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164 Sentences With "teemed"

How to use teemed in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "teemed" and check conjugation/comparative form for "teemed". Mastering all the usages of "teemed" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But during construction, the site teemed with dozens of workers.
I teemed with desire for anything, and something, and elsewhere.
NORWAY'S COUNTRYSIDE teemed with European soldiers in the past two weeks.
As of 2015, its executive ranks teemed with former intelligence officials.
The Prohibition era teemed with lurid anecdotes about murderous drunken rages.
Once upon a time, the internet teemed with experimental, personal publications.
Despite the lateness of the hour, they teemed with industry and activity.
Blood banks teemed with hundreds upon hundreds of people racing to make donations.
After school and on weekends, the garden teemed with children running and playing.
I found their legacies in Vilnius, a city that once teemed with Jewish life.
I was teemed with a Yale Professor Zareena Grewal - in the department of American Studies.
The streets here once teemed with a "bang-bang army," as residents call the porters.
The edges of the park still teemed with joggers, cyclists and dog walkers on Wednesday afternoon.
For a moment in August, an event hall in Texas teemed with hope, taquitos and unity.
The crocodile lineage dates to the Mesozoic Era, when the seas teemed with enormous marine reptiles.
After the marathon, the runners' guts teemed with far greater numbers of a bacteria called Veillonella.
While many shops remain closed, with graffiti spray-painted across their shutters, one street teemed with people.
The city's Fur District, south of Pennsylvania Station in Midtown Manhattan, once teemed with manufacturers and dealers.
On March 14, the day he received his diagnosis, Bourbon Street teemed with St. Patrick's Day celebrants.
The muscle cells of the exercisers on placebo teemed with active mitochondria, which are the cells' powerhouses.
Weegee's photography scoured a city that teemed with jewelry-draped socialites and dead gangsters strewn across tavern doorways.
He ran the 1976 Olympic team out of the garage, which teemed with boxes of sweatsuits and equipment.
High in the Caucasus Mountains, a ski resort is rising on slopes that once teemed with Islamist militants.
JOAL, Senegal — Once upon a time, the seas teemed with mackerel, squid and sardines, and life was good.
I never had any choice; all the traditional Iranian dishes my mom cooked teemed with herbs and vegetables.
Not long ago, the laptop category teemed with "desktop replacements," sorta portable workhorses with big screens and powerful processors.
Southeast Asia's forests once teemed with myriad species, including sun bears, striped rabbits, marbled cats, hog badgers and monkeys.
A GIANT HOTEL in Houston teemed with oil-and-gas executives on March 11th, the start of a CERAWeek.
Cars filled the vast parking lot and anchor stores like Bloomingdale's, J. C. Penney and Sears teemed with customers.
Sea otters, which had teemed in the hundreds of thousands, were nearly extinct from over-hunting, Mr. Kelly said.
The Big Oyster Hundreds of years ago, New York Harbor teemed with more than 200,000 acres of live oyster reefs.
Her homestead of thatched-roof huts teemed with children tending their chores, grinding nuts into paste and maize into meal.
Until World War II, American cities teemed with single-room-occupancy houses and hotels that served as de facto apartment rentals.
The water from Lake Whillans teemed with 130,000 microbial cells per millilitre — a population 10–100 times bigger than some researchers expected.
Certainly the local streets never teemed with restaurantgoers, shoppers and multilingual tourists the way they do now on an ordinary Sunday afternoon.
Scene City 9 Photos View Slide Show ' At the Time Warner Center on Monday night, a red carpet area teemed with reporters.
The streets were lined with grog shops, gambling dens and bordellos, and teemed at all hours with stevedores, sailors, gangs and thieves.
The Olympia exhibition center in West Kensington teemed with British publishers and editors, a cohort badly in need of stress relief these days.
And the more she opened herself to share what teemed within, the more significance could be found in our enduring through it all.
But discovering a mushroom from the Early Cretaceous, when the Earth teemed with dinosaurs and flowering plants were beginning to emerge, is astounding.
Inside, one glimpses an East Village that teemed not only with painters and beat poets but also with sidewalk mechanics and motorcycle gangs.
Nostalgia for the days when the waterfront of Hoboken, N.J., teemed with stevedores and tugboat crews is apparently a thing of the past.
Quay and Shop Streets were where I found most of the action in Galway; they teemed with pedestrians, shops, day drinkers and street musicians.
Predictably, the House floor today teemed with all the chaos of a high school cafeteria: animated by thick egos, tables separated by deep allegiances.
And on July 13th, the day after Mr Trump landed, Britain teemed with demonstrations as protesters took to streets and squares, from Exeter to Aberdeen.
During Cambrian times, in what are now the Mackenzie Mountains of Canada's far north, a muddy ecosystem teemed with worms, crustaceans, and other ancient organisms.
Their long-term memories were faultier than those of the sedentary mice, even though, the researchers found, their brains teemed with far more new neurons.
The land teemed with life and the conditions were excellent for fossilization, with seasonal floods and meandering rivers that rapidly buried dead animals and plants.
Newly affordable magazines and cookbooks teemed with kitschy photos of baked Alaskas and ham legs blasted with hairspray and spritzed with glycerin so they gleamed.
All about him, Brooklyn teemed with people on a mid-Friday's journey toward another thrumming weekend in a borough that is enjoying a decided renaissance.
Their crowds typically teemed with jocks and bros who had little interest in Propagandhi's politics, and Hannah had little interest in making them feel welcome.
