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41. ITAG
Ford, 1937) whether the operation was indigenous to the fracture of the skull theSoga were said MARQUIS, 1892 Manners and monuments of prehistoric peoples.
http://www.trepan.com/historical/articles/ch53.html
Home Historical Articles : Diseases in Antiquity Trepanation of The Skull by The Medicine-men Of Primitive Cultures, With Particular Reference To Present-day Native East African Practice EDWARD L. MARGETTS INTRODUCTION T repanation of the skull is the most fascinating surgical operation in the history of medicine. Archaeological finds indicate that it is also the oldest therapeutic procedure of which we have objective evidence. The bibliography of trephining is vast, there are thousands of references, and much controversy as to motive and technique. The extensive literature deals mostly with "prehistoric" trepanation, particularly Neolithic European or pre-Columbian South American. But in actual fact, the operation has been practised almost everywhere in the world and at all periods, from the New Stone Age certainly and perhaps even from an earlier period in the evolution of man. The work "trepanation" is from the Greek trypanon, meaning "a borer," and dates from classical times. The more recent term "trephination" affords a variant, and is derived from the French. Essentially, both words mean the same, the making of a depression or perforation in the calvarium. Trepanation or trephination in the narrowest sense implies the boring of a hole through the intact skull of a living person. An extended meaning of this would include the making of a depression but not a hole in one or both tables of the cranium, or the removal of bone fragments already present from trauma or infection. The hole or depression is usually made by scraping (

42. Dr.ADOKO - Uganda Facts And History
soga) is in southeastern Uganda, east of the They displaced small bands of indigenoushuntergatherers , who The meeting of these peoples resulted in trade
http://www.adoko.multiservers.com/factshistory.htm
Uganda Facts and History. Extracts from the Library of congress site Location and Size Crops Land Use ... The Return of Military Rule: 1985 Location and Size Uganda is a landlocked country astride the equator, about 800 kilometers inland from the Indian Ocean (see fig. 1). It lies on the northwestern shores of Lake Victoria, extending from 1 south to 4 north latitude and 30 to 35 east longitude. Uganda is bordered by Tanzania and Rwanda to the south, Zaire to the west, Sudan to the north, and Kenya to the east. With a land surface of 241,139 square kilometers (roughly twice the size of the state of Pennsylvania), Uganda occupies most of the Lake Victoria Basin, which was formed by the geological shifts that created the Rift Valley during the Pleistocene era. The Sese Islands and other small islands in Lake Victoria also lie within Uganda's borders. Top of Page Top of Page Crops Land Use In the southern half of the country, rich soil and rainfall permit extensive agriculture, and in the drier and less fertile northern areas, pastoral economies are common. Approximately 21 percent of the land is cultivated and 45 percent is woodland and grassland, some of which has been cleared for roads, settlements, and farmland in the south. Approximately 13 percent of the land is set aside as national parks, forests, and game reserves. Swampland surrounding lakes in the southern and central regions supports abundant papyrus growth. The central region's woodlands and savanna give way to acacia and cactus growth in the north. Valuable seams of copper, cobalt, and other minerals have been revealed along geological fault lines in the southeast and southwest (see Mining , ch. 3). Volcanic foothills in the east contain phosphates and limestone.

43. 600AD_999AD
645CE Downfall of the soga Clan in Japan Ainu on Hokkaido after he had defeated anindigenous tribe called that was ended by an invasion of the Kyrgyz peoples.
http://timelines.ws/0600AD_999AD.HTML
Return to algis.com
c600 In China Yang Di, a Sui emperor, extended the Grand Canal. He reportedly assumed power by poisoning his father. Ma Shu-mou, aka Mahu, was one of the canal overseers and was said to have eaten a steamed 2-year-old child each day he worked on the canal. On completion the canal extended for 1,100 miles.
(WSJ, 10/25/99, p.A50) c600CE Small porkers came to Hawaii with the Polynesians some 1400 years ago, and big pigs arrived with the Europeans.
(WSJ, 7/25/95, p.A-6) c600CE Early settlers from the Marquesas built the Alakoko fishpond and taro fields on Kauai, Hawaii.
(SFEC, 8/29/99, p.T6) c600CE The Joya de Ceren Maya site in El Salvador was buried beneath 16 feet of ash from nearby Loma Caldera.
(AM, May/Jun 97 suppl. p.D) c600 "The Navigatio Sancti Brendani Abbatis" (Voyage of St. Brendan the Abbott) recounts a 7-year trip to a land across the sea by the Irish saint and a band of acolytes about this time.
(SFEM, 11/15/98, p.24) 600-700CE The Tantras, Buddhist texts for generating deep religious experiences, were produced in India.
(SFEC,12/14/97, p.T5)

