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Many parrots are vividly colored, and some are multi-colored. In size they range from 8 cm (3.1 in) to 1 m (3.3 ft) in length. Most of the more than 150 species in this family are found in the New World. Monk parakeet, Myiopsitta monachus (I) Carolina parakeet, Conuropsis carolinensis (E) Green parakeet, Psittacara holochlorus (A) [142]
As the population of Miami grew between the late 1910s through the Boom era of the early 1920s, new areas reached northward along the old Dixie Highway (NE 2nd Avenue) and Avenue D (N. Miami Avenue), which extended northward from NE 36th Street. The northern city limit of Miami was moved to NE 38th Street, and this took in a part of Buena Vista ...
The Miami-Dade County Tax Records say this building was built in 1917 . [3] In August, 1914, the Miami Weather Bureau Office was relocated from the Bank of Bay Biscayne Building to the third floor of the old federal building. [4] Weather instruments were installed on the roof of the building. Richard Gray (1874-1960) was the Official-in-Charge.
The parts outside the city of Miami include 116 of these properties and districts, including 1 National Historic Landmark; they are listed here, while the properties in Miami are listed separately. One property, the Venetian Causeway, is split between Miami and Miami Beach, and is thus included on both lists. Another property was once listed ...
A Government Center district sign with the Stephen P. Clark Government Center and Miami-Dade County Courthouse in the background. Government Center is a district in the western portion of downtown Miami, Florida, bound roughly by I-95 and West (NW/SW) 3rd Avenue to the west, South (SW/SE) 1st Street to the south, North (NE/NW) 5th Street to the north, and East (NE/SE) 1st Avenue to the east.
Locally known as Northwest 36th Street and Doral Boulevard, the 3.998-mile-long (6.434 km) State Road 948 (SR 948) is a commercially important east–west highway in central Miami-Dade County, Florida.
From the 1920s to the 1950s, the Omni area was a high-end shopping area with many major department stores along Biscayne Boulevard, such as Sears, Roebuck and Company (whose tower still stands at the Arsht Center), a Burdines directly to the north at the southwestern corner of Northeast 14th Street, and a Jordan Marsh at the northeastern corner of Northeast 15th Street built in 1956). [4]
Little Haiti (French: La Petite Haïti, Haitian Creole: Ti Ayiti), [1] [2] is a neighborhood of Miami, Florida, United States. It is known historically as Lemon City, Little River and Edison. It is known historically as Lemon City, Little River and Edison.