatory is Scotland’s oldest public observatory.

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Codex Telleriano-Remensis

The Codex Telleriano-Remensis, produced in sixteenth century Mexico on European paper, is one of the finest surviving examples of Aztec manuscript painting.

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Collections care

Collections care, which is sometimes called preventive conservation, involves any actions taken to prevent or delay the deterioration of cultural heritage.

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Colonel Plug

Colonel Plug (1700s? – 1820?), also known as Colonel Fluger and "The Last of the Boat-Wreckers", who existed sometime between the 1790s and 1820, was the legendary river pirate who ran a criminal gang on the Ohio River in a cypress swamp near the mouth of the Cache River.

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Color-tagged structure

A color-tagged structure is a structure in the United States which has been classified by a color to represent the severity of damage or the overall condition of the building.

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Colorado Desert

California's Colorado Desert is a part of the larger Sonoran Desert.

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Colossi of Memnon

The Colossi of Memnon (italic or es-Salamat) are two massive stone statues of the Pharaoh Amenhotep III, who reigned in Egypt during the Dynasty XVIII.

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Comet vintages

Comet vintages are years during which an astronomical event, involving generally a "Great Comet", occurs prior to harvest.

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Comparative planetary science

Comparative planetary science or comparative planetology is a branch of space science and planetary science in which different natural processes and systems are studied by their effects and phenomena on and between multiple bodies.

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Compensation (engineering)

In engineering, compensation is planning for side effects or other unintended issues in a design.

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Complex fluid

Complex fluids are binary mixtures that have a coexistence between two phases: solid–liquid (suspensions or solutions of macromolecules such as polymers), solid–gas (granular), liquid–gas (foams) or liquid–liquid (emulsions).

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Composting toilet

A composting toilet is a type of toilet that treats human excreta by a biological process called composting.

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Compton College

Compton College is a public community college in Compton, California.

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Concepción, Chile

Concepción (in full: Concepción de la Madre Santísima de la Luz, "Conception of the Blessed Mother of Light") is a Chilean city and commune belonging to the metropolitan area of Greater Concepción, it is one of the largest urban conurbations of Chile.

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Concord Fault

The Concord Fault is a geologic fault in the San Francisco Bay Area.

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Concrete leveling

In civil engineering, concrete leveling is a procedure that attempts to correct an uneven concrete surface by altering the foundation that the surface sits upon.

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Conservation and restoration of shipwreck artifacts

The conservation and restoration of shipwreck artifacts is the act of caring for cultural heritage that has been part of a shipwreck and have often been underwater for a great length of time.

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Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura

Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura is an American television series hosted by Jesse Ventura and broadcast on truTV.

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Contents of the Voyager Golden Record

The Voyager Golden Record contains 116 images plus a calibration image and a variety of natural sounds, such as those made by surf, wind, and thunder, and animal sounds, including the songs of birds, whales and dolphins.

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Continental margin

The continental margin is one of the three major zones of the ocean floor, the other two being deep-ocean basins and mid-ocean ridges.

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Continental shelf

The continental shelf is an underwater landmass which extends from a continent, resulting in an area of relatively shallow water known as a shelf sea.

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Contra Dam

The Contra Dam, commonly known as the Verzasca Dam and the Locarno Dam, is an arch dam on the Verzasca River in the Val Verzasca of Ticino, Switzerland.

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Convent of Bosco ai Frati

The Convent of Bosco ai Frati is located in the comune (municipality) of Scarperia e San Piero, in the midst of Turkey oak woods.

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Convergent boundary

In plate tectonics, a convergent boundary, also known as a destructive plate boundary, is a region of active deformation where two or more tectonic plates or fragments of the lithosphere are near the end of their life cycle.

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Cook Inlet

Cook Inlet (Dena'ina: Tikahtnu) stretches from the Gulf of Alaska to Anchorage in south-central Alaska.

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Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

The Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) is a research institute that is sponsored jointly by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR) and the University of Colorado Boulder (CU).

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COPS (animated TV series)

COPS (Central Organization of Police Specialists) is an American animated television series released by DIC Entertainment, and distributed by Claster Television, Celebrity Home Entertainment and Golden Book Video.

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Coral Sea

The Coral Sea is a marginal sea of the South Pacific off the northeast coast of Australia, and classified as an interim Australian bioregion.

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Corbin, Kentucky

Corbin is a home rule-class city in Whitley and Knox counties in the southeastern portion of the U.S. state of Kentucky.

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Coromandel Coast

The Coromandel Coast is the southeastern coast region of the Indian subcontinent, bounded by the Utkal Plains to the north, the Bay of Bengal to the east, the Kaveri delta to the south, and the Eastern Ghats to the west, extending over an area of about 22,800 square kilometres.

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Corona, Tennessee

Corona is an unincorporated community in Tipton County, Tennessee, United States.

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Corpse Party

is a survival horror, adventure, and dōjin soft video game series originally created by Makoto Kedōin and developed by Team GrisGris.

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Coruscant

Coruscant is a planet in the fictional Star Wars universe (in the Coruscant Subsector of the Corusca Sector of the Core Worlds).

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Cosmic Odyssey (documentary)

Cosmic Odyssey is a 2002 documentary television series about the cosmos, created by Avanti Pictures, narrated by William Shatner, and produced by Soapbox Entertainment for The Discovery Channel.

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Coulomb stress transfer

Coulomb stress transfer is a seismic-related geological process of stress changes to surrounding material caused by local discrete deformation events.

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Council of Seleucia

The Council of Seleucia was an early Christian church synod at Seleucia Isauria (now Silifke, Turkey).

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Countries affected by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami

This article lists the countries affected by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and the resulting tsunami in alphabetical order – for detailed information about each country affected by the earthquake and tsunami, see their individual articles.

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Covington, Tennessee

Covington is a city in central Tipton County, Tennessee, United States.

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Coyote Mountains

The Coyote Mountains are a small mountain range in San Diego and Imperial Counties in southern California.

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Creepmeter

A creepmeter is an instrument that monitors the slow surface displacement of an active geologic fault in the earth.

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CRESTA

CRESTA (Catastrophe Risk Evaluation and Standardizing Target Accumulations) was founded as a joint project of Swiss Reinsurance Company, Gerling-Konzern Globale Reinsurance Company, and Munich Reinsurance Company.

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Crisis

A crisis (from the Greek κρίσις - krisis; plural: "crises"; adjectival form: "critical") is any event that is going (or is expected) to lead to an unstable and dangerous situation affecting an individual, group, community, or whole society.

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Crisis camp

A crisis camp is a BarCamp gathering of IT professionals, software developers, and computer programmers to aid in the relief efforts of a major crisis such as those caused by earthquakes, floods, or hurricanes.

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Crisis management

Crisis management is the process by which an organization deals with a disruptive and unexpected event that threatens to harm the organization or its stakeholders.

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Critias (dialogue)

Critias (Κριτίας), one of Plato's late dialogues, recounts the story of the mighty island kingdom Atlantis and its attempt to conquer Athens, which failed due to the ordered society of the Athenians.

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Crush syndrome

Crush syndrome (also traumatic rhabdomyolysis or Bywaters' syndrome) is a medical condition characterized by major shock and renal failure after a crushing injury to skeletal muscle.

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Cryoseism

A cryoseism, also known as an ice quake or a frost quake, is a seismic event that may be caused by a sudden cracking action in frozen soil or rock saturated with water or ice.

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Cubagua

Cubagua or Isla de Cubagua is the smallest and least populated of the three islands constituting the Venezuelan state of Nueva Esparta, after Isla Margarita and Coche.

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Cuckoo, Virginia

Cuckoo is a small unincorporated community in Louisa County, Virginia, United States.

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Culpability

Culpability, or being culpable, is a measure of the degree to which an agent, such as a person, can be held morally or legally responsible for action and inaction.

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Cumaná

Cumaná is the capital of Venezuela's Sucre State. It is located east of Caracas. Cumaná was one of the first settlements founded by Europeans in mainland America and is the oldest continuously-inhabited, European-established settlement in the continent. Attacks by indigenous peoples meant it had to be refounded several times. The municipality of Sucre, which includes Cumaná, had a population of 358,919 at the 2011 Census; the latest estimate (as at mid 2016) is 423,546. The city, located at the mouth of the Manzanares River on the Caribbean coast in the Northeast coast of Venezuela, is home to one of five campuses of the Universidad de Oriente and a busy maritime port, home of one of the largest tuna fleets in Venezuela. The city is close to Mochima National Park a popular tourist beaches destination amongst Venezuelans. The city of Cumaná saw the birth of key heroes of and contributors to the Venezuelan independence movement: Antonio Jose de Sucre, the ‘Gran Mariscal de Ayacucho’, a leading general and President of Bolivia; as well as Brigadier General D. Juan Francisco Echeto. Cumaná is also the birthplace to eminent poets, writers and politicians like Andrés Eloy Blanco, an important figure in Latin-American literature and who later rose to the national political scene; as well as José Antonio Ramos Sucre, another distinguished poet and diplomat. Important scientists including Pehr Löefling from Sweden, Alexander von Humboldt from Germany and Aimé Bonpland from France did part of their experimental works and discoveries when visiting and living in Cumaná in the 18th century. The city is also home to a Toyota plant, which manufactures the Hilux and Toyota Fortuner.

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Cumbre Vieja

Cumbre Vieja (Old Summit) is an active although dormant volcanic ridge on the volcanic ocean island of La Palma in the Canary Islands, Spain, that erupted twice in the 20th century – in 1949, and again in 1971.

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Curtain Razor

Curtain Razor is a 1949 Looney Tunes short directed by Friz Freleng and starring Porky Pig.

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Cusco Cathedral

The Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption of the Virgin, also known as Cusco Cathedral, is the mother church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cusco.

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Cusco School

The Cusco School (Escuela Cuzqueña) or Cuzco School, was a Roman Catholic artistic tradition based in Cusco, Peru (the former capital of the Inca Empire) during the Colonial period, in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries.

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Cushing, Oklahoma

Cushing is a city in Payne County, Oklahoma, United States.

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Cutro

Cutro (Calabrian: Cùtru) is a town and comune in the province of Crotone, Calabria region, Italy.

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Cwmllynfell

Cwmllynfell is the name of a village, community and electoral ward in Neath Port Talbot county borough, Wales.

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Cyclone Vania

Tropical Cyclone Vania (RSMC Nadi designation 03F, JTWC designation 05P) was the third depression and first tropical cyclone of the 2010–11 South Pacific cyclone season.

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Cypress Street Viaduct

The Cypress Street Viaduct, often referred to as the Cypress Structure, was a 1.6 mile long, raised two-tier, multi-lane (four lanes per deck) freeway constructed of reinforced concrete that was originally part of the Nimitz Freeway (State Route 17, and later, Interstate 880) in Oakland, California.

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Cyrene, Libya

Cyrene (translit) was an ancient Greek and Roman city near present-day Shahhat, Libya.

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Dabbahu Volcano

Dabbahu Volcano (also Boina, Boyna or Moina) is an active volcano located in the remote Afar Region of Ethiopia.

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Daen Lao Range

The Daen Lao Range (ทิวเขาแดนลาว,; Loi La) is a mountain range of the Shan Hills in eastern Burma and northern Thailand.

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Daimajin

is the titular character from the Daimajin trilogy created by Daiei Film.

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Daisy Johnson

Daisy Johnson, also known as Quake, is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

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Dal Lake

Dal is a lake in Srinagar (Dal Lake is a misnomer as Dal in Kashmiri means lake), the summer capital of Jammu and Kashmir. The urban lake, which is the second largest in the state, is integral to tourism and recreation in Kashmir and is named the "Jewel in the crown of Kashmir" or "Srinagar's Jewel". The lake is also an important source for commercial operations in fishing and water plant harvesting.Pandit pp. 66–93 The shore line of the lake, is about, is encompassed by a boulevard lined with Mughal era gardens, parks, houseboats and hotels. Scenic views of the lake can be witnessed from the shore line Mughal gardens, such as Shalimar Bagh and Nishat Bagh built during the reign of Mughal Emperor Jahangir and from houseboats cruising along the lake in the colourful shikaras. During the winter season, the temperature sometimes reaches, freezing the lake. The lake covers an area of and is part of a natural wetland which covers, including its floating gardens. The floating gardens, known as "Rad" in Kashmiri, blossom with lotus flowers during July and August. The wetland is divided by causeways into four basins; Gagribal, Lokut Dal, Bod Dal and Nagin (although Nagin is also considered as an independent lake). Lokut-dal and Bod-dal each have an island in the centre, known as Rup Lank (or Char Chinari) and Sona Lank respectively. At present, the Dal and its Mughal gardens, Shalimar Bagh and the Nishat Bagh on its periphery are undergoing intensive restoration measures to fully address the serious eutrophication problems experienced by the lake. Massive investments of approximately US$275 million (11 billion) are being made by the Government of India to restore the lake to its original splendour.

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Dam

A dam is a barrier that stops or restricts the flow of water or underground streams.

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Dam failure

A dam is a barrier across flowing water that obstructs, directs or slows down the flow, often creating a reservoir, lake or impoundments.

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Damophon

Damophon (Δαμοφῶν; fl. 2nd century BC) was an ancient Greek sculptor of the Hellenistic period from Messene, who executed many statues for the people of Messene, Megalopolis, Aegium and other cities of Peloponnesus.

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Dancers of Delphi

The Dancers of Delphi, also known as the Acanthus Column, are three figures in high relief on top of an acanthus column found near the sanctuary of Pythian Apollo at Delphi.

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Darkest Africa

Darkest Africa (1936) is a Republic movie serial.

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Darkest Night (film)

Darkest Night is a 2012 independent film in the horror film genre, directed by Filipino Noel Tan and written and produced by American Russ Williams.

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Data loss

Data loss is an error condition in information systems in which information is destroyed by failures or neglect in storage, transmission, or processing.

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David A. Johnston

David Alexander Johnston (December 18, 1949 – May 18, 1980) was an American United States Geological Survey (USGS) volcanologist who was killed by the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens in Washington.

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David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA

The University of California, Los Angeles School of Medicine—known as the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA (DGSOM)—is an accredited medical school located in Los Angeles, California, USA.

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David H. Geiger

David H. Geiger (1935 – October 3, 1989) was an engineer who invented the air-supported fabric roof system that at the time of his death was in use at almost half the domed stadiums in the world.

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David Icke

David Vaughan Icke (born 29 April 1952) is an English writer and public speaker.

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David Leeson

David Leeson (born October 18, 1957, in Abilene, Texas) is a staff photographer for The Dallas Morning News.

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David Stevenson (engineer)

David Stevenson MICE FRSE FRSSA (11 January 1815 – 17 July 1886) was a Scottish lighthouse designer, who designed over thirty lighthouses in and around Scotland, and helped continue the great dynasty of lighthouse engineering founded by his father.

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Düren

Düren is a town in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, between Aachen and Cologne on the river Rur.

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De rerum natura

De rerum natura (On the Nature of Things) is a first-century BC didactic poem by the Roman poet and philosopher Lucretius (c. 99 BC – c. 55 BC) with the goal of explaining Epicurean philosophy to a Roman audience.

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Deanna Jo

The Deanna Jo is a small fireboat operated by the Alameda Fire Department.

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December 16

No description.

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December 1924

The following events occurred in December 1924.

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December 2015 Hindu Kush earthquake

The December 2015 Hindu Kush earthquake was a magnitude 6.3 earthquake that struck South Asia on 25 December 2015.

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December 23

No description.

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Deconstruction (building)

In the context of physical construction, deconstruction is the selective dismantlement of building components, specifically for re-use, repurposing, recycling, and waste management.

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Deep Core (film)

Deep Core is a 2000 American Action, Sci-Fi, Thriller film.

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Deep-focus earthquake

A deep-focus earthquake in seismology (also called a plutonic earthquake) is an earthquake with a hypocenter depth exceeding 300 km.

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Degei

In Fijian mythology, Degei (pronounced Ndengei), enshrined as a serpent, is the supreme god of Fiji.

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Deities of Slavic religion

Deities of Slavic religion, arranged in cosmological and functional groups, are inherited through mythology and folklore.

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Dekitate High School

is a Super Famicom video game that was released to an exclusively Japanese market in 1995 and was considered to be the first "high school simulation" video game to be released for the Super Famicom.

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Deluge (film)

Deluge is a 1933 American pre-Code apocalyptic, science fiction film released by RKO Radio Pictures, and directed by Felix E. Feist.

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Denali

Denali (also known as Mount McKinley, its former official name) is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of above sea level.

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Denholme Clough Fault

The Denholme Clough Fault is a small fault located in Denholme, England.

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Denudation

In geology, denudation involves the processes that cause the wearing away of the Earth's surface by moving water, by ice, by wind and by waves, leading to a reduction in elevation and in relief of landforms and of landscapes.

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Depth of focus (tectonics)

In seismology, the depth of focus or focal depth refers to the depth at which an earthquake occurs.

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Derek Keir

Derek Keir (born in Johannesburg, South Africa) has been an associate professor of geophysics at the University of Southampton since 2015.

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Design-basis event

A design basis event (DBE) is a postulated event used to establish the acceptable performance requirements of the structures, systems, and components, such that a Nuclear power plant can withstand the event and not endanger the health or safety of the plant operators or the wider public.

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Destructive testing

In destructive testing (or destructive physical analysis, DPA) tests are carried out to the specimen's failure, in order to understand a specimen's performance or material behaviour under different loads.

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Devastation Trail

Devastation Trail is a trail at Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park.

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Devil's Chimney (Gloucestershire)

For other landscape features of the same name see Devil's Chimney (disambiguation). The Devil's Chimney is a limestone rock formation that stands above a disused quarry in Leckhampton, near Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England.

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Devils Hole

Devils Hole is a geologic formation located within the Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge, in Nye County, Nevada, in the Southwestern United States.

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Devils Hole pupfish

The Devils Hole pupfish (Cyprinodon diabolis) is a species of fish native to Devils Hole (Nevada, U.S.), a geothermal aquifer-fed pool within a limestone cavern, in the Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge east of Death Valley.

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Dhul-Qarnayn

Dhul-Qarnayn, (ذو القرنين), or Zulqarnayn, "he of the two horns" (or figuratively “he of the two ages”), appears in Surah 18 verses 83-101 of the Quran as a figure empowered by Allah to erect a wall between mankind and Gog and Magog, the representation of chaos.

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Diablo Canyon earthquake vulnerability

Diablo Canyon (Nuclear) Power Plant, located in San Luis Obispo County California, was originally designed to withstand a 6.75 magnitude earthquake from four faults, including the nearby San Andreas and Hosgri faults, but was later upgraded to withstand a 7.5 magnitude quake.

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Diablo Canyon Power Plant

The Diablo Canyon Power Plant is an electricity-generating nuclear power plant near Avila Beach in San Luis Obispo County, California.

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Diagnosis: Murder

Diagnosis: Murder was an American comedy/mystery/medical crime drama television series starring Dick Van Dyke as Dr.

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Diamond Valley Lake

Diamond Valley Lake is a man-made off-stream reservoir located near Hemet, California, United States.

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Diaphragm (structural system)

In structural engineering, a diaphragm is a structural element that transmits lateral loads to the vertical resisting elements of a structure (such as shear walls or frames).

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Dibaj

Dibaj (ديباج, also Romanized as Dibadj; formerly known as Qal‘eh (Persian: قلعه), Chahārdeh, Chārdeh, and Chehārdeh) is a city in the Central District of Damghan County, Semnan Province, Iran.

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Dibsi Faraj

Dibsi Faraj is an archaeological site on the right bank of the Euphrates in Aleppo Governorate (Syria).

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Didier Sornette

Didier Sornette (born June 25, 1957 in Paris) is Professor on the Chair of Entrepreneurial Risks at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich) since March 2006.

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Digicel Haiti Earthquake Relief Fund

Digicel Haiti Earthquake Relief Fund was established by Digicel (the largest mobile telecommunications operator in the Caribbean) after the January 12 earthquake to raise funds for the recovery/relief efforts in Haiti.

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Digne-les-Bains

Digne-les-Bains, or simply and historically Digne (Occitan: Dinha (dei Banhs) in classical norm or Digno in Mistralian norm), is a commune of France, capital of the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department, and situated in the region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur.

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Dimitrios Trichopoulos

Dimitrios Trichopoulos (Δημήτριος Τριχόπουλος; December 9, 1938 – December 1, 2014), was a Mediterranean Diet expert and tobacco harms researcher.

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Dingbat (building)

A dingbat is a type of formulaic apartment building that flourished in the Sun Belt region of the United States in the 1950s and 1960s, a vernacular variation of shoebox style "stucco boxes".

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Dinosaur Island

Dinosaur Island is an island that has appeared in various comic book series published by DC Comics.

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Disaster

A disaster is a serious disruption, occurring over a relatively short time, of the functioning of a community or a society involving widespread human, material, economic or environmental loss and impacts, which exceeds the ability of the affected community or society to cope using its own resources.

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Disaster film

A disaster film or disaster movie is a film genre that has an impending or ongoing disaster as its subject and primary plot device.

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Disaster recovery plan

A disaster recovery plan (DRP) is a documented process or set of procedures to recover and protect a business IT infrastructure in the event of a disaster.

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Disaster research

Disaster research deals with conducting field and survey research on group, organizational and community preparation for, response to, and recovery from natural and technological disasters and other community-wide crises.

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Disaster response

Disaster response is the second phase of the disaster management cycle.

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Disaster!

Disaster!: A Major Motion Picture Ride...Starring You! was a dark ride attraction at Universal Studios Florida.

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Disasters Emergency Committee

The Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) is an umbrella group of UK charities which coordinates and launches collective appeals to raise funds to provide emergency aid and rapid relief to people caught up in disasters and humanitarian crises around the world.

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Discover Magazine (TV series)

Discover Magazine is a 1992-2000 documentary television series that aired on the Disney Channel from 1992-1994 and then on Discovery Channel from 1996-2000.

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Discovery Seamounts

Discovery Seamounts are a chain of seamounts in the Southern Atlantic Ocean, which include the Discovery Seamount.

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Disenchantment Bay

Disenchantment Bay extends southwest for 16 km (10 mi) from the mouth of Russell Fiord to Point Latouche, at the head of Yakutat Bay in Alaska.

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Dissipator (building design)

A dissipator is a device mounted among some sections of a building to reduce strains during an earthquake by slowing down the shaking of the building.

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District Meteorological Observatory

The, abbreviated to DMO, is a type of JMA and a part of its.

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Disturbance (ecology)

In biology, a disturbance is a temporary change in environmental conditions that causes a pronounced change in an ecosystem.

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Dobrá Voda, Trnava District

Dobrá Voda is a municipality of Trnava District in the Trnava region of Slovakia.

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Doctor Cyber

Doctor Cyber is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics publications and related media, traditionally as an adversary of the superhero Wonder Woman.

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Dodger Stadium

Dodger Stadium, occasionally called by the metonym Chavez Ravine, is a baseball park located in the Elysian Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, the home field to the Los Angeles Dodgers, the city's Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise.

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Doel Nuclear Power Station

The Doel Nuclear Power Station is one of two nuclear power plants in Belgium.

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Dog Star (short story)

"Dog Star" is a 1962.