44. Chapter 7: Islamic And Christian Spain In The Early Middle Ages
simply measured with a cord (soga) along a does SánchezAlbornoz) that some peoplesare naturally the growth and mobilization of indigenous Christian capital.
http://libro.uca.edu/ics/ics7.htm
THE LIBRARY OF IBERIAN RESOURCES ONLINE ISLAMIC AND CHRISTIAN SPAIN
IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES
Thomas F. Glick
PART TWO MOVEMENT OF IDEAS AND TECHNIQUES TECHNOLOGY
1. Modalities of Innovation and Change
Technology, in its broadest sense, includes all those artifacts and techniques that human beings use to adapt the natural environment to the needs of the species. Thus I have already discussed (in Chapter 2) the development of technologies In general, the movement of technological diffusion in the high middle ages followed a trajectory from China and India to the West, through the mediation of Persia, which was also a hearth of technological innovation. Sinologists, like Joseph Needham, tend to stress the consistency, longevity, and hence the slowness of this cultural flow. Islamists, like Juan Vernet, tend to stress the speed of diffusion. Both viewpoints are correct as generalizations. There tended to be substantial lags between the invention of a technique in China and its eventual arrival in the West; after the Arab conquests, however, Eastern techniques diffused much more rapidly once they gained the borders of the Islamic world. Thus the Chinese were more than one thousand years ahead of Europeans in the development of certain foundry techniques, or even simpler devices such as the wheelbarrow. Yet, the use of paper was diffused from Samarkand in the mid-eighth century to al-Andalus by mid-tenth, and "Arabic" (that is, Indian) numerals diffused throughout the Islamic world in the ninth century, in a matter of decades.

45. Exerpts.html
arc totally staffed by national, indigenous dentists. Nemoto, Yoshikazu Oikawa, RitsuSoga, Hideyuki Suya involvement with the Democratic peoples' Republic of
http://www.aims-ministry.org/journal.html
AIMS Journals
These full-version AIMS Journals come to you via the Internet in pdf format. They requires the Adobe Acrobat Reader which may be obtained free at: Adobe Acrobat
Aims Journal 2001 (Vol. 21 No. 2 ) Board Members Issue (.pdf 8.653 mB)

Because this issue is so large, it is here broken down into 7 separate files for those of you that cannot handle the single large file above.
Pages 1 thru 4 (.pdf 1.232 mB)

Pages 5 thru 8 (.pdf 1.040 mB)

Pages 9 thru 16 (.pdf 1.571 mB)

Pages 17 thru 24 (.pdf 0.741 mB)
...
Aims Journal 2000 (Vol. 21 No. 1 ) Stop Smoking Issue (.pdf 1634 kB)

Gleanings from the older AIMS Journals Autumn 1998 Summer 1998 Winter 1998 Autumn 1997 Gleanings from the AIMS Journal Autumn 1997 Fall 97 Journal Cover Photo Editorial: Don Roth, Editor This edition of the AIMS Journal focuses on the role of dentistry in the Adventist International Medical Society. The Editorial Board decided we would dedicate an entire edition of the AIMS Journal to the worldwide dental activities of the Seventh-day Adventist church. General direction for this edition was given by Dr. James Crawford, who, as an associate director for the department of health of the General Conference, is in charge of dental affairs. He is also an associate dean of the School of Dentistry of Loma Linda University.

46. Fine Arts - Modern & Contemporary | Sculptures & Paintings
1320 1981 1714 1688 napoleon's soga rosa murals florentine bonifacius increasing indigenousaccomplished hatsumoyo mariano besides maris africa louisa anxious
http://www.dot411.com/select?fine-arts

47. Livingwateruganda/Church Statistics
Nkole 1.91m; Kiga 1.63m; soga 1.61m traditional religionists are of four or five northeasternpeoples — the Karamojong Other indigenous 7, I, 65, 26,000, 52,000.
http://www.livingwateruganda.com/churchstatistics.htm
Livingwater Uganda Home Contact us
Answers to Prayer
Uganda is the first country in the world with a massive AIDS problem to halve and even reduce the numbers of the afflicted from possibly 25% in 1992 to possibly 8-10% in 2000. Both government and churches faced up to the terrible calamity and have successfully worked to achieve this reduction The East African Revival brought new life and fervency to the large Church of Uganda and other smaller denominations for 30 years after its beginnings in 1936 Renewed revival from 1986 onwards — widespread prayer movements, the amazing growth of the Pentecostal Assemblies and a revival movement in the Catholic Church in 1995
Challenges for Prayer
The devastation of the Amin and Obote years with unrestrained terror, murder, tribal warfare and corruption destroyed much of the economic and social fabric of the nation and hastened the spread of AIDS The Church though in part being revived and growing, needs prayer for:

48. PRECOLONIAL METALWORKING IN AFRICA A BIBLIOGRAPHY.
PRECOLONIAL METALWORKING IN africa A BIBLIOGRAPHY. MILLER T. MAGGS Originally compiled by Dr Tim Maggs and staff of the Natal Museum, Private Bag 9070, Pietermaritzburg 3200, South africa.
http://www.uct.ac.za/depts/age/material/metbib.htm

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