On a recent afternoon, the Hot Topic store at the King of Prussia Mall, outside of Philadelphia, teemed with teenagers, 22016-somethings and stroller-pushing parents.
Occupy teemed with compelling ideas, but its anarchist principles dictated that the movement remain "leaderless" and take shape through free-forming local assemblies and direct action.
Back then every day teemed with violence, and the poems, like all of Clifton's poems, let me imagine even the wildest dudes around me as my brother.
It was different from the early days of CUHK, when students had first beat back police and the campus teemed with people preparing for the next battle.
The campus teemed with the visual cacophony of thousands of young people all jockeying for primacy in a conversation about all the different ways of being black.
In 2010, Goodluck Jonathan became the first Nigerian president to hail from that region; soon the Hilton's lobby teemed with men wearing the delta's trademark gowns and fedoras.
In 2004, he edited a special comics issue of McSweeney's Quarterly, and as with his own titles, even the unfoldable dust jacket teemed with extra texts and gags.
He hails from Argentina, a country that has seen a dirty war between fascism and communism and in which his parish teemed with those you might call capitalism's losers.
It is unthinkable in the New York of 2016 that here, and on hundreds of acres of the city in the 1970s and 1980s, the blocks teemed with menace.
The Upper Columbia United Tribes, made up of five native tribes, hope to reintroduce native salmon to this portion of the river — a river that once teemed with the fish.
All of these events occurred during a period called the Devonian when, though the oceans teemed with organisms no less varied than today's, life on the continents was just getting going.
The country apparently teemed with bandits, the most fearsome of them a Mexican named Alvarado, who was known as Old White Lip, because his mustache was half white and half black.
Beachfront restaurants teemed with day drinkers, but I followed Dodgy's advice for lunch and went to Banana's Bar & Grill, a polished bistro where cabdrivers were stopping in for takeout chicken soup.
The park teemed with summer life — basketball on the blacktops, splashing in the pool, joggers on the track, old-timers playing cards on chipped picnic tables, teenagers lounging on the jungle gym.
Washington was a little peeved, and he responded to the rejection with a letter to the Senate that teemed with anger—or, at least, an overly stuffy 18th-century form of anger.
While wandering around the city—which teemed with mango-colored rickshaws, raucous bazaars, and pink bougainvillea spilling over compound walls—he had been surprised to discover that it was full of mosques.
My memories call up a miniature Emerald Isle in Greene County, where the resort's dining room was always full, the pub teemed with revelers and there were always enough children for a ballgame.
The hearts of the childhood runners, though, teemed with about 20 million additional cardiomyocytes — the type of heart cell that contracts — compared with the hearts of the sedentary rats of the same age.
There will be allusions to the mansion's erstwhile bacchanalia, lounges with names like the Grotto Lounge — a nod to the notorious Jacuzzi cave that teemed with licentiousness (and eventually bacterial strains including Legionnaires').
Neither Fred nor Kate had attended Oak Elementary —instead they'd gone to Auburn, a considerably lower-ranked institution where the classrooms had teemed with children and the teachers bore a uniform expression of grim determination.
Many people came from neighboring cities in the state of Santander, Colombia, to see Nono in Bucaramanga, and in the house Mami grew up in, the living room teemed with people awaiting treatment and readings.
Boîte The night-life slum known as Hell Square, a three-by-three grid of Lower East Side blocks below East Houston Street, has teemed with mobbed bars and hooting drunks for over a decade.
Tens of thousands of people traveled to New York by train or boat for the opening ceremony, the streets teemed with merrymakers and enough American flags went up to make it feel like a holiday.
A flash of skin on a beach in Tel Aviv, a cosmopolitan city on the Mediterranean, is hardly unusual — Tel Aviv teemed with women sunbathing in bikinis over the weekend, just as it has for years.
The gym teemed with climbers of all ages and sizes and shapes, and as Ashima walked among them some did double takes, others played it cool, and a few offered up congratulations, for the world championships.
"It's a city of champions," he said during an interview at Asics's downtown Boston location this month as the surrounding streets teemed with fans awaiting a parade celebrating the New England Patriots' sixth Super Bowl win.
In 2015, as a recent addition to the New York cast of VH1003's reality show Love & Hip Hop, she uploaded a video to Instagram—a sneakily inspiring clip that teemed with vulnerability and candor and Bronx bite.
In Al Hol, the refugee camp in northeast Syria where he was staying, the heat regularly reached a relentless 100 degrees by midmorning, there was scant medical care, and fresh water, when it arrived, usually teemed with bacteria.
The streets abutting the New Yorker hotel in Manhattan teemed with the bereft, with the emotionally and politically wounded seeking solace, camaraderie and some kind of reassurance that they could weather Hillary Clinton's astonishing loss to Donald J. Trump.
Filmed when the world of drag ball houses and queer voguing culture teemed with energy and vibrance, Paris Is Burning has attracted lingering criticism for framing the culture through the eyes of a white documentary filmmaker, director Jennie Livingston.
Villagers from the steep hill country around Chongqing found a living using their stamina to carry loads in the city, and the streets and docks teemed with men in faded blue coats and canvas shoes clutching poles and bundles of rope.
When the scientists then microscopically examined brain tissue, they found that the runners' brains, as expected, teemed with far more new neurons than did the brains of the sedentary animals, even though the runners had been exercising for only a week.
"While there are still ballots left to count, we have beaten the odds every step of the way," Ms. Klobuchar said late Tuesday, as her primary-night party speech teemed with the optimism often enjoyed only by a primary winner.