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Don L. Anderson

Don Lynn Anderson (March 5, 1933 – December 2, 2014) was an American geophysicist who made significant contributions to the understanding of the origin, evolution, structure, and composition of Earth and other planets.

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Donald Duck universe

The Donald Duck universe is a fictional shared universe which is the setting of stories involving Disney cartoon character Donald Duck, as well as Daisy Duck, Huey, Dewey, and Louie, Scrooge McDuck, and many other characters.

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Doomed (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)

"Doomed" is the 11th episode of season 4 of the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

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Doomsday Preppers

Doomsday Preppers was an American reality television series that aired on the National Geographic Channel from 2011 to 2014.

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Doublet earthquake

Seismologists sometimes refer to a pair of similarly sized earthquake shocks that occur relatively closely spaced in time and location as an earthquake "doublet." This occurrence is distinct from the normal pattern of earthquake aftershocks.

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Doug Sutherland (American politician)

Doug Sutherland (born 1937), Republican, is the former Commissioner of Public Lands for the state of Washington.

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Drežniške Ravne

Drežniške Ravne (Raune di Dersenza) is a settlement in the Municipality of Kobarid in the Littoral region of Slovenia.

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Drunken trees

Drunken trees, tilted trees, or a drunken forest, is a stand of trees displaced from their normal vertical alignment.

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Dubh Artach

Dubh Artach is a remote skerry of basalt rock off the west coast of Scotland lying west of Colonsay and south-west of the Ross of Mull.

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Duck and cover

"Duck and cover" is a method of personal protection against the effects of a nuclear explosion.

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Durrës

Durrës (Durazzo,, historically known as Epidamnos and Dyrrachium, is the second most populous city of the Republic of Albania. The city is the capital of the surrounding Durrës County, one of 12 constituent counties of the country. By air, it is northwest of Sarandë, west of Tirana, south of Shkodër and east of Rome. Located on the Adriatic Sea, it is the country's most ancient and economic and historic center. Founded by Greek colonists from Corinth and Corfu under the name of Epidamnos (Επίδαμνος) around the 7th century BC, the city essentially developed to become significant as it became an integral part of the Roman Empire and its successor the Byzantine Empire. The Via Egnatia, the continuation of the Via Appia, started in the city and led across the interior of the Balkan Peninsula to Constantinople in the east. In the Middle Ages, it was contested between Bulgarian, Venetian and Ottoman dominions. Following the declaration of independence of Albania, the city served as the capital of the Principality of Albania for a short period of time. Subsequently, it was annexed by the Kingdom of Italy and Nazi Germany in the interwar period. Moreover, the city experienced a strong expansion in its demography and economic activity during the Communism in Albania. Durrës is served by the Port of Durrës, one of the largest on the Adriatic Sea, which connects the city to Italy and other neighbouring countries. Its most considerable attraction is the Amphitheatre of Durrës that is included on the tentative list of Albania for designation as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Once having a capacity for 20,000 people, it is the largest amphitheatre in the Balkan Peninsula.

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Dusky Canada goose

The dusky Canada goose (Branta canadensis occidentalis) is a subspecies of the Canada goose, along with six other subspecies.

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Earth

Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the only astronomical object known to harbor life.

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Earth Changes

The phrase "Earth Changes" was coined by the American psychic Edgar Cayce (1877-1945) to refer to the belief that the world would soon enter on a series of cataclysmic events causing major alterations in human life on the planet.

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Earth observation

Earth observation (EO) is the gathering of information about the physical, chemical, and biological systems of the planet via remote-sensing technologies, supplemented by Earth-surveying techniques, which encompasses the collection, analysis, and presentation of data.

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Earth Revealed: Introductory Geology

Earth Revealed: Introductory Geology, originally titled Earth Revealed, is a 26-part video instructional series covering the processes and properties of the physical Earth, with particular attention given to the scientific theories underlying geological principles.

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Earth science

Earth science or geoscience is a widely embraced term for the fields of natural science related to the planet Earth.

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Earth Watchers Center

Earth Watchers Center (EWC) is a non-profit environmental organization in Iran which has been functioning since September 2002.

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Earthquake (1974 film)

Earthquake is a 1974 American ensemble disaster film directed and produced by Mark Robson.

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Earthquake (disambiguation)

An earthquake is the result of a sudden release of energy in the Earth's crust (the outer layer) that creates seismic waves.

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Earthquake (Modern Family)

"Earthquake" is the third episode of the second season of the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) American sitcom, Modern Family and the 27th episode overall.

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Earthquake Baroque

Earthquake Baroque is a style of Baroque architecture found in the Philippines, which suffered destructive earthquakes during the 17th century and 18th century, where large public buildings, such as churches, were rebuilt in a Baroque style during the Spanish Colonial period in the country.

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Earthquake casualty estimation

Recent advances are improving the speed and accuracy of loss estimates immediately after earthquakes (within less than an hour) so that injured people may be rescued more efficiently.

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Earthquake cloud

Earthquake clouds are clouds claimed to be signs of imminent earthquakes.

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Earthquake duration magnitude

The concept of Earthquake Duration Magnitude - originally proposed by Bisztricsany in 1958 using surface waves only - is based on the realization that on a recorded earthquake seismogram, the total length of the seismic wavetrain - sometimes referred to as the CODA - reflects its size.

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Earthquake engineering

Earthquake engineering is an interdisciplinary branch of engineering that designs and analyzes structures, such as buildings and bridges, with earthquakes in mind.

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Earthquake environmental effects

Earthquake environmental effects are the effects caused by an earthquake on the natural environment, including surface faulting, 2012 Emilia, Northern Italy, earthquakes # '''Secondary effects''': mostly this is the intensity of the ground shaking (e.g., landslides, liquefaction, etc.). The importance of a tool to measure earthquake Intensity was already outlined early in the 1990s.Serva, L. (1994). The effects on the ground in the intensity scales, Terra Nova, 6, 414–416. In 2007 the Environmental Seismic Intensity scale (ESI scale) was released, a new seismic intensity scale based only on the characteristics, size and areal distribution of earthquake environmental effects. A huge amount of data about associated with modern, historical and paleoearthquakes worldwide occurred is available on the EEE Catalogue, a infrastructure developed in the framework of the INQUA TERPRO Commission on Paleoseismology and Active Tectonics.

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Earthquake Hazards Reduction Act of 1977

Earthquake Hazards Reduction Act of 1977 is a statute formulating a national policy to diminish the perils of earthquakes in the United States.

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Earthquake in New York

Earthquake in New York is an American television movie that aired on Fox Family Channel on Sunday October 11, 1998 from 8:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. ET.

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Earthquake insurance

Earthquake insurance is a form of property insurance that pays the policyholder in the event of an earthquake that causes damage to the property.

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Earthquake location

The primary purpose of a seismometer is to locate the initiating points of earthquake epicenters.

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Earthquake prediction

Earthquake prediction is a branch of the science of seismology concerned with the specification of the time, location, and magnitude of future earthquakes within stated limits, and particularly "the determination of parameters for the next strong earthquake to occur in a region.

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Earthquake preparedness

Earthquake preparedness is a set of measures taken at the individual, organisational and societal level to minimise the effects of an earthquake.

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Earthquake Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority

Earthquake Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority (reporting name: ERRA), is an independent, autonomous, and federal institution of Pakistan tasked and responsible for the operational planning, coordinating, monitoring, and regulating the reconstruction and rehabilitation operations in the earthquake affected areas of the country.

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Earthquake Relief and Rehabilitation Project

Earthquake Relief and Rehabilitation Project (ERRP) was a project undertaken by the Sarhad Rural Support Programme (SRSP) for the relief and rehabilitation of the people of Hazara, Pakistan following the devastating earthquake of 8th October 2005 in the region.

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Earthquake rotational loading

Earthquake rotational loading indicates the excitation of structures due to the torsional and rocking components of seismic actions.

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Earthquake scenario

Earthquake scenario is a planning tool to determine the appropriate emergency responses or building systems in areas exposed to earthquake hazards.

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Earthquake shaking table

There are several different experimental techniques that can be used to test the response of structures and soil or rock slopes to verify their seismic performance, one of which is the use of an earthquake shaking table (a shaking table, or simply shake table).

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Earthquake swarm

Earthquake swarms are events where a local area experiences sequences of many earthquakes striking in a relatively short period of time.

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Earthquake valve

An earthquake valve (or seismic valve) is an automatic method to shut off the low pressure regulated gas supply to a structure during a major earthquake and/or if a pipe is broken.

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Earthquake warning system

An earthquake warning system is a system of accelerometers, seismometers, communication, computers, and alarms that is devised for regional notification of a substantial earthquake while it is in progress.

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Earthquake weather

Earthquake weather is a type of weather popularly believed to precede earthquakes.

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Earthquake zones of India

The Indian subcontinent has a history of devastating earthquakes.

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Earthquake-resistant structures

Earthquake-resistant structures are structures designed to protect buildings from earthquakes.

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Earthshaker! (pinball)

Earthshaker! is a pinball game designed by Pat Lawlor and released by Williams Electronics in 1989.

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East African Rift

The East African Rift (EAR) is an active continental rift zone in East Africa.

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East Bay Vivarium

The East Bay Vivarium is a vivarium located in Berkeley, California in the United States.

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East Cape Lighthouse

East Cape Lighthouse is a lighthouse sited on Otiki Hill above East Cape, the easternmost point on the North Island of New Zealand.

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East Haven, Connecticut

East Haven is a town in New Haven County, Connecticut, in the United States.

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East Island / Whangaokeno

East Island / Whangaokeno is a small, Rodent Invasion Project, Department of Statistics, University of Auckland.

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East Mountain (Massachusetts)

East Mountain is a traprock mountain ridge located in the Connecticut River Valley of Massachusetts.

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Eastern Tennessee Seismic Zone

The Eastern Tennessee Seismic Zone (ETSZ), also known as the East Tennessee Seismic Zone and the Southern Appalachian Seismic Zone, is a geographic band stretching from northeastern Alabama to southwestern Virginia that is subject to frequent small earthquakes.

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Ebenezer Presbyterian Church, Osu

The Ebenezer Presbyterian Church, formerly known as the Basel Mission Church, Christiansborg, is a historic Protestant church located in the suburb of Osu in Accra, Ghana.

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Eco-terrorism in fiction

Eco-terrorism has been a topic of fictional books, television programmes and films.

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Economy of Istanbul

Economy of Istanbul covers the issues related to the economy of the city of Istanbul, Turkey.

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Edith Irvine

Lizzie Edith Irvine (7 January 1884 – 1949) wan an American photographer who documented the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.

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Edmund Creffield

Franz Edmund Creffield, commonly known as Edmund Creffield and by the pseudonym Joshua (c. 1870–1906), was a German-American religious leader who founded a movement in Corvallis, Oregon, which became known locally as the "Holy Rollers".

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Edmund Otis Hovey

Edmund Otis Hovey (September 15, 1862 – September 27, 1924) was an American geologist specialising in volcanoes, earthquakes and meteorites.

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Education in Ecuador

The Ecuadorian Constitution requires that all children attend school until they achieve a “basic level of education,” which is estimated at nine school years.

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Educational toy

Educational toys (sometimes called "instructive toys") are objects of play, generally designed for children, which are expected to stimulate learning.

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Edward L. Beach Sr.

Edward Latimer Beach Sr. (June 30, 1867December 20, 1943) was a United States Navy officer and author.

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Edward Pigot

Edward Francis Pigot (18 September 1858 – 22 May 1929) was an Irish-born Australian Jesuit priest, seismologist and astronomer.

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Effect of the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake on Indonesia

Indonesia was the first country to be seriously affected by the earthquake and tsunami created by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake on 26 December 2004, swamping the northern and western coastal areas of Sumatra, and the smaller outlying islands off Sumatra.

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Effective stress

Effective stress is a force that keeps a collection of particles rigid.

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Effects of nuclear explosions

The energy released from a nuclear weapon detonated in the troposphere can be divided into four basic categories.

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El Hierro

El Hierro, nicknamed Isla del Meridiano (the "Meridian Island"), is the smallest and farthest south and west of the Canary Islands (an Autonomous Community of Spain), in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Africa, with a population of 10,162 (2003).

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El Mollar

El Mollar is a settlement in Tucumán Province in northern Argentina.

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El Reno, Oklahoma

El Reno is a city in and county seat of Canadian County, Oklahoma, United States.

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El Salvador

El Salvador, officially the Republic of El Salvador (República de El Salvador, literally "Republic of The Savior"), is the smallest and the most densely populated country in Central America.

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El Salvador Project

The El Salvador Reconstruction and Development Project is a charitable volunteer project from Imperial College London's Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering which was launched in reaction to two major earthquakes that struck the country of El Salvador in 2001.

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El Supremo (wrestler)

Salvador Cuevas Ramírez (July 8, 1942 – May 3, 2010) was a Mexican Luchador, or professional wrestler, known under the ring name El Supremo.

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El Tatio

El Tatio is a geyser field located within the Andes Mountains of northern Chile at 4,320 meters above mean sea level.

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El Tigre Fault

The El Tigre Fault is a 120 km long, roughly north-south trending, major strike-slip fault located in the Western Precordillera in Argentina.

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Elastic-rebound theory

In geology, the elastic-rebound theory is an explanation for how energy is released during an earthquake.

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Electricity sector in Italy

The electricity sector in Italy describes the production, sale, and use of electrical power in Italy.

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Electricity sector in Japan

The electric power industry in Japan covers the generation, transmission, distribution, and sale of electric energy in Japan.

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Elgin Marbles

The Elgin Marbles (/ˈel gin/), also known as the Parthenon Marbles, are a collection of Classical Greek marble sculptures made under the supervision of the architect and sculptor Phidias and his assistants.

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Eli Stone

Eli Stone is an American legal comedy-drama TV series, named for its title character.

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Elis (regional unit)

Elis or Ilia (Ηλεία, Ileia) is one of the regional units of Greece.

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Emagines

Emagines is a project, funded since 2006 by the German Research Foundation (DFG), for digitizing the large and partially very old collections of images held by the German Archaeological Institute (DAI).

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Emergency

An emergency is a situation that poses an immediate risk to health, life, property, or environment.

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Emergency Broadcast System

The Emergency Broadcast System (EBS), occasionally called the Emergency Broadcasting System and sometimes called the Emergency Action Notification System (EANS), was an emergency warning system used in the United States.

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Emergency communication system

An emergency communication system (ECS) is any system (typically computer-based) that is organized for the primary purpose of supporting one-way and two-way communication of emergency messages between both individuals and groups of individuals.

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Emergency evacuation

Emergency evacuation is the urgent immediate egress or escape of people away from an area that contains an imminent threat, an ongoing threat or a hazard to lives or property.

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Emergency management

Emergency management or disaster management is the organization and management of the resources and responsibilities for dealing with all humanitarian aspects of emergencies (preparedness, response, and recovery).

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Emergency Management Institute

The Emergency Management Institute (EMI) of the United States Federal Emergency Management Agency serves as the national focal point for the development and delivery of emergency management training to enhance the capabilities of state, territorial, local, and tribal government officials; volunteer organizations; FEMA's disaster workforce; other Federal agencies; and the public and private sectors to minimize the impact of disasters and emergencies on the American public.

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Emergency population warning

An emergency population warning is a method whereby local, regional, or national authorities can contact members of the public en masse to warn them of an impending emergency.

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Emergency Responder Health Monitoring and Surveillance

Emergency Responder Health Monitoring and Surveillance (ERHMS) is a health monitoring and surveillance framework developed by the National Response Team, an organization of 15 federal departments and agencies responsible for coordinating emergency preparedness and response.

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Emilio Rosenblueth

Emilio Rosenblueth Deutsch (1926–1994) was a Mexican engineer who devoted himself to the research of seismic events, and in particular to study the behavior of buildings against earthquakes and other seismic activity.

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Emperor Ingyō

was the 19th emperor of Japan,Imperial Household Agency (Kunaichō):; retrieved 2013-8-28.

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Empress Suiko

(554 – 15 April 628) was the 33rd monarch of Japan,Imperial Household Agency (Kunaichō): according to the traditional order of succession.

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Emygdius

Saint Emygdius (Latin: Emidius, Æmedius, Emigdius, Hemigidius; Sant'Emidio; c. 279 – c. 309 AD) was a Christian bishop who is venerated as a martyr.

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Encantadia

Encantadia is a Filipino fantasy franchise produced and published by GMA Network.

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Encounters (TV series)

Encounters: The Hidden Truth was an hour-long TV series that featured real-life stories of paranormal phenomena.

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Encyclopedia (TV series)

Encyclopedia is a television series created by the HBO Network and the for-profit branch of the Children's Television Workshop (CTW) (now known as Sesame Workshop), Distinguished Productions, Inc.

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Energetically modified cement

Energetically modified cements (EMC) are a class of cementitious materials made from pozzolans (e.g. fly ash, volcanic ash, pozzolana), silica sand, blast furnace slag, or Portland cement (or blends of these ingredients).

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Energy

In physics, energy is the quantitative property that must be transferred to an object in order to perform work on, or to heat, the object.

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Energy in Ohio

The energy sector of Ohio consists of thousands of companies and cities representing the oil, natural gas, coal, solar, wind energy, fuel cell, biofuel, geothermal, hydroelectric, and other related industries.

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Engativá

Engativá is the 10th locality of Bogotá.

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Engineering geology

Engineering geology is the application of the geology to engineering study for the purpose of assuring that the geological factors regarding the location, design, construction, operation and maintenance of engineering works are recognized and accounted for.

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Enola earthquake swarm

The Enola earthquake swarm was a series of earthquakes in 2001 that centered on Central Arkansas.

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Enterprise, Utah

Enterprise is a city in Washington County, Utah, United States.

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Enuma Anu Enlil

Enuma Anu Enlil (The Assyrian Dictionary, volume 7 (I/J) – inūma, The Oriental Institute, Chicago 1960, s. 160. When the gods Anu and Enlil), abbreviated EAE, is a major series of 68 or 70 tablets (depending on the recension) dealing with Babylonian astrology.

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Environment of Virginia

The natural environment of Virginia encompasses the physical geography and biology of the U.S. state of Virginia.

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Environmental hazard

An environmental hazard is a substance, a state or an event which has the potential to threaten the surrounding natural environment / or adversely affect people's health, including pollution and natural disasters such as storms and earthquakes Any single or combination of toxic chemical, biological, or physical agents in the environment, resulting from human activities or natural processes, that may impact the health of exposed subjects, including pollutants such as heavy metals, pesticides, biological contaminants, toxic waste, industrial and home chemicals.

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Environmental impact of hydraulic fracturing

Hydraulic fracturing has the potential to cause fugitive methane emissions, air pollution, water contamination, and noise pollution.

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Environmental impact of hydraulic fracturing in the United States

Environmental impact of hydraulic fracturing in the United States has been an issue of public concern, and includes the potential contamination of ground and surface water, methane emissions, air pollution, migration of gases and hydraulic fracturing chemicals and radionuclides to the surface, the potential mishandling of solid waste, drill cuttings, increased seismicity and associated effects on human and ecosystem health.

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Environmental impact of nuclear power

The environmental impact of nuclear power results from the nuclear fuel cycle, operation, and the effects of nuclear accidents.

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Environmental issues in Ethiopia

As in many neighboring countries, most environmental issues in Ethiopia relate to deforestation and endangered species.

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Environmental issues in Haiti

Environmental issues in Haiti include a severe deforestation problem, overpopulation, a lack of sanitation, natural disasters, and food insecurity.

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Environmental issues in Indonesia

Environmental issues in Indonesia are associated with the country's high population density and rapid industrialisation, and they are often given a lower priority due to high poverty levels, and an under-resourced governance.

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Environmental issues in Pakistan

Environmental issues in Pakistan include deforestation, air pollution, water pollution, noise pollution, climate change, pesticide misuse, soil erosion, natural disasters and desertification.

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Environmental issues in Tehran

Tehran, the capital city of Iran, suffers from a severe air pollution, and it is located near three major fault lines, while being the most populous region of the country.

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Environmental issues in Venezuela

Environmental issues in Venezuela include natural factors such as earthquakes, floods, rockslides, mudslides, and periodic droughts.

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Environmental Science Services Administration

The Environmental Science Services Administration (ESSA) was a United States Federal executive agency created in 1965 as part of a reorganization of the United States Department of Commerce.

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Environmental Seismic Intensity scale

The Environmental Seismic Intensity scale (ESI 2007) is a seismic scale used for measuring the intensity of an earthquake on the basis of the effects of the earthquake on the natural environment (Earthquake Environmental Effects).

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Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two

Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two (known as Epic Mickey: The Power of 2 in Europe) is a platform video game and the sequel to Epic Mickey.

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Epicenter

The epicenter, epicentre or epicentrum in seismology is the point on the Earth's surface directly above a hypocenter or focus, the point where an earthquake or an underground explosion originates.

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Episodic tremor and slip

Episodic tremor and slip (ETS) is a seismological phenomenon observed in some subduction zones that is characterized by non-earthquake seismic rumbling, or tremor, and slow slip along the plate interface.

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EQ

EQ may refer to.

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Erasmo Janer Gironella

José Erasmo Janer Gironella (1833-1911) was a Spanish entrepreneur and politician.

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Erik the Viking

Erik the Viking is a 1989 British comedy-fantasy film written and directed by Terry Jones.

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Erosion and tectonics

The interaction between erosion and tectonics has been a topic of debate since the early 1990s.

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ESG Solutions

ESG Solutions (Engineering Seismology Group or ESG) is a geophysical products and services company specializing in microseismic monitoring.

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Essex County Fire and Rescue Service

Essex County Fire and Rescue Service (ECFRS) is the statutory fire and rescue service for the county of Essex in the east of England, and is one of the largest fire services in the country, covering an area of 1,338 square miles and a population of over 1.7 million people.

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Et-Tell

Et-Tell is an archaeological site in the West Bank that is popularly thought to be the biblical city of Ai.

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Ethel Bellamy

Ethel Frances Butwell Bellamy (17 November 1881 – 7 December 1960) was an English astronomical computer and seismologist.

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Ethiopian xeric grasslands and shrublands

The Ethiopian xeric grasslands and shrublands ecoregion is a semi-desert strip on or near the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden coasts in Eritrea, Ethiopia, Djibouti and Somalia.

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Euan MacKie

Euan Wallace MacKie (born 10 February 1936) is a British archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Euboea

Euboea or Evia; Εύβοια, Evvoia,; Εὔβοια, Eúboia) is the second-largest Greek island in area and population, after Crete. The narrow Euripus Strait separates it from Boeotia in mainland Greece. In general outline it is a long and narrow island; it is about long, and varies in breadth from to. Its geographic orientation is from northwest to southeast, and it is traversed throughout its length by a mountain range, which forms part of the chain that bounds Thessaly on the east, and is continued south of Euboea in the lofty islands of Andros, Tinos and Mykonos. It forms most of the regional unit of Euboea, which also includes Skyros and a small area of the Greek mainland.

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Eureka (Oz)

Eureka is a white kitten found by Dorothy Gale's Uncle Henry, that he gives to her telling her that the name means "I have found it!" She is introduced in Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz.

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Eureka High School (California)

Eureka High School or EHS, formerly Eureka Senior High School, is a public high school in Eureka, California.

