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Mobile (French name for the indigenous Mauvilla tribe) [14] Mobile County [14] Moulton (after a settler) [15] Mon Louis (named for the nearby Mon Louis Island. The island was named by Nicholas Baudin, Sieur de Miragouin, in honor of his French native city Montlouis-sur-Loire) Ozark [15] Perdue Hill [15] Piedmont [15] Semmes (for Raphael Semmes ...
Lost Ark [a] is an online MMO action role-playing game [1] [2] developed by Smilegate RPG, a South Korean video game company. [3] It was revealed in South Korea on November 12, 2014 by Smilegate. [ 4 ]
Forest Lodge Guest House. The 2-story guest house was designed by Magnus Jemne and built 1928-29. Inside is a 24x34 foot "old English great room" with a vaulted ceiling and a kitchen with a dumbwaiter to deliver food to the great room. [2] [6] View of the garage and cow barn at Forest Lodge. The "Cow Palace" was built in 1929 and expanded in 1940.
The area, like much of northern Illinois, was inhabited by the Powtawatomi tribe until 1836, when they were removed by the government. [2] One of the very first Irish settlers in the area was Michael Yore, [3] who built a log cabin near to the intersection of Telegraph and Old Mill Roads today in Lake Forest. [1]
A forest called the Brecilian Forest is inhabited by elves and filled with magical ruins in the video game Dragon Age: Origins. In C. S. Lewis's That Hideous Strength, the tomb of Merlin is located in the fictitious Bragdon Forest. The forest is tied to the elves in Judith Tarr's historical fantasy The Hound and the Falcon and Alamut series.
French Island is a census-designated place (CDP) in La Crosse County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 4,207 at the 2010 census. [3] It lies on an island of the same name, though they are not coextensive; a portion of the island is part of the city of La Crosse. All of the island is part of the La Crosse Metropolitan Statistical Area.
At times Glacial River Warren overflowed its bed and Garrard's Bluff would have been an island. [2] The area is near the northern extreme of the Driftless Area of Minnesota, a region that remained unglaciated during the phases of the last ice age. In the present day, a creek flows through the eastern end of the park into Lake Pepin.
There are over 800 plant species on the islands and lakeshore. [6] Ecologically, the islands contain some old growth, but primarily secondary Northern hardwood forest.There are elements of the oak, hickory, and hemlock hardwood forests of the eastern United States, but also features of the Boreal forest typical of Ontario.