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Queen Elizabeth was crowned and buried in 1603 at Westminster Abbey, a large twin-towered Gothic church with a vast interior. Founded over a millennium ago, it is one of the United Kingdom’s most notable religious buildings and the traditional place of coronation and burial site for English and, later, British monarchs. Many royal marriages and national commemorative events have also been held within its walls. This episode concludes the recounting of my excursion to Southern England in search of the glorious era of Tudor England that helped shape the early exploration and colonization of the North American Continent. E113 Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/8vOAsYqUzbA which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Westminster Abbey books available at https://amzn.to/3AXBaZH England History books available at https://amzn.to/4526W5n British Kings & Queens books available at https://amzn.to/430VOo0 Age of Discovery books available at https://amzn.to/3ZYOhnK Age of Exploration books available at https://amzn.to/403Wcjx ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Mark Vinet's HISTORICAL JESUS podcast is available at https://parthenonpodcast.com/historical-jesus Mark's TIMELINE video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 Twitter: https://twitter.com/MarkVinet_HNA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Mark's Books: https://amzn.to/3k8 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Our next mission is to discover the places of birth (1533) and death (1603) of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth the First during the glorious era that was Tudor England which helped shape the early exploration and colonization of the North American Continent. E111. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/u58vM0O3kaM which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. England History books available at https://amzn.to/4526W5n British Kings & Queens books available at https://amzn.to/430VOo0 Age of Discovery books available at https://amzn.to/3ZYOhnK Age of Exploration books available at https://amzn.to/403Wcjx ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Mark Vinet's HISTORICAL JESUS podcast is available at https://parthenonpodcast.com/historical-jesus Mark's TIMELINE video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 Twitter: https://twitter.com/MarkVinet_HNA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Mark's Books: https://amzn.to/3k8qrGM See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The glorious era that was Tudor England helped shape the early exploration and colonization of the North American Continent. Join me as we begin a deep dive into Tudor England and its Great Transatlantic Explorers. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/lthofwdylGg which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. England History books available at https://amzn.to/4526W5n British Kings & Queens books available at https://amzn.to/430VOo0 Age of Discovery books available at https://amzn.to/3ZYOhnK Age of Exploration books available at https://amzn.to/403Wcjx ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Mark Vinet's video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 Twitter: https://twitter.com/HistoricalJesu Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Mark's Books: https://amzn.to/3k8qrGM See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The epizootic of 1872 was a massive outbreak of a flulike illness primarily among horses in North America, Central America, and some islands in the Caribbean. Research: "WHEN A FLU REINED IN NEW YORK." States News Service, 28 Apr. 2020. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A622209555/GPS?u=mlin_n_melpub&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=2bf7de71. Accessed 3 Feb. 2025. Andrews, Thomas G. “Influenza’s Progress: The Great Epizootic Flu of 1872-73 in the North American West.” Utah Historical Quarterly. Vol. 89. No. 1. Andrews, Thomas G. “The Great Horse Flu of 1872-1873.” The Bill Lane Center for the American West. Stanford University. https://west.stanford.edu/events/great-horse-flu-1872-1873 Andrews, Thomas. “The Great Horse Flu of 1872-1873.” Bill Lane Center for the American West Stanford Department of History. 5/4/2023. https://west.stanford.edu/events/great-horse-flu-1872-1873 Bierer, Bert W. “History of Animal Plagues of North America.” USDA. 1939. https://archive.org/details/CAT75660671/page/22/mode/1up Department of Health, the City of New York. “Report on the Epizootic Influenza Among Horses in 1872-73.” https://archive.org/details/reportdepartmen05unkngoog/page/n259/mode/1up Durkin, Kevin. “The Great Epizootic of 1872.” Reprinted from SustainLife: uarterly Journal of the Ploughshare Institute for Sustainable Culture. Fall 2012. https://www.heritagebarns.com/the-great-epizootic-of-1872 Freeberg, Ernest. “The Horse Flu Epidemic That Brought 19th-Century America to a Stop.” Smithsonian. 12/4/2020. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/how-horse-flu-epidemic-brought-19th-century-america-stop-180976453/ Judson, A B. “History and Course of the Epizoötic among Horses upon the North American Continent in 1872-73.” Public health papers and reports vol. 1 (1873): 88-109. Judson, A.B. “Report on the Origin and Progress of the Epizootic among Horses in 1872, With a Table of Mortality in New York (Illustrated with Maps). The Veterinarian : a monthly journal of veterinary science. Volume 47 (Vol. 20 of Fourth Series), January - December 1874. https://archive.org/details/s2023id1378227/page/492/mode/1up Kelly, John. "Why the long face? Because in 1872, nearly every horse in Washington got very ill." Washingtonpost.com, 5 Nov. 2016. Gale OneFile: Business, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A468927553/GPS?u=mlin_n_melpub&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=26db57c2. Accessed 3 Feb. 2025. Kheraj, Sean. “The Great Epizootic of 1872-73.” NiCHE. https://niche-canada.org/2018/05/03/the-great-epizootic-of-1872-73/ Kheraj, Sean. “The Great Epizootic of 1872–73: Networks of Animal Disease in North American Urban Environments.” Environmental History, July 2018, Vol. 23, No. 3 (July 2018). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/48554105 Law, James. “Influenza in Horses.” Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture, 1872. 1874. https://archive.org/details/reportofcommissi1872unit/page/203/mode/1up Lazarus, Oliver. “The Great Epizootic of 1872: Pandemics, Animals, and Modernity in 19th-Century New York City.” The Gotham Center for New York City History. 2/25/2021. https://www.gothamcenter.org/blog/the-great-epizootic-of-1872 Liautard, A.F. “Report on the Epizootic, as it Appeared in New York.” Report of the Department of Health, the City of New York. https://archive.org/details/reportdepartmen05unkngoog/page/n295/mode/1up McCloskey, Patrick J. “The Great Boston Fire & Epizootic of 1872.” Dakota Digital Review. 12/3/2020. https://dda.ndus.edu/ddreview/the-great-boston-fire-epizootic-of-1872/ McClure, James P. “The Epizootic of 1872: Horses and Disease in a Nation in Motion.” New York History , JANUARY 1998, Vol. 79, No. 1 (JANUARY 1998). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/23182287 McShane, Clay. “Gelded Age Boston.” The New England Quarterly , Jun., 2001, Vol. 74, No. 2 (Jun., 2001). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/3185479 Morens and Taubenberger (2010) An avian outbreak associated with panzootic equine influenza in 1872: an early example of highly pathogenic avian influenza? Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses 4(6), 373–377. Powell, James. “The Great Epizootic.” The Historical Society of Ottawa. https://www.historicalsocietyottawa.ca/publications/ottawa-stories/momentous-events-in-the-city-s-life/the-great-epizootic Sack, Alexandra, et al. "Equine Influenza Virus--A Neglected, Reemergent Disease Threat." Emerging Infectious Diseases, vol. 25, no. 6, June 2019, pp. 1185+. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints, dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid2506.161846. Accessed 3 Feb. 2025. Stolte, Daniel. “UA Study on Flu Evolution May Change Textbooks, History Books.” University of Arizona. https://news.arizona.edu/news/ua-study-on-flu-evolution-may-change-textbooks-history-books See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Let’s discover the places of birth and death of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth the First during the glorious era that was Tudor England which helped shape the early exploration and colonization of the North American Continent. Enjoy this HISTORICAL JESUS Extra — The STORY of AMERICA. Check out the YouTube version of this episode which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams at: https://youtu.be/u58vM0O3kaM https://youtu.be/N7y4fYbjNuw Queen Elizabeth books available at https://amzn.to/45YvzPN England History books available at https://amzn.to/4526W5n British Kings & Queens books available at https://amzn.to/430VOo0 Age of Discovery books available at https://amzn.to/3ZYOhnK Age of Exploration books available at https://amzn.to/403Wcjx ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 Twitter: https://twitter.com/HistoricalJesu Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Books: https://amzn.to/3k8qrGM See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Kurt Charnock has taken on some of the toughest running and cycling challenges, and lived to tell the tale. He sees every challenge as an adventure, yet to us mere mortals they are momentous tasks of endurance, hardship and being so far out of our comfort zone it‘s in a different time zone. The trials and tribulations Kurt has been willing to put himself through, would make members of the armed forces question his sanity. A true adventurer that keeps upping the anti and who travels from John o'Groats to Land's End as a warm up for crossing the North American Continent.If you've thought about taking on a huge physical challenge, and wondered what it takes, this is a great interview with someone who's been through it and done it on a monumental scale. Kurt talks about the mindset, training, conditioning and other preparations needed to get the job done. It's a fascinating subject and an enthralling tale of sheer grit, determination and single mindedness. https://www.theargus.co.uk/news/23861838.sussex-granny-run-length-usa-gruelling-challenge/https://www.theargus.co.uk/news/24094324.sussex-adventurers-nearly-finished-3-500-mile-run-across-us/https://www.facebook.com/brightontri.raceseries/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
RANDOM WAYPOINTS PODCAST EP.06.02 | GUESTS IRONHORSE OVERLAND GIVE CENTRAL AMERICA TRAVEL UPDATEIronhorse Overland, also known as Mike & Debbie Lee became a thought as Mike and Deb contemplated life after retirement. Both had spent their lives working in the Emergency Services field (Law Enforcement, Fire, and military) and raising their 4 kids. Deb & Mike grew up enjoying the outdoors and have always loved camping, hiking, off-roading, hunting and fishing. And so plans were made, the house was sold and they decided to take their love for the outdoors to the next level and transition to a full time life of Overland Travel.Over the past 2.5 years, They and their dog Gunner, have traveled & camped throughout the entire North American Continent and Baja, in their 2015 Toyota 4-Runner and 2020 Patriot Camper X1H. In January, they started their Mainland Mexico, Central America adventure. @ironhorseoverland7353 ===================== Co-Host =============================Michael Ladden @Drive The Globe https://www.drivetheglobe.com/ ——————————— CONNECT ———————————
Welcome to a precipitous dive into the gruelling heart of the great North American Continent, into the bleak expanses of the arid and repulsive desert - the great Alkali plain. Chapter 6 of A Study in Scarlet opens to this formidable panorama, a land that stands as sentinel against the march of civilisation from the peaks of Sierra Nevada to the reaches of Nebraska, Yellowstone in the north to Colorado in the south. Here, in this land of stark contrasts, we traverse the snow-capped mountains, grim valleys, swift rivers that crash through jagged canyons and sprawling plains, painted starkly white with winter snow, or clad in summer's gray robe of saline alkali dust. This is a land shrouded in the promise of barrenness, inhospitality, and despair. This chapter takes us on a journey through the hollow stillness of a soundless wilderness. From the stoic silence that surveyed the northern edge of Sierra Blanco, to the humble pathway that seems to carry the memory of lost adventurers. We are filled with the tense loneliness of existence here - the coyotes, the buzzards, the grizzly bear enduring in the shadow of desolation.And yet in this desolate tapestry of austere beauty and unyielding harshness, we witness the promise of life and adventure. An emaciated lone figure, haggard and lean, draped on the precipice of life and death, clings to hope, and a little girl, five years old, a symbol of innocence and resilience amidst the parched despair of the landscape.It is this unlikely duo, castaway in this harsh and unwelcoming wilderness, whose poignant story stirs our emotions and draws us closer to their struggle for survival. How they endure the adversity, how they navigate through despair, and how they keep the flame of hope alive in a land devoid of life and joy is the compelling narrative of this chapter.
