| Margaret Hasluck Margaret Masson Hardie Hasluck (June 18, 1885 - October 18, 1948). She was a Scottish geographer, linguist, epigrapher, archaeologist and scholar.Margaret Hasluck graduated from Aberdeen University where she received Honors in Classics in 1907, and then went to Cambridge, completing her studies with honors in 1911; she was not awarded a degree because Cambridge did not award degrees to women until 1948. Margaret_Hasluck
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| James Boyle (broadcasting) James Boyle is one of the leading public figures in the British arts world with a long track record in broadcasting in particular. His take-no-prisoners style has earned him numerous plaudits, but also resulted in controversy, most famously at BBC Radio 4. James_Boyle_(broadcasting)
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| Immersion (mathematics) mathematics, an immersion is a differentiable map between differentiable manifolds whose derivative is everywhere injective. Explicitly, f M → N is an immersion if is an injective map at every point p of M (where the notation represents the tangent space of at the point ). Equivalently, f is an immersion if it has constant rank equal to the dimension of M: The map f itself need not be injective, only its derivative. Immersion_(mathematics)
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| Dead external links/301/a Wikipedia:Dead_external_links/301/a
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| Dead external links/301/t Wikipedia:Dead_external_links/301/t
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| Clootie clootie or cloot in Scots is a strip or piece of cloth, a rag or item of clothing; it can also refer to fabric used in the patching of clothes or the making of proddy rugs (aka "clootie mats"). The saying "Ne'er cast a cloot til Mey's oot" conveys a warning not to shed any clothes before the summer has fully arrived and the may flowers (hawthorn blossoms) are in full bloom. The saying also appears in English as "Ne'er cast a clout till May be out". Clootie
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| Marischal Museum Marischal Museum is the main museum in the city centre of Aberdeen, Scotland. It was established in 1786 and is situated in the architecturally notable Marischal College building, part of the University of Aberdeen.The museum most notably houses examples of Egyptian and Classical antiquities, non-Western ethnography and pieces relating to Scottish prehistory and numismatics. Marischal_Museum
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| Articles for creation/2006-10-04 Wikipedia:Articles_for_creation/2006-10-04
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| Espido Freire María Laura Espido Freire (her pen name is just her surnames Espido Freire) was born in Bilbao, Spain on July 16, 1974. Espido_Freire
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| Douglas Strachan Dr. (Robert) Douglas Strachan (1875-1950) was a Scottish designer of stained glass windows. He studied at both Gray's School of Art in Aberdeen, and the Royal Academy in London. Although Strachan was interested in Futurism, Cubism, and Vorticism, his work shows little influence of this. Strachan often composed his windows in areas of pure colour which were then defined by areas of silvery white. Douglas_Strachan
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| Taskscape taskscape is often credited to social anthropologist Tim Ingold. As Ingold has described the termlandscape is an array of related features, so – by analogy – the taskscape is an array of related activities." Taskscape, then is a socially constructed space of human activity, understood as having spatial boundaries and delimitations for the purposes of analysis. Taskscape
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| John Struthers (anatomist) Sir John Struthers, LRCSE, MD, LLD, FRCSE, FRSE (b. , Brucefield, near Dunfermline, Scotland – d. ) was Professor of Anatomy at the University of Aberdeen.After completing his medical training in Edinburgh in 1845, Struthers specialized in anatomy and was appointed as Lecturer of Anatomy at the University of Edinburgh and as a surgeon at the Royal Infirmary. John_Struthers_(anatomist)
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| West Siberian economic region West Siberian economic region (; tr.:Zapadno-Sibirsky ekonomichesky rayon) is one of twelve economic regions of Russia. This vast plain—marshy and thinly populated in the north, hilly in the south—is of growing economic importance, mostly due to the abundance of natural resourcesTyumen Oblast, and Russia's largest oil refinery is in Omsk. West_Siberian_economic_region
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| Janet Todd Janet Margaret Todd (born 10 September 1942) is a Welsh-born academic and a well-respected author of many books on women in literature. Todd was educated at Cambridge University and the University of Florida, where she undertook a doctorate on the poet John Clare. Janet_Todd
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| Universities and Colleges Christian Fellowship Talk:Universities_and_Colleges_Christian_Fellowship
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| Unidirectional Lightweight Encapsulation Unidirectional_Lightweight_Encapsulation
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| Kirk of St Nicholas, Aberdeen The Kirk of St Nicholas is a historic church located in the city centre of Aberdeen, Scotland. It is now officially known as the "Kirk of St Nicholas (uniting)" as it is membership of both of the Church of Scotland and the United Reformed Church. It is also known as "The Mither Kirk" (mother church) of the city.The earliest mention of a church on the site of the present Kirk can be found in a Papal document of 1157. Kirk_of_St_Nicholas,_Aberdeen
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| Lawrence Whalley Lawrence J. Whalley, MD DPM FRCP(E) FRCPsych is Crombie Ross Professor of Mental Health in the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK. He is best known for his ground-breaking follow-up studies of about 750 Aberdeen City and Shire residents who took part at age 11 years in the Scottish Mental Surveys of 1932 and 1947. Lawrence_Whalley
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| Women in geology Women in geology concerns the history and contributions of women to the field of geology. There has been a long history of women in the field, but they have tended to be underrepresented. In the era before the eighteenth century science and geological science had not been as formalized as they would become later. Women_in_geology
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| Sandy Gall Sandy Gall, CBE (born 1 October 1927, Penang) is a British journalist, author, and former ITN news presenter. His career as a journalist spans over 50 years. Sandy_Gall
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