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British and Isles
We should recall the number of movements for the service of mankind which arose from the kindred Evangelicalism of the British Isles and the Pietism of the Continent of Europe -- among them prison reform, anti-slavery measures, legislation for the alleviation of conditions of labour, the Inner Mission, and the Red Cross.
Songs from China and Japan were reserved exclusively for Miss Mao, who is a native of China, and those of the British Isles were sung by Mr. Fuller, who is English by birth.
The only other regions so blessed are the British Isles, western Europe, eastern China, southern Chile and parts of Japan, New Zealand and Tasmania.
The Gulf Stream and its northern extension towards Europe, the North Atlantic Drift, for example, warms the atmosphere of the British Isles and north-western Europe and influences weather and climate as far south as the northern Mediterranean.
The oldest-surviving Anglican church outside of the British Isles ( Britain and Ireland ) is St Peter's Church in St. George's, Bermuda, established in 1612 ( though the actual building had to be rebuilt several times over the following century ).
It arose from the intermingling of children of early settlers from a great variety of mutually intelligible dialectal regions of the British Isles and quickly developed into a distinct variety of English.
The Porvoo Common Statement ( 1996 ), agreed to by the Anglican churches of the British Isles and most of the Lutheran churches of Scandinavia and the Baltic, also stated that " the continuity signified in the consecration of a bishop to episcopal ministry cannot be divorced from the continuity of life and witness of the diocese to which he is called.
* Geograph British Isles – Photos of Abergavenny and surrounding areas
Early archaeoastronomy surveyed Megalithic constructs in the British Isles, at sites like Auglish in County Londonderry, in an attempt to find statistical patterns
The claims of Hawkins were largely dismissed, but this was not the case for Alexander Thom's work, whose survey results of megalithic sites hypothesized widespread practice of accurate astronomy in the British Isles.
* Great Britain, the largest island in the British Isles and the largest island in Europe
* British Isles, a group of islands that includes Great Britain, Ireland, and other islands
** Terminology of the British Isles, discusses the sometimes ambiguous or contentious names for parts of the island group
The British and Irish Lions ( formerly known as the British Isles and the British Lions ) is a rugby union team made up of players from England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales.
The team historically used the name British Isles.
After the southern part of Ireland became independent in 1922, the team continued to be termed the British Isles, referring to the British Isles geographic term, rather than national citizenship.
Some saw the 1891 team — the first sanctioned by the Rugby Football Union — as the English national team, though others referred to it as " the British Isles ".
Five years later a British Isles side returned to South Africa.
They played one extra match on this tour, making the total of 21 games, including four tests against South Africa, with the British Isles winning three of them.
In 1899 the British Isles touring side returned to Australia for the first time since the unofficial tour of 1888.

British and mapping
British seafaring Captain James Cook, midway through his third and final voyage of exploration in 1778, sailed along the west coast of North America aboard the, mapping the coast from California all the way to the Bering Strait.
Although R. K. Greville published his Algae Britannicae as early as 1830, it was not until 1902 with the publication of A Catalogue of the British Marine Algae by Edward Arthur Lionel Batters that the systematic correlation of records, extensive distribution mapping and the development of identification keys began in earnest.
* Directorate of Overseas Surveys, the United Kingdom's central survey and mapping organisation for British colonies and protectorates 1957 – 1984
The primary limitation with bump mapping is that it perturbs only the surface normals without changing the underlying surface itself .< ref > Real-Time Bump Map Synthesis, Jan Kautz < sup > 1 </ sup >, Wolfgang Heidrichy < sup > 2 </ sup > and Hans-Peter Seidel < sup > 1 </ sup >, (< sup > 1 </ sup > Max-Planck-Institut für Informatik, < sup > 2 </ sup > University of British Columbia )</ ref > Silhouettes and shadows therefore remain unaffected, which is especially noticeable for larger simulated displacements.
On April 12, 2003, scientists working at the Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre in Vancouver, British Columbia finished mapping the genetic sequence of a coronavirus believed to be linked to SARS.
* Directorate of Colonial Surveys, the United Kingdom's central survey and mapping organisation for British colonies and protectorates 1946-1957
Short-form gazetteers, often used in conjunction with computer mapping and GIS systems, may simply contain a list of place-names together with their locations in latitude and longitude or other spatial referencing systems ( e. g. British National Grid reference ).
" William Fagg, the British art historian, compared it to the logarithmic mapping of natural growth by biologist D ’ Arcy Thompson.
* Overseas Surveys Directorate, the United Kingdom's central survey and mapping organisation for British colonies and protectorates 1984-1991
An approximate mapping between British classifications and US Grade Point Averages can be inferred from the University College London graduate admissions criteria.
In 1811, Claudius James Rich, an Englishman and a resident for the East India Company in Baghdad, began examining and mapping the ruins of Babylon and Nineveh, and collecting numerous inscribed bricks, tablets, boundary stones, and cylinders, including the famous Nebuchadnezzar Cylinder and Sennacherib Cylinder, a collection which formed the nucleus of the Mesopotamian antiquities collection at the British Museum.
The British Coastguard had its electronic mapping service disabled for a few hours, and Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Post, and the European Commission also all had issues with the worm.
The concept of ‘ good international citizenship ’ has been specifically attributed to Evans in academic writing ; its ‘ idealistic pragmatism ’ has been seen as a way of bridging or transcending rival doctrines of realism and idealism in international relations theory ; and the idea has been advanced as mapping a possible ‘ third way for British foreign policy ’.
An 1885 book about Western Scotland with a chapter on Roy's life has him a Colonel in the British Army who was trusted with the work of mapping the Highlands in 1747 by his commanding general.
The peak is located at which is 3. 1 km east by north of Sevtopolis Peak, 5. 1 km west-southwest of Spark Point, 4. 47 km north-northeast of Tile Ridge and 4. 9 km northeast of Lloyd Hill ( British mapping in 1935 and 1968, Chilean in 1947, Argentine in 1953, and Bulgarian in 2005 and 2009 ).
In 1810, he was sent to help defend Corfu against the British, and spent his time mapping the island's old fortifications.
In 1778, the British seafaring Captain James Cook, midway through his third and final voyage of exploration, sailed along the west coast of North America, mapping the coast from California all the way to the Bering Strait.
H2X radar (" Mickey set ", AN / APS-15 ) was an American development of the British H2S radar, the first ground mapping radar to be used in combat.
The first editor was Charles Camsell, since 1915 a fellow of the British Royal Geographical Society, a geologist who had been responsible for mapping large parts of Northern Ontario, Manitoba and the Yukon.
The island's eastern tip, Point Irving, is named for the commander of a British exploratory and mapping expedition, John J. Irving.
Collins Geo in Bishopbriggs continues to handle world mapping, British Isles map products, and sales of geographical data.
The island's eastern tip, Point Irving, is named for the commander of a British exploratory and mapping expedition, John J. Irving.
The survey played an important role in the exploration of Canada, especially in the mapping of hitherto-uncharted parts of British Columbia.
The survey entailed the first detailed mapping of much of southern British Columbia, including remote areas such as the Coast Mountains icefields and a range of potential pass and route combinations, including new discoveries-the most notable and crucial of which was Rogers Pass through the Selkirk Mountains, but also less famously but no less crucially Eagle Pass through the Monashees.

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