In this episode , we look back at John Jenrette's fateful decision to run for the South Carolina State House. He was living in North Myrtle Beach and struggling as a Lawyer. In that day lawyers could not advertise and John Jenrette was trying to figure out a way to get his name out to the public. He was, he said, tired of getting paid in collard greens. It was a decision that would change his life forever. He won. That lifted him to position of Chairman of the Horry County State House delegation. He was 28 years old and the system of that day was entirely different than what we have in the state today. There were no County Councils and the state senators ran the county. In that respect, John Jenrette was sitting in a really good position, he was young, energetic, and the cousin of the sitting State Senator in Horry County, James Stevens. It was a relationship that would pay dividends. In this episode, we will hear about how under Jenrette's leadership, along with Senator James Stevens, they went to work to build roads, bridges, and develop a fledgling school, then known as Coastal Carolina Community College. It was quite the ride for a young man in a hurry. It was this extraordinary run in the State Legislature that would be the foundation for his later runs for Congress against an entrenched , powerful incumbent. Then we learn about the distant family tie between John Jenrette, a man of French Huguenot descent, and the leader of another nation on the North American Continent , Pierre Trudeau , the Prime Minister of Canada. Jenrette enjoys talking about his family and their long history in America and the Carolinas. We will also be introduced to one of John Jenrette's closest friends and a legendary political ally whose career was as large as any in modern South Carolina history, Senator Dick Elliott of North Myrtle Beach, S.C. We will look back at their friendship, its importance in the rise of John Jenrette, and Dick Elliot's own outsized career both in politics, in business, and its impact on our State of South Carolina and through out the Pee Dee region. Dick Elliott was as responsible for the rise of the Grand Strand in the Golf business, the tourism business, the improved road system, and the growth in Real Estate as anyone in the state, for he was a leader in every one of those industries as well as politics for nearly a half century. In this episode we look back as John Jenrette lays the groundwork for one of the great upsets in the history of South Carolina politics against Representative John McMillan, who had served 16 terms in Congress. That will be the next story we will tell. Questions or comments at , Randalrgw1@aol.com , https://twitter.com/randal_wallace , and http://www.randalwallace.com/Please Leave us a review at wherever you get your podcastsThanks for listening!!
Episode 135: Would Lenin or Stalin have supported the idea of Decolonization? (of the North American Continent) Guests: Derek (PlantsFanon), Victor (Red Falcon) To find the word document that we were reading from, you can go to the podcast share drive, then to go the “Documents” folder. The answer is “YES”, they would support the current idea of ‘Decolonization'. Quoted Sources included: A) “The Right of Nations to Self-Determination” by Lenin B) “Self-Determination of Nations” by Lenin C) “The Revolutionary Proletariat and the Right of Nations to Self-Determination” by Lenin D) “The Discussion on Self-Determination Summed Up” by Lenin E) “The Socialist Revolution and the Right of Nations to Self-Determination (Theses)” by Lenin F) “State and Revolution” by Lenin G) “What is to be Done?” by Lenin H) “Imperialism The Highest Stage of Capitalism” by Lenin I) “‘Left-Wing' Communism, An Infantile Disorder” by Lenin J) “Marxism and the National Question” by Stalin K) “The Foundations of Leninism” by Stalin L) “Historical Materialism” by Stalin Rick is a citizen of the Comanche Nation, and has a master's in Indigenous People's law, from the University of Oklahoma.
Janis Putelis is one of the most recognizable names in hunting today. An accomplished hunter of hooved game on the North American Continent, Janis is well known through his work with MeatEater. Why would he want to transition his hunting style and a large portion of his life to include hunting with hounds? Listeners will get the full story on The Journey on the Houndsman XP Network. In this episode listeners will hear the insights from Janis and the path he has chosen for his journey. Where did he get is hound? Where did he get information for training a scent hound? Did he have mentors? What resources did he draw from? How have his opinions changed from an almost specific ungulate hunter to becoming a Houndsman? This is an awesome episode of The Journey and a must listen for new and seasoned houndsmen as Janis helps us teach, train and learn on the Houndsman XP Podcast Network. www.houndsmanxp.com Check out the Sportsmen's Empire Podcast Network for more relevant outdoor content! SPONSORS: Cajun Lights Havoc Hunting Supply Go Wild Old South Dog Boxes Joy Dog Food Briar Creek Kennel dogsRtreed Freedom Hunters Rough Cut Company Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Janis Putelis is one of the most recognizable names in hunting today. An accomplished hunter of hooved game on the North American Continent, Janis is well known through his work with MeatEater. Why would he want to transition his hunting style and a large portion of his life to include hunting with hounds?Listeners will get the full story on The Journey on the Houndsman XP Network. In this episode listeners will hear the insights from Janis and the path he has chosen for his journey. Where did he get is hound? Where did he get information for training a scent hound? Did he have mentors? What resources did he draw from? How have his opinions changed from an almost specific ungulate hunter to becoming a Houndsman? This is an awesome episode of The Journey and a must listen for new and seasoned houndsmen as Janis helps us teach, train and learn on the Houndsman XP Podcast Network.www.houndsmanxp.comCheck out the Sportsmen's Empire Podcast Network for more relevant outdoor content!SPONSORS:Cajun LightsHavoc Hunting SupplyGo WildOld South Dog BoxesJoy Dog FoodBriar Creek KenneldogsRtreedFreedom HuntersRough Cut Company
Janis Putelis is one of the most recognizable names in hunting today. An accomplished hunter of hooved game on the North American Continent, Janis is well known through his work with MeatEater. Why would he want to transition his hunting style and a large portion of his life to include hunting with hounds?Listeners will get the full story on The Journey on the Houndsman XP Network. In this episode listeners will hear the insights from Janis and the path he has chosen for his journey. Where did he get is hound? Where did he get information for training a scent hound? Did he have mentors? What resources did he draw from? How have his opinions changed from an almost specific ungulate hunter to becoming a Houndsman? This is an awesome episode of The Journey and a must listen for new and seasoned houndsmen as Janis helps us teach, train and learn on the Houndsman XP Podcast Network.www.houndsmanxp.comCheck out the Sportsmen's Empire Podcast Network for more relevant outdoor content!SPONSORS:Cajun LightsHavoc Hunting SupplyGo WildOld South Dog BoxesJoy Dog FoodBriar Creek KenneldogsRtreedFreedom HuntersRough Cut Company
Let's delve into the life and times of the British Monarch that gave his name to the Jacobean Era (1603-25), King James I. This pivotal epoch helped shape the exploration and colonization of the North American Continent. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/coL9Ys12nak which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Monarchy From the Middle Ages to Modernity by David Starkey (AudioBook) available at https://amzn.to/3HpwAYn Support this channel by enjoying a wide-range of useful & FUN Gadgets at https://twitter.com/GadgetzGuy Go follow our YouTube page to enjoy additional Bonus content including original short 60 second capsules at https://bit.ly/3eprMpO Mark Vinet's TIMELINE video channel at https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Get exclusive access to Bonus episodes, Ad-Free content, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on Patreon at https://patreon.com/markvinet and receive an eBook welcome GIFT or Donate on PayPal at https://bit.ly/3cx9OOL and also receive an eBook welcome GIFT. Denary Novels by Mark Vinet are available at https://amzn.to/33evMUj Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Twitter: https://twitter.com/TIMELINEchannel Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 YouTube Podcast Playlist: https://www.bit.ly/34tBizu Podcast: https://anchor.fm/mark-vinet TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@historyofnorthamerica Linktree: https://linktr.ee/WadeOrganization Credit: Monarchy From the Middle Ages to Modernity by D. Starkey. Audio excerpts reproduced under the Fair Use (Fair Dealings) Legal Doctrine for purposes such as criticism, comment, teaching, education, scholarship, research and news reporting.
