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English Wikipedia references for Dur.ac.uk 451-500 of 541
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River Wear
The River Wear ( weer) is a river in North East England, rising in the Pennines and flowing eastwards, mostly through County Durham, to the North Sea at Sunderland.
River_Wear
Alex/sandbox/Treasure Trap
User:Alex/sandbox/Treasure_Trap
Liancourt Rocks/Archive 19
Talk:Liancourt_Rocks/Archive_19
Ecemaml/Gibraltar
User:Ecemaml/Gibraltar
Reference desk/Archives/Language/2008 September 19
Wikipedia:Reference_desk/Archives/Language/2008_September_19
Solar cell/Archive 3
Talk:Solar_cell/Archive_3
Malaysia-Thailand joint development area
Malaysia-Thailand Joint Development Area is a 7,250km square area in the Gulf of Thailand which was created as an interim measure to exploit the natural resources in the seabed or continental shelf claimed by the two countries and to share the proceeds equally. The arrangement does not extinguish the legal right to claims by both countries over the area. This is one of the first applications of the joint development principle in territorial disputes in the world.
Malaysia-Thailand_joint_development_area
Reference desk/Archives/Miscellaneous/2008 October 5
Wikipedia:Reference_desk/Archives/Miscellaneous/2008_October_5
David Newman (political geographer)
David Newman (October 25, 1956) is a British-Israeli scholar in political geography and geopolitics, Professor at the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Department of Politics and Government, editor of Geopolitics, and former columnist of the Jerusalem Post.
David_Newman_(political_geographer)
Treasure Trap
Treasure Trap was a live action role-playing game established at Peckforton Castle in Cheshire in April 1982. Various splinter groups broke from the original system, some retaining the Treasure Trap name, and helped to shape the later British LARP scene.
Treasure_Trap
Scholarship Level
GCE S-level, Scholarship level, or Special paper was a British public examination taken by the most able A-level students. The S-level was typically used to support UK university entrance applications, particularly to Oxford or Cambridge and results were graded 'Distinction', 'Merit' or 'Unclassified'.
Scholarship_Level
Australia-Indonesia border
Australia-Indonesia border is a maritime boundary running west from the two countries' tripoint boundary with Papua New Guinea in the western entrance to the Torres Straits through the Arafura Sea and Timor Sea and terminating in the Indian Ocean. The boundary is however broken by the "Timor Gap", where Australian and East Timorese territorial waters meet and where the two countries have overlapping claims to the seabed.
Australia-Indonesia_border
Ko Losin
Ko Losin (เกาะโลซิน) is a small rocky islet in the southern area of the Gulf of Siam. It is under the Sai Buri Amphoe (administrative area) of the Pattani Province of Thailand.Owing to the islet's relative remoteness, the area around Kosharks and mantas thrive undisturbed.Though barren and uninhabited, Ko Losin, along with the islets of Ko Kra (), constitutes a disputed territory.continental shelf boundary between Malaysia and Thailand arises from the different baselines which the two countries adopt in calculating the equidistant line for boundary.
Ko_Losin
Ko Kra, Nakhon Si Thammarat Province
Ko Kra (เกาะกระ) is a group of small rocky islets in the southern area of the Gulf of Siam. Nakhon Si Thammarat Province of Thailand.Ko Kra, located about 54 km from the nearest shore, consists of three isletsThe Ko Kra group, although barren and uninhabited, is part of a territorial dispute along with the islet of Ko Losin.continental shelf boundary between Malaysia and Thailand arises from the different baselines which the two countries adopt in calculating the equidistant line for boundary.
Ko_Kra,_Nakhon_Si_Thammarat_Province
129.234.217.155
User_talk:129.234.217.155
History of the Eastern Roman Empire
History of the Roman Empire, referring mainly to the Eastern Roman Empire, or Byzantine Empire. It begins with the division of the Roman Empire by Diocletian in 286 AD, and the founding of Constantinople (officially called "Second Rome" and later "New Rome") as the capital of the Roman Empire by Constantine I in 330, while it concludes with the Fall of Constantinople in 1453, and the Fall of Trebizond in 1461.
