Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The following are approximate tallies of current listings by county. These counts are based on entries in the National Register Information Database as of March 13, 2009 [2] and new weekly listings posted since then on the National Register of Historic Places web site. [3]
Location of Boone County in Missouri. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Boone County, Missouri.. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Boone County, Missouri, United States.
Some of these sites are on the National Register of Historic Places (NR) as independent sites or as part of larger historic district.Several of the sites are National Historic Landmarks (NRL).
The location of the state of Missouri. Paleontology in Missouri refers to paleontological research occurring within or conducted by people from the U.S. state of Missouri.The geologic column of Missouri spans all of geologic history from the Precambrian to present with the exception of the Permian, Triassic, and Jurassic. [1]
The history of the Mapungubwe Cultural Landscape dates back 210 million years ago when one of the earliest plant-eating dinosaurs, Plateosauravus (Euskelosaurus), was known to have lived in the area. The Mapungubwe area became a focus of agricultural research in the 1920s through the efforts of the botanist Illtyd Buller Pole-Evans.
Alligator †Arctodus †Arctodus simus Bison †Bootherium Bufo †Bufo woodhousei Life restoration of the Pliocene-Holocene camel Camelops †Camelops; Canis †Canis dirus †Canis latrans
The Chronister Dinosaur Site is a fossil site within the McNairy Sand Member of the Ripley Formation, Missouri. Dinosaur fossils are among the known remains from the Chronister Dinosaur Site, most of which are housed in Washington, D.C.'s Smithsonian Institution .
Bollinger County is part of the Cape Girardeau, MO–IL Metropolitan Statistical Area. The county is the home of the "Missouri dinosaur" discovered at an archaeological dig near Glen Allen in 1942. Blue Pond, the deepest natural pond in Missouri, is located in the southern portion of the county.