Queen Elizabeth was crowned and buried in 1603 at Westminster Abbey, a large twin-towered Gothic church with a vast interior. Founded over a millennium ago, it is one of the United Kingdom's most notable religious buildings and the traditional place of coronation and burial site for English and, later, British monarchs. Many royal marriages and national commemorative events have also been held within its walls. This episode concludes the recounting of my excursion to Southern England in search of the glorious era of Tudor England that helped shape the early exploration and colonization of the North American Continent. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/8vOAsYqUzbA which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Support our channel by watching and clicking on the ads in this video. It costs you nothing and by doing so gives us extra credit and encourages, supports & helps us to create more quality content. Thanks! Visit our sponsor https://athleticgreens.com/EMERGING to take ownership over your health and get a FREE 1 year supply of immune-supporting Vitamin D and 5 FREE travel packs with your first purchase! Get exclusive access to Bonus episodes, Ad-Free content, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on Patreon at https://patreon.com/markvinet or Donate on PayPal at https://bit.ly/3cx9OOL and receive an eBook welcome GIFT by Mark Vinet. Denary Novels by Mark Vinet are available at https://amzn.to/33evMUj Mark Vinet's TIMELINE video channel at https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Twitter: https://twitter.com/TIMELINEchannel Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 YouTube Podcast Playlist: https://www.bit.ly/34tBizu Podcast: https://anchor.fm/mark-vinet Linktree: https://linktr.ee/WadeOrganization
Our next mission is to discover the places of birth (1533) and death (1603) of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth the First during the glorious era that was Tudor England which helped shape the early exploration and colonization of the North American Continent. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/u58vM0O3kaM which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Support our channel by watching and clicking on the ads in this video. It costs you nothing and by doing so gives us extra credit and encourages, supports & helps us to create more quality content. Thanks! Visit our sponsor https://athleticgreens.com/EMERGING to take ownership over your health and get a FREE 1 year supply of immune-supporting Vitamin D and 5 FREE travel packs with your first purchase! Get exclusive access to Bonus episodes, Ad-Free content, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on Patreon at https://patreon.com/markvinet or Donate on PayPal at https://bit.ly/3cx9OOL and receive an eBook welcome GIFT by Mark Vinet. Denary Novels by Mark Vinet are available at https://amzn.to/33evMUj Mark Vinet's TIMELINE video channel at https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Twitter: https://twitter.com/TIMELINEchannel Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 YouTube Podcast Playlist: https://www.bit.ly/34tBizu Podcast: https://anchor.fm/mark-vinet Linktree: https://linktr.ee/WadeOrganization
The glorious era that was Tudor England helped shape the early exploration and colonization of the North American Continent. Join me as we begin a deep dive into Tudor England and its Great Transatlantic Explorers. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/lthofwdylGg which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Support our channel by watching and clicking on the ads in this video. It costs you nothing and by doing so gives us extra credit and encourages, supports & helps us to create more quality content. Thanks! Visit our sponsor https://athleticgreens.com/EMERGING to take ownership over your health and get a FREE 1 year supply of immune-supporting Vitamin D and 5 FREE travel packs with your first purchase! Get exclusive access to Bonus episodes, Ad-Free content, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on Patreon at https://patreon.com/markvinet or Donate on PayPal at https://bit.ly/3cx9OOL and receive an eBook welcome GIFT by Mark Vinet. Denary Novels by Mark Vinet are available at https://amzn.to/33evMUj Mark Vinet's TIMELINE video channel at https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Twitter: https://twitter.com/TIMELINEchannel Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 YouTube Podcast Playlist: https://www.bit.ly/34tBizu Podcast: https://anchor.fm/mark-vinet Linktree: https://linktr.ee/WadeOrganization
I met Ryland Engelhart at a Deepak Chopra wellness retreat in South Carolina. If you are a food person, his name may or may not be familiar to you, but his family's two restaurant brands in Southern California (Café Gratitude and Gracias Madre) are synonymous with healthy, highly tasty vegan dishes that are not named after ingredients or a chef's daughter but are instead positive affirmations. If you go to one of Café Gratitude's eight locations in Southern California, and want a delicious, gluten-free salad of edamame, mustard-marinated kale, warm broccolini with dill, avocado and maple-toasted seeds, be prepared to let your server know when he comes to the table that I AM ENCHANCHANTING. Before you roll your eyes, know that these affirmations, indeed, Ryland's doctrine of living are genuine. He freely states that in the early 2000s when he and his brother migrated from San Francisco to Los Angeles with the concept of Café Gratitude, he specifically did so with the zeal and belief of an evangelist. He was on a mission to change the world through food, humbly serving his fellow humans and creating a culture of health. That same zeal and belief underpins his “huge, foolish project, like Noah…” called Kiss the Ground, a non-profit organization that explores how we save the earth from global warming and the human species from extinction through regenerative agriculture and literally pulling CO2 out of the atmosphere and putting it back into the ground. Kiss the Ground is also the name of a film Ryland produced that has had over 5 million views on Netflix and won significant acclaim for the message that paints a 3D picture of how we can sustain our food supply and the planet. The film, even with all its successes, has also been deeply criticized for a lack of diversity and not connecting the tenants of land management to its roots in the Native American and indigenous peoples of the North American Continent. That criticism has touched Ryland personally. It has been a source of disenchantment, self-distrust and apathy. He authentically describes how one of the greatest achievements of his life, has also been the cause of pain and the evaporation of his ideas of who he is. We speak to Ryland during a time in his life when he is the process of rebuilding, reflection and reexamination. This is his season of life where there is no production, but silence, stillness and tarrying as springtime glimmers on the horizon. It's a lesson for us all, really. As he describes it, there is a “divine timing for the inhale and the exhale.” And as with each breath, there is always a pause.Kiss the Ground CommunityRyland on IGPatrick's WebsitePatrick on IGAt the Podium on IGPatrick on LinkedIn
A quick rundown of the political problem of the North American Continent. From the latest podcast with Ari Freeman.
Matt Hill, the voice of Ed on Cartoon Network's longest running cartoon, "Ed, Edd n Eddy". Matt was also of TMNT: Next Mutation as Raphael. In 2008-2009 he traveled the North American Continent by running for his initiative "Run for One Planet". Is there a voice actor, actor, author, musician, comic book creator, athlete, pop culture icon, etc. that you would like to see me interview? if so drop it in the comments below. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nmyheadpod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nmyheadpod Twitter: https://twitter.com/nmyheadpod Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/WhatsInMyHeadPodcast/featuredDon't forget to subscribe and follow us across all social media platforms.
Dr. Jean-Ronald Lafond is a classically trained singer who has sung, and taught in Europe, parts of Asia, and the North American Continent. He speaks about his childhood in Haiti, moving to New Jersey, and how his first experience at the Metropolitan Opera inspired him to pursue singing instead of Engineering. He also discusses training singers, and his own philosophy marrying principles of Martial Arts with vocal training he calls Kashu-do. Lastly, he discusses the state of the opera world today—the effects of Covid, opera in the MeToo era, and racial reckoning in the industry.