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Eurocode 8: Design of structures for earthquake resistance

In the eurocode series of European standards (EN) related to construction, Eurocode 8: Design of structures for earthquake resistance (abbreviated EN 1998 or, informally, EC 8) describes how to design structures in seismic zone, using the limit state design philosophy.

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Eurocodes

The eurocodes are the ten European standards (EN; harmonised technical rules) specifying how structural design should be conducted within the European Union (EU).

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European macroseismic scale

The European macroseismic scale (EMS) is the basis for evaluation of seismic intensity in European countries and is also used in a number of countries outside Europe.

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Eurymedon Bridge (Aspendos)

The Eurymedon Bridge was a late Roman bridge over the river Eurymedon (modern Köprüçay), near Aspendos, in Pamphylia in southern Anatolia.

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Eusebia (empress)

Eusebia (†360, full name Flavia Aurelia Eusebia, sometimes known as Aurelia Eusebia) was the second wife of Emperor Constantius II.

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Evangelical Methodist Church in the Philippine Islands

The Evangelical Methodist Church in the Philippine Islands (Iglesia Evangelica Metodista en las Islas Filipinas.) is a Methodist Christian denomination.

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Ewald Heer

Ewald Heer (July 28, 1930) is an aerospace engineer, author and professor who has worked on robotics, artificial intelligence (AI), and large space structures.

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Exit (video game)

Exit is a 2005 action/puzzle video game that was developed and published by Taito for the PlayStation Portable.

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Expansion joint

An expansion joint or movement joint is an assembly designed to safely absorb the temperature-induced expansion and contraction of construction materials, to absorb vibration, to hold parts together, or to allow movement due to ground settlement or earthquakes.

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External risk

External risks are generally something that is uncontrollable by the first party.

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Extinction event

An extinction event (also known as a mass extinction or biotic crisis) is a widespread and rapid decrease in the biodiversity on Earth.

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Extreme Loading for Structures

Extreme Loading for Structures (ELS) is commercial structural-analysis software based on the applied element method (AEM) for the automatic tracking and propagation of cracks, separation of elements, element collision, and collapse of structures under extreme loads.

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Eyjafjallajökull

Eyjafjallajökull (English Island Mountain Glacier, is one of the smaller ice caps of Iceland, north of Skógar and west of Mýrdalsjökull. The ice cap covers the caldera of a volcano with a summit elevation of. The volcano has erupted relatively frequently since the last glacial period, most recently in 2010.

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Ezekiel Stone Wiggins

Ezekiel Stone Wiggins (December 4, 1839 – August 14, 1910) was a Canadian weather and earthquake predictor known as the "Ottawa Prophet".

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Ștefania Mărăcineanu

Ștefania Mărăcineanu (June 18, 1882 – 1944) was a Romanian physicist.

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Fa of Xia

Emperor Fa (Chinese: 發) was the 16th ruler of the Xia Dynasty, father of the infamous Jie who brought the dynasty to its end.

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Facatativá

Facatativá is a city and municipality in the Cundinamarca Department, located about 18 miles (31 km) northwest of Bogotá, Colombia and 2,586 meters above sea level.

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Face Off (season 7)

The seventh season of the Syfy reality television series Face Off premiered on July 22, 2014.

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Faial Island

Faial Island, also known in English as Fayal, is a Portuguese island of the Central Group (Portuguese: Grupo Central) of the Azores.

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Falcon Nest

Falcon Nest is a detached residence in Prescott, Arizona, that is the tallest single family home in North America at.

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Falehau

Falehau is a village on the island of Niuatoputapu in Tonga.

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Farmington Mountain

Farmington Mountain,, is a traprock ridge located southwest of Hartford, Connecticut in the town of Farmington.

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Fault (geology)

In geology, a fault is a planar fracture or discontinuity in a volume of rock, across which there has been significant displacement as a result of rock-mass movement.

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Fault mechanics

Fault mechanics is a field of study that investigates the behavior of geologic faults.

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Fault scarp

A fault scarp is a small step or offset on the ground surface where one side of a fault has moved vertically with respect to the other.

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Features, events, and processes

Features, Events, and Processes (FEP) are terms used in the field of radioactive waste management to define relevant scenarios for safety assessment studies.

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February 1927

The following events occurred in February 1927.

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February 1963

The following events occurred in February 1963.

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February 20

No description.

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Federal Emergency Management Agency

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is an agency of the United States Department of Homeland Security, initially created by Presidential Reorganization Plan No.

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Federal Reserve Bank Building (Seattle)

The Federal Reserve Bank Building, also known as the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Seattle Branch, served as the offices of the Seattle branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco for over 50 years, from 1951 to 2008.

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Federal Signal Modulator

Modulator Speaker Arrays are electronic warning devices produced by Federal Signal Corporation that are used to alert the public about tornadoes, severe weather, earthquakes, fires, lahars or any other disaster.

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FEMA Photo Library

The FEMA Photo Library is an online gallery of photos compiled by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) of the United States, containing more than 37,000 disaster related photographs taken since 1980.

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Ferdinand André Fouqué

Ferdinand André Fouqué (21 June 1828 – 7 March 1904) was a French geologist and petrologist.

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Ferdinand Verbiest

Father Ferdinand Verbiest (9 October 1623 – 28 January 1688) was a Flemish Jesuit missionary in China during the Qing dynasty.

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Fernandina Island

Fernandina Island (formerly known in English as Narborough Island, after John Narborough) is the third largest, and youngest, island of the Galápagos Islands.

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Ferndale Museum

The Ferndale Museum, located in Ferndale, California, houses and exhibits artifacts, documents and papers from settlement during the California Gold Rush to the present including an active Bosch-Omori seismograph.

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Ferndale, California

Ferndale is a city in Humboldt County, California, United States.

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Ferrocement

Ferrocement or ferro-cement (also called thin-shell concrete or ferro-concrete) is a system of reinforced mortar or plaster (lime or cement, sand and water) applied over layer of metal mesh, woven expanded-metal or metal-fibers and closely spaced thin steel rods such as rebar.

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Fessenheim Nuclear Power Plant

The Fessenheim Nuclear Power Plant is located in the Fessenheim commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in northeastern France, north east of the Mulhouse urban area, within of the border with Germany, and approximately from Switzerland.

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Fifth-century Athens

Fifth-century Athens is the Greek city-state of Athens in the time from 480 BC-404 BC.

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Fillmore Towne Theatre

Fillmore Towne Theatre is located at 338 Central Avenue in Fillmore, California and is a central landmark of the town.

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Fimmvörðuháls

Fimmvörðuháls ("five cairns pass") is the area between the glaciers Eyjafjallajökull and Mýrdalsjökull in southern Iceland.

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Fish kill

The term fish kill, known also as fish die-off, refers to a localized die-off of fish populations which may also be associated with more generalized mortality of aquatic life.

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Flash evaporation

Flash (or partial) evaporation is the partial vapor that occurs when a saturated liquid stream undergoes a reduction in pressure by passing through a throttling valve or other throttling device.

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Flash Gordon: The Greatest Adventure of All

Flash Gordon: The Greatest Adventure of All is a 1982 animated television film produced by Filmation and written by Samuel A. Peeples, whose credits included the original Star Trek series.

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Flat slab subduction

Flat slab subduction is characterized by a low subduction angle (A slab refers to the subducting lower plate. Although, some would characterize flat slab subduction as any shallowly dipping lower plate as in western Mexico. Flat slab subduction is associated with the pinching out of the asthenosphere, an inland migration of arc magmatism (magmatic sweep), and an eventual cessation of arc magmatism. The coupling of the flat slab to the upper plate is thought to change the style of deformation occurring on the upper plate's surface and form basement-cored uplifts like the Rocky Mountains. The flat slab also may hydrate the lower continental lithosphere and be involved in the formation of economically important ore deposits. During the subduction, a flat slab itself may be deformed, or buckling, causing sedimentary hiatus in marine sediments on the slab. The failure of a flat slab is associated with ignimbritic volcanism and the reverse migration of arc volcanism. Multiple working hypotheses about the cause of flat slabs are subduction of thick, buoyant oceanic crust (15–20 km) and trench rollback accompanying a rapidly overriding upper plate and enhanced trench suction. The west coast of South America has two of the largest flat slab subduction zones. Flat slab subduction is occurring at 10% of subduction zones.

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Flight cancellation and delay

A flight delay is when an airline flight takes off and/or lands later than its scheduled time.

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Flinn–Engdahl regions

The Flinn–Engdahl regions (or F–E regions) are a division of the Earth into seismic zones.

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Flood

A flood is an overflow of water that submerges land that is usually dry.

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Flood stage

Flood stage is the level at which a body of water's surface has risen to a sufficient level to cause sufficient inundation of areas that are not normally covered by water, causing an inconvenience or a threat to life and/or property.

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Focal mechanism

The focal mechanism of an earthquake describes the deformation in the source region that generates the seismic waves.

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Folger Coffee Company Building

The Folgers Coffee Company Building is a historic mid-rise office building located at 101 Howard Street in the Financial District, San Francisco.

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Folklore of Romania

A feature of Romanian culture is the special relationship between folklore and the learned culture, determined by two factors.

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Force majeure

Force majeure – or vis major (Latin) – meaning "superior force", also known as cas fortuit (French) or casus fortuitus (Latin) "chance occurrence, unavoidable accident", is a common clause in contracts that essentially frees both parties from liability or obligation when an extraordinary event or circumstance beyond the control of the parties, such as a war, strike, riot, crime, or an event described by the legal term act of God (hurricane, flood, earthquake, volcanic eruption, etc.), prevents one or both parties from fulfilling their obligations under the contract.

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Forced Labour Convention

The Forced Labour Convention, the full title of which is the Convention Concerning Forced or Compulsory Labour, 1930 (No.29), is one of eight ILO fundamental conventions of the International Labour Organization.

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Forces of Nature (2004 film)

Forces of Nature is an IMAX film about strong forces that shape the Earth's surface.

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Foreshock

A foreshock is an earthquake that occurs before a larger seismic event (the mainshock) and is related to it in both time and space.

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Fort Pilar

The Real Fuerza de Nuestra Señora del Pilar de Zaragoza (Royal Fort of Our Lady of the Pillar of Zaragoza), also Fort Pilar, is a 17th-century military defense fortress built by the Spanish colonial government in Zamboanga City, Philippines.

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Fortifications of Kotor

The fortifications of Kotor (Italian: Cattaro) are an integrated historical fortification system that protected the medieval town of Kotor containing ramparts, towers, citadels, gates, bastions, forts, cisterns, a castle, and ancillary buildings and structures.

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Fortunatus of Casei

Saint Fortunatus of Casei (San Fortunato di Casei) is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church.

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Fowler Mountain

Fowler Mountain, est.

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Fox Islands (Alaska)

The Fox Islands are a group of islands in the eastern Aleutian Islands of the U.S. state of Alaska.

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Fracture mechanics

Fracture mechanics is the field of mechanics concerned with the study of the propagation of cracks in materials.

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Francesco I Gattilusio

Francesco I Gattilusio (died 6 August 1384) was the first member of the Gattilusio family to rule the Aegean island of Lesbos as vassal of the Byzantine emperor.

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Francesco II Gattilusio

Francesco II Gattilusio (born Giacomo Gattilusio or Jacopo c. 1365 – 26 October 1403/1404) was the second Gattilusio lord of Lesbos, from 1384 to his death.

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Francis Borgia, 4th Duke of Gandía

Saint Francis Borgia, S.J., 4th Duke of Gandía (Valencian: Francesc de Borja, Francisco de Borja) (28 October 1510 – 30 September 1572) was a great-grandson of Pope Alexander VI, a Grandee of Spain, a Spanish Jesuit, and third Superior General of the Society of Jesus.

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Francis Solanus

Francisco Solano y Jiménez, O.F.M., (also known as Francis Solanus) (10 March 1549 – 14 July 1610) was a Spanish friar and missionary in South America, belonging to the Order of Friars Minor (the Franciscans), and is honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church.

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Frank Gaffney

Frank J. Gaffney Jr. (born 5 April 1953) is an American counter-jihad conspiracy theorist and the founder and president of the Center for Security Policy.

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Fred B. Walters

Fred Walters is a broadcast executive and journalist who was inducted into the Hall of Fame of the Philadelphia Broadcast Pioneers and in 2013 received the Lifetime Achievement Award of the Pennsylvania Associated Press Broadcasters Association.

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Frederick Inglefield

Admiral Sir Frederick Samuel Inglefield, (29 April 1854 – 8 August 1921) was a Royal Navy officer who served as Fourth Sea Lord, was appointed as a Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown of Italy and commanded auxiliary patrol forces in World War I. After retirement he was a Deputy Lieutenant of Derbyshire.

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Frenchman Mountain

Frenchman Mountain is located east of Las Vegas in the U.S. state of Nevada.

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Frequency response

Frequency response is the quantitative measure of the output spectrum of a system or device in response to a stimulus, and is used to characterize the dynamics of the system.

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Freshmen (comics)

Freshmen is a comic book series published by Top Cow, co-created by Seth Green and Hugh Sterbakov.

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Fukuoka

is the capital city of Fukuoka Prefecture, situated on the northern shore of Japanese island Kyushu.

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Fulton, Tennessee

Fulton is a rural unincorporated community in Lauderdale County, Tennessee.

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Fusakichi Omori

was a pioneer Japanese seismologist, second chairman of seismology at the Imperial University of Tokyo and president of the Japanese Imperial Earthquake Investigation Committee.

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G. Bakthavathsalam

G.

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Gagamba

Gagamba (meaning “spider”), subtitled The Spider Man, is a novel by award-winning and most widely translated, goodreads.com, nationalbookstore.com Filipino author F. Sionil José.

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Galathea expeditions

The Galathea expeditions comprise a series of three Danish ship-based scientific research expeditions in the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries, carried out with material assistance from the Royal Danish Navy and, with regard to the second and third expeditions, under the auspices of the Danish Expedition Foundation.

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Ganja, Azerbaijan

Ganja (Gəncə) is Azerbaijan's second largest city, with a population of around 331,400.

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Garibaldi Volcanic Belt

The Garibaldi Volcanic Belt is a northwest-southeast trending volcanic chain in the Pacific Ranges of the Coast Mountains that extends from Watts Point in the south to the Ha-Iltzuk Icefield in the north.

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Garlock Fault

The Garlock Fault is a left-lateral strike-slip fault running northeast-southwest along the north margins of the Mojave Desert of Southern California, for much of its length along the southern base of the Tehachapi Mountains.

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Garrotxa Volcanic Zone Natural Park

The Garrotxa Volcanic Zone Natural Park (Catalan: Parc Natural de la Zona Volcànica de la Garrotxa) is a natural park area covering a Holocene volcanic field (also known as the Olot volcanic field) in Catalonia, northeastern Spain.

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Geb

Geb was the Egyptian god of the Earth and later a member of the Ennead of Heliopolis.

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Gem Valley

Gem Valley is a rural valley in southeast Idaho, in the United States, so named for its local gemstones which can be found throughout the valley.

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Genesis II (film)

Genesis II is a 1973 American television film pilot created and produced by Gene Roddenberry and directed by John Llewellyn Moxey.

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Genie (feral child)

Genie (born 1957) is the pseudonym for an American feral child who was a victim of severe abuse, neglect, and social isolation.

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Genpatsu-shinsai

, meaning nuclear power plant earthquake disaster (from the two words Genpatsu – nuclear power plant – and Shinsai – earthquake disaster) is a term which was coined by Japanese seismologist Professor Katsuhiko Ishibashi in 1997.

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Geodynamics

Geodynamics is a subfield of geophysics dealing with dynamics of the Earth.

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Geographica

The Geographica (Ancient Greek: Γεωγραφικά Geōgraphiká), or Geography, is an encyclopedia of geographical knowledge, consisting of 17 'books', written in Greek by Strabo, an educated citizen of the Roman Empire of Greek descent.

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Geography of California

California is a U.S. state on the western coast of North America.

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Geography of Chile

Image:Chilenav.gif|thumb|417px|left|Click over the map to obtain a topographic map of the region and its toponymy rect 23 14 119 35 rect 23 35 119 44 rect 23 44 119 54 rect 23 54 119 65 rect 23 65 119 75 rect 23 75 119 85 rect 23 85 119 96 rect 23 96 119 107 rect 23 107 119 117 rect 23 117 119 127 rect 23 127 119 140 rect 23 140 119 151 rect 23 151 119 163 rect 23 163 119 174 rect 23 174 119 185 rect 20 185 119 197 rect 23 197 119 207 rect 23 207 119 219 rect 23 219 119 232 rect 23 232 119 244 rect 23 244 119 256 rect 23 256 119 269 rect 23 269 119 281 rect 23 281 119 294 rect 23 294 119 307 rect 23 307 119 321 rect 23 321 119 334 rect 23 334 119 349 rect 23 349 119 363 rect 23 363 119 376 rect 23 376 119 391 rect 23 391 119 407 rect 23 407 119 420 rect 23 420 119 438 rect 23 438 119 453 rect 23 453 119 469 rect 23 469 119 485 rect 23 485 119 520 desc none --> The geography of Chile is extremely diverse as the country extends from a latitude of 17° South to Cape Horn at 56° (if Chilean claims on Antarctica are included Chile would extend to the South Pole) and from the ocean on the west to Andes on the east.

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Geography of Costa Rica

Costa Rica is located on the Central American Isthmus, surrounding the point 10° north of the equator and 84° west of the prime meridian.

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Geography of Cyprus

Cyprus is an island in the Eastern Basin of the Mediterranean Sea.

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Geography of East Timor

This article describes the geography of East Timor.

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Geography of El Salvador

El Salvador borders the North Pacific Ocean to the south and southwest, with Guatemala to the north-northwest and Honduras to the north-northeast.

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Geography of Ethiopia

Ethiopia is located in the Horn of Africa.

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Geography of Georgia (country)

The geography of Georgia describes the geographic features of Georgia, a country in the Caucasus region.

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Geography of Honduras

Honduras is a country in Central America.

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Geography of Houston

Houston, the most populous city in the Southern United States, is located along the upper Texas Gulf Coast, approximately northwest of the Gulf of Mexico at Galveston.

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Geography of Iceland

Iceland is an island country at the confluence of the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans, east of Greenland and immediately south of the Arctic Circle, atop the constructive boundary of the northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge about from Scotland and from New York City.

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Geography of India

India lies on the Indian Plate, the northern portion of the Indo-Australian Plate, whose continental crust forms the Indian subcontinent.

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Geography of Iowa

This article is about the geography of the State of Iowa.

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Geography of Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan is located in Central Asia and Eastern Europe at.

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Geography of Kerala

Kerala (38,863 km²; 1.18% of India’s landmass) is situated between the Arabian Sea to the west and the Western Ghats to the east.

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Geography of Laos

Laos is an independent republic, and a landlocked nation in Southeast Asia, northeast of Thailand, west of Vietnam.

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Geography of Malaysia

The geography of Malaysia deals with the physical and human geography of Malaysia, a Southeast Asian country.

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Geography of Mexico

The geography of Mexico describes the geographic features of Mexico, a country in the Americas.

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Geography of Myanmar

Myanmar (also known as Burma) is the northwestern-most country of mainland Southeast Asia, bordering China, India, Bangladesh, Thailand and Laos.

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Geography of Nicaragua

Nicaragua (officially the Republic of Nicaragua República de Nicaragua) is a country in Central America, bordering both the Caribbean Sea and the North Pacific Ocean, between Costa Rica and Honduras.

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Geography of North Korea

North Korea is located in east Asia on the northern half of the Korean Peninsula.

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Geography of Pakistan

The Geography of Pakistan (جغرافیۂ پاکِستان) is a profound blend of landscapes varying from plains to deserts, forests, hills, and plateaus ranging from the coastal areas of the Arabian Sea in the south to the mountains of the Karakoram range in the north.

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Geography of Papua New Guinea

The geography of Papua New Guinea describes the eastern half of the island of New Guinea, the islands of New Ireland, New Britain and Bougainville, and smaller nearby islands.

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Geography of Portugal

Portugal is a coastal nation in southwestern Europe, located at the western end of the Iberian Peninsula, bordering Spain (on its northern and eastern frontiers: a total of). The Portuguese territory also includes a series of archipelagos in the Atlantic Ocean (the Açores and Madeira), which are strategic islands along the North Atlantic. The extreme south is not too far from the Strait of Gibraltar, leading to the Mediterranean Sea. In total, the country occupies an area of of which is land and water. Despite these definitions, the Portugal-Spain border remains an unresolved territorial dispute between the two countries. Portugal does not recognise the border between Caia and Ribeira de Cuncos River deltas, since the beginning of the 1801 occupation of Olivenza by Spain. This territory, though under de facto Spanish occupation, remains a de jure part of Portugal, consequently no border is henceforth recognised in this area.

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Geography of Puerto Rico

The geography of Puerto Rico consists of an archipelago located between the Caribbean Sea and the North Atlantic Ocean, east of the Dominican Republic and west of the Virgin Islands.

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Geography of Rosario

This article is about the geography and urban structure of Rosario, which is the largest city of the, and the third most populous in the country, after Córdoba and Buenos Aires.

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Geography of Salt Lake City

Salt Lake City is located in a large valley, the Salt Lake Valley, separated by the Wasatch Mountains to the east and the Oquirrh Mountains to the west.

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Geography of Santa Maria, Bulacan

Santa Maria is a landlocked municipality in the province of Bulacan, Philippines comprising 24 barangays with a total land area of 90.925 square kilometers (35.106 sq mi).

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Geography of Slovenia

Slovenia is situated in Central Europe touching the Alps and bordering the Mediterranean.

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Geography of Tajikistan

Tajikistan is nestled between Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan to the north and west, China to the east, and Afghanistan to the south.

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Geography of Tamil Nadu

Tamil Nadu is the eleventh largest state in India and covers an area of.

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Geography of the Cayman Islands

The Cayman Islands are a British dependency and island country.

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Geography of the Philippines

The Philippines is an archipelago that consists of 7,107 islands with a total land area of.

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Geography of the United States

The term "United States", when used in the geographical sense, is the contiguous United States, the state of Alaska, the island state of Hawaii, the five insular territories of Puerto Rico, Northern Mariana Islands, U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, and American Samoa, and minor outlying possessions.

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Geography of the United States Virgin Islands

Geography of the United States Virgin Islands The United States Virgin Islands are a group of several dozen islands and cays located in the Caribbean, about southeast of Florida, north of Venezuela, east of Puerto Rico, and immediately west and south of the British Virgin Islands.

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Geography of Turkey

Turkey is situated in Anatolia (95%) and the Balkans (5%), bordering the Black Sea, between Bulgaria and Georgia, and bordering the Aegean Sea and the Mediterranean Sea, between Greece and Syria.

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Geography of Turkmenistan

Turkmenistan is a landlocked country in Central Asia, bordering the Caspian Sea to the west, Iran and Afghanistan to the south, Uzbekistan to the north-east, and Kazakhstan to the north-west.

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Geography of Vatican City

The geography of Vatican City is unique due to the country's position as an urban, landlocked enclave of Rome, Italy.

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Geohazard

A geohazard is a geological state that may lead to widespread damage or risk.

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GeoHazards International

GeoHazards International (GHI) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to ending preventable death and suffering caused by natural disasters in the world's most vulnerable communities.

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Geologic hazards

A geologic hazard is one of several types of adverse geologic conditions capable of causing damage or loss of property and life.

