Queen Maud Land
Queen Maud Land region: see Antarctica .
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Not cool.(UPDATES)(Brief article)
Magazine article from: World Watch; 5/1/2009; 67 words
; ...interpolate temperatures in the areas between the stations, researchers concluded in January that the continent warmed an average of 0.1 degree Celsius per decade from 1957 through 2006. See Antarctica and Climate Change, January/February 2009, p. 6
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King's Medal to AINA Fellow.(Arctic Institute of North America)(Jan Erling Haugland)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Arctic; 12/1/2005; 166 words
; ...People's Aid. He is currently director of the Dronning Maud Land Air Network (DROMLAN), which facilitates communication and transportation for scientists from Cape Town to Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica, and among the several scientific stations...
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Teachers' Trek.(two teachers to attempt to cross Antarctica on skis)
Magazine article from: Science World; 12/11/2000; ; 304 words
; ...in their 3,863 kilometer (2,400 mile)-trek over the frozen continent. The historic expedition kicked off last month in Queen Maud Land, Antarctica, and is scheduled to end on the Ross Ice Shelf in February. This has always been my dreams, says Bancroft. The...
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The bottom of the world.(map reading)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Know Your World Extra; 2/3/2006; 178 words
; ...correct words to complete each statement. 1. The Antarctic Peninsula is part of East Antarctica | West Antarctica. 2. Queen Maud Land touches the Ross Sea | Southern Ocean. 3. The South Pole is closest to the Ross Ice Shelf | Amery Ice Shelf. 4. The Ronne Ice...
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OUTDOORS BRIEFLY.(Briefly)
Newspaper article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR); 2/3/2009; 700+ words
; ...and Antarctica, where he and a partner spent 80 days completing the first major ski and big wall climbing expedition in Queen Maud Land. Co-sponsored by Backcountry Gear and the University of Oregon Outdoor Program, Libecki's presentation begins at 7 p.m. at...
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German Exploration of the Polar World: A History, 1870-1940.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Arctic; 12/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...Ritscher in 1938-39. This expedition aimed at staking a German claim to a sector of the continent, i.e., what is now Dronning Maud Land, facing the South Atlantic. Its primary purpose was to make an extensive aerial photographic survey, buttressing the German...
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Norwegian Arctic expansionism, Victoria Island (Russia) and the Bratvaag expedition.
Magazine article from: Arctic; 12/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...Brogger, 1933; Skagestad, 1975). In the Antarctic, Bouvet Island became Norwegian in 1928, Peter I Island in 1933, and Queen Maud Land in 1939 (Skagestad, 1975; Barr, 1987). One of the bases for claiming these polar areas was that Norwegians either had discovered...
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Queen Maud Land
Book article from: Concise Dictionary of World Place-Names
Queen Maud Land (Norwegian: Dronning Maud Land), Antarctica Discovered by the...dependency in 1949. It was named after Queen Maud (1869–1934), English wife...King of Norway (1905–57). The Queen Maud Mountains are also named after her...
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Matilda
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History
Matilda ( Maud ) (d. 1131), queen of David I of Scotland. Widow of Simon de Senlis and daughter of Earl Waltheof of Northumbria and his wife Judith, William the...
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Antarctica
Book article from: A Dictionary of Contemporary World History
...Zealand (Ross Dependency) in 1923, Australia (Australian Antarctic Territory) in 1933, France (Adélie Land) in 1938, Norway (Queen Maud Land) in 1939, Chile (Antarctic Peninsula) in 1940, and Argentina (Antarctic Peninsula) in 1942. However, these...
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Sampson, Fay (Elizabeth) 1935-
Book article from: Something About the Author
...the Royal Marine Staff Band) and Edith Maud (a hotel waitress; maiden name, Cory) Sampson...father's successor, the ruler of Summer Land, but she must undergo many trials and learn many lessons before she can truly become queen. "Very much in the tradition of C. S. Lewis...
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St. Margaret of Scotland
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...family was forced to flee the land. They sailed for the Continent...Scotland, and one daughter, Maud, was married to Henry I of England...diversified the cultural life of the land. Under her leadership, ceremonies...Barnett, Margaret of Scotland, Queen and Saint (1926), is chiefly...Wilson, Alan, ...
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