Keean Bexte is an award-winning Canadian journalist who has interviewed some of the biggest names in Western geopolitics. People like Ilhan Omar, Greta Thunberg. and Justin Trudeau are just a couple of the people has interviewed. He graduated from the University of Calgary with a Bachelor of Science in Energy Sciences and Energy Economics. His works spreads across the North American Continent with coverage of Canadian and American politics alike. https://twitter.com/TheRealKeean https://www.thecountersignal.com/ https://www.instagram.com/therealkeean/ https://www.addyadds.one https://www.patreon.com/addyadds https://paypal.me/oneaddyadds
I'm really excited to share my conversation with my (Producer Ashley)'s friend Ty Defoe. Ty and I talked the day after the inauguration of Joe Biden and that is reflected in the interview. We also chat about Ty being on Broadway, working with (#Icon) Kate Bornstein, and helping the craft the indigenous representation and public acknowledgement of the crimes, treatment, and genocides committed against indigenous people throughout history in the North American Continent for this year's Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. TY DEFOE (Giizhig) is from the Oneida and Ojibwe Nations. He is an interdisciplinary-hyphenated artist, activist, writer, cultural worker, and shape-shifter. As a two-spirit person Ty aspires to an integral approach to artistic projects, social justice, indigeneity, and environmentalism. Ty gained recognition in many circles around the world including a Grammy Award for his work on “Come to Me Great Mystery.” Ty's global cultural arts highlights are: the Millennium celebration in Cairo, Egypt with the Call for Peace Drum and Dance Company; Turkey for the Ankara International Music Festival, and Festival of World Cultures in Dubai. Ty's frequents his own community where he learned to hoop dance, eagle dance, and play a variety of wooden flutes. https://www.tydefoe.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/isittransphobic/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/isittransphobic/support
Anthony and Lauren discuss non-piano teaching ideas. Cheng-Feng Lin shares his teaching techniques. Get to know international sensation Manuel Zazueta.
Book of Mormon Evidence Podcast - Come Follow Me Supplemental Study
This is part two: DVD from 2011 with Rod Meldrum who discusses the amazing destruction to the North American Continent, at the time of Christ's Death. He looks at different possibilities including the heartland site of America's largest ever known earthquake found at New Madrid.Support the show (http://www.bookofmormonevidencestreaming.com)
Book of Mormon Evidence Podcast - Come Follow Me Supplemental Study
This is part one: Rod Meldrum discusses the amazing destruction to the North American Continent, at the time of Christ's Death. He looks at different possibilities including the heartland site of America's largest ever known earthquake found at New Madrid.Support the show (http://www.bookofmormonevidencestreaming.com)
Mike Ranta shares stories of paddling across the entire North American Continent in a single season. As if once wasn’t enough, he did it a second time two years later. Mike brings a great laugh and even more important, a great message of positivity. Enjoy today’s interview with Mike Ranta!Learn more:Mike Ranta's Paddle on FacebookMike Ranta's paddle on YouTubeWarrior AdventuresFur Trade Canoe Routes/Then & NowMike is supported by:Swift canoesBadger paddles
Shane Mahoney is the CEO of Conservation Visions Inc. An organization that partners with other like minded organizations and individuals that spurs on conservation for wildlife and wildplaces. As a scientist, activist, and storyteller, Shane has spent a great deal of his life interacting, observing, and connecting with the wild landscape. His childhood was spent in the northeastern woodlands, and now as an adult expanding his view particularly on the North American Continent. Shane launched in 2017, the WildHarvest Initiative. A project that is beginning to quantify the amount of wild food harvested by Hunters, Anglers, Foragers, and Trappers. The aim of this project is to understand the amount of food that is seperate from traditional agriculture, and its importance. What if this food was gone. How would this resource be replaced? How many people would be affected? Through the North American Model of Conservation, pursuing wildgame and foraging for wild plants has proven to be sustainable. For Sportsmen, this initiative is a valuable tool for promoting our lifestyle. Shane also makes a point to say that humans and animals can coexist, but not without forward thinking. As we encroach on wildspaces, are we thinking about our effect on the wild species already there? As we wrap our conversation, Shane shares a very unique dish, what could be described as a Turr Wellington. A seabird, wrapped in dough and baked in the oven. The unique part is that only native Newfoundlanders can hunt these Turrs. His description of the dark, almost black flesh of these birds, wrapped, roasted, and served with vegetables had me looking into how to make a trip just to dine on one of these birds.Conservation Vision/Wild Harvest Website: https://www.conservationvisions.com/wild-harvest-initiative Huntavore is Powered by Simplecast
Shane Mahoney is the CEO of Conservation Visions Inc. An organization that partners with other like minded organizations and individuals that spurs on conservation for wildlife and wildplaces. As a scientist, activist, and storyteller, Shane has spent a great deal of his life interacting, observing, and connecting with the wild landscape. His childhood was spent in the northeastern woodlands, and now as an adult expanding his view particularly on the North American Continent. Shane launched in 2017, the WildHarvest Initiative. A project that is beginning to quantify the amount of wild food harvested by Hunters, Anglers, Foragers, and Trappers. The aim of this project is to understand the amount of food that is seperate from traditional agriculture, and its importance. What if this food was gone. How would this resource be replaced? How many people would be affected? Through the North American Model of Conservation, pursuing wildgame and foraging for wild plants has proven to be sustainable. For Sportsmen, this initiative is a valuable tool for promoting our lifestyle. Shane also makes a point to say that humans and animals can coexist, but not without forward thinking. As we encroach on wildspaces, are we thinking about our effect on the wild species already there? As we wrap our conversation, Shane shares a very unique dish, what could be described as a Turr Wellington. A seabird, wrapped in dough and baked in the oven. The unique part is that only native Newfoundlanders can hunt these Turrs. His description of the dark, almost black flesh of these birds, wrapped, roasted, and served with vegetables had me looking into how to make a trip just to dine on one of these birds.Conservation Vision/Wild Harvest Website: https://www.conservationvisions.com/wild-harvest-initiative Huntavore is Powered by Simplecast
Shane Mahoney is the CEO of Conservation Visions Inc. An organization that partners with other like minded organizations and individuals that spurs on conservation for wildlife and wildplaces. As a scientist, activist, and storyteller, Shane has spent a great deal of his life interacting, observing, and connecting with the wild landscape. His childhood was spent in the northeastern woodlands, and now as an adult expanding his view particularly on the North American Continent. Shane launched in 2017, the WildHarvest Initiative. A project that is beginning to quantify the amount of wild food harvested by Hunters, Anglers, Foragers, and Trappers. The aim of this project is to understand the amount of food that is seperate from traditional agriculture, and its importance. What if this food was gone. How would this resource be replaced? How many people would be affected? Through the North American Model of Conservation, pursuing wildgame and foraging for wild plants has proven to be sustainable. For Sportsmen, this initiative is a valuable tool for promoting our lifestyle. Shane also makes a point to say that humans and animals can coexist, but not without forward thinking. As we encroach on wildspaces, are we thinking about our effect on the wild species already there? As we wrap our conversation, Shane shares a very unique dish, what could be described as a Turr Wellington. A seabird, wrapped in dough and baked in the oven. The unique part is that only native Newfoundlanders can hunt these Turrs. His description of the dark, almost black flesh of these birds, wrapped, roasted, and served with vegetables had me looking into how to make a trip just to dine on one of these birds.Conservation Vision/Wild Harvest Website: https://www.conservationvisions.com/wild-harvest-initiative Huntavore is Powered by Simplecast
Shane Mahoney is the CEO of Conservation Visions Inc. An organization that partners with other like minded organizations and individuals that spurs on conservation for wildlife and wildplaces. As a scientist, activist, and storyteller, Shane has spent a great deal of his life interacting, observing, and connecting with the wild landscape. His childhood was spent in the northeastern woodlands, and now as an adult expanding his view particularly on the North American Continent. Shane launched in 2017, the WildHarvest Initiative. A project that is beginning to quantify the amount of wild food harvested by Hunters, Anglers, Foragers, and Trappers. The aim of this project is to understand the amount of food that is seperate from traditional agriculture, and its importance. What if this food was gone. How would this resource be replaced? How many people would be affected? Through the North American Model of Conservation, pursuing wildgame and foraging for wild plants has proven to be sustainable. For Sportsmen, this initiative is a valuable tool for promoting our lifestyle. Shane also makes a point to say that humans and animals can coexist, but not without forward thinking. As we encroach on wildspaces, are we thinking about our effect on the wild species already there? As we wrap our conversation, Shane shares a very unique dish, what could be described as a Turr Wellington. A seabird, wrapped in dough and baked in the oven. The unique part is that only native Newfoundlanders can hunt these Turrs. His description of the dark, almost black flesh of these birds, wrapped, roasted, and served with vegetables had me looking into how to make a trip just to dine on one of these birds.Conservation Vision/Wild Harvest Website: https://www.conservationvisions.com/wild-harvest-initiative Huntavore is Powered by Simplecast
Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry joins Louis Avallone and Stephen Parr to talk about the fundamentals of what has made America great, and then he discusses the current challenges facing all of us to keep America great for the future.LTC Alan West explains one of the most significant aspects of what makes America great is the American Military’s history, starting with the first shots fired at Lexington and Concord, starting the Revolutionary War. Throughout the years, young men and women continue to volunteer to serve in America’s military for the defense of the Nation. They take an oath to defend the Founding Documents of the United States. C. L. Bryant talks about what makes America Great. Only in America with all the various differences which of our American racial and ethnic “quilt”, can individual people’s stories be told. He explains that slavery did not exist in America for 400 years. It existed for only 89 years in the Nation. It existed longer on the North American Continent, however. Diamond and Silk didn’t like the media being dishonest about Donald Trump. They decided it was time to start speaking up. What makes America great are the freedoms we have as America. All you have to do is take advantage of the opportunities.
Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry joins Louis Avallone and Stephen Parr to talk about the fundamentals of what has made America great, and then he discusses the current challenges facing all of us to keep America great for the future.LTC Alan West explains one of the most significant aspects of what makes America great is the American Military’s history, starting with the first shots fired at Lexington and Concord, starting the Revolutionary War. Throughout the years, young men and women continue to volunteer to serve in America’s military for the defense of the Nation. They take an oath to defend the Founding Documents of the United States. C. L. Bryant talks about what makes America Great. Only in America with all the various differences which of our American racial and ethnic “quilt”, can individual people’s stories be told. He explains that slavery did not exist in America for 400 years. It existed for only 89 years in the Nation. It existed longer on the North American Continent, however. Diamond and Silk didn’t like the media being dishonest about Donald Trump. They decided it was time to start speaking up. What makes America great are the freedoms we have as America. All you have to do is take advantage of the opportunities.
Carmen Rao and Joel Salvino, creators of the Wild West Trail share an overview of the trail along with their adventures hiking it. The Wild West Trail connects the most intact temperate ecosystem on the planet. At over 2,200 miles long it traverses the heart of the North American Continent. The genesis of the hike is in Jarbidge Nevada, from there the arduous journey shoots northward to the Canadian Border. Turning east, it turns south inside Glacier National Park and the eastern terminus is Jackson pass, in the Teton Mountains (source: wildwesttrail.co)Connect with Wild West TrailWebsite: Wild West TrailInstagram: @WildWestTrailYouTube: Wild West TrailConnect with Lori:Instagram: @thehikepodcastTwitter: @thehikepodcastBlog: thehikepodcast.wordpress.comFacebook: @thehikepodcastEmail: hikepodcast@gmail.com Special thank you to Isabella, Tim, Leisel and Greg for being show patrons!Music outro track "Two Mountains at a Time" from Live at the Fillmore by PachydermMusic used under the Creative Commons license. Support the show Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/thehikepodcast)
It was a tall order but Mark and his Dad started out last Sept and hunted through Feb. Together they successfully took every upland gamebird flying in the North American Continent. It wasn't easy, but the Peterson's have no regrets. Not to mention a freezer full of feathered trophies for the dinner table.
Hashtag 59's Season 3 Podcast is 50 Episodes long and each episode will provide FIVE outdoor adventures in each of the US's 50 states. We are doing these episodes in ABC Order of the states and episode twelve is Idaho. The goal is to give you ideas and opportunities to experience outdoor adventure anywhere and everywhere in the United States of America. Here's our list for Idaho: 1. White Water Raft the Salmon River. 2. Cliff jump, mountain bike, hike, and more in C’oeur D’Alene, Idaho 3. Head to the Niagara of the West. Shoshone Falls. 4. Craters of the Moon National Monument: Famously called "the strangest 75 square miles on the North American Continent" by an early explorer, and it is indeed a unique and memorable landscape. This monument is named for the seemingly endless craters, lava flows, and piles of loose rock. The area's terrain is so other-worldly that the Apollo astronauts even trained here in preparation for their moon missions. The monument boasts 60 lava flows and 25 cinder cones as well as what is called the Great Rift, a 62-mile-long crack in the earth's surface. The last volcanic activity in the area is said to have occurred nearly 2,000 years ago. 5. Sawtooth Mountains and the town of Stanley: In less than a three hour jaunt from Boise, you can be in the heart of the Sawtooth Mountains. The site of the jagged craggy peaks are worth the trip alone. From Boise take Highway 21 north to the small funky town of Stanley where the outdoor opportunities are endless. Think world-class hiking, fishing, and biking. Or you can simply find a nice riverside spot to relax and take in the beautiful scenery. 6. Hot Springs: Idaho has more soakable hot springs than any other state, with approximately 130 natural pools that are just the right temperature. Near Boise, there are two types of hot springs. The first are wild, undeveloped hot springs on public lands, many of which require a short hike. The second are commercial hot springs around Boise. Thanks for listening to Season 3 of our podcast featuring all 50 US States and some of each state's unique and hopefully lesser known to you Outdoor Adventures. This episode featured the state of Idaho. Subscribe to our podcast if you enjoy what you hear and if you feel so inclined to leave a review we would be grateful. Check out www.Hashtag59.com for our old podcast seasons, hundreds of blogs, & outdoor events/team outings info.
Episode Notes Ok, sure, giving thanks is relatively straight forward – you’re formally expressing gratitude for something, say like surviving…but what about that “first” part? First in the United States? First in the North American continent? First European in the North American Continent? You will not be surprised that we are delighted to hold forth on these details. Join Ken and Glen as they serve up a feast of thoughts on the “First” Thanksgiving. Thanks for listening! Questions? Comments? Talk to us at thenagaincontact@gmail.com Find out more at http://www.thenagainpodcast.com
In this episode: Stories of odd things on the North American Continent! Things that shouldn't be there, but are! The Kensington Rune Stone! The Los Lunas Decalog Stone! The Maine Penny! And MORE! SIMPLY AMAZING! EMAIL: TerrysMysteriousMoments@gmail.com Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/terrydtx/ Shows on RPA: Monday's: Real Paranormal Activity - The Podcast Tuesday's: Aaron's Horror Show with Aaron Frale Wednesday's: Terry's Mysterious Moments with Terry From Texas Every Other Thursday: The Sandman Lullaby with Patrick Shawn Jones First Friday Of Every Month: Full Dark Productions (Video), The Witching Hour (Video) and Unexplained Cases (Video) REAL PARANORMAL ACTIVITY - THE PODCAST: Get our new App for iOS and Android! Its FREE! Download it now from the App stores! If you would like to listen to the archives, become a Premium Access member! For $3.99 a month you get unlimited access to the past Bonus, Listener Stories, Interviews and even audio books of Folklore from around the world! We use the funds for the show bills and to improve the show like the Apps! You can go to the website and click on the "Get Premium Access" button or you can register and also log into your existing account through the App! In the App just go to a Premium Episode and in the listing will be a "Padlock" icon. Tap on that and you will be brought into the Register/Login screen! You can then just use the App to log into your account or you can always go to the website! Thank you in advance and please enjoy yourselves! Where else to find the RPA Network: We're on all the major streaming audio platforms such as: Pandora, iHeart Radio Network, Spotify, Radio Public, etc, etc.. Ad Placement On RPA: Have a product, service or book to promote? Have RPA brand you to the world at a fraction of the cost that others charge! Priced to fit any budget! You'll receive maximum exposure from RPA's listener audience of 161 countries! No Ad? No problem! We'll create one for you! Contact Aaron today! What have you got to lose? For details email: Aaron@RealParanormalActivity.com NEW! The RPA SWAG STORE: You asked for it! You got it! Browse our large selection of RPA/Paranormal/Goth/Humor themed clothing for both men and women! We give you 30 DAYS to return your purchase(s) if you decide too! No questions asked! AMAZING! Enter the store here: https://shop.spreadshirt.com/RPAPodcast Facebook Page: www.Facebook.com/Rpapodcast/ Website: www.RealParanormalActivity.com Twitter: @RPAPodcast Skype: RPAPodcast Hashtag: #RPAPodcast Please take the RPA Survey. It'll help the show with future advertisers.
