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[ "National Library of Wales", "owner of", "National Library of Wales Framed works of art collection" ]
The National Library of Wales (Welsh: Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru), Aberystwyth, is the national legal deposit library of Wales and is one of the Welsh Government sponsored bodies. It is the biggest library in Wales, holding over 6.5 million books and periodicals, and the largest collections of archives, portraits, maps and photographic images in Wales. The Library is also home to the national collection of Welsh manuscripts, the National Screen and Sound Archive of Wales, and the most comprehensive collection of paintings and topographical prints in Wales. As the primary research library and archive in Wales and one of the largest research libraries in the United Kingdom, the National Library is a member of Research Libraries UK (RLUK) and the Consortium of European Research Libraries (CERL).At the very core of the National Library of Wales is the mission to collect and preserve materials related to Wales and Welsh life and those which can be utilised by the people of Wales for study and research. Welsh is the Library's main medium of communication but it does, however, aim to deliver all public services in Welsh and English. In January 2015 the Library, in partnership with Wikimedia UK, appointed a full-time Wikipedian in Residence with the aim of developing further its resources on an open licence, to a worldwide audience.
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[ "National Library of Wales", "owner of", "National Library of Wales archives and manuscripts catalogue" ]
The National Library of Wales (Welsh: Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru), Aberystwyth, is the national legal deposit library of Wales and is one of the Welsh Government sponsored bodies. It is the biggest library in Wales, holding over 6.5 million books and periodicals, and the largest collections of archives, portraits, maps and photographic images in Wales. The Library is also home to the national collection of Welsh manuscripts, the National Screen and Sound Archive of Wales, and the most comprehensive collection of paintings and topographical prints in Wales. As the primary research library and archive in Wales and one of the largest research libraries in the United Kingdom, the National Library is a member of Research Libraries UK (RLUK) and the Consortium of European Research Libraries (CERL).At the very core of the National Library of Wales is the mission to collect and preserve materials related to Wales and Welsh life and those which can be utilised by the people of Wales for study and research. Welsh is the Library's main medium of communication but it does, however, aim to deliver all public services in Welsh and English. In January 2015 the Library, in partnership with Wikimedia UK, appointed a full-time Wikipedian in Residence with the aim of developing further its resources on an open licence, to a worldwide audience.
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[ "Whitland", "connects with", "Saint Flewyn" ]
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[ "Whitland", "topic's main category", "Category:Whitland" ]
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[ "Lake Superior", "different from", "Lake Superior" ]
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[ "Lake Superior", "connects with", "Keweenaw Waterway" ]
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[ "Lake Superior", "topic's main category", "Category:Lake Superior" ]
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[ "Parliament for Wales Campaign", "connects with", "Megan Lloyd George" ]
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[ "Pequod (Moby-Dick)", "connects with", "Moby Dick Coin" ]
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[ "Pequod (Moby-Dick)", "significant event", "shipwrecking" ]
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[ "Norton Folgate", "connects with", "Bishopsgate" ]
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[ "Norton Folgate", "connects with", "Folgate Street" ]
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[ "Norton Folgate", "connects with", "Worship Street" ]
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[ "Norton Folgate", "connects with", "Shoreditch High Street" ]
Norton Folgate is a short length of street in London, connecting Bishopsgate with Shoreditch High Street, on the northern edge of the City of London. It constitutes a short section of the A10 road, the former Roman Ermine Street. Its name is a reminder of the tiny ancient Liberty of Norton Folgate situated in and around the area.The nearest London Underground station is Liverpool Street, also a National Rail mainline railway station. The nearest London Overground station is Shoreditch High Street. It lends its name to a character played by Samuel Barnett in the ongoing Big Finish Productions Torchwood audio drama series. In July 2015, more than 500 people protested against the demolition of the old buildings in historic Norton Folgate neighbourhood to make way for new developments. People travelled from across the country to ask for the restoration of the old structures rather than offering them to the international property investment market.
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[ "Tuskegee Railroad", "connects with", "Montgomery and West Point Railroad" ]
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[ "Forestry in Wales", "connects with", "Natural Resources Wales" ]
Management Natural Resources Wales is a Welsh Government sponsored body, for the management of all the natural resources of Wales. It was formed from a merger of the Countryside Council for Wales, Environment Agency Wales, and the Forestry Commission Wales, and also assumes some other roles formerly taken by Welsh Government. Other organisations working in Wales to improve the management of Welsh woodlands and forests include the Confederation of Forest Industries, Coed Cymru and Woodknowledge Wales.