Hong Kong's dynamic skyline and bustling harbor illustrate its role as a global financial hub, but decades ago it teemed with factories, making it one of the four "Asian Tigers" of the day along with Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan.
Her gall bladder teemed with the typhoid bacterium, but she never felt sick, so, like Mr. Dugas, she refused to believe she was infectious, even after doctors discovered her condition when family after family fell ill soon after hiring her as a cook.
When the insects descended, the community quickly gathered to try to scare them off, using one arm to beat them with sticks or bang on metal pots, and the other to cover their faces and eyes as the bright, yellow insects teemed around them.
The same street once teemed with hundreds of thousands of protesters, whose collective anger helped turn the disappearances into a global indictment of the impunity gnawing at Mexico, and a symbol of the tens of thousands of people who have vanished during the nation's drug war.
The artist's carefully crafted images examine problems while offering visual "solutions," inspired by her own cultural heritage of Greek and Norse mythology, all the way to the internet itself, which has always teemed with appropriated imagery from multiple/questionable sources, forming the basis of the meme.
During the 19th-century, the popular press and even the halls of government teemed with stories about precisely such Mormon depredations — lurid, and generally fictional, tales of polygamous LDS men who savored entire stables of wives, discarding these women long before they hit Trump's 35-year expiration date.
The nation teemed with those who had seen him play and had subconsciously used his 1941 56-game hitting streak as a psychological method of prolonging that summer and so holding off the United States' seemingly inevitable entry into the world war that had officially begun in 1939.
Soon, my San Myshuno teemed with lookalikes, all with similar personalities, careers and families: a creative wife, a logical husband, a child or two who embodied both parents and also wore adorable clothing and decorated their bedrooms with geodes and posters of horror movie heroes and female soccer players.
But they found, too, that the memory centers of the brains in the weight trainers teemed now with enzymes and genetic markers that are known to help kick-start the creation and survival of new neurons, while also increasing plasticity, which is the brain's ability to remodel itself.
But they found, too, that the memory centers of the brains in the weight trainers teemed now with enzymes and genetic markers that are known to help kick-start the creation and survival of new neurons, while also increasing plasticity, which is the brain's ability to remodel itself.
Mr. Malek was born a twin — his brother, Sami, is younger by four minutes; they also have an older sister, Yasmine — to Egyptian immigrants, and grew up in the Sherman Oaks section of Los Angeles, sheltered and largely unaware, he said, of the Hollywood that teemed beyond the Santa Monica Mountains.
After plowing his Home Depot rental truck down a bike path along the Hudson River that teemed with pedestrians and cyclists and crashing into a school bus, the complaint said, he jumped out of the truck, yelled "Allahu akbar" (Arabic for "God is great") and waved a paintball gun and a pellet gun.
As news reports teemed with images from Port Arthur showing flooded homes and shelters, the city's name began to trend on Twitter early Wednesday morning as dozens of residents posted their addresses and conditions, saying that they were trapped in their houses with children and older people in dire need of assistance.
Eventually, We Happy Few managed to push me into a state where I simply constructed an alternate version of the game that was intentionally confusing and nonsensical, from the fetch quests that amounted to grabbing an object 10 feet away from the quest-giver to the moment everyone's eyes turned red and the sky teemed with orange lines.
The screen teemed with unsummable activity. It was full of visions, legends, myths, fables. T.V was scarcely something you could feel superior to. It was too various.
On March 14, 1981, the relocation site, which teemed with people from almost every part of the country and was more popularly known as the resettlement area, became an independent municipality called General Mariano Alvarez.
The Check Off Program has also teemed up with Taco Bell to introduce the double steak cheese quesadilla and worked with Domino's to create cheese stuffed crust and push their products into schools, bringing pizza to over 2,000 schools.
The woods were full of kaka, pigeons and other birds suitable for food. Lakes were covered with water fowl and teemed with eels, silveries and whitebait, and along the coast was an abundance of fish as well as birds of every sort.
With his family expanding and his reputation rising, he eventually abandoned this pension and regained his artistic freedom. Thereafter, he worked on a considerable number of engravings. Religious books and contemporary novels teemed with his engravings. In 1684, Leclerc engraved a plate notable in art history.
They were given a monopoly over the crying and selling of fish and they regulated the catching of fish in the Thames which teemed with fish such as salmon at that time. The guild still continues today as one of the Great Twelve City Livery Companies.
The dense podocarp forest, including matai, totara, kahikatea, and rimu, teemed with wekas, tuis, pigeons, and other birds. In the coastal lakes such as Waihola, eels abounded. At some point during the first centuries of occupation they discovered pounamu. Thus the South Island also became known as Te Wahipounamu.
The town had excellent soil for the cultivation of grains, vegetables and orchards. Streams teemed with salmon and trout. Hills and valleys provided pasturage for grazing sheep and cattle. Connected in 1847 to the Connecticut & Passumpsic Rivers Railroad, the town by 1859 was noted for producing butter and leather.
In colonial times, the surrounding lands were heavily forested; the stands of eastern white pine were especially valued for ships' masts. The river teemed with fish, Atlantic salmon the most prized. Abundant game roamed the forests, and berries were a valuable food supplement. Atlantic Salmon Scottish immigrants to the area found it familiar.
A huge conurbation, the city teemed with recent migrants from the rural villages. Achebe revelled in the social and political activity around him and later drew upon his experiences when describing the city in his 1960 novel No Longer at Ease.Ezenwa-Ohaeto, p. 58. While in Lagos, Achebe started work on a novel.