A meandering episode for a meandering expedition. This episode covers the expedition of Hernando de Soto, the next in our inglorious series of conquistadors who had tried and failed to tame the North American Continent. Basically, he and his expedition wandered for four years in circles through what is now the states of Florida, Georgia, … Continue reading Episode 12 – What Goes Around, Comes Around
Melting Mountain Glaciers For many years it has been believed that Canada's western mountain glaciers, also known as the Cordilleran Ice Sheet, melted some 12.5 thousand years ago. A new study published in the Journal Nature by researcher Brian Menounos and his team is shedding new light on just when our mountains became ice-free. Deciphering the story of ice melt across western Canada's mountain has far-reaching implications. By understanding how ice melted thousands of years ago, we can also build better models to predict how current alpine ice sheets, like the one in Greenland, may melt in the future. It also helps to understand the challenges of previous theories of an "ice-free corridor" in terms of human migration to the North American Continent. And finally, it also is an important part of the story of ocean level fluctuations as a result of the increased meltwater. When we talk about landscapes we need to understand two concepts, inheritance and consistency. When we look at changing climates over the millennia, we also need to look at the associate landforms that each climate typically creates. In the mountain west, for instance, the mountain landscape was first carved by the power of water. Water dissects the land in a very specific way. It takes advantage of the contours as well as weaknesses in the rocks to guide its flow. Water passes over rocks of varying hardness including soft shales and harder limestones. Softer rocks will be worn down more quickly while harder rocks remain more resistant to the power of water. Cracks or fissures will be widened and over time, the landscape begins to be divided by mountain summits and intervening v-shaped valleys carved by water. When glaciers later inherited this water forged landscape, they inherited the same valleys previously carved by water and began to renovate them. Narrow V-shaped valleys were renovated into broad u-shaped valleys typical of valley glaciers. High on the mountains, glaciers also formed on cliff ledges and any area where snow could accumulate. As these glaciers moved, they enlarged the ledges upon which they sat and in many cases created round bowl-shaped depressions called cirques. I often refer to cirques as glacial nurseries as the ice usually formed there and then would overflow down the valley as it exceeded the ability of these bowls to contain the ever-increasing volumes of ice. Rock and debris fell onto the ice and some hitched a ride, just like a modern-day conveyor belt. It would later be deposited along the ice margins in linear ridges called moraines. Most of the rock becomes incorporated into the glacier and gets scraped and scoured along the base of the glacier. It's this action that allows glaciers to modify the landscape. Today, water has re-inherited this ice-modified mountainscape and is once again altering the cirques and u-shaped valleys. Consistency refers to the simple fact that processes acting on the landscape within a particular climate are the same processes that acted on the landscape at other periods of similar temperature and moisture. The way water changes the mountains today is the same way it would have done thousands or even millions of years ago. Each climate creates its own types of landforms but is always working with vistas carved by successive climatic periods. As a naturalist, this is what I love to look for in the surrounding peaks. Where can I find the impacts of previous climates and how are the current changes in climate affecting how water will shape the mountains long into the future. Brian Menounos' study helps climatologists to not only more accurately understand how our mountain glaciers melted, but also how similar landscapes today may react in the future. Just like looking at a star in the sky represents light that may have traveled for thousands or millions of years before it reached your eye, our mountains may represent a time capsule of how other mountain glaciers may melt in the future. One of the challenges facing this study was the fact that most previous studies found that the glaciers in western Canada only melted around 12.5 thousand years ago. This date was the result of Carbon dating. Carbon dating has been a tried and true way of dating materials for decades, but once you get into high mountain landscapes, it runs into problems; there's not a lot of carbon at high elevations. The carbon used for dating comes from ancient plants and once you hit the upper alpine environment, you find yourself in a land of rock and ice with little to no plant life. This may have added significant error to the dating. If you take a walk to the far end of Lake Louise in summer, you'll enter a land where winter is still king, and where glaciers have only recently revealed the landscape that was previously hidden by ice. You'll also notice that there is little regrowth on much of the lower valley as you hike up to the Plain of Six Glaciers Teahouse. Once glaciers disappear from a mountain valley, it may take a millennia or more before it becomes fully reclaimed by plant communities. This means that the carbon that was being measured in previous studies may have represented plants that colonized the valley long after the glaciers had disappeared. Newer dating methods that don't rely on carbon offered some additional ways to get a better date. Beryllium is a mineral most of us have never heard of. It's a highly toxic and carcinogenic mineral, but it's also one of the lightest metals in the world and has a correspondingly high melting point. These characteristics make beryllium very important in today's cell phones, aeroplanes and even missiles. One isotope, beryllium 10, like carbon 14 is radioactive. The radioactivity is created by cosmic rays colliding with atoms on Earth. In the case of beryllium 10, it's caused when cosmic rays hit oxygen atoms in the bedrock. A layer of ice acts to stop these rays and so measuring how much beryllium 10, which is found in the quartz rocks so common in the mountains, can help to tell us when the rocks were exposed by melting glacial ice. Menounos and his team measured 76 samples from 26 locations to see if dates could be more accurately determined using this new dating method. They visited glacial moraines across British Columbia in order to test the theory that many areas may have been ice-free much earlier than previously believed. The great ice age, the Pleistocene, ended some 14,700 years ago when climates suddenly warmed. At the peak of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet, the amount of ice was similar to what can be found in present-day Greenland. The results showed that the moraine samples fell into two age ranges, 12,800 to 15,000 years for the older locations and 9,800 to 13,000 for the younger sites. If we work with the average ages of 13,900 and 11,400 years respectively, the study showed that large areas of the mountain glaciers had already melted prior to earlier estimates of 12,500 years ago. It also shows that ocean waters off the coast of British Columbia would have risen by approximately 4C between 15,500 and 14,000 years ago. This would have melted most of the low-elevation glaciers, leaving only the highest mountain regions ice-free. Also during this period, meltwater would have contributed to sea level increases of 2.5 to 3 metres. In other terms, the mountain glaciers lost half of their mass in less than 400 years. This also changed the ice sheet into a series of interconnected alpine glaciers, and icefields, gradually leaving us with the landscape we recognize today, just on a much much more extensive scale. This study shows that vast amounts of ice had been lost from the mountain landscape at least 2,000 years earlier than previously thought. It also shows that ice sheets as large Greenland's can also melt at a very fast rate. Essentially, once the melt starts, it can take place very quickly. While it may seem that this actually adds to the possibilities of human migrations towards a possible "ice-free corridor", the study shows evidence that low elevation travel routes would have remained ice-choked until long after the migrations would have needed to occur. Way back in episode 6 I talked about some of the new evidence that was rendering the ice-free corridor to the dustbin of history. You can check it out at www.MountainNaturePodcast.com/ep006. The most recent archaeological evidence shows that people had already arrived in North and South America as far back as 14,500 years ago. Assuming that early migrants made it across the ice-free corridor even 13,000 years ago, there is little chance they would have spread to Monte Verde in southern Chile by 14,500 years ago, yet there are archaeological sites that date to that period. Essentially, it's out with the ice-free corridor and in with the kelp highway. What the heck is the kelp highway you ask? Well, it refers to a coastal migration rather than an inland one. It wasn't long ago that this was considered fringe science. All the archaeological eggs were in the ice-free corridor camp and there was little research into an alternative option. Over time though, ancient sites began to appear across the coastal areas of North and South America that kept pushing the tenure of first nations further and further back. Currently, the oldest sites are 14,500 years old in places like the Page-Ladson site in Florida. As far south as this site seems today, this underwater site revealed evidence of mastodon bones that showed signs of human butchering. Even much further south, on the southern end of Chile, lies the Monte Verde site. In 1975 the remains of a Gomphothere, an animal considered to be ancestral to modern-day elephants was found and this spurred further investigations. These revealed amazing artefacts well preserved in a peat bog that included butchered Gomphothere bones, stone hearths, the remains of other local animals, wooden house posts and even bits of animal skin clothing. To most archaeologists used to having to deal with hearths and stone tools, this site was incredibly rich, largely due to the preserving qualities of peat. Again, the dates stretch back to some 14,500 years. Prior to sites like this, the Clovis culture was considered to the be the oldest North American indigenous culture, but these and many more sites are now pre-dating the Clovis culture which was believed to have arrived via the ice-free corridor between 12,900 and 13,200 years ago. So how exactly did these pre-Clovis cultures find themselves in the New World - well that's the kelp highway? Essentially it refers to a coastal migration of peoples confident in traveling by boat along coastal areas taking advantage of plentiful supplies of kelp and seafood that was available. The ice-free corridor Clovis migration has been suffering a death by a thousand cuts over the past few years. Doubtless, Clovis people did take advantage of a corridor across the Bering Strait but it is now clear that they were the followers and not the leaders. They would still have arrived several millennia after the coastal regions had already been settled. In Episode 37, I talk about a new site off the coast of British Columbia that begins to add fuel to the kelp highway migration theory. One of the Achilles heels of this potential migratory route in the past has been the lack of evidence of a coastal migration. A newly announced site on Triquet Island has revealed artefacts at least 14,000 years old. This makes it the oldest archaeological site in Canada and helps to finally build a trail of breadcrumbs to support a coastal