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In the 2010 census, about 20,000 Maryland residents, or 0.4% of the state, self-reported American Indian as their only race. More than 50,000 people in Maryland self-identified as being at least part American Indian, constituting 1.0% of the total state population. [13]
The Indian rose-ringed parakeet (P. k. manillensis) originates from the southern Indian subcontinent and has feral and naturalised populations worldwide, in Australia, Great Britain (mainly around London), the United States, and other Western countries. It is often referred to as the Indian ringneck parrot. [5] [6]
D. p. edwardsii is nocturnal and prone to hiding and traveling under rocks, fallen logs and leaf litter, so it is not commonly observed by people despite the potential abundant population density. Another subspecies in Kansas was found to have densities of 700 to 1,800 per 1 hectare (0.0039 sq mi; 0.010 km 2 ).
The Image Existence Checker shows articles in this list that have images. Pages in category "Wikipedia requested images of people of Maryland" The following 149 pages are in this category, out of 149 total.
Some accounts say the name means "place where people trade" or "the place to which tribute is brought". [11] The natives called the river above the falls Cohongarooton , [ 12 ] translated as "river of geese", [ 13 ] and that area was renowned in early years for an abundance of both geese and swans.
The Chaptico, also known as the Cecomocomoco, [1] were a group of Native Americans who lived along the Southwestern shore of the Chesapeake Bay in what is today St. Mary's County, Maryland. They were loosely dominated by the Patuxent in the pre-colonial time.
Indian Head is a town in Charles County, Maryland, United States. The population was 3,894 at the 2020 U.S. Census . [ 3 ] It has been the site of a naval base specializing in gun and rocket propellants since 1890. [ 4 ]
By 1671, it was the largest Indian settlement in Maryland, and was made part of a reservation in 1686. Askiminokonson was located on the north side of the Pocomoke River near present-day Snow Hill, Maryland. [5]