Next day he explored the area. About a quarter of the way down from the hilltop, he found a huge overhanging rock which was dry underneath. Close by he saw two reservoirs full of water and fruit and vegetable farms at the foot of the hill. To the west was the town rubbish dump which teemed with rabbits.
Comic verse abounded in the Victorian era. Magazines such as Punch and Fun magazine teemed with humorous inventionSpielmann, M. H. The History of "Punch", from Project Gutenberg and were aimed at a well-educated readership.Vann, J. Don. "Comic Periodicals", Victorian Periodicals & Victorian Society (Aldershot: Scholar Press, 1994) The most famous collection of Victorian comic verse is the Bab Ballads.
Freemen [] have drunk wine, and hyenas have listened to instruction. The whelps of the (11) f[ox] laughs at wise men, and the poor woman has mixed myrhh, and the priestess (12) [ ] to the one who wears a girdle of threads. The esteemed esteems and the esteemer is es[teemed. ] and everyone has seen those things that decree offspring and young.
Stoddart became an oil painter. According to Mick Gidley, an Emeritus Professor of American Literature & Culture at the University of Leeds, Stoddart's "brightly coloured pictures looked like illustrations to lost or unwritten fairy tales, and teemed with creatures, both familiar and exotic." Stoddart exhibited her work in the United States, Canada and Mexico. She was also a life-long diarist.
When his father died in 1925, he was taken care of by his eldest sister, Lakshmi. Krishnan studied in the Hindu High School and developed an interest in literature, art and nature. His family lived in Mylapore, and in those days it was covered in shrub and teemed with bird life, jackals and blackbucks. Krishnan even had a pet mongoose.
However, these landlocked seas were not being replenished by freshwater and so gradually evaporated, leaving concentrated salt deposits in those regions. Devonian North America once again experience home to seas that teemed with life. In fact Devonian marine life may have been more abundant and diverse than at any other point in the Paleozoic. Glass sponges became abundant in western New York during the Devonian.
Ex-service is British terminology for veterans, which refers to those who have served in the British Empire or Commonwealth Armed Forces. Britain, with its historic distrust of standing armies, did little for its veterans before the 19th century. It did set up two small hospitals for them in the 1680s. In London and other cities the streets teemed with disabled or disfigured veterans begging for alms.
On September 9, 1876, General Crook's relief column endured a forced march of twenty-miles to Slim Buttes in about four and a half hours, arriving at 11:30 a.m. The whole cheering command entered the valley, and the village teemed with activity like an anthill which had just been stirred up.Anson Mills, "My Story," (hereinafter "Anson Mills")(1918), p.430. Finerty, p.70, 253.
It may have been 1,000 feet deep where Memphis is now. The embayment gradually filled with sand, clay, and gravel brought in by rivers on uplands to the north, east, and west (Wade 1926). The margins of the bay teemed with marine life. Crabs, snails, lobsters, clams, scallops, whelks, nautilus, sharks, and other familiar animals lived in the warm, shallow sea, eating, reproducing, and being eaten (Sohl 1960 and 1964).
Bydgoszcz market place has been charted in 1346, then paved in 1604. Until the end of the 17th century, court judgments were carried out there in public. It was the administrative and commercial heart of the city till the beginning of the 20th century, where Bydgoszcz economic, cultural and social life teemed. The market and the rim of properties located around constituted the core of the nascent city.
The present edifice was dedicated on February 13, 1870. As the city rapidly expanded northward the community, known as the "Tenderloin", teemed with immigrants from Europe. In 1872, A parochial school adjoining the church was built, staffed by the Sisters of Charity. Later, the Christian Brothers were enlisted to provide instruction. By the early 1900s the area was known for newspaper publishing (The New York Herald) and theaters (The Metropolitan Opera House (39th St)).
Tundra Before the Pre-Boreal, Eurasia was locked in the chill of the Younger Dryas and was a mostly continuous tundra belt, with regions of taiga, covered with a blanket of grasses, shrubs and other low plants typical of open land. Large numbers of herbivores wandered in herds over vast distances. The blanket teemed with small, rapidly reproducing species, which supported food chains of larger predators. The largest predators and humans hunted the mammals of the open tundra.
Plötzensee () is a small glacial lake in Berlin. It is situated in the former borough of Wedding, now a part of Mitte, adjacent to the public park Volkspark Rehberge. The name stems from Plötze, one name for the roach in German, as the lake formerly teemed with it. Plötzensee lake (centre) and prison (lower left) Plötzensee is part of a chain of lakes stretching from the northeast to the Spree valley, formed in the last ice age.
Most grades of steel are melted once and are then cast or teemed into a solid form prior to extensive forging or rolling to a metallurgically-sound form. In contrast, VIM-VAR steels go through two more highly purifying melts under vacuum. After melting in an electric arc furnace and alloying in an argon oxygen decarburization vessel, steels destined for vacuum remelting are cast into ingot molds. The solidified ingots then head for a vacuum induction melting furnace.
The Ozama River () is a river in the Dominican Republic. It rises in the Loma Siete Cabezas mountain in the Sierra de Yamasá mountain range, close to the town of Villa Altagracia. In 1498, Bartolome Colon had a fort built on the Ozama River delta, which would later become the first permanent European settlement in the New World (Santo Domingo). The estuary at that time, "teemed with fish and where the Indians raised cassava and yams," according to Floyd.