migration. We still need to push the chronology back further if we are to bring well-established populations of humans to the southern tip of South America by 14,500 years ago, but perhaps this is a good start. One of the great aspects of science is that until you actually look for something, it may be hiding in plain sight. Some science is the result of just plain luck…looking for one thing, and discovering another. Sometimes, we're just looking in the wrong place. With renewed interest in a coastal migration, there will be more and more resources focused on examining sites that might have been visited by our very oldest ancestors. While part of me laments the loss of a good story on an ice-free corridor migration right past my doorstep, another part of me loves the fact that an entirely new archaeological story is now unfolding. Just to throw another wrinkle into the equation. We're still assuming a migration across the Bering Strait that hugged the Pacific coast of North America. What if these paleo sailors were more adept than we give them credit for? We know that Aboriginal Australians were there by 50,000 years ago. They would have had a more challenging, open-water voyage in order to discover this new continent. Maybe we're just beginning to scratch the surface in a new whodunnit of New World migration. A really unique site in California shows the potential for some kind of early human as far back as 130,000 years ago. The site was found in 1992 beside a highway site near San Diego California. While archaeologists are quibbling about a few hundred years here and there when dating sites, this site has come in more than 100,000 years before anyone thought humans could be in the new world. The site features a partial skeleton of a mastodon that appears to have been butchered by paleo-humans. The outrageous preliminary dating of the site kept it on the fringes until new dating techniques to confirm early dating. This resulted in the new research being published in the Journal Nature just in April of 2017. Every new discovery leads to new rabbit holes of investigation, confirmation, peer review, and then new questions. This site is so wacky early that if it's confirmed by subsequent research, then all human migration theories on the planet will be up for grabs. It's so old that we would be talking about hominids as opposed to humans. I can't wait to see how this story ends. Perhaps we are just at the beginning of a new mystery? Stay tuned. Next up - The greatest land geographer to ever live David Thompson's early years The history of the exploration of Canada is filled with the names of great men. Names like Simon Fraser, Alexander Mackenzie, Samuel Hearne, Anthony Henday, and David Thompson. All of these men were great explorers but in the final tally of simple achievement, none could hold a candle to David Thompson, or as the first nations knew him, the man who looks at stars. Thompson was born on April 30, 1770, in Westminster, England. His family was poor and after his brother was born two years later, his father died leaving the family even the more destitute. The day before his 7th birthday he was enrolled in the Grey Coat School in Westminster. At the time, it was a school devoted to educating poor boys. Its goal was "to educate poor children in the principles of piety and virtue, and thereby lay a foundation for a sober and Christian life". By all accounts, Thompson was an able student and this brought him to the attention of the School Board. In the minutes of their December 30, 1783, meeting it states: "The Master also reports that application was made by the Secretary belonging to the Hudson's Bay Company, to know, if this Charity could furnish them with 4 boys against the month of May next, for their settlements in America. The Master, by order of the Treas (sic) wrote a letter informing the Governor and Directors that there were but two boys that had been taught navigation in the school, which two boys they desire may be qualified for them, vis: Samuel John McPherson and David Thompson." What an adventure for a boy of only 15…or was it? Apparently, Samuel McPherson didn't think so as he did a runner the following day rather than be packed off to the new world. Thompson, on the other hand, embraced the opportunity and on the minutes of the Grey School dated June 29, 1784, he was apprenticed to the Hudson's Bay Company. The minutes state: "On the 20th of May David Thompson, a mathematical Boy belonging to the Hospl (sic) was bound to the Hudson's Bay Company and the Trear then paid Mr Thos. Hutchins, Corresponding Secretary to the said Company, the sum of five pounds for taking the said Boy apprence (sic) for seven years". I can imagine that when the Company ship the Prince Rupert departed London in May of 1784 that many things must have been going through the mind of this bright 15 year old boy. Part of him must have been terrified to leave the only home he had ever known for a vast wilderness. Thompson reflected on his years at the Grey School writing in his journal: "Books in those days were scarce and dear and most of the scholars got the loan of such books as his parents could lend him. Those which pleased us most were the Tales of the Genii, the Persian, and Arabian Tales, with Robinson Crusoe and Gullivers Travels : these gave us many subjects for discussion and how each would behave on various occasions." Doubtless, stories of the hardships awaiting him must have reached his young ears, yet he embraced his fate and soon after, the new world for the rest of his life. As the ship approached the coast of North America he wrote: "We now held our course over the western ocean ; and near the islands of America saw several icebergs, and Hudson's Straits were so full of ice, as to require the time of near a month to pass them ; this being effected the three ships separated, one for Albany and Moose Factories, another for York Factory, and the third for Churchill Factory at which last place we arrived in the beginning of September 1784." Thompson continued: "Hudson's Bay, including Jame's Bay, may be said to be an inland sea, connected to the Atlantic Ocean by Hudson's Straits…On its west side it receives Seal, Churchill, the Kissiskatchewan (now known as the Nelson), Hayes, Severn, Albany, and Moose Rivers; on the east side Ruperts and several other Rivers, the names of which are unknown as they come from barren, desolate, countries." What a first impression it must have been for Thompson? Fort Churchill was isolated at what must have seemed like the end of the world, especially when he learned: "The Factory is supplied once a year with goods and provisions, by a Ship which arrives on the last days of August, or early September, and in about ten days is ready for her homeward voyage; the severity of the climate requiring all possible dispatch." Thompson saw adventure along with hardship. In autumn, just like they do today for the viewing pleasure of thousands of tourists, the polar bears arrive at Churchill. Thompson wrote: "The polar Bear now makes his appearance, and prowls about until the ice at the sea shore is extended to a considerable distance ; when he leaves to prey on the Seal, his favourite food : during his stay he is for plunder and every kind of mischief, but not willing to fight for it." While the cold and the wind bothered all, there was little snow until the latter part of December when: "a north east snow storm of three days continuance drifted the snow to the height of the stockades and over them, and filled the whole yard to the depth of six to ten feet, which could not be cleared, and through which avenues had to be cut and cleared of about four feet in width ; and thus remained till late in April, when a gradual thaw cleared the snow away. From the end of October to the end of April every step we walk is in Snow Shoes. The Natives walk with ease and activity, and also many of us: but some find them a sad incumbrance, their feet become sore and their ankles sprained; with many a tumble in the snow from which it is sometimes difficult to rise." The winds of Hudson Bay are legendary. Any snow that falls quickly forms in huge drifts. After spending three weeks on the Bay this fall, I can see how the stockades would catch the drifting snow and how it would fill the enclosed yard as well. The climate is the great arbiter in the north and he wrote: "The country, soil, and climate in which we live, have always a powerful effect upon the state of society, and the movements and comforts of every individual, he must conform himself to the circumstances under which he is placed, and as such we lived and conducted ourselves in this extreme cold climate. All our movements more, or less, were for self-preservation : All the wood that could be collected for fuel, gave us only one fire in the morning, and another in the evening…" "The interior of the walls of the House were covered with rime to the thickness of four inches, pieces of which often broke off, to prevent which we wetted the whole extent, and made it a coat of ice, after which it remained firm, and added to the warmth of the House, for the cold is so intense, that everything in a manner is shivered by it" When the summer sun arrived, so did the swarms of mosquitoes. Thompson wrote: "Summer such as it is, comes at once, and with it myriads of tormenting Musketoes ; the air is thick with them, there is no cessation day nor night of suffering from them. Smoke is no relief, they can stand more smoke than we can, and smoke cannot be carried about with us. The narrow windows were so crowded with them, they trod each other to death in such numbers, we had to sweep them out twice a day ; a chance cold northeast gale of wind was a grateful relief, and [we] were thankful for the cold weather that put an end to our sufferings. " "different Persons feel them in a different manner ; some are swelled, even bloated, with intolerable itching ; others feel only the smart of the minute wounds ; Oil is the only remedy and that frequently applied ; the Natives rub themselves with Sturgeon Oil, which is found to be far more effective than any other oil. All animals suffer from them, almost to madness, even the well-feathered Birds suffer about the eyes and neck. The cold nights of September are the first and most steady relief." At one point, Thompson began to wonder why he had been brought at all: "It had been the custom for many years, when the governors of the factory required a clerk, to send to the school in which I was educated to procure a Scholar who had a mathematical education to send out as Clerk, and, to save expenses, he was bound apprentice to them for seven years. To learn what ; for all I had seen in their service neither writing nor reading was required, and my only business was to amuse myself, in winter growling at the cold ; and in the open season shooting Gulls, Ducks, Plover and Curlews, and quarelling with Musketoes and Sand flies." After spending a year at Churchill, he was sent to York Factory after the supply ship had arrived at Churchill in 1785. He was sent out, accompanied by two natives, on foot, without provisions, to walk 240 km in the cold of autumn to bring mail that had arrived on the ship to another fort. He was accorded a single blanket to keep him warm at nights. At the same time, two natives would be sent from York Factory to Churchill. This would give each fort current information about the state of the other while also forming as a ready means of communicating between the forts. They were dropped at Cape Churchill and while Thomson was given a blanket, his guides were given a gallon of strong whiskey. Alas, the day was lost as they quickly set down to consume the spirits. Thompson always opposed the use of whiskey in the fur trade and banned it from any post that he was in control of. The next day they walked all day without breakfast or lunch, and in the evening his guides shot a goose and three