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Geological history of Earth

The geological history of Earth follows the major events in Earth's past based on the geologic time scale, a system of chronological measurement based on the study of the planet's rock layers (stratigraphy).

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Geologist

A geologist is a scientist who studies the solid and liquid matter that constitutes the Earth as well as the processes that shape it.

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Geology

Geology (from the Ancient Greek γῆ, gē, i.e. "earth" and -λoγία, -logia, i.e. "study of, discourse") is an earth science concerned with the solid Earth, the rocks of which it is composed, and the processes by which they change over time.

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Geology of Azerbaijan

The Geology of Azerbaijan forms a constituent geological part of the Alpine fold belt.

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Geology of Chile

The geology of Chile is a result of the Andean and preceding orogenies occurring on the western coast of South America, a convergent boundary of tectonic plates.

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Geology of Colombia

Geology of Colombia refers to the geological composition of the Republic of Colombia that determines its geography.

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Geology of Cyprus

The geology of Cyprus is part of the regional geology of Europe.

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Geology of England

The geology of England is mainly sedimentary.

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Geology of Great Britain

The geology of Great Britain is renowned for its diversity.

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Geology of Hainan Island

Hainan Island, located in the South China Sea, separated from the mainland of China by the Qiongzhou Strait, has a complex geological history that it has experienced multiple stages of metamorphism, volcanic and intrusive activities, tectonic drifting and more.

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Geology of India

The geology of India is diverse.

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Geology of Japan

The islands of Japan are primarily the result of several large ocean movements occurring over hundreds of millions of years from the mid-Silurian to the Pleistocene as a result of the subduction of the Philippine Sea Plate beneath the continental Amurian Plate and Okinawa Plate to the south, and subduction of the Pacific Plate under the Okhotsk Plate to the north.

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Geology of Namibia

The geology of Namibia encompasses rocks of Paleoproterozoic, Mesoproterozoic and Neoproterozoic and Paleozoic to Cenozoic age.

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Geology of New Hampshire

The Geology of New Hampshire is relatively similar to the rest of the New England region.

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Geology of New Zealand

The geology of New Zealand is noted for its volcanic activity, earthquakes and geothermal areas because of its position on the boundary of the Australian Plate and Pacific Plates.

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Geology of Pakistan

The geology of Pakistan encompasses the varied landscapes that make up the land constituting modern-day Pakistan, which are a blend of its geological history, and its climate over the past few million years.

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Geology of Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico is composed of Jurassic to Eocene volcanic and plutonic rocks, which are overlain by younger Oligocene to recent carbonates and other sedimentary rocks.

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Geology of the Capitol Reef area

The exposed geology of the Capitol Reef area presents a record of mostly Mesozoic-aged sedimentation in an area of North America in and around Capitol Reef National Park, on the Colorado Plateau in southeastern Utah.

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Geology of the Grand Canyon area

The geology of the Grand Canyon area includes one of the most complete and studied sequences of rock on Earth.

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Geology of the Iberian Peninsula

The geology of the Iberian Peninsula consists of the study of the rock formations on the Iberian Peninsula, which includes Spain, Portugal, Andorra, and Gibraltar.

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Geology of the Lassen volcanic area

The geology of the Lassen volcanic area presents a record of sedimentation and volcanic activity in the area in and around Lassen Volcanic National Park in Northern California, U.S. The park is located in the southernmost part of the Cascade Mountain Range in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States.

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Geology of the Netherlands

The geology of the Netherlands describes the geological sequence of the Netherlands.

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Geology of the Northland Region

New Zealand's Northland Region is built upon a basement consisting mainly of greywacke rocks, which are exposed on the eastern side of the peninsula.

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Geology of the Pacific Northwest

The geology of the Pacific Northwest includes the composition (including rock, minerals, and soils), structure, physical properties and the processes that shape the Pacific Northwest region of the United States and Canada.

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Geology of the Pyrenees

The Pyrenees are a 430 kilometre long, roughly east-west striking, intracontinental mountain chain that divide France, Spain, and Andorra.

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Geology of the Western Carpathians

The Western Carpathians are an arc-shaped mountain range, the northern branch of the Alpine-Himalayan fold and thrust system called the Alpide belt, which evolved during the Alpine orogeny.

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Geology of the Zion and Kolob canyons area

The geology of the Zion and Kolob canyons area includes nine known exposed formations, all visible in Zion National Park in the U.S. state of Utah.

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Geology of Wales

The geology of Wales is complex and varied; its study has been of considerable historical significance in the development of geology as a science.

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Geomathematics

Geomathematics or Mathematical Geophysics is the application of mathematical intuition to solve problems in Geophysics.

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Geomorphology

Geomorphology (from Ancient Greek: γῆ, gê, "earth"; μορφή, morphḗ, "form"; and λόγος, lógos, "study") is the scientific study of the origin and evolution of topographic and bathymetric features created by physical, chemical or biological processes operating at or near the Earth's surface.

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Geomythology

Geomythology is the study of alleged references to geological events in mythology.

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Geopark

A geopark is a unified area that advances the protection and use of geological heritage in a sustainable way, and promotes the economic well-being of the people who live there.

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Geophysical signal analysis

Geophysical signal analysis is concerned with the detection and a subsequent processing of signals.

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George Massey Tunnel

The George Massey Tunnel (often referred to as the Massey Tunnel) is a highway traffic tunnel in the Metro Vancouver region of southwestern British Columbia.

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Geotechnical centrifuge modeling

Geotechnical centrifuge modeling is a technique for testing physical scale models of Geotechnical Engineering systems such as natural and man-made slopes and earth retaining structures and building or bridge foundations.

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Geotechnical engineering

Geotechnical engineering is the branch of civil engineering concerned with the engineering behavior of earth materials.

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Geothermal areas of Yellowstone

The geothermal areas of Yellowstone include several geyser basins in Yellowstone National Park as well as other geothermal features such as hot springs, mud pots, and fumaroles.

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Geothermal energy

Geothermal energy is thermal energy generated and stored in the Earth.

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Gerardus Mercator

Gerardus Mercator (5 March 1512 – 2 December 1594) was a 16th-century German-Flemish cartographer, geographer and cosmographer.

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Gerhard vom Rath

Gerhard vom Rath (20 August 1830 – 23 April 1888), was a German mineralogist, born at Duisburg in Prussia.

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Geyser

A geyser is a spring characterized by intermittent discharge of water ejected turbulently and accompanied by steam.

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Geysir

Geysir, sometimes known as The Great Geysir, is a geyser in southwestern Iceland.

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Ghaggar-Hakra River

The Ghaggar-Hakra River is an intermittent, endorheic river in India and Pakistan that flows only during the monsoon season.

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Ghost shirt

Ghost shirts are shirts or other clothing items created by Ghost dancers and thought to be imbued with spiritual powers.

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Giant

Giants (from Latin and Ancient Greek: "gigas", cognate giga-) are beings of human appearance, but prodigious size and strength common in the mythology and legends of many different cultures.

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Gibson County, Indiana

Gibson County is a county in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Indiana.

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Gimnazija Banja Luka

Gimnazija Banja Luka (Serbian Cyrillic: Гимназија Бања Лука) is a gymnasium in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Ginga Legend Weed

is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yoshihiro Takahashi.

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Gingerbread house (architecture)

Gingerbread houses are an architectural style that originated in Haiti in the late 19th century.

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Giovanni Battista Scalabrini

Blessed Giovanni Battista Scalabrini (8 July 1839 – 1 June 1905) was an Italian Roman Catholic prelate and the Bishop of Piacenza from 1876 until his death; he was the founder of both the Missionaries of Saint Charles and the Mission Sisters of Saint Charles.

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Giuseppe Mercalli

Giuseppe Mercalli (May 21, 1850 – March 19, 1914) was an Italian volcanologist and Catholic priest.

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Glacial lake outburst flood

A glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) is a type of outburst flood that occurs when the dam containing a glacial lake fails.

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Glacier

A glacier is a persistent body of dense ice that is constantly moving under its own weight; it forms where the accumulation of snow exceeds its ablation (melting and sublimation) over many years, often centuries.

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Glacier Bay Basin

Glacier Bay Basin in southeastern Alaska, in the United States, encompasses the Glacier Bay and surrounding mountains and glaciers, which was first proclaimed a U.S. National Monument on February 25, 1925, and which was later, on December 2, 1980, enlarged and designated as the Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve under the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, covering an area of 3,283,000 acres (1,329,000 ha).

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Global Disaster Alert and Coordination System

The Alert and Coordination System (GDACS) is a joint initiative of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and the European Commission that serves to consolidate and improve the dissemination of disaster-related information, in order to improve the coordination of international relief efforts.

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Global Earthquake Model

The Global Earthquake Model (GEM) is a public–private partnership initiated in 2006 by the Global Science Forum of the OECD to develop global, open-source risk assessment software and tools.

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Global Positioning System

The Global Positioning System (GPS), originally Navstar GPS, is a satellite-based radionavigation system owned by the United States government and operated by the United States Air Force.

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GlobalMedic

GlobalMedic is a non-sectarian humanitarian-aid non-governmental organization based in Etobicoke, Toronto, Ontario, Canada and the operational arm of the David McAntony Gibson Foundation (DMGF), a registered Canadian charity.

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Glozhene Monastery

The Glozhene Monastery is an Eastern Orthodox monastery located on the northern slopes of Stara Planina in Bulgaria, near the village of Glozhene and the Cherni Vit river, 12 km from Teteven.

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Go Jetters

Go Jetters is a 3D animated British children's television series currently airing on CBeebies.

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Goblin shark

The goblin shark (Mitsukurina owstoni) is a rare species of deep-sea shark.

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Godred Crovan

Godred Crovan (died 1095), known in Gaelic as Gofraid Crobán, Gofraid Meránach, and Gofraid Méránach, was a Norse-Gaelic ruler of the kingdoms of Dublin and the Isles.

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Godzilla (2014 film)

Godzilla is a 2014 American monster film directed by Gareth Edwards.

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Going to California

"Going to California" is a ballad written and performed by the English rock band Led Zeppelin.

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Gold in California

Gold became highly concentrated in California, United States as the result of global forces operating over hundreds of millions of years.

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Golden Bridge

The Golden Bridge connects Ankleshwar to Bharuch in the Gujarat state of western India.

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Golpayegan County

Golpayegan County (شهرستان گلپایگان) is a county in Isfahan Province in Iran.

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Golpayegan minaret

The Golpayegan minaret, also known as the Golpayegan tower, is a historical minaret in the city of Golpayegan in Iran.

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Goodbye California

Goodbye California is a novel by Scottish author Alistair MacLean, first published in 1977.

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Gorda Plate

The Gorda Plate, located beneath the Pacific Ocean off the coast of northern California, is one of the northern remnants of the Farallon Plate.

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Gorleben salt dome

The Gorleben salt dome is a proposed deep geological repository in a salt dome in Gorleben in the Lüchow-Dannenberg district in the far north-east of Lower Saxony for low-, medium- and high-level radioactive waste.

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Goryō

are vengeful Japanese ghosts from the aristocratic classes, especially those who have been martyred.

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GOSCON

GOSCON (Government Open Source Conference) was a conference held annually from 2005 to 2011 to explore the use of open standard and open-source software in the public sector, mostly in the United states.

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Gottifredo Palace

The Gottifredo Palace is a large medieval house in Alatri in the Lazio Region of Italy.

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Gourbeyre

Gourbeyre is a commune in the French overseas region and department of Guadeloupe, in the Lesser Antilles.

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Government Cable Office

The Government Cable Office at 218 Sixth Street in Seward, Alaska, United States, is a historic building that served as a telegraph office that connected Seward with communications in the rest of the United States.

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Government House, Darwin

Government House is the office and official residence of the Administrator of the Northern Territory.

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Grace, Idaho

Grace is a city in Caribou County, Idaho, in the United States.

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Gracias a la Vida

"Gracias a la vida" (Spanish for "Thanks to life") is a song composed and first performed by Chilean musician Violeta Parra, one of the artists who set the basis for the movement known as Nueva Canción.

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Graham Island (Mediterranean Sea)

Graham Island (also Graham Bank or Graham Shoal; Isola Ferdinandea) is a submerged volcanic island in the Mediterranean Sea.

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Gran Desierto de Altar

The Gran Desierto de Altar is one of the major sub-ecoregions of the Sonoran Desert, located in the State of Sonora, Northwest Mexico.

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Grand Banks of Newfoundland

The Grand Banks of Newfoundland are a group of underwater plateaus south-east of Newfoundland on the North American continental shelf.

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Grand Teton National Park

Grand Teton National Park is an American national park in northwestern Wyoming.

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Granular convection

Granular convection, or granular segregation, is a phenomenon where granular material subjected to shaking or vibration will exhibit circulation patterns similar to types of fluid convection.

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Grasberg mine

The Grasberg mine is the largest gold mine and the second largest copper mine in the world.

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Graviquake

A graviquake is an earthquake occurring in an extensional tectonic setting, where the gravitational energy stored during the interseismic period is delivered by the collapse of a brittle upper crustal volume, slipping along a normal fault and generating the double couple recorded in the moment tensor solution.

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Grímsvötn

Grímsvötn (vötn.

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Great Lakes tectonic zone

The Great Lakes tectonic zone is bounded by South Dakota at its tip and heads northeast to south of Duluth, Minnesota, then heads east through northern Wisconsin, Marquette, Michigan, and then trends more northeasterly to skim the northern-most shores of lakes Michigan and Huron before ending in the Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, area.

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Great Southern California ShakeOut

The Great California ShakeOut is an annual earthquake preparedness drill in California.

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Greek–Turkish earthquake diplomacy

The Greek–Turkish earthquake diplomacy was initiated after successive earthquakes hit both countries in the summer of 1999 and led to an improvement in Greco-Turkish relations.

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Greendale Fault

The Greendale Fault is an active seismic fault in the middle of New Zealand's South Island.

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Greendale, New Zealand

Greendale is a lightly populated rural area, part of the Selwyn District, Canterbury, a region of New Zealand's South Island.

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Greenville, South Carolina

Greenville (locally) is the largest city in and the seat of Greenville County, South Carolina, United States.

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Gregor and the Marks of Secret

Gregor and the Marks of Secret is a high fantasy/epic fantasy novel, the fourth book in the critically acclaimed The Underland Chronicles by Suzanne Collins.

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Gregory Thaumaturgus

Gregory Thaumaturgus or Gregory the Miracle-Worker (Γρηγόριος ὁ Θαυματουργός, Grēgórios ho Thaumatourgós; Gregorius Thaumaturgus; 213 – 270), also known as Gregory of Neocaesarea, was a Christian bishop of the 3rd century.

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Grid computing

Grid computing is the collection of computer resources from multiple locations to reach a common goal.

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Groß-Gerau

Groß-Gerau is the district seat of the Groß-Gerau district, lying in the southern Frankfurt Rhein-Main Region in Hesse, Germany, and serving as a hub for the surrounding area.

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Ground zero

In terms of nuclear explosions and other large bombs, the term "ground zero" (also known as "surface zero") describes the point on the Earth's surface closest to a detonation.

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Ground–structure interaction

The interaction between soil (ground) and structure consists of an exchange of mutual stress between the structure itself and the foundations ground.

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Growth fault

Growth faults are syndepositional or syn-sedimentary extensional faults that initiate and evolve at the margins of continental plates.

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Guadua

Guadua is a Neotropical genus of thorny, clumping bamboo in the grass family, ranging from moderate to very large species.

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Guaranda

Guaranda is a city in central Ecuador.

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Guardia Lombardi

Guardia Lombardi, known as La Uàrdia in the Guardiese dialect or Guardiae Longobardorum in Latin, is a small town and comune in the Province of Avellino in Campania, Italy.

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Guarenas Cathedral

The Our Lady of Copacabana Cathedral (Catedral de Nuestra Señora de Copacabana de Guarenas) or simply Cathedral of Guarenas, is the name given to a religious building belonging to the Catholic Church and is located at Ambrosio Plaza Street on one side of the Bolívar Square, in the city of Guarenas, a city in the municipality Ambrosio Plaza, Miranda state, which serves as a "satellite city" of Caracas, in the South American country of Venezuela.

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Guerrero

Guerrero (Spanish for "warrior"), officially the Free and Sovereign State of Guerrero (Estado Libre y Soberano de Guerrero), is one of the 31 states which, with the Federal District, comprise the 32 Federal Entities of Mexico.

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Gulf Coast of the United States

The Gulf Coast of the United States is the coastline along which the Southern United States meets the Gulf of Mexico.

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Gulf of Corinth basin

The Gulf of Corinth is an active extensional marine sedimentary basin thought to have started deforming during the late Miocene – Pleistocene epoch.

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Gulf of Mexico

The Gulf of Mexico (Golfo de México) is an ocean basin and a marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean, largely surrounded by the North American continent.

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Gulf of Saros

Saros Bay or Gulf of Saros (Saros Körfezi) is an inlet of the northern Aegean Sea located north of the Gallipoli Peninsula in northwestern Turkey.

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Gumare

Gumare or Gomare is a rural village located in the North-West District of Botswana, near the Okavango Delta.

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Gunning Shire

Gunning Shire was a local government area in New South Wales centered on Gunning, New South Wales north of the Australian Capital Territory until February 2004, when the local government organisation was absorbed into newly created Palerang Council and Upper Lachlan Shire.

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Gunning, New South Wales

Gunning is a town on the Old Hume Highway, between Goulburn and Yass in the Southern Tablelands of New South Wales, Australia, about 260 km south-west of Sydney and 75 km north of the national capital, Canberra.

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Gustav Herglotz

Gustav Herglotz (2 February 1881 – 22 March 1953) was a German Bohemian mathematician.

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Gutenberg–Richter law

In seismology, the Gutenberg–Richter law (GR law) expresses the relationship between the magnitude and total number of earthquakes in any given region and time period of at least that magnitude.

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Guy Gardner (comics)

Guy Gardner is a fictional comic book superhero appearing in books published by DC Comics, usually in books featuring the Green Lantern family of characters, and for a time (late 1980s through mid 1990s) was also a significant member of the Justice League family of characters.

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H. Jay Melosh

H.

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Haa District

Haa District (Dzongkha: ཧཱ་; Wylie: Haa; alternative spellings include "Ha") is one of the 20 dzongkhag or districts comprising Bhutan.

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Habitat

In ecology, a habitat is the type of natural environment in which a particular species of organism lives.

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Haghpat Monastery

Haghpat Monastery, also known as Haghpatavank (Հաղպատավանք), is a medieval monastery complex in Haghpat, Armenia.

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Haibao Pagoda Temple

The Haibao Pagoda Temple is a Buddhist temple located in Xingqing District of Yinchuan, Ningxia, China.

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Haicheng, Liaoning

Haicheng is a county-level city of central Liaoning province, People's Republic of China.

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Hait

Hait (Ҳоит), a region in Tajikistan, a strategic, land-locked mountainous country in Central Asia, is the site of one of the world's worst earthquakes last century.

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Haiti Reconstruction Fund

The Haiti Reconstruction Fund (HRF) is a partnership between the international community and the Government of Haiti to help finance post-earthquake reconstruction.

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Half-mast

Half-mast or half-staff refers to a flag flying below the summit on a pole.

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Halloween in the Castro

The Halloween celebration held in The Castro district of San Francisco began in the 1940s as a neighborhood costume contest.

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Hamaoka Nuclear Power Plant

The is a nuclear power plant in the city of Omaezaki in Shizuoka Prefecture, on Japan's east coast, 200 km south-west of Tokyo.

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Hamburg Süd

Hamburg Südamerikanische Dampfschifffahrts-Gesellschaft ApS & Co KG – Hamburg Süd for short – ranks among the ten largest container shipping brands worldwide and is part of Maersk Line, the world’s largest container shipping company.

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Han dynasty

The Han dynasty was the second imperial dynasty of China (206 BC–220 AD), preceded by the Qin dynasty (221–206 BC) and succeeded by the Three Kingdoms period (220–280 AD). Spanning over four centuries, the Han period is considered a golden age in Chinese history. To this day, China's majority ethnic group refers to themselves as the "Han Chinese" and the Chinese script is referred to as "Han characters". It was founded by the rebel leader Liu Bang, known posthumously as Emperor Gaozu of Han, and briefly interrupted by the Xin dynasty (9–23 AD) of the former regent Wang Mang. This interregnum separates the Han dynasty into two periods: the Western Han or Former Han (206 BC–9 AD) and the Eastern Han or Later Han (25–220 AD). The emperor was at the pinnacle of Han society. He presided over the Han government but shared power with both the nobility and appointed ministers who came largely from the scholarly gentry class. The Han Empire was divided into areas directly controlled by the central government using an innovation inherited from the Qin known as commanderies, and a number of semi-autonomous kingdoms. These kingdoms gradually lost all vestiges of their independence, particularly following the Rebellion of the Seven States. From the reign of Emperor Wu (r. 141–87 BC) onward, the Chinese court officially sponsored Confucianism in education and court politics, synthesized with the cosmology of later scholars such as Dong Zhongshu. This policy endured until the fall of the Qing dynasty in 1911 AD. The Han dynasty saw an age of economic prosperity and witnessed a significant growth of the money economy first established during the Zhou dynasty (c. 1050–256 BC). The coinage issued by the central government mint in 119 BC remained the standard coinage of China until the Tang dynasty (618–907 AD). The period saw a number of limited institutional innovations. To finance its military campaigns and the settlement of newly conquered frontier territories, the Han government nationalized the private salt and iron industries in 117 BC, but these government monopolies were repealed during the Eastern Han dynasty. Science and technology during the Han period saw significant advances, including the process of papermaking, the nautical steering ship rudder, the use of negative numbers in mathematics, the raised-relief map, the hydraulic-powered armillary sphere for astronomy, and a seismometer for measuring earthquakes employing an inverted pendulum. The Xiongnu, a nomadic steppe confederation, defeated the Han in 200 BC and forced the Han to submit as a de facto inferior partner, but continued their raids on the Han borders. Emperor Wu launched several military campaigns against them. The ultimate Han victory in these wars eventually forced the Xiongnu to accept vassal status as Han tributaries. These campaigns expanded Han sovereignty into the Tarim Basin of Central Asia, divided the Xiongnu into two separate confederations, and helped establish the vast trade network known as the Silk Road, which reached as far as the Mediterranean world. The territories north of Han's borders were quickly overrun by the nomadic Xianbei confederation. Emperor Wu also launched successful military expeditions in the south, annexing Nanyue in 111 BC and Dian in 109 BC, and in the Korean Peninsula where the Xuantu and Lelang Commanderies were established in 108 BC. After 92 AD, the palace eunuchs increasingly involved themselves in court politics, engaging in violent power struggles between the various consort clans of the empresses and empresses dowager, causing the Han's ultimate downfall. Imperial authority was also seriously challenged by large Daoist religious societies which instigated the Yellow Turban Rebellion and the Five Pecks of Rice Rebellion. Following the death of Emperor Ling (r. 168–189 AD), the palace eunuchs suffered wholesale massacre by military officers, allowing members of the aristocracy and military governors to become warlords and divide the empire. When Cao Pi, King of Wei, usurped the throne from Emperor Xian, the Han dynasty would eventually collapse and ceased to exist.