History_of_the_Eastern_Roman_Empire
James Feast
William James "Jim" Feast CBE FRS (born 25th June 1938) is a British chemical scientist and academic.
James_Feast
David Rollason
David W. Rollason is an English historian and medievalist. He is a Professor in history at Durham University. He specialises in the cult of saints, the history of Northumbria and in the historical writings of Durham, most notably producing a modern edition and translation of the Libellus de exordio and co-operating on an edition of the famous Durham Liber Vitae.
David_Rollason
Strengleikar
Strengleikar (English:Stringed Instruments) is a collection of twenty-one Old Norse prose tales based on the Old French Lais of Marie de France. It is one of the literary works commissioned by King Haakon IV of Norway (r. 1217-1263) for the Norwegian court.
Strengleikar
Klute (Nightclub)
Talk:Klute_(Nightclub)
Evolutionary psychology/Archive 2
Talk:Evolutionary_psychology/Archive_2
Reliable sources/Noticeboard/Archive 25
Wikipedia:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard/Archive_25
David Barker (zoologist)
David Barker (born c. 1923) is a United Kingdom zoologist and neurologist specialising in animal neuroanatomy. He is professor emeritus of zoology at the University of Durham and is honoured by the annual award of the David Barker Prize in Zoology. In February 1963 he published Zoology and Medical Research.Barker studied anatomy at the University of Oxford from 1941 to 1943 under the tutellage of John Zachary Young.
David_Barker_(zoologist)
Microbial enhanced oil recovery
Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery (MEOR) is a biological based technology consisting in manipulating function or structure, or both, of microbial environments existing in oil reservoirs. The ultimate aim of MEOR is to improve the recovery of oil entrapped in porous media while increasing economic profits. MEOR is a tertiary oil extraction technology allowing the partial recovery of the commonly residual two-thirds of oil, thus increasing the life of mature oil reservoirs.
Microbial_enhanced_oil_recovery
Swedish Empire
Sweden was, between 1611 and 1718, one of the great powers of Europe. In modern historiography this period is known as the Swedish Empire, or stormaktstiden ("the era of great power").
Swedish_Empire
The Skies are Weeping
Talk:The_Skies_are_Weeping
Centre for the Advanced Study of the Arab World
The Centre for the Advanced Study of the Arab World (CASAW) (Arabic
Centre_for_the_Advanced_Study_of_the_Arab_World
Peter Reid ARPS
Peter Reid ARPS MA BSc(Hons) PGCEPeter Reid is the elder son of Arthur and Sadie (née Simpson) Reid, born 30th December 1946 at Ferryhill, Co Durham. His secondary education was at the Johnston Grammar Technical School at Durham. An engineering craft apprenticeship, instead of the more usual academic route between the ages of sixteen and twenty one, followed with part-time attendance at Durham Technical College allowing him to gain a variety of engineering qualifications.
Peter_Reid_ARPS
Olympic-Wallowa Lineament
-- Parts of this article are currently being reorganized --The Olympic-Wallowa lineament (OWL) Erwin Raisz in 1945 on a relief map of the continental United States Port Angeles, on the Olympic Peninsula to the Wallowa Mountains of northeastern Oregon.
Olympic-Wallowa_Lineament
Martin Fleischmann
Martin Fleischmann, (born March 29, 1927 in Karlovy Vary, Czechoslovakia) is a British chemist noted for his work in electrochemistry. He came to wider public prominence
Martin_Fleischmann
Colleges of the University of Durham
list of the colleges within the University of Durham. These colleges are the primary source of accommodation for undergraduates and graduates at the University, also providing bursaries and scholarships to students. They also provide funding and/or accommodation for some of the research posts in the University.The University of Durham has 16 colleges, of which University is the oldest, founded in 1832.
