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A giant spider from J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium. She appears at the end of the fourth book, second volume (The Two Towers) of The Lord of the Rings. She is said to be a child of Ungoliant. Sergeant Stinkbug Stinkbug: Ricky Ricotta's Mighty Robot vs. the Stupid Stinkbugs from Saturn: Dav Pilkey: The main antagonist of the book.
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The National Digital Library Program (NDLP) is a project by the United States Library of Congress to assemble a digital library of reproductions of primary source materials to support the study of the history and culture of the United States. The NDLP brought online 24 million books and documents from the Library of Congress and other research ...
The pilot for the American Memory project was a digitization program which started in 1990. Selected Library of Congress holdings including examples of film, video, audio recordings, books and photographs were digitized and distributed on Laserdisc and CD-ROM.
Spiders serve as a recurring motif in the works of J. R. R. Tolkien. [66] [g] Tolkien included giant spiders in his 1937 book The Hobbit where they roamed Mirkwood, attacking and sometimes capturing the main characters. [68] The character of Ungoliant is featured as a spiderlike entity, and as a personification of Night from his earliest writings.
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Children's books about spiders (4 P) N. Novels about spiders (3 P) Pages in category "Spiders in literature"
Depictions of spiders (order Araneae) in popular culture, air-breathing arthropods that have eight legs, chelicerae with fangs generally able to inject venom, and spinnerets that extrude silk. They are the largest order of arachnids and rank seventh in total species diversity among all orders of organisms.
A digital library of new books edited in a similar way to Wikipedia Wikilala: History of Ottoman Empire: Digital library project [64] Wikisource: General 3,500,000+ A digital library of out-of-copyright or freely licensed books Wired for Books: A project of the WOUB Center for Public Media at Ohio University: Wisconsin Heritage Online