ducks. He arrived on Sept 13 and spent the winter in the fort and quickly settled into a new routine. The natives that walked with him were given 3 gallons of brandy and 4 pounds of tobacco. The fall and winter are spent collecting all manner of food, fishing, snaring hares, hunting geese in the fall and ptarmigan in the winter, and basically trying to stay warm. The forts had to be completely self-sufficient. March and April seem to be the months when snow blindness is most prevalent. Thompson writes: "As I never had it, I can only describe the sensations of my companions. Accustomed to march in all weathers, I had acquired a power over my eyelids to open, or contract them as circumstances required, and to admit only the requisite quantity of light to guide me, and thus [I] prevented the painful effects of snow blindness. In the case of those affected the blue eye suffers first and most, the gray eye next, and the black eye the least ; but none are exempt from snow blindness ; the sensations of my companions, and others, were all the same ; they all complained of their eyes, being, as it were, full of burning sand ; I have seen hardy men crying like children, after a hard march of four months in winter. Three men and myself made for a trading post in the latter part of March. They all became snow blind, and for the last four days I had to lead them with a string tied to my belt, and [they] were so completely blind that when they wished to drink of the little pools of melted snow, I had to put their hands in the water. They could not sleep at night. On arriving at the trading Post, they were soon relieved by the application of the steam of boiling water as hot as they could bear it, this is the Indian mode of cure, and the only efficient cure yet known, but all complained of weakness of sight for several months after." The Bay men had mastered the north country. As they expanded their influence further west, they encountered the peoples of the Blackfoot Confederacy, in particular, the Peigan. He wasn't the first to visit the Blackfoot, that honour was reserved for Anthony Henday who visited the area in 1754. Henday was trying to sell an impossibility though. He was trying to convince them to go to the Bay to sell their furs. This was pretty much a non-starter for a population of the grasslands. He learned that, rather than travel long distances to the Bay, the Blackfoot would sell their furs to the Cree, who would, in turn, trade them to the Company at York Factory for a profit. An additional wrinkle was that the rival Northwest Company had built forts far more convenient to the Cree and they would get the best furs long before the remaining poorer quality pelts made their way to the Bay. The Northwest Company sent men out, onto the land, to meet, live with, learn the languages of, and in some cases, intermarry with the indigenous people of the hinterlands. The Blackfoot, while they enjoyed the whiteman's trade goods, they really didn't need them, and they definitely didn't want trading posts in their territory. They also were in a position to manage trade across the continental divide to British Columbia. Essentially, any Hudson's Bay Man wanting to visit B.C. would have to go through them. To negotiate with the Blackfoot, the company sent James Gaddy who spent three winters living with the Peigan in the foothills west of Calgary. In 1787, 17-year old David Thompson accompanied him. At this point, nobody had realized that David was no ordinary teenager. He kept a careful journal and decades later would use it to write his memoirs. Thompson described the people that he stayed with and the stories shared with him by them: "The Peeagan in whose tent I passed the winter was an old man of at least 75 to 80 years of age ; his height about six feet, two or three inches, broad shoulders, strong limbed, his hair gray and plentiful, forehead high and nose prominent, his face slightly marked with the small pox, and alltogether his countenance mild, and even, sometimes playfull ; although his step was firm and he rode with ease, he no longer hunted, this he left to his sons ; his name was Saukamappee (Young Man) ; his account of former times went back to about 1730…" Saukamappee was not of the Peigan, today referred to by the name Pikani. He was part of a Cree nation known as the Nahathaway with whom the Pikani were closely allied. Both nations were constantly at war with the Snake or Shoshone Indians to the south. Usually, they were very well matched in terms of weaponry and few people died in their skirmishes…at least in the early days. Saukamappee related how the arms race began to alter the balance of power as horses and guns began to appear. "By this time the affairs of both parties had much changed ; we had more guns and iron headed arrows than before ; but our enemies the Snake Indians and their allies had Misstutim (Big Dogs, that is Horses) on which they rode, swift as the Deer, on which they dashed at the Peeagans, and with their stone Pukamoggan (war clubs) knocked them on the head, and they had thus lost several of their best men. This news we did not well comprehend and it alarmed us, for we had no idea of Horses and could not make out what they were. Only three of us went and I should not have gone, had not my wife's relations frequently intimated, that her father's medicine bag would be honored by the scalp of a Snake Indian." Guns and horse began to change the landscape of the plains. The Pikani won with the help of the Nahathaway guns. Thankfully, the Snake Indians didn't have any horses with them in this battle. A few days later, Saukamappee saw his first horse, a dead one that had been killed in a different skirmish. The Peigan were able to keep the Snakes gun-poor as they were able to control access to the Hudson's Bay and Northwest Company supply of trade goods. This allowed the Peigan to expand greatly across the plains until they encountered an unstoppable foe - Smallpox. "While we have these weapons, the Snake Indians have none, but what few they sometimes take from one of our small camps which they have destroyed, and they have no Traders among them. We thus continued to advance through the fine plains to the Stag River when death ca
Jean-Louis discusses the correct terminology for referring to the Native Peoples of the North American Continent.
// Episode 005: After four mind blowing episodes, the standard of the series has well and truly been set. This episode is no exception, coming to us direct from our Asia resident Kimball Collins. Over the past 27 years, Kimball has transcended from local hero as resident of the cornerstone venue, Aahz, in the USA to revered world-class artist, jet-setting throughout Europe, Asia, South America and throughout the North American Continent, in the elusive arena of top American DJ talent. As one of the original global Electronic Music DJs, Kimball Collins was one of the first American DJs to play at the prestigious Ministry of Sound in London, Zap and Renaissance Clubs in the U.K. He has been doing one-off’s at the top electronic music clubs in the US, including past residencies at Crobar, Motor, Spundae, Utopia, Firestone, House Of Blue’s, Zinc, Renaissance, Amphitheater, and 23. Kimball’s experience truly shows in this 2hr musical master piece, taking you on a truly exquisite journey. Lock yourself in for the ride. Check out more from Kimball Collins at: https://soundcloud.com/kimballcollins - - - - // Tracklist: 1. HVOB - The Anxiety To Please (Original) 2. The Box (trio) - Sketches of Pain (Jon Charnis Mix) 3. Yannick Labbe - Sugar Coated Insult (Original) 4. Virgo Four, Jacques Bon - Machine Love (Superpitcher Extended) 5. Fort Romeau - Insides (Original) 6. Luis Junior - You Inspire Me (Marten Sundberg Remix) 7. Landslide - Lost Soul (Original) 8. Mattheis - Ls (Original) 9. Maceo Plex - Wash Away The Tears (Original) 10. Luis Junior - Green Tag (Original) 11. Scuba - Drift (Original) 12. Padre - Chasing Mirrors ft. Jova (Christian Loffler Remix) 13. Zoe Zoe - Kids (Original) 14. Eagles & Butterflies - Lost In A Dream (Slow Hearts Remix) 15. DkA - Sum (Original) 16. Love Over Entropy - Off The Grid (Original) 17. DkA - Vedett ft. Juke (Original) 18. Agoria - Under The River (YokoO's Above The Clouds Live Edit) 19. DJ Koze - XTC (Original) 20. Greg Chin - Dashboard Angels (Original) - - - // About Us: Global Transmission is a collaborative project between eight likeminded individuals from around the world who have come together to share their love of electronic music. In a monthly podcast, we deliver a mix of the absolute best in progressive, house and techno. With a combined 100+ years of musical experience across a diverse range of backgrounds, scenes and sounds thousands of miles apart are fused into one cohesive, auditory delight. With occasional guest mixes highlighting other outstanding local and international artists, Global Transmission strives to be a quality forum for consistently bringing the best of soulful, underground and intelligent dance music to the ears of our listeners the world over. We hope you enjoy ☺ - - - - // The Residents: Arkadiusz (Mexico) | Das Schöne Leben | https://soundcloud.com/arkadiusz-dmytrow Ian Dillon (UK) | Decoded Magazine | https://soundcloud.com/i-d-1 juSt b (Canada) | Thump | https://soundcloud.com/just-b-4 Kimball Collins (Thailand) | Mixmag Asia | https://soundcloud.com/kimballcollins Loquai (Germany) | Mistiquemusic | https://soundcloud.com/loquai Nathan Clement (USA) | Polytechnic Recordings | https://soundcloud.com/djnathanclement Sebastian Wild (Australia) | Equal Dose | https://soundcloud.com/sebastianwild Tercsab (Hungary) | https://soundcloud.com/tercsab
This is one of the most under-reported murders in the history of the North American Continent. A mutilation that took hours and mind that was so disturbed it relished in the extreme violence inflicted on the deceased, this story exposes the obvious deficiencies in the extremely Liberal Canadian justice system, which even many natives don't even fully understand. Dan Zupansky, author of Trophy Kill "The Shall We Dance Murder" and host of the highly-popular true-crime podcast True Murder "The Most Shocking Killers in True Crime History", joins us to tell us a tale that is as disturbing as some of the most infamous cases ever reported. Zupansky, however, wasn't satisfied in simply chronicling a historical case. He jumped in, head first, into an active case that was still unraveling. In doing so, he became the unwitting target of critics and star witness for the prosecution of his subject. He tells us his story, no holds barred, describing his disdain for some of the actors in this case such as Greg Broadsky, who defended infamous killer Paul Bernardo and is on a short list of the most prominent known Canadian criminal defense attorneys. This story is interesting from so many different standpoints, and also so tragic from so many different standpoints, it's unlikely for anyone not to find something they feel passionate about on this particular case.
Ascension Center Organization is about the Universal Life Ministries of metaphysics including cosmology and UFOlogy. ACO Social Service Club shares our cultures and traditions. TJ Morris ET Radio –Off World Beings Monitoring HUMAN PROGRESS. TJ Morris ET Radio is owned by TJ Morris ACO LLC – Broadcast Media – ACO PRESS CORPS- Communication Online Skills as an Associates Cooperative Organization. ACO LLC is managed by managers around the North American Continent.
January 2012 - Jim and Peggy highlight 2011 shows, their guests and talk about their favorite places on the North American Continent to see in an RV.
January 2012 - Jim and Peggy highlight 2011 shows, their guests and talk about their favorite places on the North American Continent to see in an RV.
January 2012 - Jim and Peggy highlight 2011 shows, their guests and talk about their favorite places on the North American Continent to see in an RV.