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  2. The Grass Roots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Grass_Roots

    The Grass Roots also recorded songs written by the group's musicians, which appeared on their albums and the B-sides of many hit singles. As the Grass Roots, they had their first top-10 hit in the summer of 1967 with "Let's Live for Today", an English-language cover version of "Piangi con me", a 1966 hit for the Anglo-Italian quartet The Rokes.

  3. Rob Grill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rob_Grill

    The Grass Roots played at Newport Pop Festival 1969 at Devonshire Downs, which was a racetrack at the time but now is part of the North Campus for California State University at Northridge. They played on Sunday, June 22, which was the final day of the festival, as their top twenty hit "Wait A Million Years" was hitting the airwaves.

  4. Mars habitat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_habitat

    (M. Dowman, 1989) [1] 1990s era NASA design featuring 'spam can' type habitat landers. The downside may be minimal shielding for the crew, and two ideas are to use Mars materials, such as ice, to increase shielding, and another is to move underground, perhaps caves. A Mars habitat is a hypothetical place where humans could live on Mars.

  5. Warren Entner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Entner

    After departing from The Grass Roots in the mid 70s, Entner went behind the scenes of the music business and became a manager. Owning his own firm Warren Entner Management, Entner managed a number of hard rock artists including Angel, Quiet Riot, Faith No More, [4] Rage Against the Machine, Deftones, as well as other acts such as The Grays, Failure and Nada Surf.

  6. How did ancient humans survive brutal conditions in ‘roof of ...

    www.aol.com/did-ancient-humans-survive-brutal...

    The Tibetan Plateau has more snow and ice than anywhere on Earth except the north and south poles, experts said.

  7. Grassland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grassland

    Similar to montane grasslands, polar Arctic tundra can have grasses, but high soil moisture means that few tundras are grass-dominated today. However, during the Pleistocene glacial periods (commonly referred to as ice ages ), a grassland known as steppe-tundra or mammoth steppe occupied large areas of the Northern Hemisphere.

  8. Seagrass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seagrass

    The roots can live in an anoxic environment and depend on oxygen transport from the leaves and rhizomes but are also important in the nutrient transfer processes. [4] [5] Seagrasses profoundly influence the physical, chemical, and biological environments of coastal waters. [4]

  9. This is what the human body would have to look like to ...

    www.aol.com/news/2016-07-21-this-is-what-the...

    An Australian sculptor has created a model of what the human body would have to look like to survive a car crash ... but modern vehicle safety technology and safe road design can drastically ...