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[ "South Hook LNG terminal", "connects with", "South Wales Gas Pipeline" ]
Description The terminal is built to receive, store and re-gasify liquefied natural gas shipped from the Qatargas 2 LNG plant in Qatar. There are five storage tanks located onsite. The large tanks are each 94 metres in diameter and 31 metres high, rising another 12 metres to the top. The volume of a large tank is roughly that of the Albert Hall. The regasified natural gas is fed through the South Wales Gas Pipeline to the national gas network at Tirley, Gloucestershire.
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[ "South Hook LNG terminal", "different from", "Dragon LNG terminal" ]
South Hook LNG terminal is an LNG regasification terminal near Milford Haven and is the largest LNG terminal in Europe. Together with the smaller Dragon LNG terminal nearby, it can handle up to 25% of the UK's gas requirement. The first tanker docked on 20 March 2009.History The project was announced in April 2003. The terminal is located at the former Esso refinery at South Hook, Herbrandston.
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[ "Dragon LNG terminal", "different from", "South Hook LNG terminal" ]
Liquefied natural gas In light of the dwindling supplies of North Sea gas, Milford Haven has become home to two new LNG terminals which eventually could provide 25% of the UK's gas requirement. Under construction from 2006, South Hook is based on the former Esso refinery facility, while Dragon LNG is based on a brownfield site of the Gulf oil refinery, now also housing SEMLogistics chemicals. The regasified natural gas is fed through National Grid plc's South Wales Gas Pipeline to the distribution point at Tirley, Gloucestershire. The first vessel, the Q-Flex-class Tembek from Qatar, docked at South Hook on 20 March 2009. The first gas to the Dragon facility was delivered 14 July 2009.
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[ "Dragon LNG terminal", "connects with", "South Wales Gas Pipeline" ]
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[ "Meibion Glyndŵr", "connects with", "Operation Tân" ]
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[ "Puente de Piedra (Zaragoza)", "connects with", "Calle Don Jaime I" ]
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[ "Puente de Piedra (Zaragoza)", "connects with", "Paseo de Echegaray y Caballero" ]
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[ "Puente de Piedra (Zaragoza)", "connects with", "Sobrarbe street" ]
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[ "Puente de Piedra (Zaragoza)", "connects with", "Paseo de la Ribera" ]
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[ "Tateyama Tunnel Trolleybus", "connects with", "Tateyama Ropeway" ]
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[ "Tateyama Tunnel Trolleybus", "connects with", "Tateyama Highland Bus" ]
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[ "Budic II of Brittany", "connects with", "Saint Tanwg" ]
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[ "TMS6100", "connects with", "Texas Instruments LPC Speech Chips" ]
The Texas Instruments TMS6100 is a 1 or 4-bit serial mask (factory)-programmed read-only memory IC. It is a companion chip to the TMS5100, CD2802, TMS5110, (rarely) TMS5200, and (rarely) TMS5220 speech synthesizer ICs, and was mask-programmed with LPC data required for a specific product. It holds 128Kib (16KiB) of data, and is mask-programmed with a start address for said data on a 16KiB boundary. It is also mask-programmable whether the /CE line needs to be high or low to activate, and also what the two (or four) 'internal' CE bits need to be set to activate, effectively making the total addressable area 18 bits. Finally, it is mask-programmable whether the bits are read out 1-bit serially or 4 at a time.
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[ "TMS6100", "has use", "speech synthesis" ]
The Texas Instruments TMS6100 is a 1 or 4-bit serial mask (factory)-programmed read-only memory IC. It is a companion chip to the TMS5100, CD2802, TMS5110, (rarely) TMS5200, and (rarely) TMS5220 speech synthesizer ICs, and was mask-programmed with LPC data required for a specific product. It holds 128Kib (16KiB) of data, and is mask-programmed with a start address for said data on a 16KiB boundary. It is also mask-programmable whether the /CE line needs to be high or low to activate, and also what the two (or four) 'internal' CE bits need to be set to activate, effectively making the total addressable area 18 bits. Finally, it is mask-programmable whether the bits are read out 1-bit serially or 4 at a time.
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[ "Moby Dick Coin", "has use", "award" ]
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[ "Moby Dick Coin", "has use", "bounty" ]
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[ "Moby Dick Coin", "connects with", "Pequod" ]
Known in the numismatic world as a "Moby Dick Coin", the Ecuadorian 8 Escudos doubloon, minted in Quito, Ecuador, between 1838 and 1843, is the one ounce of gold "sixteen dollar piece" Captain Ahab nails to the mast of the Pequod, promising it to the first man who "raises" Moby-Dick. The coin is first mentioned in Herman Melville's 1851 novel Moby-Dick, in Chapter 36 "The Quarter Deck" and later at length in Chapter 99 "The Doubloon". It is often mistaken as a Spanish doubloon, but this coin was not struck by the Spanish crown or endorsed by the Spanish government. The Moby Dick coin was minted in the Republic of Ecuador, at the Quito mint, many years after its independence from Spain.