At the castle rises the Hafenlohr, which once filled the moat and also the nearby ponds that teemed with fish. The castle served as a central administrative seat in the Spessart and was for more than two centuries the lawcourt for 14 surrounding communities. Since 1994, the building has been used as a hotel. Since 2017 the castle no longer a hotel, but is used by the French company Châteauform' as an event venue for business meetings, corporate retreats and conferences.
Imagery frequently drew on heroic realism.eye magazine, "Designing heroes" The Soviet pavilion for the Paris World Fair was surmounted by Vera Mukhina's a monumental sculpture, Worker and Kolkhoz Woman, in heroic mold. This reflected a call for heroic and romantic art, which reflected the ideal rather than the realistic.Richard Overy, The Dictators: Hitler's Germany, Stalin's Russia, p355-6 Art was filled with health and happiness; paintings teemed with busy industrial and agricultural scenes, and sculptures depicted workers, sentries, and schoolchildren.
According to Asgardian legend, in the beginning there was nothing, but in time two worlds came into being on opposite sides of the void. The one to the north was named Niflheim, a world of clouds and shadows in whose center surged the fountain Hvergelmir, from which flowed twelve rivers of ice. The one to the south was named Muspelheim, which teemed with rivers of fire. Eventually the warm air from the south carved out the ice giant Ymir from the ice in the north.
In the centuries before the Europeans arrived in Antigua, the Antiguan racers were numerous and widespread. The thick forest that covered the islands teemed with lizards, the snakes' favored prey, and the racer had no natural predators to threaten it. In the late 15th century, European settlers began to colonize and develop Antigua and Barbuda for huge plantations of sugarcane. The ships that brought slaves to the island (and those that also or instead carried away rum or other tropical products) also brought rats.
However, significance of the town literally enhanced to greater extents after the M2 project completed back in 1997. With the construction of Lillah Exit Toll Plaza, the distances to major cities like Rawalpindi & Lahore simply reduced thus creating grand opportunities for better living of the natives of the town. The land is generally arid but still teemed with lush green fields which add to the overall beauty of town. Generally the climate is warm, however, temperature falls very low during winters with foggy days and nights.
The shortgrass prairie was once filled with huge herds of free-ranging bison and pronghorn. The prairie also teemed with large prairie dog colonies, deer and elk, and predators such as gray wolves and grizzly bears. The prairie is home to healthy populations of plains blue grama, a vast array of songbirds and raptors, carpets of buffalo grass and a broad diversity and abundance of wildflowers and butterflies. It was a landscape so teeming with life it has been compared to the South American Pampas.
The soft, muddy sea floor probably received very little sunlight, but it teemed with life due to steady rains of organic debris from plankton and other organisms farther up the water column. The bottom was dominated by large Inoceramus clams, which were covered with oysters; there was little biodiversity. Clam shells would have accumulated over the centuries in layers under the sea floor's surface, and would have provided shelter for small fish. Other invertebrates known to have lived in this sea include various species of rudists, crinoids and cephalopods (including squids and ammonites).
DAWN, Fight for spoils splits Taliban, 18 Aug. 2009BBC, Waziristan house bomb kills six, 25 May 2005 Reporter David Rohde of The New York Times and two Afghan colleagues Tahir Luddin and Asad Mangal were being held in Makin during the March 2009 missile strike.NY Times, A Drone Strike and Dwindling Hope, 20 October 2009 Rohde reported that the area "teemed with Uzbek, Arab, Afghan and Pakistani militants." After the drone strike, the Taliban arrested and executed a local man, whose decapitated body was hung in the local bazaar.
He and brother Moses "Lee" prospered in ranching until the Range Law Act curtailed the right to use this land for grazing. :Sleds (later wagons) were used to move the farm produce, fruit and cattle to Lemon Bay where they were transferred to draft boats and transported to ships at Boca Grande. Some of the wagons were rafted across the bay to Manasota Beach where the produce was ferried to Cuban smacks and later to American schooners. :Anderson pioneered commercial fishing in North Lemon Bay which teemed with schools of mullet and other fish.
Resupply was accomplished the same way, hoisting cargo nets of supplies up onto the boathouse deck. To get men back and forth from Juneau, the boat would bring them into Dicks Arm, a fjord, located about a mile from the island which shelter provided a calm landing place for bush pilots to bring float planes in. Dicks Arm was also used for recreation for the men on the light when they could get off. It teemed with black bear, grizzlies and had Dall sheep on the higher slopes.
The Gault is one of the most fossil rich horizons in the UK; yielding plentiful bivalves, cephalopod (including ammonites) and gastropods. This has allowed for a tight correlation of the age of the Gault with other geological units in Europe, under the science of biostratigraphy. At its maximum the Gault sea grew to cover the northern landmass which had supplied the sediment for the lower sandstones; by this time Britain was at 35°N and the land and sea teemed with dinosaurs and marine reptiles, the remains of which have been found in the Gault.
Given its proximity to the Alps, the area teemed with wildlife. Bears were also present and an important event in the family lore is tied to an incident involving a bear attack. The Mozzoni family was a noble Milanese family which had retired to the area around Varese (documents attest to their presence in Arcisate and Induno first, and then in Bisuschio) after factional struggles between the Della Torre and the Visconti families and their allies. After the Visconti family was replaced by the Sforza, the Mozzoni allied with this new Milanese ruling family.
After that Divodasa, the son of Sudeva, was next installed on the throne of Kasi. Realising the prowess of those high-souled princes, the sons of Vitahavya, King Divodasa, endued with great energy, rebuilt and fortified the city of Baranasi (Varanasi or Banaras) at Indra's command. They teemed with articles and provisions of every kind and were adorned with shops and marts swelling with prosperity. Those territories stretched northwards from the banks of Ganges to the southern banks of Gomati, and resembled a second Amravati (the city of Indra).