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Handial Union

Handiyal is a village and union parishad of Chatmohar Upazila, Bangladesh.

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Hans Benndorf

Hans Benndorf (December 13, 1870 – February 11, 1953) was an Austrian physicist born in Zurich, and died in Graz.

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Harmonic tremor

A harmonic tremor is a sustained release of seismic and infrasonic energy typically associated with the underground movement of magma, the venting of volcanic gases from magma, or both.

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Harry Fielding Reid

Harry Fielding Reid (May 18, 1859 – June 18, 1944) was an American geophysicist.

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Harry Karstens

Henry Peter "Harry" Karstens (September 2, 1878 – November 28, 1955) was the first superintendent of Mount McKinley National Park (now known as Denali National Park), from 1921 to 1928.

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Harvey Bullock (comics)

Harvey Bullock is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, commonly in association with the superhero Batman.

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Hasmonean royal winter palaces

The Hasmonean royal winter palaces are a complex of Hasmonean and Herodian buildings from the Second Temple period, which were discovered in the western plain of Jericho valley, at Tulul Abu al-'Alayiq, near the place where the Roman road connecting Jericho with Jerusalem enters Wadi Qelt.

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Hatcher Pass

Hatcher Pass (3,886 ft or 1,148 m) is a mountain pass through the southwest part of the Talkeetna Mountains, Alaska.

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Hatchett Hill

Hatchett Hill, est.

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Hawaii hotspot

The Hawaii hotspot is a volcanic hotspot located near the namesake Hawaiian Islands, in the northern Pacific Ocean.

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Hawaiian Islands

The Hawaiian Islands (Mokupuni o Hawai‘i) are an archipelago of eight major islands, several atolls, numerous smaller islets, and seamounts in the North Pacific Ocean, extending some from the island of Hawaiokinai in the south to northernmost Kure Atoll.

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Hawley Harvey Crippen

Hawley Harvey Crippen (September 11, 1862 – November 23, 1910), usually known as Dr.

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Hayden Geological Survey of 1871

The Hayden Geological Survey of 1871 explored the region of northwestern Wyoming that later became Yellowstone National Park in 1872.

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Hayward Fault Zone

The Hayward Fault Zone is a geologic fault zone capable of generating destructive earthquakes.

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Hazard

A hazard is an agent which has the potential to cause harm to a vulnerable target.

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Hazard map

A hazard map is a Map that highlights areas that are affected by or vulnerable to a particular hazard.

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HAZUS

Hazus is a geographic information system-based natural hazard analysis tool developed and by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

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Health Oriented Preventive Education

Health Oriented Preventive Education (HOPE) is a Pakistan NGO which provides the poor with service in the sectors of health and education, particularly focusing on women and children.

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Heart Peaks

Heart Peaks, originally known as the Heart Mountains, is a mountain massif in the Northern Interior of British Columbia, Canada.

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Hebron, Utah

Hebron is a ghost town located on Shoal Creek in Washington County in southwestern Utah, United States.

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Hecker Pass

Hecker Pass is a low mountain pass across the Santa Cruz Mountains of central California, connecting Watsonville on the Pacific coast to Gilroy and the Santa Clara Valley.

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Height Modernization

Height Modernization is the name of a series of state-by-state programs recently begun by the United States' National Geodetic Survey, a division of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

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Hekla

Hekla, or Hecla, is a stratovolcano in the south of Iceland with a height of.

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Helensburgh

Helensburgh (lit) is a town within the Helensburgh and Lomond Area of Argyll and Bute Council, Scotland.

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Hellnahellir

Hellnahellir is the largest man-made or artificial cave in Iceland.

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Helmut Landsberg

Helmut Erich Landsberg (1906–1985) was a noted and influential climatologist.

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Henning, Tennessee

Henning is a town in Lauderdale County, Tennessee.

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Herbert Mullin

Herbert William Mullin (born April 18, 1947) is an American serial killer who killed thirteen people in California in the early 1970s.

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Herod the Great

Herod (Greek:, Hērōdēs; 74/73 BCE – c. 4 BCE/1 CE), also known as Herod the Great and Herod I, was a Roman client king of Judea, referred to as the Herodian kingdom.

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Higby Mountain

Higby Mountain or Mount Higby, is a traprock mountain ridge located east of Meriden, Connecticut.

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High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program

The High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) was initiated as an ionospheric research program jointly funded by the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Navy, the University of Alaska Fairbanks, and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).

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High-rise building

A high-rise building is a tall building, as opposed to a low-rise building and is defined by its height differently in various jurisdictions.

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High-speed rail in East Asia

High-speed rail in East Asia refers to the high-speed rail systems of China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, which together are approaching a length of.

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Hihifo

Hihifo is the main village on the island of Niuatoputapu in Tonga.

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Hilbert–Huang transform

The Hilbert–Huang transform (HHT) is a way to decompose a signal into so-called intrinsic mode functions (IMF) along with a trend, and obtain instantaneous frequency data.

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Hinge

A hinge is a mechanical bearing that connects two solid objects, typically allowing only a limited angle of rotation between them.

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Historical geology

Historical geology or paleogeology is a discipline that uses the principles and techniques of geology to reconstruct and understand the geological history of Earth.

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History of Afghanistan (1992–present)

This article on the History of Afghanistan since 1992 covers the time period from the fall of the Najibullah government in 1992 to the ongoing international military presence in Afghanistan.

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History of Alaska

The history of Alaska dates back to the Upper Paleolithic period (around 14,000 BC), when wanderer groups crossed the Bering land bridge into what is now western Alaska.

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History of Bay Area Rapid Transit

Bay Area Rapid Transit, widely known by the acronym BART, is the main rail transportation system for the San Francisco Bay Area.

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History of Brigham Young University

The history of Brigham Young University begins in 1875, when the school was called Brigham Young Academy.

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History of California 1900 to present

This article continues the history of California in the years 1900 and later;for events through 1899, see History of California before 1900. After 1900, California continued to grow rapidly and soon became an agricultural and industrial power.

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History of Casablanca

The history of the city of Casablanca in Morocco has been one of many political and cultural changes.

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History of Charleston

The history of Charleston, South Carolina, is one of the longest and most diverse of any community in the United States, spanning hundreds of years of physical settlement beginning in 1670 through modern times.

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History of geology

The history of geology is concerned with the development of the natural science of geology.

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History of geophysics

The historical development of geophysics has been motivated by two factors.

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History of Greece

The history of Greece encompasses the history of the territory of the modern nation state of Greece as well as that of the Greek people and the areas they inhabited and ruled historically.

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History of LSU Tigers football

The LSU Tigers football team represents Louisiana State University in the sport of American football.

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History of Oaxaca

In the Central Valley region of the Southern Mexican state of Oaxaca archeologists discovered evidence of historic settlements.

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History of paleontology

The history of paleontology traces the history of the effort to understand the history of life on Earth by studying the fossil record left behind by living organisms.

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History of Piedmont, California

The history of Piedmont, California, covers the history of the area in California's San Francisco Bay Area that is now known as Piedmont, up to and beyond the legal establishment of a city.

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History of Portugal (1640–1777)

From the restoration of the House of Braganza in 1640 until the end of the reign of the Marquis of Pombal in 1777, the kingdom of Portugal was in a period of transition.

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History of Queensland

The history of Queensland encompasses both a long Aboriginal Australian presence as well as the more recent European settlement.

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History of Recreo

Recreo began as a small Hispanic homestead which offered rest to travellers and hence its name.

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History of the Jews in Ancona

The history of the Jews in Ancona in Italy, began when Jews settled into the city in the first half of the 14th century, contributing to money-lending and other economic roles.

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History of Thessaloniki

The history of the city of Thessaloniki is a long one, dating back to the Ancient Greeks.

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History of Xi'an

Xi'an was among the most important cities of China before AD 1000.

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HIT Humanitarian

HIT Humanitarian is a 501(c)3 charitable organization established in 2009 by Heritage Internet Technologies (HIT), a Utah-based IT/web-hosting company (formerly known as Heritage Web Solutions).

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Hochstaufen

The Hochstaufen is located in the north of Bad Reichenhall (Landkreis Berchtesgadener Land) and is the easternmost mountain of the Chiemgau Alps.

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Hokkaido

(), formerly known as Ezo, Yezo, Yeso, or Yesso, is the second largest island of Japan, and the largest and northernmost prefecture.

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Holocene

The Holocene is the current geological epoch.

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Holy Forty Martyrs Church, Veliko Tarnovo

The Holy Forty Martyrs Church (църква "Св., tsarkva "Sv. Chetirideset machenitsi") is a medieval Eastern Orthodox church constructed in 1230 in the town of Veliko Tarnovo in Bulgaria, the former capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire.

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Home insurance

Home insurance, also commonly called homeowner's insurance (often abbreviated in the US real estate industry as HOI), is a type of property insurance that covers a private residence.

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Homeless shelter

Homeless shelters are a type of homeless service agency which provide temporary residence for homeless individuals and families.

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Homelessness

Homelessness is the circumstance when people are without a permanent dwelling, such as a house or apartment.

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Homelessness in the United States

Homelessness is the condition of people lacking "a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence" as defined by The McKinney–Vento Homeless Assistance Act.

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Honda Point disaster

The Honda Point disaster was the largest peacetime loss of U.S. Navy ships.

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Hoodoo Mountain

Hoodoo Mountain is a potentially active flat-topped stratovolcano in the Stikine Country of northwestern British Columbia, Canada, located northeast of Wrangell, Alaska, on the north side of the lower Iskut River and east of its junction with the Stikine River.

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Hopalong Casualty

Hopalong Casualty is a 1960 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes theatrical animated short, featuring the Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote.

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Horoscopic astrology

Horoscopic astrology is a form of astrology that uses a horoscope, a visual representation of the heavens, for a specific moment in time in order to interpret the inherent meaning underlying the alignment of the planets at that moment.

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Horrible Geography

Horrible Geography is a series of children's non-fiction books written by Anita Ganeri, illustrated by Mike Phillips, and published in the UK by Scholastic.

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Horton Hears a Who! (film)

Horton Hears a Who! (also known as Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a Who!) is a 2008 American computer animated adventure comedy film based on the book of the same name by Dr. Seuss.

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Hot Creek (Mono County, California)

Hot Creek, starting as Mammoth Creek, is a stream in Mono County of eastern California, in the Western United States.

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House

A house is a building that functions as a home.

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Howrah Bridge

Howrah Bridge is a bridge with a suspended span over the Hooghly River in West Bengal, India.

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Hsieh Ying-chun

Hsieh Ying-chun (謝英俊, born 1954 in Taichung County, Taiwan) is a Taiwanese architect and contractor.

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Hsinchu

Hsinchu officially known as Hsinchu City, is a provincial city in northern Taiwan.

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Huaynaputina

Huaynaputina is a stratovolcano in a volcanic upland in southern Peru.

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Hugo Benioff

Victor Hugo Benioff (September 14, 1899 – February 29, 1968) was an American seismologist and a professor at the California Institute of Technology.

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Human Diastrophism

Human Diastrophism, also known as Blood of Palomar, is a graphic novel by American cartoonist Gilbert Hernandez.

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Human flesh search engine

Human flesh search engine is a Chinese term for the phenomenon of distributed researching using Internet media such as blogs and forums.

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Human response to disasters

Human response to disasters has been recorded throughout human history.

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Humanitarian response to the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake

The humanitarian response to the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake of a magnitude of 9.3 was prompted by one of the worst natural disasters of modern times.

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Humboldt Bay

Humboldt Bay is a natural bay and a multi-basin, bar-built coastal lagoon located on the rugged North Coast of California, entirely within Humboldt County.

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Humboldt Bay Life-Saving Station

The Humboldt Bay Life-Saving Station was originally built in November 1878 on the north side of the entrance to Humboldt Bay in northern California, United States near Eureka, adjacent to the site of the first Humboldt Harbor Light (1856–1892).

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Huntington Beach Pier

The Huntington Beach Pier is a municipal pier located in Huntington Beach, California, at the west end of Main Street and west of Pacific Coast Highway.

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Huntress (Helena Bertinelli)

The Huntress, also known as Helena Rosa Bertinelli, is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Hurricane Brenda (1973)

Hurricane Brenda of August 1973 was the first tropical cyclone on record to make landfall in the Mexican Province of Campeche.

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Hurricane Earl (2010)

Hurricane Earl was the first major hurricane to threaten New England since Hurricane Bob in 1991.

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HurriQuake

The HurriQuake nail is a construction nail designed by Ed Sutt for Bostitch, a division of Stanley Works, and patented in 2004.

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Hveragerði

Hveragerði is a town and municipality in the south of Iceland located 45 km to the east of Reykjavík on Iceland's main ringroad, Route 1.

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Hydrate Ridge

Hydrate Ridge is an accretionary thrust clathrate hydrate formation, meaning it has been made of sediment scraped off of subducting oceanic plate.

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Hydraulic fracturing

Hydraulic fracturing (also fracking, fraccing, frac'ing, hydrofracturing or hydrofracking) is a well stimulation technique in which rock is fractured by a pressurized liquid.

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Hydraulic fracturing by country

Hydraulic fracturing has become a contentious environmental and health issue with Tunisia and France banning the practice and a de facto moratorium in place in Quebec (Canada), and some of the states of the US.

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Hydrothermal vents and seamounts of the Azores

The hydrothermal vents and seamounts of the Azores (fontes hidrotermais e montes submarinos dos Açores) are a series of Atlantic seamounts and hydrothermal vents that are part of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge system, giving rise to the archipelago and bathymetric region of the Azores.

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Hypocenter

A hypocenter (or hypocentre) (from ὑπόκεντρον for 'below the center') is the point of origin of an earthquake or a subsurface nuclear explosion.

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I Feel the Earth Move

"I Feel the Earth Move" is a song written and recorded by pop singer-songwriter Carole King, which first appeared on her album Tapestry; additionally, the song is one half of the double A-sided single, the flip side of which was "It's Too Late".

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I Witness Video

I Witness Video was an NBC News production primetime series and American informational reality-based television program that aired on NBC on Sunday night from August 16, 1992 to July 10, 1994.

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Ian Plimer

Ian Rutherford Plimer (born 12 February 1946) is an Australian geologist, professor emeritus of earth sciences at the University of Melbourne, previously a professor of mining geology at the University of Adelaide, and the director of multiple mineral exploration and mining companies.

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Iben Browning

Iben Browning (January 9, 1918 – July 18, 1991) was an American business consultant, author, and "self-proclaimed climatologist." He is most notable for having made various failed predictions of disasters involving climate, volcanoes, earthquakes, and government collapse.

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Ibora

Ibora was a city in the late Roman province of Helenopontus, which became a Christian bishopric.

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Ice age

An ice age is a period of long-term reduction in the temperature of Earth's surface and atmosphere, resulting in the presence or expansion of continental and polar ice sheets and alpine glaciers.

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ICEARRAY

ICEARRAY is an abbreviation for Icelandic Strong-motion Array.

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Iceberg Lounge

The Iceberg Lounge is a fictional nightclub appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Iceland plume

The Iceland plume is a postulated upwelling of anomalously hot rock in the Earth's mantle beneath Iceland.

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Iceland–India relations

Iceland–India relations refers to the bilateral relations between Iceland and India.

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Icelandic Association for Search and Rescue

''Ingebjörg'', a ship of Slysavarnarfélagið Landsbjörg, at port in Seyðisfjörður, Iceland Slysavarnarfélagið Landsbjörg or the Icelandic Association for Search and Rescue (ICE-SAR) is a national association of rescue units and accident prevention divisions.

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Icelandic turf house

Icelandic turf houses were the product of a difficult climate, offering superior insulation compared to buildings solely made of wood or stone, and the relative difficulty in obtaining other construction materials in sufficient quantities.

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Ict4peace

ICT4peace is a policy and capacity-building oriented international foundation.

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Idosawa Fault

--> The, also referred to as the Shionihara Fault, is an active earthquake fault system located in Fukushima Prefecture of Japan, to the west of Iwaki city.

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Idyllwild-Pine Cove, California

Idyllwild, Pine Cove, and Fern Valley are three adjacent unincorporated communities, of which Idyllwild is the largest, located in the San Jacinto Mountains in Riverside County, California, United States.

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Ikuo Towhata

is a well-known geotechnical engineering professor at the University of Tokyo, Japan.

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Il Bisbetico Domato

Il Bisbetico Domato (The Taming of the Scoundrel) is a 1980 Italian film directed by Franco Castellano and Giuseppe Moccia, credited as Castellano & Pipolo.

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Image of the Beast (film)

Image of the Beast, or A Thief in the Night III, is a 1981 Christian end times film.

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Imperial County, California

Imperial County is a county in the U.S. state of California.

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In Search of... (TV series)

In Search of... was a television series that was broadcast weekly from 1977 to 1982, devoted to mysterious phenomena.

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Inca architecture

Incan architecture is the most significant pre-Columbian architecture in South America.

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Incheon Bridge

The Incheon Bridge is a reinforced concrete bridge in South Korea.

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Incident Command System

The Incident Command System (ICS) is a standardized approach to the command, control, and coordination of emergency response providing a common hierarchy within which responders from multiple agencies can be effective.

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InciWeb

InciWeb is an interagency all-risk incident web information management system provided by the United States Forest Service released in 2004.

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Index of structural engineering articles

This is an alphabetical list of articles pertaining specifically to structural engineering.

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Index of wave articles

This is a list of Wave topics.

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Indigenous and community conserved area

Indigenous and community conserved areas (ICCAs), or indigenous peoples’ and community conserved territories and areas, are spaces de facto governed by indigenous peoples or local communities with evidently positive outcomes for the conservation of biological and cultural diversity.

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Indonesia–Philippines relations

Indonesia–Philippines relations are foreign bilateral relations between Indonesia and the Philippines.

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Indonesian future capital proposal

A proposal to move the Indonesian capital city from Jakarta to other locations has been discussed since the Sukarno presidency, and even earlier during the Dutch colonial era.

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Induced seismicity

Induced seismicity refers to typically minor earthquakes and tremors that are caused by human activity that alters the stresses and strains on the Earth's crust.

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Indus River

The Indus River (also called the Sindhū) is one of the longest rivers in Asia.

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Infinite monkey theorem

The infinite monkey theorem states that a monkey hitting keys at random on a typewriter keyboard for an infinite amount of time will almost surely type a given text, such as the complete works of William Shakespeare.

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Infrasound

Infrasound, sometimes referred to as low-frequency sound, is sound that is lower in frequency than 20 Hz or cycles per second, the "normal" limit of human hearing.

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INRS-EMT

The Énergie, Matériaux et Télécommunications (EMT, Energy, Materials and Telecommunications) is part of the INRS research university in Quebec.

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Inside Outside (novel)

Inside / Outside is a science fiction novel by American writer Philip José Farmer.

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InSight

InSight is a robotic lander designed to study the interior of the planet Mars.

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Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (IPM&R) Khyber Medical University is the only institute in Public sector in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa which offers five years (ten Semesters) Doctor of Physiotherapy course.

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Institute of technology

An institute of technology (also: university of technology, polytechnic university, technikon, and technical university) is a type of university which specializes in engineering, technology, applied science, and sometimes natural sciences.

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Instituto de Ciencias de la Tierra Jaume Almera

The Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera (original name in Spanish Instituto de Ciencias de la Tierra Jaume Almera, ICTJA) is an earth science public research institute of the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC).

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Insular Mountains

The Insular Mountains are a range of mountains in the Pacific Coast Ranges on the Coast of British Columbia, Canada, comprising the Vancouver Island Ranges and Queen Charlotte Mountains.

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Insurance

Insurance is a means of protection from financial loss.

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Intangible asset finance

Intangible Asset Finance is the branch of finance that deals with intangible assets such as patents (legal intangible) and reputation (competitive intangible).

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Interbay, Seattle

Interbay is a neighborhood in Seattle, Washington in the United States consisting of the valley between Queen Anne Hill on the east and Magnolia on the west, plus filled-in areas of Smith Cove and Salmon Bay.

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Interferometric synthetic-aperture radar

Interferometric synthetic aperture radar, abbreviated InSAR (or deprecated IfSAR), is a radar technique used in geodesy and remote sensing.

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Internal erosion

Internal erosion is the formation of voids within a soil caused the removal of material by seepage.

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International Building Code

The International Building Code (IBC) is a model building code developed by the International Code Council (ICC).

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International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction

The United Nations General Assembly designated the 1990s as the International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction (IDNDR).

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International Nuclear Event Scale

The International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale (INES) was introduced in 1990 by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in order to enable prompt communication of safety-significant information in case of nuclear accidents.

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International Organization for Peace, Care and Relief

The International Organization for Peace, Care and Relief (IOPCR) is a non-governmental organization based in Tripoli, Libya.

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International rankings of Iran

The following are international rankings for Iran.

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International Seismological Centre

The International Seismological Centre (ISC) is a non-governmental, nonprofit organization charged with the final collection, definitive analysis and publication of global seismicity.

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International Society of Nephrology

The International Society of Nephrology (ISN) is an international body representing specialists in nephrology (kidney diseases).

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Interplate earthquake

An interplate earthquake is an earthquake that occurs at the boundary between two tectonic plates.

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Interstate 238

Interstate 238 (I-238) is a short auxiliary route of the Interstate Highway System in the San Francisco Bay Area in the U.S. state of California.

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Interstate 880

Interstate 880 (I-880) is an Interstate Highway in the San Francisco Bay Area connecting San Jose and Oakland, running parallel to the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay.

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Intraplate earthquake

The term intraplate earthquake refers to a variety of earthquake that occurs within the interior of a tectonic plate; this stands in contrast to an interplate earthquake, which occurs at the boundary of a tectonic plate.

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Invisibility in fiction

Invisibility in fiction is a common plot device, found in both the science fiction and fantasy genres.

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Ionian Sea

The Ionian Sea (Ιόνιο Πέλαγος,, Mar Ionio,, Deti Jon) is an elongated bay of the Mediterranean Sea, south of the Adriatic Sea.

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Ionosat-Micro

Ionosat Micro — Ukrainian satellite mission.

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Iranian Red Crescent Society

The Iranian Red Crescent Society (IRCS), officially the Red Crescent Society of the Islamic Republic of Iran (Jamʿiyat-e Helāl-e Aḥmar-e Jomhuri-e eslāmi-e Irān) is a non-governmental humanitarian organization in Iran.

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Iranian Space Agency

The Iranian Space Agency (ISA, Persian: سازمان فضایی ایران Sázmán e Fazái e Irán) is Iran's governmental space agency.

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IRIS Consortium

IRIS (Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology) is a university research consortium dedicated to exploring the Earth's interior through the collection and distribution of seismographic data.

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Irruputuncu

Irruputuncu is a volcano in the commune of Pica, Tamarugal Province, Tarapacá Region, Chile, as well as San Pedro de Quemes Municipality, Nor Lípez Province, Potosí Department, Bolivia.

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Irving Friedman

Irving Friedman (January 12, 1920 – June 28, 2005) was a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) scientist and a pioneer in geochemistry.

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Isabela, Puerto Rico

Isabela is a municipality of Puerto Rico (U.S.) located in the north-western region of the island, north of San Sebastián; west of Quebradillas; and east of Aguadilla and Moca.

