Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bale is connected to the Message Exchange Bus (MXB), which is a technology that connects major Iranian messaging platforms like Bale, Eitaa, Soroush, Rubika, Gap and iGap and enables users to send messages and files, make voice and video calls and more between these apps without needing a separate account for each one ensuring uninterrupted ...
Bale (name), a list of people with that name; Bale baronets, an extinct title in the Baronetage of England; Bail (jewelry), also spelled bale, a component of certain types of jewelry, mostly necklaces; A variant breed or type of Abyssinian horse
Aglaophenia acacia Allman, 1883; Aglaophenia acanthocarpa Allman, 1876; Aglaophenia amoyensis Hargitt, 1927; Aglaophenia baggins Soto Àngel & Peña Cantero, 2017; Aglaophenia bakeri Bale, 1919
The Bale revolt, also known as the Bale Peasant Movement, was an insurgency that took place in the 1960s in the southeastern Ethiopian province of Bale among the local Oromo and Somali populations. The revolt targeted the feudalist system in place during the Ethiopian Empire and was rooted in ethnic and religious grievances.
Simien and Bale Mountains are natural sites while the other ten sites are listed for their cultural significance. [3] In 1996 Simien was listed as endangered because of the impact of a new road across the property, excessive cattle grazing, agricultural encroachment, and a drop in the number of populations of large mammals.
The Bale Mountains vervet (Chlorocebus djamdjamensis) is a terrestrial Old World monkey endemic to Ethiopia, found in the bamboo forests of the Bale Mountains. [1] [2] All species in Chlorocebus were formerly in the genus Cercopithecus. [1] The Bale Mountains vervet is one of the least-known primates in Africa.
The Bale Mountains tree frog (Balebreviceps hillmani) is a species of frogs in the family Brevicipitidae. It is the only species in the monotypic genus Balebreviceps and endemic to the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia. [2] Its natural habitats are tree heath (Erica arborea) woodland near the timberline as well as partly cleared mixed forest further down.
Trioceros wolfgangboehmei is native to the Bale Mountains in Dinsho and Goba. T. wolfgangboehmei resides on the northern and north-eastern slopes of the mountains, unlike other Trioceros species (T. harennae and T. balebicornutus) that are confined to the southern slopes. They primarily reside at altitudes around 2,000 to 3,000 meters above sea ...