How To Use Tidewater In A Sentence
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Avey had heard the stories from her aunt when, as a child, she spent a month each summer at Cuney's home in Tatem, one of the South Carolina tidewater islands.
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Those from the coastal states came from the hilly, interior backcountry rather than the coastal tidewater areas.
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You'll kayak through a maze of fjords and tidal channels and through the ice-encrusted Cordillera Darwin and the most active tidewater glaciers in the world.
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The spring river's tidewater connects sea even, the sea bright moon the total tide living, spending a good month a circle a person family reunion, blessing a voice companion, you go.
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Mount Garibaldi is only 20 km from tidewater at the head of Howe Sound.
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But after discussing the plan with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and other agencies, he says, regulators abandoned it because the aerators could hurt an endangered fish, the tidewater goby.
Tiny Town Is Awash in Water Woes
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The unit was noted not only for its hard-fighting abilities, but also for its varied and far-flung field of service, stretching from tidewater Virginia all the way to the plains of Texas.
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The Virginia tidewater region and the coastal south were also settled largely by the Scots-Irish.
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One bay had one tidewater glacier, one had two, and two had five each (College and Harriman fjords).
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Malaria profoundly affected public health in the southern tidewater region, and it was a primary reason colonists in the Chesapeake Bay region lived shorter lives than did New Englanders.
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The modeled their home on a historic property in the tidewater region of Maryland.
C. Gordon Kirwan Jr., businessman, car enthusiast, dies at 84
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Some changes are obvious in Kenai Fjords National Park, a popular destination south of Anchorage known for its ice-capped peaks, tidewater glaciers and abundant marine life.
Mudslides, Wildfires & Declining Wildlife Highlight Climate Change In Alaska
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The tidewater, with its old colonial heritage, held a symbolic place as the state's most influential region, but by 1860 it held neither the most people nor the most wealth.
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The Mattaponi are decedents of Chief Powhatan, father of Pocahontas and ruler of large portions of what is now tidewater Virginia.
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A second group of migrants came from a different ‘hearth’: the tidewater region of South Carolina and Georgia.
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He gets mail as an alumnus of the Citadel, was raised in tidewater Carolinas, claims to be a Rear
Heroes or Villains?
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I should note while we're talking about President Bush, I should mention that right behind me here in the tidewater is the aircraft carrier the George H.W. Bush.
CNN Transcript Oct 4, 2008
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These frontier men were the precise opposites of the tidewater aristocrats.
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A notable signature of the ice-sheet readvance during the Killard Point Stadial was the subglacial transfer of large volumes of detritus to tidewater margins.
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Within a year he had moved into the house and for the next fifty-two years oversaw one of the most successful tidewater plantations in Virginia.
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Each one go back out both sides as the tidewater emerge a small road.
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American Black Ducks are historically found in forested wetlands, tidewater areas, and coastal marshes of eastern North America.
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The original settlers, such as the Jefferson family, moved westward because families like theirs planted tobacco in tidewater Virginia and exhausted the soil.
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The builder of Temple Heights, Richard Thomas Brownrigg, a well-to-do planter and businessman, was a native of the colonial tidewater city of Edenton, on North Carolina's Albemarle Sound.
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I was born back from tidewater and don't know as the barnacle does stick to the oyster.
Our Fellow Savages of the Sandwich Islands (version 1)
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Hubbard Glacier is the largest tidewater glacier in North America.
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As in the Canadian campaign, returning soldiers and deserters carried smallpox home with them, sparking outbreaks that lasted well into 1777 in tidewater Virginia and Maryland.
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A tough question to answer, but I don't think it can get any better than fishing for chinook salmon in tidewater.
The Kings of Tidewater
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You'll kayak through a maze of fjords and tidal channels and through the ice-encrusted Cordillera Darwin and the most active tidewater glaciers in the world.
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The first part of the trip explores the coast, a region of emerald rain forests, deep fjords, rich sealife, and tidewater glaciers that crumble into icy seas.
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The answer turned out to be aluminum, which would bring its own raw materials with it -- bauxite from the tropics, cryolite from Greenland, petroleum coke from Texas, and would require from the Saguenay only its wasting water power and a tidewater port for the entrance of its supplies.
Building Frontiers with Aluminum
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While many observers noted the unhealthfulness of the marshy tidewater zone, they also emphasized the richness of the land and its potential for economic development.
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That sure as hell didn't stop PETA from having a very large HQ in the tidewater right there where a wetland could be.
Steel Shot or Counseling for "Murderous" Swans?
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If we seek the real predecessor of the modern railroad track, we must go back three hundred years to the wooden rails on which were drawn the little cars used in English collieries to carry the coal from the mines to tidewater.
The Railroad Builders; a chronicle of the welding of the states
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The first part of the trip explores the coast, a region of emerald rain forests, deep fjords, rich sealife, and tidewater glaciers that crumble into icy seas.
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Other species include banded killfish, mummichog, tidewater silverside, bay anchovy, tesselated darter and spottail shiner.
Chesapeake Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve, Maryland
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Completion of the Tonopah and Tidewater Rail Road allowed him to open the rich Lila C. Mine near Death Valley.
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But after discussing the plan with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and other agencies, he says, regulators abandoned it because the aerators could hurt an endangered fish, the tidewater goby.
Tiny Town Is Awash in Water Woes
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Natives of the tidewater, however, have been known to carry them forever in their hearts, giving birth to sightings just about anywhere in the world these Chesapeake people choose to travel.
The Chesapeake Regret
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A native North Carolinian from a poor family with no formal education who had scratched out a living in one trade after another innkeeper, blacksmith, wheelwright, ferryman, preacher, farmer, even doctor, longtime state legislator and ardent democrat, Bloodworth represented New Hanover County in the Cape Fear region of the Tidewater.
Ratification
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The term "greenfish" is unknown among Virginia Tidewater fishermen.
The Bounty of the Chesapeake Fishing in Colonial Virginia
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Those four glaciated fjords generally are deep and have both tidewater and hanging glaciers (i.e. glaciers that have retreated from tidewater, sometimes dramatically).
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Nineteenth-century urban and industrial development of the eastern seaboard bypassed tidewater Maryland and left its few towns, Chestertown among them, distinctive for their isolation.
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Visitors will also find historic breeds of animals and crops typical of tidewater Virginia.
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Founded in 1635 as the first Puritan settlement above tidewater, the town appears connected to its past, even after nearly 370 years of growth and change.
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You can read more at www. freebiegas.com or search 'tidewater'.
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