Luke Spanton is a young 25 year old Big Game Guide and Outfitter, in the northern part of British Columbia with a guiding area of approximately 3000 square miles. The Department of Mines along with it’s henchman Jack Savage are determined to build a road into the middle of the most pristine mountain wilderness in the world; just so happens that is to go through the middle of Luke’s guiding area. Luke is determined to stop them by any means legally possible. His mentor, bush pilot friend, Midnight Anderson is there to help. Luke is confronted with bulldozers, graders, planes and helicopters. He is battled by the elements, rain, mud, sleet and snow, but he presses on. This is a story about one man’s struggle to save some of the most beautiful mountain wilderness country in the world. LHC.
As a middle-aged man, Luke Spanton had semi-retired to a small town in eastern Utah. Ballard was defi nitely a small town and thats just the way Luke liked it. He had taken a part-time job selling irrigation equipment for a local Farmers Equipment Supply Store. It was a hot Friday afternoon and just after passing through Blanding on his way home, empty handed, his cell phone rang. It was his boss and he was pissed. Luke had failed to close a deal on a large sale of irrigation equipment and his boss was in no mood to hear excuses. As Luke crested the ridge north of Blanding, thankfully for him, he lost cell phone reception. What a wasted day he thought, as he drove on in the heat. All was fi nally silent, at least until Monday or so he thought. Luke had no idea that he was about to witness an assassination and that for the next few weeks his life would become the biggest nightmare he could ever imagine.
Présentation de l'éditeur : "Robidoux Chronicles treats with comprehensive documentary detail the factual history of the Robidoux lineage in North America from the first progenitor who arrived in Quebec in about 1665- through the famous six brothers who distinguished themselves as Mountain Men- up until even recent times on reservations in the US. Many members of the Robidoux family were intimately connected to the entire history of the North American fur trade. The six brothers- born in St. Louis before the coming of Lewis & Clark- were important fur-traders during the classical Rendezvous era of the North American fur trade. They became key players in the organization & articulation of the Overland Trail- only to die soon afterward in relative obscurity upon the plains of Kansas & Nebraska. By the 1950's- the story of the Robidoux had been almost entirely forgotten. Subsequent historians had lost all but a scant & fragmentary knowledge of the true role & exploits of the Robidoux & their French-Indian compatriots upon the frontiers of the old west. Antoine Robidoux was the first to establish permanent trading settlements west of the Rockies in the Inter-Montane corridor & his brother Michel was one of the first expeditions to traverse the length of the Grand Canyon. The eldest brother Joseph became one of the earliest established traders on the upper Missouri & founded St. Joseph, Missouri, which was later to be the primary starting point of the Overland Trail. His younger brother Louis became one of the earliest ranch owners in California, becoming Don of the Jurupa- that encompassed the areas known today as Riverside, San Bernardino, San Jacinto & San Timoteo. An entire inter-tribal French-Indian ethnocultural orientation had developed upon the plains- prairies & mountains of the Trans-Mississippi west a good fifty years before the coming of the Iron Horse & the Pony Express- & has been carried on today in proximity to the reservations of Kansas & Oklahoma- South Dakota & Wyoming.
The area of analysis and control of mechanical systems using differential geometry is flourishing. This book collects many results over the last decade and provides a comprehensive introduction to the area.
Take a walk down memory lane and experience the past of Aquidneck Island and her neighbors. Over two hundred stunning photographs and detailed, informative captions offer a glimpse into the rich pasts of Newport, Jamestown, Portsmouth, and Middletown, as well as Prudence, Gould, Hog, and Rose Islands. I n March of 1638, a group of Bostonians met with Roger Williams and decided to purchase the Island of Aquidneck. In the years that followed, the towns of Newport, Portsmouth, and Middletown were founded and soon became distinct components of a Narragansett Bay community. These islands have flourished into thriving coastal communitites renowned for their beauty and character.
UCL Institute of Archaeology PhD Series, Volume 1 The research presented in this book advances scholarship on Anglo-Saxon non-elite rural settlements through the analysis of material culture. Forty-four non-elite sites and the high-status site of Staunch Meadow, occupied throughout the Anglo-Saxon period (c. 5th-11th centuries) and geographically representative of Anglo-Saxon settlement in England, were selected for study. Comparative analyses of the material culture assemblages and settlement data from these sites were evaluated from four main research perspectives: the archaeological contexts and distributional patterns of material culture at the sites; the range and character of material culture; patterns of material culture consumption; and material culture as evidence for the economic reach of rural settlements.
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