This volume presents the results of archaeological work carried out by MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) at Highflyer Farm in 2018. Remains dating from the Neolithic to the post-medieval period were recorded, with most of the activity occurring between the early Iron Age and late Roman periods
In part, Dr Coster built up the empire by selling company products which had high alcohol content (mainly hair tonic) to underworld bootleggers during prohibition. However, Coster's real genius was in convincing banks that McKesson and ...
... IMPLODES EXPLODES ERODES EXTOLS CYCLONES BEMOANS QUINONES INTONES MOREAU PEROT THOREAU TURBOT+ CAROCHE CORRODE PAROLED BAROQUE PAROLE JEROME MOROSE AROSE CORRODES PAROLES TRUDEAU TRUFFAUT BOUDREAUX BOUDREAU ROUSSEAU COUSTEAU NOUVEAU ...
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations.
This book offers a biography of the most glamorous and powerful NATO Supreme Commander of the Cold War, General Lauris Norstad, as both a "nuclear" general and an "international" general.
Written by storytellers for storytellers, this volume offers an entirely new approach to word finding. Browse the pages within to see what makes this book different: ~ Entries arranged in chapters by topic.
The Catalogue contains all inscriptions discovered during 24 seasons of Saudi-German excavations at Taymāʾ, 2004–15.
Collection of essays and reviews written by Paul Hasluck in the years before his death in 1993.
Originally published in 1912, this book with extensive source footnotes and bibliography follows the evolution and development of roads, rivers, canals, tramways, buses and cycles.
In this book, Peter Davenport, having been involved in most of the archaeological work in Bath since 1980, attempts to tell the story of Roman Bath: the latest interim report on the ‘Three Hundred Year Dig’.
The Sherwood Rangers had been pulled back out of the fray on 29 June, the day Sergeant Jim Christie of the No. 5 Army Film and Photo Section arrived to take photographs of the men and knocked-out enemy tanks still strewn about the ...