Thousands of raw volunteers and many professional soldiers came to the area to fight for the Union. By mid-summer, Washington teemed with volunteer regiments and artillery batteries from throughout the North, all of which serviced by what was little more than a country town that in 1860 had only 75,800 people. George Templeton Strong's observation of Washington life led him to declare: > Of all the detestable places Washington is first. Crowd, heat, bad quarters, > bad fair [fare], bad smells, mosquitos, and a plague of flies transcending > everything within my experience.. .
Yet while Faiyum is located at the edge of the Libyan Desert, it is a well-vegetated location even today; some 35-30 Ma it was a lush region and teemed with life. On the other hand, is it not at all likely that such a large and quite likely predatory bird like E. eocaenus was in any way gregarious or occurred at high population densities. It might therefore be described as a "hermit" with some justification, but certainly not as a "desert-dweller". pezus is Latinized Greek from pezós (πεζός), "someone who walks".
With coral sea cliffs teemed with fringing reefs along the west coast, the park features a large number of mountains in the north, and coral tablelands and foothills in the south. The plain, which is formed by fault valleys, has a vast lake called Longluan Lake, together with rising coral tablelands and limestone caves to the east. The east side of the coral tablelands features unique sand rivers and sand waterfalls formed by the combined effects of winds and rivers, as well as coral cliffs, sunken caves and stalactites.
The island had been used as a seasonal fishing stop-over and sheep pasture. In 1948, Arundel negotiated its purchase for $750 and constructed a stone building for himself and his friends to use as a lodge during the sport fishing season. Legend has it that it was, in fact, while Arundel and his friends were engaged in an episode of rum-drinking that they conceived, wrote, approved and published the Declaration of Independence of Outer Baldonia. Reflecting the primacy of sport fishers such as Arundel in its leadership, the trappings of the state seem to have teemed with aquatic life.
The lagoons teemed with a rich variety of invertebrates and fish, and he examined the atoll's structure in view of the theory he had developed in Lima, of encircling reefs becoming atolls as an island sank. This idea was supported by the numerous soundings FitzRoy had taken showing a steep slope outside the reef with no living corals below 20–30 fathoms (40–60 m). Arriving at Mauritius on 29 April 1836, Darwin was impressed by the civilised prosperity of the French colony which had come under British rule. He toured the island, examining its volcanic mountains and fringing coral reefs.
On his first day in New Zealand, having arrived on the Charlotte Jane, he climbed Mount Pleasant to get a view of the Canterbury Plains. He stood by the hut built by Charles Crawford, who was managing Mount Pleasant for the Rhodes brothers, when he remarked the following: > All around the soil teemed with vegetable productions – wild oats, ripe > sowthistle, plantain, groundsel & other plants grew large and strong. There > was a track of a running stream hard by, but springs everywhere. I could > have wished much to have bought the house and all, just as it stood.
There was a high number of distilleries in Canada, one of the most famous being Hiram Walker who developed Canadian Club Whisky. The French islands of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, located south of Newfoundland, were an important base used by well-known smugglers, including Al Capone, Savannah Unknown, and Bill McCoy. The Gulf of Mexico also teemed with ships running from Mexico and the Bahamas to Galveston, Texas, the Louisiana swamps, and Alabama coast. By far the biggest Rum Row was in the New York/Philadelphia area off the New Jersey coast, where as many as 60 ships were seen at one time.
The colony was coordinated by Thomas Weston, a London merchant and ironmonger. He was associated with the Plymouth Council for New England which had funded the short-lived Popham Colony in Maine 15 years earlier. During the period when the Pilgrims were in the Netherlands, Weston helped to arrange their passage to the New World with help from the Merchant Adventurers. Historian Charles Francis Adams, Jr. glowingly called him a "sixteenth century adventurer" in the mold of John Smith and Walter Raleigh, adding that his "brain teemed with schemes for deriving sudden gain from the settlement of the new continent".
London in the 1840s was more like a 21st-century Third World megalopolis than a typical 19th-century city. A significant portion of the population had no fixed place of work, and indeed, many had no fixed abode. In classic fashion, the city teemed with outsiders and migrants from other parts of Britain, and with the British Empire's continued growth, people from all over the world gradually began arriving in the city, as well, to seek their fortune. Items of commerce, such as food, drink, textiles, and household goods, were distributed by an army of carts and wagons.
Steamboat Wrigley on the Mackenzie River, c. 1901 In the following decades the North West Company established forts on the river, the precursors of present-day settlements such as Fort Simpson (formerly Fort of the Forks). A lucrative fur trade was carried out, as the Mackenzie basin teemed with beaver and muskrat. However, the short summer and harsh winter conditions limited trappers' activities. During the late 19th century Fort Simpson was regional headquarters for the Hudson's Bay Company. The first fur trappers were native, but starting in the 1920s increasing numbers of European trappers entered the region.
He renamed it the Surrey Theatre, being determined to perform Shakespeare and other plays. He reopened on Easter Monday and to avoid trouble with the law, which did not allow dialogue to be spoken without musical accompaniment except at the two patent theatres, he put a ballet into every such production, including Macbeth, Hamlet, and Farquhar's The Beaux' Stratagem. Contemporary reviewers noted that the Lambeth streets teemed with prostitutes.The Railway Age Museum of Garden History (Lambeth Local History) accessed 18 Mar 2007 Elliston left in 1814, and the Surrey became a circus again until Thomas Dibdin reopened it as a theatre in 1816.
