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everybody hands on deck. if the violence is dropping it is because of the good work of our men and women who are down there. but the numbers are huge. in the state of texas can the governor legally build a wall? is that a separation point from the white house? are they breaking from the white house? i don t see any reason we can t build the wall. the federal government is doing about this and they have stopped building the wall as planned by president trump. i know just from talking to border agents they re excited about that and make their job more doable. i applaud governor abbott trying to find because to deal with the crisis not going away. we need to deal with it and i m hopeful that the governor s plan will go into effect soon. harris: attorney general i will follow up quickly and use some of what congressman cuellar was talking about. the fentanyl and drugs coming
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In the 1800s, humans were busy scurrying across the globe prying into the blank spots on the map, why? Because, of course, they were
there. From the frozen poles of the Earth to its darkest jungles, we had a guy on it. Here in the United States, the transcontinental railroad had opened up the nation. But, despite nearly a century of poking around by native peoples, Spanish padres, men military, mountain and Mormon, there remained one big question mark over the terrain through which flowed the Green and the Colorado Rivers.
On then-existing maps of the area between Green River Wyoming and St. Thomas, Nevada, there might as well have been a label, in all-caps, bolded, italicized, underlined and with exclamation points:
University-of-nevada
Nevada
United-states
Deseret
Utah
New-york
Urbana
Green-river
Washington
Great-river
University-of-utah
Illinois
Samantha Gee/Stuff
A view of the damage to the Otūwhero Inlet, near Mārahau, after ex-Tropical Cyclone Gita barrelled through the Nelson-Tasman region in February 2018. Landslides can be seen in the hills. A new research article identified more than 4500 landslides in a 196 square kilometre area of Tasman District after Gita.
A new research article on landslides that includes suggestions for forestry management on fragile soils in Tasman District is yet to be fully assessed, says Tasman District Council environment and planning manager Dennis Bush-King. The authors of the article, published in the
New Zealand Journal of Forestry Science, used gridded rainfall, topography, lithology and land cover surfaces to develop a high-resolution model of more than 4500 landslides that occurred in a 196 square kilometre area of Tasman District in February 2018, during the time ex-Tropical Cyclone Gita brought heavy rain to the region.
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Dennis-bush-king
Tasman-district-council
Tasman-district
New-zealand-journal
Forestry-science
Tropical-cyclone-gita
Abel-tasman-national-park
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