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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Grijalva River 11 found (89 total)
alternate case: grijalva River
Cunduacán
(281 words)
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is located at about 18°4'0"North, 93°10'0"West. It is located in the Grijalva River Region, Chontalpa subregion. Its name originates from the Mayan cum-ua-cán
San Andrés (Mesoamerican site)
(1,419 words)
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miles) northeast of the Olmec ceremonial center of La Venta in the Grijalva river delta section of the Tabasco Coastal Plain, San Andrés is considered
Tabasco (former state)
(1,572 words)
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with that current we could not enter by said river, which we named the Grijalva River . We were being followed by more than two thousand Indians and they were
Vieja
(601 words)
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Vieja hartwegi (Taylor & Miller 1980) (Teleostei: Cichlidae) from the Grijalva River basin, Mexico and Guatemala, with description of a rheophilic morph"
Tabscoob
(987 words)
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1519, Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés reached the mouth of the Grijalva River . He decided to anchor his ships and enter the river in skiffs, looking
American crocodile
(6,959 words)
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Domínguez-Laso (2009). "Record size for a female Crocodylus acutus in the Grijalva River , Chiapas, Mexico" (PDF). Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter. 28 (2)
Maritime trade in the Maya civilization
(4,545 words)
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estimated that a flotilla of canoes encountered at the mouth of the Grijalva River was composed of over 100 canoes containing about 3,000 men, an average
Spanish conquest of the Maya
(21,539 words)
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separated by the Depresion Central, containing the drainage basin of the Grijalva River , featuring a hot climate with moderate rainfall. The Sierra Madre highlands
Las Choapas (archaeological site)
(2,209 words)
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Mound 1, Chiapa de Corzo, view looking south toward the Grijalva River . (Photo courtesy of Bbachand)
Spanish conquest of Yucatán
(16,002 words)
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followed the coast to the Tabasco River, which Cortés renamed as the Grijalva River in honour of the Spanish captain who had discovered it. In Tabasco,
Chiapanec people
(1,849 words)
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The fertile alluvial lands that make up the so-called banks of the Grijalva River were, since the beginning of American civilization, a point of attraction