Rabbits at a waterhole within the myxomatosis trial site on Wardang in 1938 An anecdotal account suggested that rabbits were introduced to the island by fishermen circa 1922 but rabbiting parties had visited the Wardang Island much earlier and it was reported that the island "teemed with rabbits" in 1875. It is not known when or by whom the animals were first introduced to the island. In November 1937, the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research began to use Wardang to conduct its first field trials of myxomatosis,National Archives of Australia. establishing the methodology for the first successful release of the myxoma virus throughout the country in the early 1950s.
The Tattered Cover is a bookstore in Denver, Colorado, and one of the largest independent bookstores in the United States. The history of bookselling in the United States is of special interest. The Spanish settlements drew away from the old country much of its enterprise and best talent, and the presses of Mexico and other cities teemed with publications mostly of a religious character, but many others, especially linguistic and historical, were also published. Bookselling in the United States was of a somewhat later growth, although printing and bookselling was introduced into Cambridge, Massachusetts, as early as 1640 by Hezekiah Usher and by Usher in 1652 in Boston.
Kaw Point, located in Kansas City, Kansas was part of the land originally claimed by Spain, then by France, until ultimately the United States bought it as part of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. The Lewis and Clark expedition party camped at Kaw Point June 26–28, 1804, on their way from St. Louis to the Pacific Ocean. Captain William Clark wrote on June 27, 1804, that "the about the mouth of this river is fine." The expedition's journals also noted that the location would be appropriate for a fort, and that the area teemed with deer, elk, buffalo, bear, and many "Parrot queets", the now extinct Carolina parakeet.
Wells advocates the replacement of a "social system, based on Private Ownership" with one based on the "spirit of service," arguing that this will be more productive as well as more just.H. G. Wells, New Worlds for Old, Ch. V ("The Spirit of Gain and the Spirit of Service"). He devotes several chapters to addressing objections to socialism, then analyzes the history of socialism. Wells places the origins of socialism in "a disconnected series of protests against the extreme theories of Individualism and Individualist Political Economy" and notes that the word dates from 1835; in its initial phase, he says, it was "immediately revolutionary" and teemed with "rash, suggestive schemes."H.
The communities surrounding Tampa Bay grew tremendously during the 20th century. Today, the area is home to about 4 million residents, making Tampa Bay a heavily used commercial and recreational waterway and putting much stress on the bay's ecosystem, which had once teemed with wildlife. The bay was seriously polluted by the early 1980s, resulting in a sharp decline in sea life and decreased recreational use. Much greater care has been taken in recent decades to mitigate the effects of human habitation on Tampa Bay, most notably upgraded sewage treatment facilities and sea grass restoration projects, which has resulted in improved water quality over time.
A herd of Columbian mammoths, a ground sloth (left background), dire wolves (left foreground), lions (center/left background), camels (right background), and saber-toothed cats (right foreground, in reeds) gather at a water source Before the Pleistocene epoch ended about 12,000 years ago, the land within the Tularosa Basin featured large lakes, streams, and grasslands. The climate was wetter and cooler, producing a lot more rain and snow than in the present. Lake Otero was one of the largest lakes in the southwest, covering , which is an area larger than the state of Rhode Island. The basin teemed with life, including large ice age mammals that lived by the shores of Lake Otero and in the surrounding grasslands.
All of this led Mantell to publish an influential paper in 1831 entitled "The Age of Reptiles" in which he summarized the evidence for there having been an extended time during which the earth had teemed with large reptiles, and he divided that era, based in what rock strata different types of reptiles first appeared, into three intervals that anticipated the modern periods of the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous.Cadbury, Deborah The Dinosaur Hunters (2000) pp. 171–175. In 1832 Mantell would find, in Tilgate, a partial skeleton of an armored reptile he would call Hylaeosaurus. In 1841 the English anatomist Richard Owen would create a new order of reptiles, which he called Dinosauria, for Megalosaurus, Iguanodon, and Hylaeosaurus.
If a player loses all of their Health, they could be revived through use of an item, by an ally's powers, or in one of the Hospitals on the map; reviving in a Hospital after a certain level incurred Experience Debt, which made gaining additional experience more difficult. The setting of the game, Paragon City for Heroes, was divided into different Zones (essentially neighborhoods) by giant energy "War Walls", which were justified in the back story. Especially dangerous zones called "Hazard" or "Trial" zones, which teemed with larger groups of enemies, were marked in red on the in-game map and were much more dangerous than normal zones. The Villains' setting, the Rogue Isles, consisted of islands connected by a network of ferries and helicopters.
Catts was inaugurated as governor on January 2, 1917. In his inauguration speech he stated: > Your triumph is no less in this good hour in beautiful Florida, for you have > withstood the onslaughts of the county and state political rings, the > corporations, the railroads, the fierce opposition of the press and > organization of the negro voters of this state against you and the power of > the Roman Catholic hierarchy against you. Yet over all of these the common > people of Florida, the everyday cracker people have triumphed. At the onset of World War I as Florida teemed with a never-before-seen wave of Anti-German sentiment, Catts attempted to exploit this to further his own anti-Catholic and racist agendas.
