[permalink] [id link]
Primitive medical technology provided limited means of protection for the aggressor and a battle's surrounding geographical regions.
from
Wikipedia
Some Related Sentences
Primitive and technology
; Feral Orks: Primitive Orks with no access to higher technology, relying instead on squigs, squiggoths, and psychic powers.
Primitive and provided
Primitive functions are those, that are not and cannot be defined as lambda abstractions because they are representing a functionality that can only be provided by the underlying operating system or the hardware.
Released in August 1982 as an Icehouse album, Primitive Man reached No. 3 on the National album charts and provided their international breakthrough single, " Hey Little Girl " which peaked at No. 7 in Australia, No. 2 in Switzerland, No. 5 in Germany and top 20 in UK, Sweden and Netherlands.
Primitive and limited
Primitive forms may allow only limited adjustment of one or two traits ( e. g., the " photodarkening " or " photochromic " materials found in light-sensitive sunglasses ), but there are theoretical forms which, using known principles of electronics, should be capable of emulating a broad range of naturally occurring materials, or of exhibiting unnatural properties which cannot be produced by other means.
Protecting the wildest portions of the Cabinet Mountains and an integral part of Kootenai National Forest and Kaniksu National Forest, the wilderness had enjoyed more limited protection since 1935 as a Primitive Area.
Primitive and means
" Primitive ," in this sense, means that the abundances of most chemical elements do not differ greatly from those that are measured by spectroscopic methods in the photosphere of the sun, which in turn should be well-representative of the entire solar system ( note: to make such a comparison between a gaseous object like the sun and a rock like a chondrite, scientists choose one rock-forming element, such as silicon, to use as a reference point, and then compare ratios.
* Fearn, Old Irish Fern means " alder-tree ", Primitive Irish * wernā, so that the original value of the letter was.
* James K. Glassman ( 2006 ) Primitive accumulation, accumulation by dispossession, accumulation by ‘ extra-economic ’ means – Progress in Human Geography, Vol.
Primitive in the sense most relevant to phylogenetics means resembling the first living things and in particular resembling them in the simple nature of their anatomy and behaviour.
Primitive and protection
Caribou Primitive Area received greater protection in 1939, when Interior Secretary Harold Ickes sought to convince President Franklin D. Roosevelt to combine the national forests and the National Park Service into a new agency under the management of the United States Department of Interior.
Primitive and for
Present-day Christian religious bodies known for conducting their worship services without musical accompaniment include some Presbyterian churches devoted to the regulative principle of worship, Old Regular Baptists, Primitive Baptists, Plymouth Brethren, Churches of Christ, the Old German Baptist Brethren, the Eastern Orthodox Christian Church and the Amish, Old Order Mennonites and Conservative Mennonites.
However the Primitive Archer test used a longbow at point blank range, generating 160 joules ( vs. 73 for Bane and 80 for Williams ), so probably not representative of battles of the time.
Zerzan calls for a " Future Primitive ", a radical reconstruction of society based on a rejection of alienation and an embracing of the wild.
In 1946 her painting The Old Checkered Inn in Summer was featured in the background of a national advertising campaign for the young women's lip gloss Primitive Red by Du Barry cosmetics.
Primitive cultures turned to witch doctors or shamans to apply magic, herbal mixtures, or folk medicine to rid deranged persons of evil spirits or bizarre behavior, for example.
Also during the 1960s, part of the national forest was designated a Primitive Weapons Area ( renamed Pioneer Weapons Area ) and set apart for hunting with longbow, crossbow, or muzzle-loading firearms ( either flintlock or percussion ).
He drew up a ' Primitive Liturgy ,' in which he substituted for the Nicene and Athanasian creeds, two creeds taken from the Apostolical Constitutions ; for his ' Primitive Eucharist ' he made use of unleavened bread and mixed wine ; and, most interestingly, he distributed medals of admission to his ' Oratory ' at the price of one shilling.
Corcu, a Primitive Irish language term for a kin group, usually combined with the name of a divine or mythical ancestor, is apparently similar to the term Dál.
* Drummond, R. Paul ( n. d .) A Portion for the Singers: A History of Music Among Primitive Baptists Since 1800.
The band has had all six of their studio albums debut on the United States Billboard 200, with a peak position at number 32 for their second album, Primitive.
In addition to the two mainstream Methodist churches a small Primitive Methodist chapel was built in Bedford Road in or soon after 1896, when a site was purchased for £ 65 2s.
By that time, most Primitive Baptists had excluded the " Two-Seeders " for holding heretical doctrines.
Remnants of Two-Seed doctrine can still be heard among a few Primitive Baptists, if one knows what to listen for.
A Primitive Methodist chapel was built in 1844 for £ 98, on a site on the Cuxwold Road donated by Lord Yarborough.
1.611 seconds.