Bruce Hiscock was thrilled to learn that his picture book Coyote and Badger-Desert Hunters of the Southwest, is to be featured in a forthcoming Hampton-Brown/National Geographic School Publishing book for English as a second language in 5th grade. The print run will be 250,000 copies.
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- Hiscock's Point, Newfoundland and Labrador - Wikipedia, the free ...
Hiscock's Point was a small place with eight families near Burgeo. See also. List of communities in Newfoundland and Labrador - Eric Hiscock - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The book includes the story of Eric and Susan Hiscock's first ocean voyage, a prelude to their later and longer world cruises on subsequent sailboats, all named "Wanderer". - Thomas Hiscock - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hiscock's obelisk can be found about eight kilometres (4.97 miles) south of Ballarat, on the Midland Highway at the corner of Hiscock Gully Road. - Joe E. Newsome High School - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This will be Coach Ken Hiscock's first record as a head football coach and a first winning record for both him and the team. In 2007 the team started out 3-0, until losing to ... - Orobanche minor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Orobanche minor, or Common Broomrape, is a holoparasitic angiosperm belonging to the genus Orobanche; a genus of about 150 non-photosynthetic plants that parasitize other ... - Buninyong - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
... the 'official' finding of gold was when it was found 3 kilometres west of the town in 1851 by Thomas Hiscock, the local Buninyong blacksmith, at an area still known as Hiscock's. ... - Peter Hiscock - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hiscock's argument also emphasized the likely failure of much of the Pleistocene archaeological record to preserve, arguing that the apparent simplicity of early eras resulted ... - Palmaria palmata - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Palmaria palmata (Linnaeus) Kuntze, also called dulse, dillisk, dilsk, red dulse, sea lettuce flakes or creathnach, is a red alga (Rhodophyta) previously referred to as ... - Elminius modestus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Elminius modestus is a species of barnacle in the family Balanidae, native to Australia, Tasmania and New Zealand, but now spread to Britain and the north west coasts of Europe ... - Self-incompatibility in plants - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Self-incompatibility (SI) is a general name for several genetic mechanisms in angiosperms, which prevent self-fertilization and thus encourage outcrossing.