Robert Gray, in the Columbia, discovered the river named after his ship and claimed the area for the U.S. And In 1805 the Lewis and Clark expedition explored the area. John Jacob Astor's fur depot, Astoria, was founded in 1811. Disputes for control of Oregon between American settlers and the Hudson Bay Company were finally resolved in the 1846 Oregon Treaty, in which Great Britain gave up claims to the region. Also Oregon has a $3.3 billion lumber and wood products industry, and an $859 million paper and allied manufacturing industry. Its salmon-fishing industry is one of the world's largest.
Artifact analysis 8 4.1 Hearths 8 4.2 Stone tools 8 4.3 Human remains 9 5. Archaeological science 10 5.1 Methods 10 5.2 Conclusions 10 6. Making sense of the past 10 7. Bibliography 12 Figure 1: Plan of Mungo lunette (Shawcross, 1998) 4 Figure 2: Section of site B showing spit levels superimposed upon depositional features (Shawcross, 1998) 6 Figure 3 – Stratigraphic units and age ranges of sites (Bowler J. J., 2003) 7 1. Introduction Lake Mungo is located in the Mungo national park within the Willandra Lakes World Heritage region 110 kilometres north-east of Mildura,
Mesopotamia is a fertile flat plain that was created by rich deposits of mud and clay that the two rivers carried from highlands and mountains that today make up the eastern side of Turkey, which lay to the north of what was Mesopotamia and is currently Iraq. The access to flowing water and fertile soil created by the rivers was what lead to the settlement of nomadic people from the Arabian Desert, which is currently located in Iran and Turkey (Hollar, 2011, p. 10). According to archaeologists who have been excavating sites in Mesopotamia since the 1840’s, primitive settlements formed between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers as far back as 10,000 B.C. Further evidence shows that early settlers fought over this fertile land, which encouraged larger and more organized groups of settlers to form the first nations in the history of this region. Eventually a well-organized nomadic tribe that existed east of Mesopotamia took control of the fertile lands and founded the nation of Sumer around 3,300 B.C.
Cultural Survival. Retrieved from: http://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/united-states/taking-garrison-dam-and-tribal-taking-area#sthash.EuaM238P.dpuf Brainy Quotes: Righting Wrongs. Retrieved from:http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/keywords/ wrongs.html#Y7ORpf7JyZ1B7E5t.99 Brodnicki Casimir, E. (nd). THE TRIBAL CHALLENGE: Cultural Resource Management with Native Americans by the Corps of Engineers in the Upper Missouri River Area. Retrieved from: http://www.bluestemcrm.com/ Dunn, R. (2007).
References: http://novaonline.nvcc.edu/eli/evans/his101/notes/gilgamesh.html http://www.icr.org/article/noah-flood-gilgamesh/ http://www.godandscience.org/apologetics/gilgamesh.html https://www.sparknotes.com/lit/gilgamesh/summary.html http://www.123helpme.com/view.asp?id=12550 http://creation.com/noahs-flood-and-the-gilgamesh-epic http://www.angelfire.com/ga/Godandscience/gilmesh.html http://www.religioustolerance.org/noah_com.htm The epic of Gilgamesh is one of the world's oldest surviving pieces of literature from Mesopotamia. This story is a tale of a universal flood, which has significant parallels to the Flood of Noah's time, dating approximately to 2000 B.C. There are only incomplete versions of this epic that still survive.
Looking at Indian Art of the Northwest Coast by Hillary Stewart Figure 5. Looking at Indian Art of the Northwest Coast by Hillary Stewart Figure 6 Looking at Indian Art of the Northwest Coast by Hillary Stewart Bibliography LeRoy H. Appleton, American Indian Design & Decoration (New York, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1950). Bill Holm, Northwest Coast Indian Art: An Analysis of Form (Vancouver, British Columbia: University of Washington Press, 1965). Robert Bruce Inveratity, Art of the Northwest Coast Indians (Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 1950). Cheryl Shearar, Understanding Northwest Coast Art: A Guide to Crests, Beings, and Symbols (Vancouver, British Columbia: Cheryl Shearar, 2000).
As the Native people of the Subarctic Shield Archaic followed suit, Pre-Dorset peoples occupied the abandon interior land. However, by 800 B.C., all evidence of them disappears. The story of Arctic Small Tool tradition in Manitoba, represented by the Pre-Dorset occupation, is significant in that the sites represent the most southerly occupation of this culture. Giddings (1953) first identified it in northern Manitoba. The Thyazzi Site on the North Knife River was later tested by Nash in 1965 and assigned to an early to mid-Pre-Dorset occupation on the basis of the lithic assemblage (Nash 1969:48).
The Aztec Civilization Easier - Aztecs were a wandering Native American tribe who came to Mexico during the 13th century. There they built a great civilization including cities, pyramids, and temples. In 1519 Spanish conquistadors arrived in Mexico and defeated the Aztecs. Harder - Aztec comes from the word Azteca, which is derived from Aztlán ("White Land"). Aztlán is believed to have been the northwestern region of today's Mexico.
The closest information I could fine would be “ENGLISH HISTORY OF HABEAS CORPUS: The history of Habeas Corpus is ancient. It appears to be predominately of Anglo-Saxon common law origin. Clearly, it precedes Magna Carta in 1215. Although the precise origin of Habeas Corpus is uncertain in light of its antiquity, its principle effect was achieved in the middle ages by various writs, the sum collection of which gave a similar effect as the modern writ” (habeascorpus.net, 2012). Habeas corpus derives from the English common law where the first recorded usage was in 1305, in the reign of King Edward I of England (wikipedia.org).
He wrote in the 5th Century BC, some 200 years after Lycurgus is alleged to have lived. Such a large time span between the life of Lycurgus and Herodotus writing about him castes further doubt as the Spartan did not record history and everything was passed down orally. Herodotus' writings of Lycurgus are based around Greek writings of the figure and oral accounts from Spartans who retold the legend, yet Herodotus did not write what people said verbatim and everything he wrote about Lycurgus was mainly from his perspective. Also many modern historians’ especially historians such as A. Andrews who wrote The Greek Tyrant said “The very existence of Lycurgus is open to doubt" and H. Michael who wrote Dimensions of military History wrote "If there is a real Lycurgus, we know nothing of him". Many believe instead that he was just a fictional character made to fuel thoughts and strength of the Great Rhetra that is attributed to his name or that he is in fact was just a prominent figure in the forming of the Great Rhetra and other personalities have been merged to form the person that was written