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Isidore of Miletus

Isidore of Miletus (Ἰσίδωρος ὁ Μιλήσιος; Medieval Greek pronunciation:; Isidorus Miletus) was one of the two main Byzantine Greek architects (Anthemius of Tralles was the other) that Emperor Justinian I commissioned to design the cathedral Hagia Sophia in Constantinople from 532 to 537.

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Islam in China

Islam in China has existed through 1,400 years of continuous interaction with Chinese society.

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Islamic attitudes towards science

Muslim scholars have developed a spectrum of viewpoints on science within the context of Islam.

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Island arc

An island arc is a type of archipelago, often composed of a chain of volcanoes, with arc-shaped alignment, situated parallel and close to a boundary between two converging tectonic plates.

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Isole Tremiti

The Isole Tremiti are an archipelago in the Adriatic Sea, north of the Gargano Peninsula.

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Isoseismal map

In seismology, an isoseismal map is used to show lines of equal felt seismic intensity, generally measured on the Modified Mercalli scale.

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Isostasy

Isostasy (Greek ''ísos'' "equal", ''stásis'' "standstill") is the state of gravitational equilibrium between Earth's crust and mantle such that the crust "floats" at an elevation that depends on its thickness and density.

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Isparta

Isparta (Σπάρτη, Baris/Βάρις in Byzantine Greek) is a city in western Turkey and the capital of Isparta Province. The city's population was 222,556 in 2010 and its elevation is 1035 m. It is known as the "City of Roses". Isparta is well-connected to other parts of Turkey via roads. Antalya lies 130 km to the south and Eskişehir is 350 km to the north. Süleyman Demirel University has introduced thousands of youths from varied backgrounds to the city's mostly conservative fabric in recent years. The city's football team, Ispartaspor, plays in Group 7 of the Turkish Regional Amateur League.

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IsraAid

The Israel Forum for International Humanitarian Aid (IsraAID) is an Israel-based humanitarian organization that responds to emergencies all over the world with targeted help.

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Israeli security forces

Security forces in Israel (also known as Israel security establishment, מערכת הבטחון, Ma'arechet ha'Bitachon) include a variety of organizations, including law enforcement, military, paramilitary, governmental, and intelligence agencies.

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It Could Happen Tomorrow

It Could Happen Tomorrow is a television series that premiered on January 15, 2006 on The Weather Channel.

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Izu-Tobu

is a large, dominantly basaltic range of volcanoes on the east side of the Izu Peninsula which lies on the Pacific coast of the island of Honshu in Japan.

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Jack Butler (Jiwarli)

Jack Butler (4 May 1901 – April 1986) was an Indigenous Australian and perhaps the last speaker of the Jiwarli dialect.

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Jack Oliver (scientist)

John "Jack" Ertle Oliver (September 26, 1923 – January 5, 2011) was an American scientist.

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Jajce

Jajce is a town and municipality located in Central Bosnia Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Jake (rescue dog)

Jake (1995 – July 25, 2007) was a well-known American black labrador who served as a search and rescue dog following the September 11 attacks and Hurricane Katrina.

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James A. FitzPatrick Nuclear Power Plant

The James A. FitzPatrick (JAF) Nuclear Power Plant is located in the Town of Scriba, near Oswego, New York, on the southeast shore of Lake Ontario.

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James Basevi

James Basevi (born 21 September 1890, Plymouth, Devon, England – d. 27 March 1962, Bellflower, California) was a British-born art director and special effects expert.

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James Bay Project

The James Bay Project (in French, projet de la Baie-James) refers to the construction by state-owned utility Hydro-Québec of a series of hydroelectric power stations on the La Grande River in northwestern Quebec, Canada, and the diversion of neighbouring rivers into the La Grande watershed.

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James S. Langer

James S. Langer is Professor of Physics at the University of California at Santa Barbara.

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Jan Jeffcoat

Jan Jeffcoat is a morning TV news anchor for WUSA-TV in Washington, D.C..

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Jana of the Jungle

Jana of the Jungle is a 30-minute Saturday morning animated series created by Doug Wildey, produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions and broadcast on NBC from September 9, 1978, to December 2, 1978.

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Jannette B. Frandsen

Jannette Behrndtz Frandsen is a researcher and consultant who works in many fields including nearshore hydrodynamics, aeroelasticity, numerical analysis, computational fluid dynamics, coastal modeling, experimental fluid mechanics, sloshing, coastal erosion, climate change related problems, e.g., sea level rise, natural hazards (storms, tsunamis), wind energy, biomimetics, wave energy.

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January 1914

The following events occurred in January 1914.

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January 1968

The following events occurred in January 1968.

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January 23

No description.

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Japan (1992 manga)

is a Japanese manga written by Buronson (author of Fist of the North Star) and illustrated by Kentaro Miura (author of Berserk).

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Japan Meteorological Agency

The, JMA, is an agency of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism.

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Japan Meteorological Agency seismic intensity scale

The Japan Meteorological Agency seismic intensity scale is a seismic scale used in Japan to measure the intensity of earthquakes.

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Japan Trench

The Japan Trench is an oceanic trench part of the Pacific Ring of Fire off northeast Japan.

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Japanese Red Cross Society

The is the Japanese affiliate of the International Red Cross.

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Japjup

Japjup is a small village in Lakhimpur district, Assam, near Bihpuria.

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Jérémie

Jérémie (Jeremi) is a commune and capital city of the Grand'Anse department in Haiti.

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Jens Christian Spidberg

Jens Christian Spidberg was a Norwegian theologian and priest.

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Jesse & Joy

Jesse & Joy is a Mexican pop duo formed in 2005 by brother and sister; Jesse, male (born December 31, 1982, as Jesse Eduardo Huerta Uecke) and Joy, female (born June 20, 1986, as Tirzah Joy Huerta Uecke), from Mexico City.

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Jie of Xia

King Jie (traditionally 17281675 BCE) was the 17th and last ruler of the Xia dynasty of China.

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Jijel

Jijel (جيجل, or Djidjelli) is the capital of Jijel Province in north-eastern Algeria.

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Jin Mao Tower

The Jin Mao Tower, also known as the or, is an 88-story (93 if counting the floors in the spire) landmark skyscraper in Lujiazui, Pudong, Shanghai, China.

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Joan Toralles

Joan Toralles was a Catalan author from Vic of a brief historical tract, the Noticiari ("Notices").

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Johann-Dietrich Wörner

Johann-Dietrich "Jan" Wörner, born 18 July 1954 in Kassel, is a German civil engineer, university professor and former president of Technische Universität Darmstadt.

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John D. Hamaker

John D. Hamaker (1914–1994), was an American mechanical engineer, ecologist, agronomist and science writer in the fields of soil regeneration, rock dusting, mineral cycles, climate cycles and glaciology.

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John Doolittle

John Taylor Doolittle (born October 30, 1950), is an attorney and an American politician.

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John J. Clague

John Joseph Clague PhD FRSC (born 1946) is an award-winning Canadian authority in Quaternary and environmental earth sciences.

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John Milne

John Milne (30 December 1850 – 31 July 1913) was a British geologist and mining engineer who worked on a horizontal seismograph.

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John Muir

John Muir (April 21, 1838 – December 24, 1914) also known as "John of the Mountains" and "Father of the National Parks", was an influential Scottish-American naturalist, author, environmental philosopher, glaciologist and early advocate for the preservation of wilderness in the United States.

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John Ochsendorf

John Ochsendorf (born 1974) is an educator, structural engineer, and historian of construction; he is a professor in the Department of Architecture and the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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John Rudnicki

John W. Rudnicki (born August 12, 1951 in Huntington, West Virginia) is an American engineering educator.

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Jor-El

Jor-El, originally known as Jor-L, is a fictional character appearing in various titles published by DC Comics.

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Jose Luis Mateos

Jose Luis Mateos Trigos (born 13 July 1961) is a theoretical physicist working at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), doing research on Complex Systems, Network Science and Statistical Physics.

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Joseph Mancinelli

Joseph "Joe" Mancinelli (born September 11, 1957) is the International Vice President and Regional Manager for Central and Eastern Canada of the Laborers' International Union of North America, a US-based labour union representing over 800,000 total members with 60,000 members in the LIUNA Central and Eastern Canadian region.

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Journal of Earthquake and Tsunami

The Journal of Earthquake and Tsunami was founded in 2007 and is published by World Scientific.

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Journey to Dinosaur Island

Dinosaur Island (also known as Journey to Dinosaur Island in the UK) is a 2014 British-Australian family adventure film.

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Journey to Where

"Journey to Where" is the fifth episode of the second series of Space: 1999 (and the twenty-ninth overall episode of the programme).

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Joyce, Washington

Joyce is an unincorporated community in Clallam County, Washington, United States.

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Juan de Fuca Plate

The Juan de Fuca Plate is a tectonic plate generated from the Juan de Fuca Ridge and is subducting under the northerly portion of the western side of the North American Plate at the Cascadia subduction zone.

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Jubilee Trail

Jubilee Trail is a novel written by Gwen Bristow, copyrighted in 1950.

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July 1909

The following events occurred in July 1909.

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July 1981

The following events occurred in July 1981.

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June 2011 Christchurch earthquake

The June 2011 Christchurch earthquake was a shallow magnitude 6.3 ML earthquake that occurred on 13 June 2011 at 14:20 NZST (02:20 UTC).

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Jungle Cruise

The Jungle Cruise is a river boat attraction located in Adventureland at many Disney Parks worldwide, namely Disneyland, Magic Kingdom, Tokyo Disneyland and Hong Kong Disneyland (the attraction at Hong Kong Disneyland is named "Jungle River Cruise").

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Junior Woodchucks

The Junior Woodchucks of the World are the Scouting organization to which the Disney characters Huey, Dewey, and Louie belong.

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Kaş

Kaş (pronounced 'Kash') is a small fishing, diving, yachting and tourist town, and a district of Antalya Province of Turkey, 168 km west of the city of Antalya.

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Kaifenheim

Kaifenheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Cochem-Zell district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Kaikoura Peninsula

The Kaikoura Peninsula is located in the northeast of New Zealand's South Island.

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Kallimasia

Kallimasia is a town of Chios, built 13 kilometers south of the capital of the island.

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Kandel (mountain)

The Kandel is a mountain, 1,241.4 metres high, in the Black Forest in the south of Baden-Württemberg, Germany.

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Karoo

The Karoo (from a Khoikhoi word, possibly garo "desert") is a semidesert natural region of South Africa.

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Kathmandu Durbar Square

Kathmandu Durbar Square (Basantapur Darbar Kshetra) in front of the old royal palace of the former Kathmandu Kingdom is one of three Durbar (royal palace) Squares in the Kathmandu Valley in Nepal, all of which are UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

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Kīlauea

Kīlauea is a currently active shield volcano in the Hawaiian Islands, and the most active of the five volcanoes that together form the island of Hawaiokinai.

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Kīlauea Iki

Kīlauea Iki is a pit crater that is next to the main summit caldera of Kīlauea on the island of Hawaiʻi in the Hawaiian Islands.

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Kırşehir Province

Kırşehir Province (Kırşehir ili) is located in central Turkey, forming part of the central Anatolian region. It stands on the North Anatolian Fault, and is currently in an earthquake warning zone. The average elevation is approximately 985 meters above sea level. The provincial capital is Kırşehir. It became a province in 1924. On 30 May 1954, it was accepted as a district of Nevşehir. Later, the towns of Kırşehir were divided between Ankara, Yozgat and Nevşehir. In 1957, Kırşehir became a province again.

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Kekova

Kekova, also named Caravola Bertarelli (1929), p.134 (Lycian: Dolichiste), is a small Turkish island near Demre (Demre is the Lycian town of Myra) district of Antalya province which faces the villages of Kaleköy (ancient Simena) and Üçağız (ancient Teimioussa).

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Kelton, Utah

Kelton is a ghost town, just north of the Great Salt Lake, in the Park Valley area of Box Elder County, Utah, United States.

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Kentucky Dam

Kentucky Dam is a hydroelectric dam on the Tennessee River on the county line between Livingston and Marshall counties in the U.S. state of Kentucky.

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Kerch Strait

The Kerch Strait (Керченский пролив, Керченська протока, Keriç boğazı) is a strait connecting the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov, separating the Kerch Peninsula of Crimea in the west from the Taman Peninsula of Russia's Krasnodar Krai in the east.

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Kermadec Plate

The Kermadec Plate is a very long and narrow tectonic plate located west of the Kermadec Trench in the south Pacific Ocean.

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Kerman Province

Kerman Province (استان کرمان, Ostān-e Kermān) is one of the 31 provinces of Iran.

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Kerry Sieh

Kerry E. Sieh is an American geologist and seismologist.

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Kessen II

is a strategy game loosely based on the Three Kingdoms period of China.

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Kevork Hovnanian

Kevork S. Hovnanian (1923 – September 24, 2009) was an Armenian-American businessman and home builder, who founded Hovnanian Enterprises in 1959.

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Key Monastery

Kye Gompa (also spelled Ki, Key or Kee - pronounced like English key) is a Tibetan Buddhist monastery located on top of a hill at an altitude of above sea level, close to the Spiti River, in the Spiti Valley of Himachal Pradesh, Lahaul and Spiti district, India.

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Keystone Pipeline

The Keystone Pipeline System is an oil pipeline system in Canada and the United States, commissioned in 2010 and now owned solely by TransCanada Corporation.

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Kfarfakoud

Kfarfakoud (Kfarfakud or Kafarfakoud كفرفاقود) is a village in the Chouf district of Lebanon that lies between the valleys of the coastal Lebanese chain of mountains.

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KHCAA Golden Jubilee Chamber Complex

KHCAA Golden Jubilee Chamber Complex is a Chambers building of the Kerala High Court Advocates Association in the city of Kochi in the state of Kerala, India.

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Khorasan Province

Khorasan (استان خراسان) (also transcribed as Khurasan and Khorassan, also called Traxiane during Hellenistic and Parthian times) was a province in north eastern Iran, but historically referred to a much larger area east and north-east of the Persian Empire.

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King Range (California)

The King Range is a mountain range of the Outer Northern California Coast Ranges System, located entirely within Humboldt County on the North Coast of California.

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King You of Zhou

King You of Zhou (795–771 BC) was the eleventh king of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty and the last of Western Zhou Dynasty.

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Kingdom Hospital

Kingdom Hospital (sometimes known as Stephen King's Kingdom Hospital) is a thirteen-episode television series based on Lars von Trier's The Kingdom (Danish title: Riget), which was developed by horror writer Stephen King in 2004 for American television.

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Kingdome

The Kingdome (officially King County Multipurpose Domed Stadium) was a multi-purpose stadium in Seattle's SoDo neighborhood.

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Kingston, Jamaica

Kingston is the capital and largest city of Jamaica, located on the southeastern coast of the island.

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Kiryat Shmona

Kiryat Shmona (קִרְיַת שְׁמוֹנָה, lit. Town of the Eight) is a city located in the Northern District of Israel on the western slopes of the Hula Valley near the Lebanese border.

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Kisho Kurokawa

(April 8, 1934 – October 12, 2007) was a leading Japanese architect and one of the founders of the Metabolist Movement.

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Kiyoo Mogi

Dr.

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Klek, Zrenjanin

Klek (Serbian Cyrillic: Клек) is a village located in the Zrenjanin municipality, Central Banat District, Vojvodina, Serbia.

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Koa'e Fault Zone

The Koa’e Fault Zone (pronounced coe-wah-hee) is a series of fault scarps connecting the East and Southwest Rift Zones on Kilauea Volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii.

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Koeberg Nuclear Power Station

Koeberg nuclear power station is a nuclear power station in South Africa.

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Komárno

Komárno (Komárom, colloquially Révkomárom, Öregkomárom, Észak-Komárom, Komorn, Komoran/Коморан) is a town in Slovakia at the confluence of the Danube and the Váh rivers.

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Kortekeer

Kortekeer is the name of an uphill road in the municipality of Maarkedal, in the Belgian province of East Flanders.

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Korumburra

Korumburra is a town in the Australian state of Victoria.

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Koryak Okrug

Koryak Okrug (Korjakskij okrug; Koryak: Чав’чываокруг, Čav’čyvaokrug), or Koryakia Korjakija), is an administrative division of Kamchatka Krai, Russia.

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Kotor

Kotor (Montenegrin Cyrillic: Котор,; Cattaro) is a coastal town in Montenegro.

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Koyna Dam

The Koyna Dam is one of the largest dams in Maharashtra, India.

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Kozani

Kozani (Κοζάνη) is a city in northern Greece, capital of Kozani regional unit and of West Macedonia region.

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Krak des Chevaliers

Krak des Chevaliers (حصن الفرسان), also Crac des Chevaliers, Ḥoṣn al-Akrād (rtl, literally "Castle of the Kurds"), formerly Crac de l'Ospital is a Crusader castle in Syria and one of the most important preserved medieval castles in the world.

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Kuldhara

Kuldhara is an abandoned village in the Jaisalmer district of Rajasthan, India.

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Kuril Islands

The Kuril Islands or Kurile Islands (or; p or r; Japanese: or), in Russia's Sakhalin Oblast region, form a volcanic archipelago that stretches approximately northeast from Hokkaido, Japan, to Kamchatka, Russia, separating the Sea of Okhotsk from the north Pacific Ocean.

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Kyojuu Tokusou Juspion

, also known as Space Wolf Juspion, is a Japanese tokusatsu television series and part of the Metal Hero series.

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Kyoto Tower

is an observation tower located in Kyoto, Japan.

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Kyrgyz Seismic Network

Kyrgyz Seismic Network.

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Kyrgyzstan Emergency Situations Ministry

The Kyrgyzstan Emergency Situations Ministry is a special ministry in Kyrgyzstan dedicated to the response of natural disasters such as earthquakes or landslides or serious accidents.

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Kythira

Kythira (Κύθηρα, also transliterated as Cythera, Kythera and Kithira) is an island in Greece lying opposite the south-eastern tip of the Peloponnese peninsula.

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L'Aquila–Preturo Airport

L'Aquila–Preturo Airport (Aeroporto dei Parchi – L'Aquila), is an airport serving L'Aquila, a city and comune of the Abruzzo region in central Italy.

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La Chureca

La Chureca (Spanish slang word for city dump) was the municipal domestic and industrial waste-disposal site in Managua, Nicaragua.

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La Purísima Mission State Historic Park

La Purísima Mission State Historic Park is a state park unit of California, United States, containing La Purisima Mission, considered to be the most completely restored Spanish mission in California.

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La Reforma (caldera)

La Reforma is a Plio-Pleistocene caldera on the Baja California Peninsula in Mexico.

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Lac de Gafsa

Lac de Gafsa, also called 'Mysterious Lake', appeared unexpectedly in 2014 alongside Om Laryes Road, 25 kilometers from the town of Gafsa in Tunisia.

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Laguna del Maule (volcano)

Laguna del Maule is a volcanic field in the Andes mountain range of Chile, close to, and partly overlapping, the Chile-Argentina frontier.

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Lahar

A lahar (from wlahar) is a violent type of mudflow or debris flow composed of a slurry of pyroclastic material, rocky debris and water.

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Lajia

Lajia is an archaeological site located in Minhe County, Haidong Prefecture in Northwest China's Qinghai province.

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Lake Baikal

Lake Baikal (p; Байгал нуур, Baigal nuur; Байгал нуур, Baigal nuur, etymologically meaning, in Mongolian, "the Nature Lake") is a rift lake in Russia, located in southern Siberia, between Irkutsk Oblast to the northwest and the Buryat Republic to the southeast.

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Lake Balanan

Lake Balanan is a lake situated in Siaton, Negros Oriental in the Philippines.

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Lake breakout

Lake breakout is a geological term that refers to the collapse of a (usually high-altitude) lake.

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Lake Cahuilla

Lake Cahuilla (also known as Lake LeConte and Blake Sea) is a prehistoric lake in California and northern Mexico.

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Lake Chichoj

Lake Chichoj is located near the city of San Cristóbal Verapaz, in the department of Alta Verapaz, in Guatemala.

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Lake island

A lake island is any landmass within a lake.

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Lake Kariba

Lake Kariba is the world's largest man-made lake and reservoir by volume.

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Lake Küçükçekmece

Lake Küçükçekmece (Küçükçekmece Gölü) is a lagoon located between the Küçükçekmece, Esenyurt and Avcılar districts of the European portion of Istanbul Province, northwestern Turkey.

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Lake Kohangatera

Lake Kohangatera is one of two lakes in Fitzroy Bay (to the east of Pencarrow Head, on the eastern side of New Zealand's Wellington Harbour).

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Lake Nyos

Lake Nyos is a crater lake in the Northwest Region of Cameroon, located about northwest of Yaoundé the capital.

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Lake Perris

Lake Perris is an artificial lake completed in 1973.

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Lake Timiskaming

Lake Timiskaming or Lake Temiskaming (Lac Témiscamingue) is a large freshwater lake on the provincial boundary between Ontario and Quebec, Canada.

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Lake Toba

Lake Toba (Danau Toba) is a large natural lake in Indonesia occupying the caldera of a supervolcano.

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Lakeport, California

Lakeport is an incorporated city and county seat of Lake County, California.

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Lamentation Mountain

Lamentation Mountain, or Mount Lamentation,, is a traprock mountain located north of Meriden, Connecticut.

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Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory

The Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) is a research unit of Columbia University located on a campus in Palisades, N.Y., north of Manhattan on the Hudson River.

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Land Beneath the Ground!

"Land Beneath the Ground!" is a Scrooge McDuck comic strip story that appeared in 1956 in the comic book Uncle Scrooge, written by Carl Barks.

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Land of the Lost (1991 TV series)

Land of the Lost is a half-hour Saturday-morning children's series that debuted on ABC in the fall of 1991.

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Landfill

A landfill site (also known as a tip, dump, rubbish dump, garbage dump or dumping ground and historically as a midden) is a site for the disposal of waste materials by burial.

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Landlords' insurance

Landlords' insurance is an insurance policy that covers a property owner from financial losses connected with rental properties.

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Landslide

The term landslide or, less frequently, landslip, refers to several forms of mass wasting that include a wide range of ground movements, such as rockfalls, deep-seated slope failures, mudflows and debris flows.

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Landslide classification

There have been known various classifications of landslides and other types of mass wasting.

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Landslide dam

A landslide dam or barrier lake is a natural damming of a river by some kind of landslides, such as debris flows and rock avalanches, or by volcanic eruptions.

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Laodicea on the Lycus

Laodicea on the Lycus (Λαοδίκεια πρὸς τοῦ Λύκου; Laodicea ad Lycum, also transliterated as Laodiceia or Laodikeia) (modern Laodikeia) was an ancient city built on the river Lycus (Çürüksu).

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Lapworth Museum of Geology

The Lapworth Museum of Geology is a geological museum run by the University of Birmingham and located on the University's campus in Edgbaston, south Birmingham, England.

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Las Bovedas

Las Bóvedas (the domes) is the local name for the remains of some Roman baths near San Pedro de Alcántara in Andalucia, Southern Spain.

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Lassen Volcanic National Park

Lassen Volcanic National Park is a United States National Park in northeastern California.

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Last Week Tonight with John Oliver

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (often abridged as Last Week Tonight) is an American late-night talk and news satire television program hosted by comedian John Oliver.

