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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Place of Bones 11 found (16 total)
alternate case: place of Bones
Husky Lakes
(656 words)
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vegetation in the area is that of typical Arctic tundra. At Saunaktuk ("place of bones "), a site in the western "finger" area, remains of at least 35 Inuvialuit
Ocean Grove, New Zealand
(790 words)
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toma haka, often interpreted as "dance by a gravesite". Toma means a place of bones , or shrine for bones; haka is here taken to mean the Māori dance of
Stanley Nyagah
(500 words)
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path. Nyagah was born on the slopes of Mt Kenya at Ka-mavĩndĩ (the place of bones ) farm in Mũkũũrĩ sub-location on 12 September 1936 to Esther Kerû and
List of reportedly haunted locations in China
(1,952 words)
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be one of the most haunted roads in the city, as it was the burial place of bones and remains of people from impoverished families during the 19th century
Hadda, Afghanistan
(1,666 words)
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Sanskrit haḍḍa n. m., "a bone", or, an unrecorded *haḍḍaka, adj., "(place ) of bones ". The former - if not a fossilized form - would have given rise to
Gregory Avery-Weir
(496 words)
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com PC Pick: Gregory Weir's first paid foray is Ossuary, the puzzling place of bones ". IndieGames.com. February 5, 2015. Archived from the original on February
St Andrews
(6,965 words)
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The name St Andrews derives from the town's claim to be the resting place of bones of the apostle Andrew. According to legend, St Regulus (or Rule) brought
Tomahawk Lagoon
(617 words)
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toma haka, often interpreted as "dance by a gravesite". Toma means a place of bones , or shrine for bones; haka is here taken to mean the Māori dance of
Canadian Film Festival
(3,060 words)
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Kite Zo A: Leave the Bones — Kaveh Nabatian Look at Me — Taylor Olson Place of Bones — Audrey Cummings Valley of Exile — Anna Fahr WaaPaKe — Jules Arita
Battle of Ndondakusuka
(1,149 words)
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where the bodies washed up began to be referred to as the Mathambo ("place of bones ") John Dunn later negotiated with Cetshwayo for the return of settler
Tomahawk Beach
(959 words)
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likely an anglicized form of the Māori words toma haka. Toma means a place of bones , or shrine for bones; haka is commonly taken to refer to the Māori dance