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Aberdeen and Airport
* Esbjerg Airport ( EBJ ), a small airport in the west of Jutland with regular flights to Aberdeen and Stavanger ( although primarily serving North Sea Oilrigs ).
* IATA airport code for Aberdeen Regional Airport, an airport east of Aberdeen, South Dakota, United States
From Bergen and Stavanger, Widerøe serves Aberdeen Airport and from Stavanger Newcastle Airport.
In physical terms, Prestwick is Scotland's largest commercial airfield, although in passenger traffic terms it sits in fourth place after Edinburgh Airport, Glasgow International, and Aberdeen Airport all of which are operated by BAA.
Over 3. 1 million passengers used Aberdeen Airport in 2011, an increase of 11. 5 % compared with 2010, making it the 14th busiest airport in the UK.
Aberdeen Airport is a base for BMI Regional ( a subsidiary of BMI ) and Eastern Airways.
Today, Aberdeen Airport handles more than 37, 000 rotary wing movements carrying around 468, 000 passengers annually.
Aberdeen Airport has now begun work on a £ 10 million construction project to attract more international routes.
A separate £ 2 million project to transform the terminal forecourt at Aberdeen Airport got underway in July 2008 and was completed that autumn.
There is a ' Jet ' bus service which runs to the Inverness Airport at Dalcross, Inverness has flights to mainly UK destinations while Aberdeen airport has UK and international flights.
In September 2003 the Met Office moved its headquarters to a purpose-built £ 80m structure near Exeter Airport and the A30, in Devon, being officially opened on 21 June 2004 — a few weeks short of its 150th anniversary — by Robert May, Baron May of Oxford, from its previous location of Bracknell in Berkshire, and it has a worldwide presenceincluding a forecasting centre in Aberdeen, and offices in Gibraltar and on the Falklands.
The nearest airport is Aberdeen Airport at Dyce.
* Aberdeen Airport
Loganair, a franchise of Flybe provides services to the Scottish Mainland ( Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Inverness ), as well as to Sumburgh Airport in Shetland.
It then passes Bucksburn, and has a junction with Aberdeen Airport.
Loganair, a franchise of Flybe, provides services to the Scottish mainland ( Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow-International and Inverness ), as well as to Sumburgh Airport in Shetland.
In addition to its main base at Glasgow, the airline has hubs at Edinburgh Airport, Inverness Airport, Dundee Airport and Aberdeen Airport.

Aberdeen and ()
Aberdeen () is a city in Grays Harbor County, Washington, United States, founded by Samuel Benn in 1884.
Braemar () is a village in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, around west of Aberdeen in the Highlands.
Dyce () is a civil parish and suburb of Aberdeen, Scotland, about north west of Aberdeen city centre, and best known as the location of the city's airport.
FirstGroup plc () is a public transport company, registered in Scotland at its headquarters in Aberdeen, operating in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Denmark, Sweden, Canada and the United States.
Note possible confusion with Balloch () in West Dunbartonshire or Balloch in Cumbernauld and Westhill, Skene near Aberdeen.
Ellon () is a town in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, approximately north of Aberdeen, lying on the River Ythan () which has one of the few undeveloped river estuaries on the Eastern coast of Scotland.

Aberdeen and is
Aberdeen is a city in Scotland, United Kingdom.
Aberdeen, Scotland, is home of:
The Aberdeen Bestiary is related to other bestiaries of the Middle Ages and especially the Ashmole Bestiary.
The tradition is often carried out at other sporting events, both professional or amateur, and even sometimes at non-sporting events where the anthem is played, throughout the Baltimore / Washington area and beyond, notably at Baltimore Ravens, Washington Capitals, Georgetown Hoyas, Maryland Terrapins, Virginia Cavaliers, Virginia Tech Hokies, West Virginia Mountaineers, Penn State Nittany Lions and Aberdeen Ironbirds games.
The Aberdeen Bestiary is one of the best known of over 50 manuscript bestiaries surviving today.
In Scotland the only one which has survived the convulsions of the 16th century is Aberdeen Breviary, a Scottish form of the Sarum Office ( the Sarum Rite was much favoured in Scotland as a kind of protest against the jurisdiction claimed by the diocese of York ), revised by William Elphinstone ( bishop 1483 – 1514 ), and printed at Edinburgh by Walter Chapman and Andrew Myllar in 1509 – 1510.
Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair, in the County of Aberdeen, in the County of Meath and in the County of Argyll, is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom.
Also, the United States Army Communications and Electronics Life Cycle Management Command ( CECOM-LCMC ) Headquarters at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland is named Armstrong Hall in his honor.
Given the differences of opinion within the Lord Aberdeen cabinet over the direction of foreign policy with regard to relations between Britain and the French under Napoleon III, it is not surprising that debate raged within the government as Louis Bonaparte, now assuming the title of Emperor Napoleon III of France.
Aberdeen in Scotland, which is constructed principally from local granite, is known as " The Granite City ".
The name " Hong Kong ", literally meaning " fragrant harbour ", is derived from the area around present-day Aberdeen on Hong Kong Island, where fragrant wood products and fragrant incense were once traded.
The Aberdeen Pavilion, built in 1898 in Ottawa was used for ice hockey in 1904 and is the oldest existing facility that has hosted Stanley Cup games.
He is buried in Allenvale Cemetery, Aberdeen.
Shetland is also served by a domestic connection from Lerwick to Aberdeen on mainland Scotland.
Traditional academic prizes, such as the University of Aberdeen's Lumsden and Sachs Fellowship, tend to be awarded for performance in theology ( or divinity as it is known at Aberdeen ) and religious studies.
* August 9 – The Aberdeen Act is signed as part of the abolition of the African slave trade.
* The city of Aberdeen is chartered by William the Lion.
* February – King's College, Aberdeen, predecessor of the University of Aberdeen in Scotland, is founded on the petition of William Elphinstone, Bishop of Aberdeen.
* Aberdeen is burned by the English.
* The Bishopric of Aberdeen is established.

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