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Latacunga

Latacunga is a plateau town of Ecuador, capital of the Cotopaxi Province, south of Quito, near the confluence of the Alaquez and Cutuchi rivers to form the Patate, the headstream of the Pastaza.

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Lauderdale County, Tennessee

Lauderdale County is a county located on the western edge of the U.S. state of Tennessee, with its border the Mississippi River.

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Lava Beds National Monument

Lava Beds National Monument is located in northeastern California, in Siskiyou and Modoc counties.

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Lavalantula

Lavalantula is an American 2015 science fiction horror thriller television film that takes place after a series of volcanic eruptions in Los Angeles unleashes a swarm of gigantic, lava-breathing tarantulas from which the film draws its title.

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Lawrence Blair

Lawrence Blair, Ph.D. is an anthropologist, author, explorer and filmmaker.

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Lawrence Hall of Science

The Lawrence Hall of Science is a public science center that offers hands-on science exhibits, designs curriculum, aids professional development, and offers after school science resources to students of all ages.

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Lévy flight

A Lévy flight, named for French mathematician Paul Lévy, is a random walk in which the step-lengths have a probability distribution that is heavy-tailed.

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Lōʻihi Seamount

Lōihi Seamount (also known as Lōʻihi) is an active submarine volcano about off the southeast coast of the island of Hawaii.

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Le Grand-Bornand

Le Grand-Bornand is a commune in the Haute-Savoie department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in south-eastern France.

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Le Vernet, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence

Le Vernet is a commune in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department, and in the region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, in southeastern France.

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Lee Sang-mook

Lee Sang-Mook (born October 18, 1962) is a Korean marine geologist.

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Legend of Dinosaurs & Monster Birds

, also known as The "Legend of Dinosaurs" is a 1977 Japanese science fiction film produced and distributed by Toei Company.

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Legends of Oz: Dorothy's Return

Legends of Oz: Dorothy's Return is a 2013 American-Indian 3D computer-animated musical fantasy film that is loosely based on the book Dorothy of Oz by L. Frank Baum's great-grandson Roger Stanton Baum.

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Lejía Lake

Laguna Lejía is a salt lake located in the Altiplano of the Antofagasta Region of northern Chile.

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Leland Stanford Winery

Leland Stanford Winery was a winery located in the Santa Clara Valley AVA, in Fremont, California, United States.

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Lenin Peak

Lenin Peak (Ленин Чокусу, Lenin Çoqusu, لەنىن چوقۇسۇ; Пик Ленина, Pik Lenina; қуллаи Ленин, qulla‘i Lenin/qullaji Lenin, renamed қуллаи Абӯалӣ ибни Сино (qulla‘i Abûalî ibni Sino) in July 2006 (Tajik); for Russian text.), or Ibn Sina (Avicenna) Peak, rises to 7,134 metres (23,406 ft) in Gorno-Badakhshan (GBAO) on the border of Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, and is the second-highest point of both countries.

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Leon Fortunato

Leonardo "Leon" Fortunato is a fictional character in the Left Behind series of Christian novels by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins.

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Les Ondes Silencieuses

Les Ondes Silencieuses (English: The Still Waters) is the third full-length album by French electronica artist Colleen (real name Cécile Schott) released on May 21, 2007.

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Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge

Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge is a National Wildlife Refuge of the United States located in Arizona.

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Lewes

Lewes is the county town of East Sussex and formerly all of Sussex.

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LGBT history in Italy

This article is about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) history in Italy.

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Liberty Science Center

Liberty Science Center is an interactive science museum and learning center located in Liberty State Park in Jersey City in Hudson County, New Jersey, United States.

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Library of Congress Classification:Class Q -- Science

Class Q: Science is a classification used by the Library of Congress Classification system.

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Licancabur

Licancabur is a stratovolcano on the border between Bolivia and Chile, south of the Sairecabur volcano and west of Juriques.

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Life or Something Like It

Life or Something Like It is a 2002 romantic comedy/drama film directed by Stephen Herek.

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Limnic eruption

A limnic eruption, also termed a lake overturn, is a rare type of natural disaster in which dissolved carbon dioxide suddenly erupts from deep lake waters, forming a gas cloud capable of suffocating wildlife, livestock, and humans.

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Lincoln, Montana

Lincoln is a census-designated place (CDP) in Lewis and Clark County, Montana, United States.

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Linear elasticity

Linear elasticity is the mathematical study of how solid objects deform and become internally stressed due to prescribed loading conditions.

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Lingxiao Pagoda

The Lingxiao Pagoda is a Chinese pagoda west of the Xinglong Temple in Zhengding, Hebei Province, China.

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Linley, Shropshire

Linley is a hamlet in Shropshire, England.

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List group label strategy

List, Group, Label, or LGL, is a prereading strategy designed to help students make connections to prior knowledge.

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List of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction

This is a list of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction works as portrayed in literature, film, television, and, comics.

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List of atheists in science and technology

This is a list of atheists in science and technology.

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List of California ballot propositions 1990–99

This is a list of California ballot propositions from 1990–1999.

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List of Cardcaptor Sakura episodes

The 70-episode Cardcaptor Sakura Japanese anime television series is based on the manga series written and illustrated by the manga artist group Clamp.

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List of CB slang

CB slang is the distinctive anti-language, argot or cant which developed among users of Citizens Band radio (CB), especially truck drivers in the United States during the 1970s and early 1980s.

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List of Chinese inventions

China has been the source of many innovations, scientific discoveries and inventions.

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List of countries by natural disaster risk

This is a list of countries by natural disaster risk, as measured in the World Risk Index, calculated by the United Nations University Institute for Environment and Human Security (UNU-EHS) and featured in the 2016 World Risk Report (WRR 2016) published by the Alliance Development Works/Bündnis Entwicklung Hilft (BEH).

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List of covers of Time magazine (1970s)

This is a list of people appearing on the cover of ''Time'' magazine in the 1970s.

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List of Curb Your Enthusiasm episodes

The HBO comedy television series Curb Your Enthusiasm premiered with an hour-long special on October 17, 1999.

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List of deadly earthquakes since 1900

The following list compiles known earthquakes that have caused one or more fatalities since 1900.

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List of disasters in Australia by death toll

This is a list of disasters and tragic events in modern Australia sorted by death toll.

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List of disasters in Japan by death toll

This is a list of Japanese disasters by their death toll.

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List of disasters in New Zealand by death toll

This is a list of New Zealand disasters by death toll, listing major disasters (excluding acts of war) which occurred in New Zealand and its territories or involved a significant number of New Zealand citizens, in a specific incident, where the loss of life was 10 or more.

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List of disasters in the Philippines

List of disasters in the Philippines.

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List of disasters in the United States by death toll

This list of United States disasters by death toll is a list of notable disasters which occurred either in the United States, at diplomatic missions of the United States, or incidents outside of the United States in which a number of U.S. citizens were killed.

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List of distributed computing projects

This is a list of distributed computing and grid computing projects.

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List of earthquakes in 1900

This is a list of earthquakes in 1900.

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List of earthquakes in 1901

This is a list of earthquakes in 1901.

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List of earthquakes in 1902

This is a list of earthquakes in 1902.

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List of earthquakes in 1903

This is a list of earthquakes in 1903.

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List of earthquakes in 1904

This is a list of earthquakes in 1904.

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List of earthquakes in 1906

This is a list of earthquakes in 1906.

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List of earthquakes in 1908

This is a list of earthquakes in 1908.

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List of earthquakes in 1909

This is a list of earthquakes in 1909.

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List of earthquakes in 1910

This is a list of earthquakes in 1910.

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List of earthquakes in 1911

This is a list of earthquakes in 1911.

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List of earthquakes in 1912

This is a list of earthquakes in 1912.

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List of earthquakes in 1913

This is a list of earthquakes in 1913.

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List of earthquakes in 1914

This is a list of earthquakes in 1914.

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List of earthquakes in 1915

This is a list of earthquakes in 1915.

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List of earthquakes in 1916

This is a list of earthquakes in 1916.

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List of earthquakes in 1917

This is a list of earthquakes in 1917.

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List of earthquakes in 1918

This is a list of earthquakes in 1918.

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List of earthquakes in 1919

This is a list of earthquakes in 1919.

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List of earthquakes in 1921

This is a list of earthquakes in 1921.

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List of earthquakes in 1922

This is a list of earthquakes in 1922.

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List of earthquakes in 1923

This is a list of earthquakes in 1923.

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List of earthquakes in 1924

This is a list of earthquakes in 1924.

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List of earthquakes in 1925

This is a list of earthquakes in 1925.

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List of earthquakes in 1926

This is a list of earthquakes in 1926.

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List of earthquakes in 1927

This is a list of earthquakes in 1927.

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List of earthquakes in 1928

This is a list of earthquakes in 1928.

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List of earthquakes in 1929

This is a list of earthquakes in 1929.

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List of earthquakes in 1930

This is a list of earthquakes in 1930.

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List of earthquakes in 1931

This is a list of earthquakes in 1931.

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List of earthquakes in 1932

This is a list of earthquakes in 1932.

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List of earthquakes in 1933

This is a list of earthquakes in 1933.

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List of earthquakes in 1934

This is a list of earthquakes in 1934.

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List of earthquakes in 1935

This is a list of earthquakes in 1935.

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List of earthquakes in 1936

This is a list of earthquakes in 1936.

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List of earthquakes in 1937

This is a list of earthquakes in 1937.

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List of earthquakes in 1938

This is a list of earthquakes in 1938.

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List of earthquakes in 1939

This is a list of earthquakes in 1939.

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List of earthquakes in 1940

This is a list of earthquakes in 1940.

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List of earthquakes in 1941

This is a list of earthquakes in 1941.

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List of earthquakes in 1942

This is a list of earthquakes in 1942.

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List of earthquakes in 1943

This is a list of earthquakes in 1943.

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List of earthquakes in 1944

This is a list of earthquakes in 1944.

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List of earthquakes in 1945

This is a list of earthquakes in 1945.

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List of earthquakes in 1946

This is a list of earthquakes in 1946.

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List of earthquakes in 1947

This is a list of earthquakes in 1947.

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List of earthquakes in 1948

This is a list of earthquakes in 1948.

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List of earthquakes in 1949

This is a list of earthquakes in 1949.

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List of earthquakes in 1950

This is a list of earthquakes in 1950.

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List of earthquakes in 1951

This is a list of earthquakes in 1951.

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List of earthquakes in 1952

This is a list of earthquakes in 1952.

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List of earthquakes in 1953

This is a list of earthquakes in 1953.

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List of earthquakes in 1954

This is a list of earthquakes in 1954.

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List of earthquakes in 1955

This is a list of earthquakes in 1955.

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List of earthquakes in 1957

This is a list of earthquakes in 1957.

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List of earthquakes in 1958

This is a list of earthquakes in 1958.

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List of earthquakes in 1959

This is a list of earthquakes in 1959.

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List of earthquakes in 1960

This is a list of earthquakes in 1960.

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List of earthquakes in 1961

This is a list of earthquakes in 1961.

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List of earthquakes in 1962

This is a list of earthquakes in 1962.

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List of earthquakes in 1963

This is a list of earthquakes in 1963.

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List of earthquakes in 1964

This is a list of earthquakes in 1964.

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List of earthquakes in 1965

This is a list of earthquakes in 1965.

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List of earthquakes in 1966

This is a list of earthquakes in 1966.

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List of earthquakes in 1967

This is a list of earthquakes in 1967.

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List of earthquakes in 1968

This is a list of earthquakes in 1968.

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List of earthquakes in 1969

This is a list of earthquakes in 1969. Only magnitude 6.0 or greater earthquakes appear on the list. Lower magnitude events are included if they have caused death, injury or damage. Events which occurred in remote areas will be excluded from the list as they wouldn't have generated significant media interest. All dates are listed according to UTC time. Maximum intensities are indicated on the Mercalli intensity scale and are sourced from United States Geological Survey (USGS) ShakeMap data. Activity generally was slightly below average with 14 events reaching magnitude 7 or greater. The largest event was off the coast of Portugal in February and measured 7.8. Other parts experiencing large events were Indonesia and Russia. The Americas had no events above magnitude 7 which is an uncommon occurrence. Of the 4,000 deaths from earthquakes two events dominated. Southeastern China had an earthquake of magnitude 5.7 in July which contributed 3,000 of the total. Indonesia had the bulk of the rest of the death toll.

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List of earthquakes in 1970

This is a list of earthquakes in 1970.

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List of earthquakes in 1971

This is a list of earthquakes in 1971.

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List of earthquakes in 1972

This is a list of earthquakes in 1972.

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List of earthquakes in 1973

This is a list of earthquakes in 1973.

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List of earthquakes in 1974

This is a list of earthquakes in 1974.

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List of earthquakes in 1975

This is a list of earthquakes in 1975.

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List of earthquakes in 1976

This is a list of earthquakes in 1976.

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List of earthquakes in 1977

This is a list of earthquakes in 1977.

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List of earthquakes in 1978

This is a list of earthquakes in 1978.

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List of earthquakes in 1985

About 67 destructive or powerful earthquakes occurred in 1985.

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List of earthquakes in 1995

Earthquakes in 1995 details the major earthquakes that occurred around the world in the year 1995.

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List of earthquakes in 1999

This is a list of earthquakes in 1999.

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List of earthquakes in 2000

This is a list of earthquakes in 2000.

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List of earthquakes in 2001

This is a list of earthquakes in 2001.

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List of earthquakes in 2002

This is a list of earthquakes in 2002.

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List of earthquakes in 2003

This is a list of earthquakes in 2003.

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List of earthquakes in 2004

This is a list of earthquakes in 2004.

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List of earthquakes in 2011

This is a list of earthquakes in 2011.

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List of earthquakes in 2013

This is a list of earthquakes in 2013.

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List of earthquakes in 2014

This is a list of earthquakes in 2014.

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List of earthquakes in 2015

This is a list of earthquakes in 2015.

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List of earthquakes in 2016

This is a list of earthquakes in 2016.

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List of earthquakes in 2017

This is a list of earthquakes in 2017.

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List of earthquakes in 2018

This is a list of earthquakes in 2018.

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List of earthquakes in Azerbaijan

This list of earthquakes in Azerbaijan, is a list of notable earthquakes that have affected areas within the current boundaries of Azerbaijan.

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List of earthquakes in Chile occurring in 2010

Several earthquakes have occurred in Chilean territory in 2010.

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List of earthquakes in Costa Rica

Notable earthquakes in the history of Costa Rica include the following.

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List of earthquakes in Egypt

This is a list of earthquakes in Egypt, including earthquakes that either had their epicenter in Egypt, or caused significant damage in Egypt.

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List of earthquakes in El Salvador

Notable earthquakes in the history of El Salvador include the following.

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List of earthquakes in Greece

This list of earthquakes in Greece includes notable earthquakes that have affected Greece during recorded history.

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List of earthquakes in India

The Indian subcontinent has a history of earthquakes.

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List of earthquakes in Japan

This is a list of earthquakes in Japan with either a magnitude greater than or equal to 7.0 or which caused significant damage or casualties.

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List of earthquakes in Mendoza Province

This is a list of earthquakes in Mendoza Province.

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List of earthquakes in New Zealand

This is a list of large earthquakes that have occurred in New Zealand.

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List of earthquakes in Nicaragua

Notable earthquakes in the history of Nicaragua include the following.

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List of earthquakes in Pakistan

Pakistan is one of the most seismically active countries in the world, being crossed by several major faults.

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List of earthquakes in Panama

Notable earthquakes in the history of Panama include the following.

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List of earthquakes in Romania

This is a list of earthquakes in Romania, including any notable historical earthquakes that have epicenters within the current boundaries of Romania, or which caused significant effects in this area.

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List of earthquakes in Sichuan

The Sichuan province of China has seen many earthquakes, the most recent of which occurred in 2017.

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List of earthquakes in South Africa

The following is a list of notable earthquakes or tremors that have been detected within South Africa.

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List of earthquakes in Spain

This is a list of notable earthquakes that had epicentres in Spain, or significantly affected the country.

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List of earthquakes in Tajikistan

This list of earthquakes in Tajikistan, is a list of notable earthquakes that have affected the area currently defined as Tajikistan.

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List of earthquakes in the Azores

The following is a list of the prominent or destructive earthquakes occurring in the Azores, or affecting the populous of the archipelago.

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List of earthquakes in the British Isles

The following is an extensive list of earthquakes that have been detected in the British Isles.

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List of earthquakes in the Levant

This is a list of earthquakes in the Levant, including earthquakes that either had their epicenter in the Levant or caused significant damage in the region.

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List of earthquakes in the United States

The following is a list of notable earthquakes and/or tsunamis which had their epicenter in areas that are now part of the United States with the latter affecting areas of the United States.

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List of earthquakes in Turkey

This is a list of earthquakes in Turkey, including any notable historical earthquakes that have epicenters within the current boundaries of Turkey, or which caused significant effects in this area.

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List of earthquakes in Washington (state)

This is a list of earthquakes in Washington, a U.S. state.

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List of English words of Spanish origin

It is a list of English language words whose origin can be traced to the Spanish language as "Spanish loan words".

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List of environmental films

Environmental issues have increasingly become a topic in film and television.

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List of eponyms (L–Z)

An eponym is a person (real or fictitious) whose name has become identified with a particular object or activity.

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List of fictional fish

This is a list of fictional fish from literature, animation and movies.

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List of films set in Las Vegas

This is a list of films set in Las Vegas.

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List of films set in Los Angeles

In the history of motion pictures in the United States, many films have been set in Los Angeles respectively in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, or a fictionalized version thereof.

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List of films set in New York City

In the history of motion pictures in the United States, many films have been set in New York City, or a fictionalized version thereof.

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List of G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero episodes

This page is a list of G.I. Joe episodes.

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List of geological phenomena

A geological phenomenon is a phenomenon which is explained by or sheds light on the science of geology.

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List of geologists

A geologist is a contributor to the science of geology.

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List of geophysicists

This is a list of geophysicists, people who made notable contributions to geophysics, whether or not geophysics was their primary field.

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List of Greek and Latin roots in English/S

Category:Lists of words.

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List of heaviest bells

Following is a list of the heaviest bells known to have been cast, and the period of time during which they held that title.

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List of historical earthquakes

Historical earthquakes is a list of significant earthquakes known to have occurred prior to the beginning of the 20th century.

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List of Horizon episodes

Horizon is a current and long-running BBC popular science and philosophy documentary programme.

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List of international earthquake acceleration coefficients

List of international earthquake acceleration coefficients.

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List of longest mountain chains on Earth

The world's longest above-water mountain range is the Andes, about long.

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List of Lopez Tonight episodes

This is a list of episodes for Lopez Tonight, which aired from November 9, 2009 to August 12, 2011 on TBS.

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List of Mahou Sentai Magiranger characters

This is a list of characters from the 2005 television series Mahou Sentai Magiranger.

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List of Marvel Comics characters: M

M-11 is a robot.

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List of measuring devices

No description.

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List of minor Circle of Magic characters

This is a list of minor characters who appear in the Circle of Magic quartet by Tamora Pierce: Sandry's Book, Tris's Book, Daja's Book and Briar's Book.

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List of Naked Science episodes

The following is a list of episodes of Naked Science, an American documentary television series which premiered in 2004 on the National Geographic Channel.

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List of natural disasters in the United States

This list of United States natural disasters is a list of notable natural disasters which occurred in the United States from 1816 to 2017.

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List of natural phenomena

Types of natural phenomena include, but are not limited to, the following: Weather, fog, thunder, tornadoes; biological processes, decomposition, germination; physical processes, wave propagation, erosion; tidal flow, and natural disasters such as electromagnetic pulses, volcanic eruptions, and earthquakes.

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List of New Hampshire historical markers (101–125)

This is part of the list of New Hampshire historical markers.

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List of nuclear weapons tests of North Korea

North Korea has conducted six nuclear tests, in 2006, 2009, 2013, twice in 2016, and 2017.

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List of oracular statements from Delphi

Pythia was the priestess presiding over the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi.

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List of people from Montclair, New Jersey

Notable current and former residents of Montclair, New Jersey, include.

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List of pharaohs

This article contains a list of the pharaohs of Ancient Egypt, from the Early Dynastic Period before 3100 BC through to the end of the Ptolemaic Dynasty, when Egypt became a province of Rome under Augustus Caesar in 30 BC.

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List of plate tectonics topics

This is a list of articles related to plate tectonics and tectonic plates.

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List of populated places affected by the 2010 Haiti earthquake

This is a list of populated places and structures affected by the 2010 Haiti earthquake, a magnitude 7.0 Mw earthquake that occurred on 12 January 2010, with an epicentre approximately west of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and affected an estimated three million people.

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List of Porphy no Nagai Tabi episodes

The table below lists the episodes of the Nippon Animation anime Porphy no Nagai Tabi, which is an adaptation of the 1955 French novel Les Orphelins de Simitra (The Orphans of Simitra) by Paul-Jacques Bonzon.

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List of Power Rangers Lightspeed Rescue characters

Power Rangers Lightspeed Rescue features the battle between the Lightspeed Rescue squad and the demons led by Queen Bansheera.

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List of Power Rangers Mystic Force characters

Power Rangers Mystic Force is the 2006 season of Power Rangers which tells the story of the fight between the Mystic Rangers and the evil Forces of Darkness who are trying to rule over the worlds of mortals and magic.

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List of Prehistoric Park episodes

The following is a list of episodes of Prehistoric Park.

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List of Rees's Cyclopædia articles

The Cyclopædia; or, Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and Literature is an important 19th century British encyclopædia edited by Rev.

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List of Rescue 911 episodes

The following is a list of episodes of the CBS television series Rescue 911.

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List of Saikano episodes

Saikano is a Japanese animated television series that aired on Family Gekijou channel from July 2 – September 24, 2002.

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List of scientific units named after people

This is a list of scientific units named after people.

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List of Shangri-La episodes

Shangri-La is an anime series adapted from the light novel of the same title by Eiichi Ikegami and Ken'ichi Yoshida.

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List of shipwrecks in 1813

The list of shipwrecks in 1813 includes some ships sunk, wrecked or otherwise lost during 1813.

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List of shipwrecks in 1868

The list of shipwrecks in 1868 includes some of the ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1868.

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List of shipwrecks in 1914

The list of shipwrecks in 1914 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost in 1914.

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List of shipwrecks in 2011

The list of shipwrecks in 2011 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 2011.

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List of shipwrecks in August 1831

The list of shipwrecks in August 1831 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during August 1831.

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List of shipwrecks in the 17th century

The list of shipwrecks in the 17th century includes ships sunk, wrecked or otherwise lost between (and including) the years 1601 to 1700.

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List of State of California enterprise computing systems

This is a partial list of State of California enterprise computing systems.

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List of tallest buildings in Los Angeles

This list of tallest buildings in Los Angeles ranks skyscrapers in Los Angeles, California, by height.

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List of tallest structures built before the 20th century

List of pre-twentieth century structures by height ! Some building may be left and that will be added after.

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List of The Country Mouse and the City Mouse Adventures characters

This is a list of characters in HBO's children's animated series The Country Mouse and the City Mouse Adventures, originally aired between 1997 and 1998.

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List of The Da Vinci Code characters

This is a list of fictional characters from Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code and the 2006 film based on it.

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List of The Wild Wild West episodes

The Wild Wild West is an American television series that ran on the CBS network from 1965 to 1969.