They attempted to land in County Donegal near Lough Swilly, but were intercepted by a bigger Royal Navy squadron, and eventually surrendered after a three-hour battle without ever landing in Ireland. Tone was captured, taken prisoner and was tried in court-martial. For some time all of Britain supposed the troops were led by the commander-in-chief in person and all the press of England and Scotland teemed with blustering or scurrilous remarks on "Paddy Kilmaine and his gang". In truth General Kilamine never embarked, although he certainly wanted to, as commander in Chef, a master tactician and without the blessing of his commander Napoleon, he superintended the departure of 6,000 of his troops from Rochfort and Brest.
In contrast with the arid plateau of Mesopotamia stretched the rich alluvial plain of Chaldea, formed by the deposits of the two great rivers that encircled it. The soil was extremely fertile, and teemed with an industrious population. Eastward rose the mountains of Elam, southward were the sea-marshes and the Kaldy or Chaldeans and other Arameans, while on the west the civilization of Babylonia encroached beyond the banks of the Euphrates, upon the territory of the nomadic ancient Semitic-speaking peoples (or Suti). Here stood Ur (Mugheir, more correctly Muqayyar) the earliest capital of the country; and Babylon, with its suburb, Borsippa (Birs Nimrud), as well as the two Sippars (the Sepharvaim of Scripture, now Abu Habba), occupied both the Arabian and Chaldaean sides of the river.
The municipality's name comes from two trees: the word Fohren is apparently a variant of the German word Föhre (“pine”, but cognate with the English word “fir”), while the second word, Linden, is also used in English, alongside “lime” and “basswood”, for the tree of the genus Tilia that still characterizes the village today. It may be, though, that the first half of this hyphenated name comes from the archaic word Forrn (in modern German, Forelle – “trout”). It is known from historical documents that the local stream, the Unnerbach, once teemed with fish. What is certain, however, is the village's first documentary mention, which has been dated to 960.Fohren-Linden’s name and first documentary mention In the First World War, ten men from Fohren-Linden gave their lives.
Smash might have survived into that 1970s era of colour tv if it could have managed to retain its popular superhero strips. Those readers old enough to have become emotionally attached to comics before Odhams introduced American superhero strips to British readers tended to dislike those superhero strips. Whereas, according to the letters pages each week, those same Marvel and DC heroes were enormously popular among the younger age group which had not been reading comics previously. Accordingly, Wham readers tended to resent the changes made in 1966, because British strips were cancelled in Wham and replaced with US superheroes, whereas Smash readers did not resent the superheroes, because in 1966 that comic had only just launched, so there were no real changes – Smash more or less teemed with American strips from the very beginning.
North Africa enjoyed a fertile climate during the subpluvial era; what is now the Sahara supported a savanna type of ecosystem, with elephant, giraffe, and other grassland and woodland animals now typical of the Sahel region south of the desert. Historian and Africanist Roland Oliver has described the scene as follows: > [In] the highlands of the central Sahara beyond the Libyan desert,... in the > great massifs of the Tibesti and the Hoggar, the mountaintops, today bare > rock, were covered at this period with forests of oak and walnut, lime, > alder and elm. The lower slopes, together with those of the supporting > bastions — the Tassili and the Acacus to the north, Ennedi and Air to the > south — carried olive, juniper and Aleppo pine. In the valleys, perennially > flowing rivers teemed with fish and were bordered by seed-bearing > grasslands.
North Africa enjoyed a fertile climate during the subpluvial era; what is now the Sahara supported a savanna type of ecosystem, with elephant, giraffe, and other grassland and woodland animals now typical of the Sahel region south of the desert. Historian and Africanist Roland Oliver has described the scene as follows: > [In] the highlands of the central Sahara beyond the Libyan desert,... in the > great massifs of the Tibesti and the Hoggar, the mountaintops, today bare > rock, were covered at this period with forests of oak and walnut, lime, > alder and elm. The lower slopes, together with those of the supporting > bastions – the Tassili and the Acacus to the north, Ennedi and Air to the > south – carried olive, juniper and Aleppo pine. In the valleys, perennially > flowing rivers teemed with fish and were bordered by seed-bearing > grasslands.
One child in four died before his or her first birthday. Redevelopment had been resisted by members of the Bethnal Green vestry, who owned much of the rookery, and were responsible for electing members of the Metropolitan Board of Works. The powers the vestries and board were limited to the Torrens Act and the Artisans' and Labourers' Dwellings Improvement Act 1875 (Cross Act) which the Bethnal Green vestry refused to use. Jay persuaded Arthur Morrison to visit the area, and the result was the influential A Child of the Jago, a barely fictionalised account of the life of a child in the slum, re- christened by Morrison as The Jago: "What was too vile for Kate Street, Seven Dials, and Ratcliffe Highway in its worst day, what was too useless, incapable and corrupt — all that teemed on the Old Jago".
Pyrococcus furiosus, one of the few modern organisms in which the incorporation of tungsten is still essential Tungsten is one of the oldest metal ions to be incorporated in biological systems, preceding the Great Oxygenation Event. Before the abundance of oxygen in Earth's atmosphere, oceans teemed with sulfur and tungsten, while molybdenum, a metal that is highly similar chemically, was inaccessible in solid form. The abundance of tungsten and lack of free molybdenum likely explains why early marine organisms incorporated the former instead of the latter. However, as cyanobacteria began to fill the atmosphere with oxygen, molybdenum became available (molybdenum becomes soluble when exposed to oxygen) and molybdenum began to replace tungsten in the majority of metabolic processes, which is seen today, as tungsten is only present in the biological complexes of prokaryotes (methanogens, gram-positive bacteria, gram-negative aerobes and anaerobes), and is only obligated in hyperthermophilic archaea such as P. furiosus.

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