Use "geographer|geographers" in a sentence

1. Abler (born 1939), American geographer; William Abler, American paleontologist

2. Many geographers now call this landmass Eurasia.

3. The historians and geographers of Greece wrote extensively about Egyptian culture.

4. Some geographers call the combined river below this point the "Upper Congo".

5. When geographers identify a Continent, they usually include all the islands associated with it.

6. He was a devoted geographer who set out to reform and perfect the map of the world.

7. Economic geographers typically differentiate between knowledge-intensive, volatile, unstandardized activities, and standardized, routinized production.

8. Excludes “BioChemists and Biophysicists” (19-1021) and “Geoscientists, Except Hydrologists and Geographers” (19-2042)

9. 3 Then, in 150 the young geographer Martin Waldseemuller published a new Latin edition of Ptolemy's Cosmography .

10. Abraham Ortelius, a 16th-century cartographer, praised Mercator as “the greatest geographer of our day.”

11. In 1976, she married Gerald Fremlin, a cartographer and geographer she met in her university days.

12. Geographers use Antipodal for places that are on the exact opposite sides of the earth from each other

13. Geographers: Biobibliographical Studies, Volume 37 explores the concept of distinction in geography.Through the lives of six geographers working in Brazil, North America, Europe and Réunion, it investigates what distinction consists of, how we identify and celebrate it and how it relates to quotidian practices in the discipline.

14. Percy Harrison Fawcett DSO (18 August 1867 – during or after 1925) was a British geographer, artillery officer, cartographer, archaeologist, and explorer of South America.

15. What got you to be, at the same time, a mechanical engineer, a geographer and a mathematician and so on, a physicist?

16. The GEBCO chart series was initiated in 1903 by an international group of geographers and oceanographers, under the leadership of Prince Albert I of Monaco.

17. The historian-geographer and other pyreneists gave us a fervour, the taste for faithfulness to a mountain, a passion characteristic of the alpinistic practice, often with elegance.

18. Biogeography, as the study of place, not only links us back to the early plant and animal geographers of the past, but incorporates our observations of …

19. The Annals of the American Association of Geographers is one of the world’s leading geography journals and is the flagship journal of the AAG, in publication since 1911.

20. It was used by ancient Greek geographers from the 4th century bc and even earlier, who distinguished “Albion” from Ierne (Ireland) and from smaller members of the British Isles

21. Claudius Ptolemy was a 2nd-century mathematician, Astronomer, astrologer, and geographer, who had written a number of scientific treatises, such as The Great Treatise, Geography, and the Tetrábiblos

22. Some of the earliest first-hand accounts of the Nanai people in the European languages belong to the French Jesuit geographers travelling on the Ussury and the Amur in 1709.

23. The Continents are, from largest to smallest: Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Antarctica, Europe, and Australia. When geographers identify a continent, they usually include all the islands associated with it

24. Even in the late 17th century, after explorers had found that South America and Australia were not part of the fabled "Antarctica", geographers believed that the continent was much larger than its actual size.

25. Thalcave looked on Composedly, without giving any indication of comprehending or not comprehending.The lesson had lasted half an hour, when the geographer left off, wiped his streaming face, and waited for the Patagonian to speak.

26. (Jos 15:7) Though its exact location is not now known, some geographers believe the name has survived in Thogheret ed-Debr, SW of Jericho, and in Wadi Debr, closer to the tentative location of the Valley of Achor.

27. Observes The Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible: “As no Mount Megiddo is known to either ancient or modern geographers, it appears the more likely that in a book [Revelation] abounding in symbolical language this term also should be meant to carry a symbolical meaning.”

28. Agog: Art Gallery of Golden (Golden, British Columbia, Canada) Agog: Australian Genomics and Clinical Outcomes of High Grade Glioma (Australia) Agog: Advisory Group on Governance (UK) Agog: Asian Gynecologic Oncology Group (Taiwan) Agog: Arizona Gun Owners Guide (Alan Korwin book) Agog: Alumni Geographers of Geneseo (est

29. The second study, “Hidden Carbon Costs of the ‘Everywhere War’: Logistics, Geopolitical Ecology, and the Carbon Bootprint of the US Military,” published by Oliver Belcher, Benjamin Neimark and Patrick Bigger from Durham and Lancaster universities in the Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers , found that if the US military

30. George Crabb in 1823 defined co-ordinates now dropping its hyphen as “a term applied to the Absciss and ordinates when taken in connexion,” later better known as the magnitudes that determine the position of a point; geographers and navigators still later used coordinates to describe the use of longitude and latitude in locating a spot on the globe.

31. Cartographer: 1 n a person who makes maps Synonyms: map maker Examples: Sebastian Cabot son of John Cabot who was born in Italy and who led an English expedition in search of the Northwest Passage and a Spanish expedition that explored the La Plata region of Brazil; in 1544 he published a map of the world (1476-1557) Type of: geographer an