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List of Tokyo Mew Mew chapters

The chapters of the manga series Tokyo Mew Mew were written by Reiko Yoshida and illustrated by Mia Ikumi.

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List of top international rankings by country

This list of top international rankings by country includes global-scale lists of countries with rankings (this list only contains sovereign states), sorted by country that is placed top or bottom in the respective ranking.

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List of UK Independent Singles Chart number ones of 2013

These are the Official Charts Company's UK Indie Chart number-one singles of 2013.

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List of unusual units of measurement

An unusual unit of measurement is a unit of measurement that does not form part of a coherent system of measurement; especially in that its exact quantity may not be well known or that it may be an inconvenient multiple or fraction of base units in such systems.

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List of volcanoes in Indonesia

The geography of Indonesia is dominated by volcanoes that are formed due to subduction zones between the Eurasian plate and the Indo-Australian plate.

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List of words ending in ology

† not study.

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Lists of earthquakes

The following is a list of earthquake lists, and of top earthquakes by magnitude and fatalities.

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Little King's Story

is a real-time strategy life simulation role-playing video game co-developed by Cing and Town Factory for the Wii.

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Lituya Bay

Lituya Bay (Tlingit: Ltu.aa,. Spelled L'tua in translation of Tebenkov's log. meaning 'lake within the point') is a fjord located on the coast of the Southeast part of the U.S. state of Alaska.

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Liviu Constantinescu

Liviu Constantinescu (26 November 1914 – 29 November 1997) was a Romanian geophysicist, professor of geophysics, member of the Romanian Academy.

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Lo frate 'nnamorato

Lo frate 'nnamorato (Neapolitan: The Brother in Love) is a three-act commedia musicale (a form of opera buffa) by Giovanni Battista Pergolesi, to a Neapolitan libretto by Gennaro Antonio Federico, first performed in 1732.

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Load cast

Load casts are bulges, lumps, and lobes that can form on the bedding planes that separate the layers of sedimentary rocks.

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Lockdown

There are several definitions for the term "lockdown"; the most common definitions pertain to a state of containment or a restriction of progression.

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Locmariaquer megaliths

The Locmariaquer megaliths are a complex of Neolithic constructions in Locmariaquer, Brittany.

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Logarithmic scale

A logarithmic scale is a nonlinear scale used when there is a large range of quantities.

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Long Mountain (Hampshire County, Massachusetts)

Long Mountain, feet above sea level, is a traprock mountain of the Holyoke Range, part of the greater Metacomet Ridge which stretches from Long Island Sound to nearly the Vermont border.

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Long period ground motion

Long period ground motion is ground movement during an earthquake with a period longer than 1 second.

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Lopez Lake

Lopez Lake is a reservoir near the city of Arroyo Grande in San Luis Obispo County, California.

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Los Angeles City Hall

Los Angeles City Hall, completed 1928, is the center of the government of the city of Los Angeles, California, and houses the mayor's office and the meeting chambers and offices of the Los Angeles City Council.

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Los Trancos Open Space Preserve

Los Trancos Open Space Preserve is a 274-acre (1.11 km²) open space preserve, located in San Mateo and Santa Clara Counties, California, near Los Altos Hills, California.

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Lost city

A lost city is a settlement that fell into terminal decline and became extensively or completely uninhabited, with the consequence that the site's former significance was no longer known to the wider world.

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Louis A. DeSimone

Louis Anthony DeSimone (born February 21, 1922) is an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Louisville, Kansas

Louisville is a city in Pottawatomie County, Kansas, United States.

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Love wave

In elastodynamics, Love waves, named after Augustus Edward Hough Love, are horizontally polarized surface waves.

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Low-velocity zone

The low-velocity zone (LVZ) occurs close to the boundary between the lithosphere and the asthenosphere in the upper mantle.

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Lower Mainland

The Lower Mainland is a name commonly applied to the region surrounding and including Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

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LSU Tigers football

The LSU Tigers football program, also known as the Fighting Tigers, represents Louisiana State University in the sport of American football.

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Lubbe Powerhouse

The Lubbe Powerhouse (also known as the Goldstream Plant) is a decommissioned hydroelectric plant located near Goldstream Provincial Park in Langford, near Victoria, British Columbia.

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Luigi Lavitrano

Luigi Lavitrano (7 March 1874 – 2 August 1950) was an Italian cardinal of the Catholic Church who served as Archbishop of Palermo from 1928 to 1944, and as prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Religious from 1945 until his death.

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Luisenburg Rock Labyrinth

The Luisenburg Rock Labyrinth (Luisenburg-Felsenlabyrinth) is a felsenmeer made of granite blocks several metres across and is part of the Großes Labyrinth Nature Reserve near Wunsiedel in Germany.

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Lviv Centre of Institute for Space Research

The Lviv Centre of the Space Research Institute of the NASU and NSAU (Львівський центр Інституту космічних досліджень НАН України та НКА України) is a Lviv branch of the actual institute.

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Lwandle Plate

The Lwandle Plate is one of three tectonic microplates, along with the Rovuma Plate and Victoria Plate, that make up the African Plate with the Somali Plate and the Nubian Plate.

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Lyaskovets

Lyaskovets (Лясковец) is a town in central northern Bulgaria, located in homonymous municipality of Veliko Tarnovo Province, 10 km northeast of Veliko Tarnovo, 2 km southeast of Gorna Oryahovitsa and 5 km south of the Yantra River, north of the Balkan Mountains.

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Lyuba Ognenova-Marinova

Lyuba Ognenova-Marinova (Люба Левова Огненова-Маринова 1922–2012) was a pioneering Bulgarian archaeologist.

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M41 highway

The M41, known informally and more commonly as the Pamir Highway (Russian: "Pamirsky Trakt", Памирский тракт) is a road traversing the Pamir Mountains through Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan in Central Asia.

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Macdonald seamount

Macdonald seamount is a seamount in Polynesia, southeast of the Austral Islands.

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Macellum of Pozzuoli

The Macellum of Pozzuoli (Macellum di Pozzuoli) was the macellum or market building of the Roman colony of Puteoli, now the city of Pozzuoli in southern Italy.

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Mada'in Saleh

Mada'in Saleh (مدائن صالح, madāʼin Ṣāliḥ, "Cities of Saleh"), also called "Al-Hijr" or "Hegra", is an archaeological site located in the Sector of Al-`Ula within Al Madinah Region, the Hejaz, Saudi Arabia.

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Madagascar Plate

The Madagascar Plate or Madagascar block was once attached to the Gondwana supercontinent and later the Indo-Australian Plate.

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MadStone

MadStone is a puzzle video game for WiiWare developed by Riverman Media.

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Mafui'e

In Polynesian mythology (specifically Samoa), Mafui'e is the god of earthquakes.

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Magic Carpet (video game)

Magic Carpet is a 3D flying video game developed by Bullfrog Productions and published by Electronic Arts in 1994.

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Magma (Jonathan Darque)

Magma (Jonathan Darque) is a fictional character, a supervillain from Marvel Comics.

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Magma chamber

A magma chamber is a large pool of liquid rock beneath the surface of the Earth.

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Magnetohydrodynamics

Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD; also magneto-fluid dynamics or hydro­magnetics) is the study of the magnetic properties of electrically conducting fluids.

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Magnitude of completeness

In an earthquake catalog, the magnitude of completeness (Mc) is the minimum magnitude above which all earthquakes within a certain region are reliably recorded.

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Maia (video game)

Maia is an upcoming sci-fi strategy simulation game by Simon Roth.

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Maitland Volcano

Maitland Volcano is a heavily eroded shield volcano that resides in the Northern Interior of British Columbia, Canada.

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Major Disaster

Major Disaster is a former DC Comics supervillain and reluctant amoral superhero.

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Makhachkala

Makhachkala (p; Анжи-кала; Lak: Гьанжи; Avar: МахӀачхъала; Lezgian: Магьачкъала; Rutul: МахаӀчкала) is the capital city of the Republic of Dagestan, Russia.

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Malad City, Idaho

Malad City (also commonly known as Malad) is the only city in Oneida County, Idaho, United States.

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Malaita

Malaita is the largest island of the Malaita Province in Solomon Islands.

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Maldivian diaspora

The Maldivian diaspora refers to the community of Maldivians, speakers of the Maldivian language, who have either emigrated from the Republic of Maldives or grew up outside of the Maldives speaking Dhivehi as a first language.

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Malia, Crete

Malia or Mallia (Μάλια) is a coastal town and a former municipality in the northeast corner of the Heraklion regional unit in Crete, Greece.

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Mammoth Hot Springs

Mammoth Hot Springs is a large complex of hot springs on a hill of travertine in Yellowstone National Park adjacent to Fort Yellowstone and the Mammoth Hot Springs Historic District.

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Mammoth Lakes, California

Mammoth Lakes is a town in Mono County, California, the county's only incorporated community.

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Mancs (dog)

Mancs (1994–2006), a male German Shepherd Dog, was the most famous rescue dog of the Spider Special Rescue Team of Miskolc, Hungary.

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Mandi, Himachal Pradesh

Mandi,, formerly known as Mandav Nagar, also known as Sahor (Tibetan: Zahor), is a major town and a municipal council in Mandi District in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh.

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Manheru

Manheru is the largest village in Bhiwani district, Haryana state, India.

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Manila

Manila (Maynilà, or), officially the City of Manila (Lungsod ng Maynilà), is the capital of the Philippines and the most densely populated city proper in the world.

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Manila Trench

The Manila Trench is an oceanic trench in the Pacific Ocean, located west of the islands of Luzon and Mindoro in the Philippines.

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Manitook Mountain

Manitook Mountain, also called Manituck Mountain,, is a long traprock mountain ridge located between the Berkshires and the Connecticut River Valley in north-central Connecticut.

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Mapping of Venus

The mapping of Venus refers to the process and results of human description of the geological features of the planet Venus.

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Marathon Dam

The Marathon Dam is a gravity dam on the Charadros River, near its junction with the Varnavas Stream, west of Marathon and northeast of Athens in Greece.

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Marcellus natural gas trend

The Marcellus is a large and prolific area of shale gas extraction from the Marcellus Formation of Devonian age in the eastern United States.

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March 1964

The following events occurred in March 1964.

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Marcia McNutt

Marcia Kemper McNutt (born February 19, 1952) is an American geophysicist and the 22nd president of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) of the United States.

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Maria Graham

Maria Graham (née Dundas; 19 July 1785 – 21 November 1842), later Maria, Lady Callcott, was a British writer of travel books and children's books, and also an accomplished illustrator.

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Marian and Holy Trinity columns

Marian columns are religious monuments depicting Virgin Mary on the top, often built in thanksgiving for the ending of a plague (plague columns) or for some other help.

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Marianna Fault

The Marianna Fault is a fault located in the Crowley's Ridge area near Marianna, Northeastern Arkansas.

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Marie Tharp

Marie Tharp (July 30, 1920 – August 23, 2006) was an American geologist and oceanographic cartographer who, in partnership with Bruce Heezen, created the first scientific map of the Atlantic Ocean floor.

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Marie-Galante

Marie-Galante is an island of the West Indies in the Caribbean Sea located south of Guadeloupe and north of Dominica.

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Marikina

Marikina (Lungsod ng Marikina) is one of the cities that make up Metro Manila, the National Capital Region.

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Marikina Valley Fault System

The Marikina Valley Fault System, also known as the Valley Fault System (VFS), is a dominantly dextral strike-slip fault system in Luzon, Philippines.

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Marine geology

Marine geology or geological oceanography is the study of the history and structure of the ocean floor.

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Mark Young (wrestler)

Luke Joseph "Joe" Mark Scarpa Jr. (April 23, 1967 – February 25, 2016) was an American professional wrestler, known by his ring name Mark Young, who competed in the World Wrestling Federation in the 1980s and early 1990s, World Championship Wrestling, and many independent promotions.

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Marshall D. Moran

Marshall D. Moran was born in Chicago on May 29, 1906 and died April 14, 1992 in Delhi, India.

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Mary Lou Zoback

Mary Lou Zoback (née Chetlain) (born July 5, 1952) is an American geophysicist who led the world stress map project of the International Lithosphere Program.

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Mary Roach

Mary Roach is an American author, specializing in popular science and humor.

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Masinloc Church

The San Andres Apostol Parish Church (Tagalog: Simbahan ng Parokya ni San Andres Apostol; Spanish: Iglesia Parroquial de San Andrés Apóstol), popularly known as Masinloc Church, is a 19th-century Baroque church located at Brgy.

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Maslak

Maslak is one of the main business districts of Sarıyer, Istanbul, Turkey, located on the European side of the city.

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Masonry veneer

Masonry veneer walls consist of a single non-structural external layer of masonry, typically made of brick, stone or manufactured stone.

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Mass call event

A mass call event or mass calling event (also MCE in telephony usage) is a situation in which an extraordinarily high number of telephone calls are attempted into or out of an area, causing tremendous network congestion, and therefore service which is either significantly degraded or potentially almost completely unavailable.

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Mass wasting

Mass wasting, also known as slope movement or mass movement, is the geomorphic process by which soil, sand, regolith, and rock move downslope typically as a solid, continuous or discontinuous mass, largely under the force of gravity, but frequently with characteristics of a flow as in debris flows and mudflows.

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Mass-casualty incident

A mass casualty incident (often shortened to MCI and sometimes called a multiple-casualty incident or multiple-casualty situation) is any incident in which emergency medical services resources, such as personnel and equipment, are overwhelmed by the number and severity of casualties.

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Massillon Washington High School

Washington High School, commonly referred to as Massillon High School or Massillon Washington High School, is a 9th to 12th grade secondary school within the Massillon City School District in the city of Massillon, Ohio, United States.

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Matata

Matata (Maori: "Matatā") is a town located in the North Island of New Zealand.

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Mathematical geophysics

Mathematical geophysics is concerned with developing mathematical methods for use in geophysics.

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Mathnet

Mathnet is a segment on the children's television show Square One Television.

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Matsuda, Kanagawa

is a town located in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan.

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Matt Moniz

Matt Moniz Born in February 1998 is an American mountaineer and speaker noted for his ascents of 8,000 meter peaks and several of the Seven Summits.

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Matteo Renzi

Matteo Renzi (born 11 January 1975) is an Italian politician who served as the Prime Minister of Italy from February 2014 until December 2016.

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Matthew Steen

Matthew Landy Steen (born August 22, 1949) is a former member of Weather Underground Organization, Students for a Democratic Society and Yippies.

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Maule Region

The Maule Region (VII Región del Maule) is one of Chile's 15 first order administrative divisions.

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Maumere

Maumere is the seat capital of the Sikka Regency and the second largest town in Flores, Indonesia.

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Maurice Leblanc

Maurice Marie Émile Leblanc (11 November 1864 – 6 November 1941) was a French novelist and writer of short stories, known primarily as the creator of the fictional gentleman thief and detective Arsène Lupin, often described as a French counterpart to Arthur Conan Doyle's creation Sherlock Holmes.

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Max Zorin

Maximillian "Max" Zorin is a fictional character and the main antagonist in the 1985 James Bond film A View to a Kill.

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Maximum magnitude

An important parameter in the calculation of seismic hazard, maximum magnitude (expressed as Moment magnitude scale) is also one of the more contentious.

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May 1971

The following events occurred in May 1971.

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Müllenbach, Cochem-Zell

Müllenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Cochem-Zell district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Mývatn

Mývatn is a shallow eutrophic lake situated in an area of active volcanism in the north of Iceland, not far from Krafla volcano.

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Māori people

The Māori are the indigenous Polynesian people of New Zealand.

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Mbala, Zambia

Mbala is Zambia’s most northerly large town and seat of Mbala District, occupying a strategic location close to the border with Tanzania and controlling the southern approaches to Lake Tanganyika, 40 km by road to the north-west, where the port of Mpulungu is located.

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MDK (video game)

MDK is a 1997 third-person shooter video game developed by Shiny Entertainment for Microsoft Windows.

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Meager Creek

Meager Creek is a creek in the southern Pacific Ranges of the Coast Mountains in British Columbia, Canada.

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Međimurje County

Međimurje County (Međimurska županija) is a triangle-shaped county in the northernmost part of Croatia, roughly corresponding to the historical and geographical region of Međimurje.

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Medieval Kannada literature

Medieval Kannada literature covered a wide range of subjects and genres which can broadly be classified under the Jain, Virashaiva, Vaishnava and secular traditions.

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Medvedev–Sponheuer–Karnik scale

The Medvedev–Sponheuer–Karnik scale, also known as the MSK or MSK-64, is a macroseismic intensity scale used to evaluate the severity of ground shaking on the basis of observed effects in an area of the earthquake occurrence.

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Mega Disasters

Mega Disasters is an American documentary television series that originally aired from May 23, 2006 to July 2008 on The History Channel.

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Mega Model

Mega Model (often abbreviated as Image Mega Model) is a Nepalese reality television show in which a number of young Nepalese women compete against each other to win for the title of Mega Model and an opportunity to start their career in the modeling industry.

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Megafault

MegaFault is a 2009 television disaster film by The Asylum, directed by David Michael Latt, starring Brittany Murphy, Justin Hartley, Eriq Lasalle, Tamala Jones, Paul Logan and Bruce Davison.

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Megalopoli Power Plant

The Megalopoli Power Plant is a power plant in Arcadia in the central Peloponnese that produces electricity for southern Greece and the islands.

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Megathrust earthquake

Megathrust earthquakes occur at subduction zones at destructive convergent plate boundaries, where one tectonic plate is forced underneath another.

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Megatsunami

A megatsunami is a very large wave created by a large, sudden displacement of material into a body of water.

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Meisei Electric

is a Japanese limited company which manufactures electronics and communications equipment.

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Menouthis

Menouthis was a sacred city in ancient Egypt, devoted to the Egyptian goddess Isis and god Serapis.

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Mentana

Mentana is a town and comune, former bishopric and present Latin Catholic titular see in the Metropolitan City of Rome, Lazio, central Italy.

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Mentawai Islands Regency

The Mentawai Islands are a chain of about seventy islands and islets approximately off the western coast of Sumatra in Indonesia.

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Mentone, Alabama

Mentone is a town in DeKalb County, Alabama, United States.

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Meopham

Meopham is a large linear village and civil parish in the Borough of Gravesham and ceremonial county of Kent, in England, and lies to the south of Gravesend.

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Merah Putih Bridge

Merah Putih Bridge (Jembatan Merah Putih) is a cable stayed bridge located in Ambon city, Maluku, Indonesia.

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Mercalli intensity scale

The Mercalli intensity scale is a seismic intensity scale used for measuring the intensity of an earthquake.

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Mercury City Tower

Mercury City Tower (r) is a supertall skyscraper located on plot 14 in the Moscow International Business Center (MIBC) in Moscow, Russia.

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Meretseger

Meretseger (or Mertseger) was a Theban cobra-goddess in ancient Egyptian religion, in charge with guarding and protecting the vast Theban Necropolis — on the west bank of the Nile, in front of Thebes — and expecially the heavily-guarded Valley of the Kings.

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Meromictic lake

A meromictic lake has layers of water that do not intermix.

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Mesoplates

The term "mesoplates" has been applied in two different contexts within geology and geophysics.

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Metacomet Ridge

The Metacomet Ridge, Metacomet Ridge Mountains, or Metacomet Range of southern New England is a narrow and steep fault-block mountain ridge known for its extensive cliff faces, scenic vistas, microclimate ecosystems, and rare or endangered plants.

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Meteorology

Meteorology is a branch of the atmospheric sciences which includes atmospheric chemistry and atmospheric physics, with a major focus on weather forecasting.

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Meteorology (Aristotle)

Meteorology (Greek: Μετεωρολογικά; Latin: Meteorologica or Meteora) is a treatise by Aristotle.

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Methana Volcano

The Methana volcano peninsula is situated approximately southwest of Athens in Greece.

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Metković

Metković is a civil parish in the Dubrovnik-Neretva County of Croatia, located in the southeast of the country, on the banks of the river Neretva and on the border with Herzegovina.

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Metlika

Metlika (MöttlingLeksikon občin kraljestev in dežel zastopanih v državnem zboru, vol. 6: Kranjsko. 1906. Vienna: C. Kr. Dvorna in Državna Tiskarna, p. 10.) is a town and municipality in the southeastern Slovenia.

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Metroid II: Return of Samus

Metroid II: Return of Samus is an action-adventure video game developed and published by Nintendo for the Game Boy handheld game console.

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Meydan Mosque, Kashan

The Meydan mosque is a historical mosque in Kashan, Iran.

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Michael Persinger

Michael A. Persinger (born June 26, 1945) is a professor of psychology at Laurentian University, a position he held since 1971.

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Michele Stefano de Rossi

Michele Stefano de Rossi (30 October 1834, Rome – 23 October 1898, Rocca di Papa) was an Italian seismologist.

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Michigan

Michigan is a state in the Great Lakes and Midwestern regions of the United States.

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Michoacán–Guanajuato volcanic field

Michoacán–Guanajuato volcanic field is located in central Mexico.

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Microatoll

A microatoll is a circular colony of coral, dead on the top but living around the perimeter.

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Microearthquake

A microearthquake (or microquake) is a very low intensity earthquake which is 2.0 or less in magnitude.

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Microseism

In seismology, a microseism is defined as a faint earth tremor caused by natural phenomena.

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Mid-Atlantic Ridge

The Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) is a mid-ocean ridge, a divergent tectonic plate or constructive plate boundary located along the floor of the Atlantic Ocean, and part of the longest mountain range in the world.

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Mihrimah Sultan Mosque (Edirnekapı)

The Mihrimah Sultan Mosque is an Ottoman mosque located in the Edirnekapı neighborhood near the Byzantine land walls of Istanbul, Turkey.

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Mikołów

Mikołów (Nikolai, Mikołůw) is a town in Silesia, in southern Poland, near the city of Katowice.

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Milengrad

Milengrad (Milen vára) is a mediaeval castle northwest from Zajezda village, in Budinščina municipality, Krapina-Zagorje County, Croatia.

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Military operations other than war (China)

Chinese military operations other than war (MOOTW) focus on deterring war, resolving conflict, promoting peace, and supporting civil authorities in response to domestic crises.

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Millennium Tower (Tokyo)

Millennium Tower was a 170-floor skyscraper that was envisioned by architect Sir Norman Foster in 1989.

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Mingun Bell

The Mingun Bell (မင်းကွန်းခေါင်းလောင်းတော်ကြီး) is a bell located in Mingun, Sagaing Region, Myanmar.

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Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (Russia)

The Ministry of Natural Resources and the Environment of the Russian Federation (Министерство природных ресурсов и экологии Российской Федерации) is a governmental agency within the Cabinet of Russia tasked with managing the country's natural resources and protecting the environment.

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Minnesota

Minnesota is a state in the Upper Midwest and northern regions of the United States.

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Minoan eruption

The Minoan eruption of Thera, also referred to as the Thera eruption, Santorini eruption, or Late Bronze Age eruption, was a major catastrophic volcanic eruption with a Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) of 6 or 7 and a dense-rock equivalent (DRE) of, Dated to the mid-second millennium BCE, the eruption was one of the largest volcanic events on Earth in recorded history.

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Mirabeau, Vaucluse

Mirabeau is a commune in the Vaucluse department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region in southeastern France.

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