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Pinta and Abingdon
***† Chelonoidis abingdonii, Pinta Island Giant Tortoise, Abingdon Island Giant Tortoise ( Extinct )
The Pinta Island tortoise ( Chelonoidis nigra ), also known as the Pinta giant tortoise, Abingdon Island tortoise, or Abingdon Island giant tortoise, was a subspecies of Galápagos tortoise native to Ecuador's Pinta Island.
The name, abingdonii, derives from Abingdon Island, now more commonly known as Pinta Island.

Pinta and Island
* Pinta Island
** Lonesome George, the last known individual of the Pinta Island Tortoise subspecies, dies at a Galapagos National Park, thus making the subspecies extinct.
* Pinzón ( Duncan ) Island Named after the Pinzón brothers, captains of the Pinta and Niña caravels, it has an area of 18 square km ( 7 sq mi ) and a maximum altitude of 458 m ( 1, 503 ft ).
Pinta Island was home to the last remaining Pinta tortoise, called Lonesome George.
He does not live on Pinta Island any longer, but at the Charles Darwin Research Station on Santa Cruz Island, where scientists were attempting to breed him.
* Pinta Island, also known as Abington Island, located in the Galápagos Islands group.

Pinta and
* A. c. sielmanni Eibl-Eibesfeldt, 1962 Pinta Island

Pinta and after
The game can be downloaded after the player reaches Sailor's Isle and talks to Pinta, a young boy who expresses a wish to sail all over the world and discover things.
The Niña and Pinta sighted and rejoined one another 6 January 1493, and, after a furious argument in which according to at least one witness, Pinzón objected to the 39 men being " left so far from Spain, being so few, because they could not be provided for and would be lost ", and Columbus threatened to hang Pinzón, the two ships headed together back toward Spain on January 8
Pinta is thought to be transmitted by skin to skin contact ( similar to bejel and yaws ), and after an incubation period of two to three weeks, produces a raised papule, which enlarges and becomes hyperkeratotic ( scaly / flaky ).

Pinta and caravel
Closs, 1892 ): The Santa Maria and Pinta are shown as carracks ; the Niña ( left ), as a caravel.
Replica of the caravel Pinta at the Wharf of the Caravels in Palos.

Pinta and has
The subspecies is believed to have become extinct ; however, there has been at least one first-generation hybrid individual found outside Pinta Island.
Pintaflores has evolved as a new breed of dancers emerged with the launching of Pintaflores Bata or Pinta Bata in 1996.

Pinta and area
Mineral resources of the Petaca Pinta wilderness study area, Cibola County, New Mexico Geological Survey Bulletin 1734-H. Denver: U. S. Department of the Interior, U. S. Geological Survey.

Pinta and .
In 1492 Christopher Columbus sailed from Spain on his first voyage with three ships, the Nina, the Pinta and the flag ship The Santa Maria, seeking a direct route to Asia.
Santa Maria and Pinta, the other two 1992 replicas of Christopher Columbus ' ship fleet are on display the Corpus Christi Museum of Science and History.
* The catacombs of Torre Pinta.
The rooms include the Camera Pinta (" Painted Room ") with noteworthy 15th ‑ century frescoes.
The global prevalence of this disease and the other endemic trematoses, Bejel and Pinta, was reduced by the Global Control of Treponematoses ( TCP ) programme between 1952 and 1964 from about 50 to 150 million cases to about 2. 5 million ( a 95 percent reduction ).
It was in such ships that Christopher Columbus set out on his expedition in 1492 ; Santa Maria was a ~ 100 ton carrack ( same as: nau ) which served as the flagship, and Pinta and Niña were smaller caravels of around 15-20 m with a beam of 6 m and displacing around 60-75 tons.
Emmons got stationed in 1882 on the Pinta in Alaska and stayed there through the 1880s and 1890s.
By the end of the 19th century, most of the Pinta Island tortoises had been wiped out due to hunting.

Abingdon and Island
Abingdon is the largest town in southern England with no rail service ( except Gosport, which is part of greater Portsmouth, and Canvey Island ).
* Nag's Head Island, Abingdon
* Andersey Island, Abingdon

Abingdon and
* Schmidt, Jean Miller ( 1999 ) Grace Sufficient: A History of Women in American Methodism, 1760 1939, Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press ISBN 0-687-15675-0
) ( 2000 ) The Methodist Experience in America: a sourcebook, Nashville: Abingdon Press, ISBN 0-687-24673-3 756 p. of original documents
* 1970 Takanori Nishikawa, Japanese singer, producer, and actor ( Abingdon Boys School and Luis-Mary )
* November 16 Ælfric of Abingdon, Archbishop of Canterbury
* 21. 6 km < sup > 2 </ sup > Abingdon, Virginia, United States
Edmund Rich ( also known as Saint Edmund or Eadmund of Canterbury, and as Saint Edmund of Abingdon ) ( 1175 1240 ) was a 13th century Archbishop of Canterbury in England.
* John de Abingdon ( 1442 unknown ).
* William of Newbury 13th century Abbot of Abingdon
Abingdon is part of the Kingsport Bristol ( TN )– Bristol ( VA ) Metropolitan Statistical Area, which is a component of the Johnson City Kingsport Bristol, TN-VA Combined Statistical Area commonly known as the " Tri-Cities " region.
* Robert Armstrong, ( 1792 1854 ), born in Abingdon, United States Army officer and candidate to be Governor of Tennessee
* Martin Beaty ( 1784 1856 ), born in Abingdon, United States Congressman from Kentucky
* Francis Preston Blair, ( 1791 1876 ), born in Abingdon, journalist and politician
* James King Gibson, ( 1812 1879 ), born in Abingdon, United States Congressman from Virginia
* Joseph E. Johnston, ( 1807 1891 ), lived in Abingdon as a boy, Confederate General in the American Civil War.
* William McMillan, ( 1764 1804 ), born in Abingdon, lawyer.
* Granville Henderson Oury, ( 1825 1885 ), born in Abingdon, captain in the Confederate Army and later United States Congressman from Arizona.
* John S. Preston, ( 1809 1881 ), born in Abingdon, Confederate general in the American Civil War and South Carolina politician
* H. Emory Widener, Jr., ( 1923 2007 ), born and died in Abingdon, judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, and one of the longest serving federal judges in United States history.
* Robert Sheffey ( 1820 1902 ), eccentric Methodist circuit-rider and evangelist, grew to maturity in Abingdon.
* Abingdon School: private, boys, 11 18.
" In the chronicles of Abingdon Abbey ( AD 941 946 ) the place is called Gifteleia.

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