Colleges_of_the_University_of_Durham
Deletion review/Log/2009 February 23
Wikipedia:Deletion_review/Log/2009_February_23
Stuffed cat/Sandbox
User:Stuffed_cat/Sandbox
Flexoelectricity
Flexoelectricity
Poppleton University
Poppleton University (founded ca.1979
Poppleton_University
St Cuthbert's Society Boat Club
St Cuthbert's Society Boat Club (SCSBC) is the rowing club of St Cuthbert's Society at Durham University.
St_Cuthbert's_Society_Boat_Club
Geoffrey Scarre
Geoffrey Scarre is a moral philosopher and professor of philosophy at the University of Durham.His most important work has been on the topics of evil and the Holocaust, and the ethics of archaeology. He has also written on Utilitarianism and John Stuart Mill.
Geoffrey_Scarre
Josephine Butler Rugby Union Football Club
Josephine Butler RUFC is an English amateur, student rugby union team. The men's first team, which forms Josephine Butler RUFC, was derived from Josephine Butler College which was formed in 2006 as a brand new college at Durham University. Josephine Butler play their games between Maiden Castle and "The Racecourse", which is located in Durham, County Durham.Josephine Butler, after a year of consolidating the club, went unbeaten in its 2nd year, winning both the 1st Division and the university '7s' tournament.
Josephine_Butler_Rugby_Union_Football_Club
Shatt al-Arab/Archive 2
Talk:Shatt_al-Arab/Archive_2
Goulstonian Lectures
Goulstonian Lectures are an annual lecture series given on behalf of the Royal College of Physicians in London. They began in 1639. The 2009 Goulstonian Lecturer was Geraint Rees.The lectures are named for Theodore Goulston (or Gulston), who founded them with a bequest. Up to the end of the nineteenth century, the spelling 'Gulstonian' was often used. In many cases the lectures have been published.
Goulstonian_Lectures
Germanic-speaking Europe
Germanic-speaking Europe refers to the area of Europe that today uses a Germanic language.About 200 million Europeans (27%) speak a Germanic language natively. West Germanic (180 million) German-speaking Europe (95 million) Germans (78 million) Austrians (7 million) Alemannic Swiss (4.6 million) Luxembourgers (0.5 million) Anglo-Frisian English-speaking Europe (64 million) English (45 million) Scots (6 million) Irish (5.5 million) Welsh (4.5 million) Frisians (0.5 million) Low Franconian / Dutch (22 million) North Germanic (22 million) Swedes (9.5 million) Danes (6 million) Norwegians (4.7 million) Icelandic (0.3 million) Faroese (0.07 million)
Germanic-speaking_Europe
Philosophical Writings
Philosophical_Writings
Coat of arms of Colchester
coat of arms of Colchester is the arms and other insignia associated with the town of Colchester, England.The shield is more commonly used than the full arms . There are two versions of the arms that are commonly seen. The first was in use from around the 1550 to 1915; the other the intervening periods between 1413 and present.
Coat_of_arms_of_Colchester
Moonriddengirl/Archive 13
User_talk:Moonriddengirl/Archive_13
Infinity Bridge
The Infinity Bridge is a public pedestrian and cycle footbridge that crosses the River Tees in the borough of Stockton-on-Tees in the north east of England. The bridge links, on the south bank the Teesdale Business Park and the Queen's Campus of the University of Durham in Thornaby-on-Tees and on the north bank, Tees Valley Regeneration's £320m North Shore development area of Stockton-on-Tees. Built at a cost of £15m
Infinity_Bridge
129.234.74.32
User_talk:129.234.74.32
129.234.74.22
User_talk:129.234.74.22
129.234.74.20
User_talk:129.234.74.20
129.234.74.18
User_talk:129.234.74.18
129.234.74.13
User_talk:129.234.74.13