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[ "The Ridgeway", "connects with", "Oxfordshire Way" ]
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[ "The Ridgeway", "connects with", "The Orange Way" ]
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[ "Ligand", "has use", "chelation" ]
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[ "Ligand", "different from", "ligand" ]
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[ "Ligand", "used by", "coordination chemistry" ]
History The composition of coordination complexes have been known since the early 1800s, such as Prussian blue and copper vitriol. The key breakthrough occurred when Alfred Werner reconciled formulas and isomers. He showed, among other things, that the formulas of many cobalt(III) and chromium(III) compounds can be understood if the metal has six ligands in an octahedral geometry. The first to use the term "ligand" were Alfred Werner and Carl Somiesky, in relation to silicon chemistry. The theory allows one to understand the difference between coordinated and ionic chloride in the cobalt ammine chlorides and to explain many of the previously inexplicable isomers. He resolved the first coordination complex called hexol into optical isomers, overthrowing the theory that chirality was necessarily associated with carbon compounds.Spectator ligand A spectator ligand is a tightly coordinating polydentate ligand that does not participate in chemical reactions but removes active sites on a metal. Spectator ligands influence the reactivity of the metal center to which they are bound.Bulky ligands Bulky ligands are used to control the steric properties of a metal center. They are used for many reasons, both practical and academic. On the practical side, they influence the selectivity of metal catalysts, e.g., in hydroformylation. Of academic interest, bulky ligands stabilize unusual coordination sites, e.g., reactive coligands or low coordination numbers. Often bulky ligands are employed to simulate the steric protection afforded by proteins to metal-containing active sites. Of course excessive steric bulk can prevent the coordination of certain ligands.
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[ "Ligand", "connects with", "coordination center" ]
Ambidentate ligand In contrast to polydentate ligands, ambidentate ligands can attach to the central atom in either one of two (or more) places, but not both. A example is thiocyanate, SCN−, which can attach at either the sulfur atom or the nitrogen atom. Such compounds give rise to linkage isomerism. Polydentate and ambidentate are therefore two different types of polyfunctional ligands (ligands with more than one functional group) which can bond to a metal center through different ligand atoms to form various isomers. Polydentate ligands can bond through one atom AND another (or several others) at the same time, whereas ambidentate ligands bond through one atom OR another. Proteins are complex examples of polyfunctional ligands, usually polydentate.Bridging ligand A bridging ligand links two or more metal centers. Virtually all inorganic solids with simple formulas are coordination polymers, consisting of metal ion centres linked by bridging ligands. This group of materials includes all anhydrous binary metal ion halides and pseudohalides. Bridging ligands also persist in solution. Polyatomic ligands such as carbonate are ambidentate and thus are found to often bind to two or three metals simultaneously. Atoms that bridge metals are sometimes indicated with the prefix "μ". Most inorganic solids are polymers by virtue of the presence of multiple bridging ligands. Bridging ligands, capable of coordinating multiple metal ions, have been attracting considerable interest because of their potential use as building blocks for the fabrication of functional multimetallic assemblies.Spectator ligand A spectator ligand is a tightly coordinating polydentate ligand that does not participate in chemical reactions but removes active sites on a metal. Spectator ligands influence the reactivity of the metal center to which they are bound.Bulky ligands Bulky ligands are used to control the steric properties of a metal center. They are used for many reasons, both practical and academic. On the practical side, they influence the selectivity of metal catalysts, e.g., in hydroformylation. Of academic interest, bulky ligands stabilize unusual coordination sites, e.g., reactive coligands or low coordination numbers. Often bulky ligands are employed to simulate the steric protection afforded by proteins to metal-containing active sites. Of course excessive steric bulk can prevent the coordination of certain ligands.Chiral ligands Chiral ligands are useful for inducing asymmetry within the coordination sphere. Often the ligand is employed as an optically pure group. In some cases, such as secondary amines, the asymmetry arises upon coordination. Chiral ligands are used in homogeneous catalysis, such as asymmetric hydrogenation.
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[ "Ligand", "topic's main category", "Category:Ligands" ]
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[ "Rebecca Riots", "connects with", "Thomas Rees" ]
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[ "Rebecca Riots", "topic's main category", "Category:Rebecca Riots" ]
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[ "Rebecca Riots", "connects with", "Edward Compton Lloyd Hall" ]
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[ "Rebecca Riots", "connects with", "Hugh Williams" ]
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[ "Parley's Trail", "connects with", "S Line" ]
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[ "Wetlina", "located on terrain feature", "Bukovec Mountains" ]
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[ "Wetlina", "connects with", "Voivodeship road 897" ]
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[ "Wetlina", "different from", "Wetlina River" ]
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[ "Agate Pass", "connects with", "Port Madison" ]
Agate Pass or Agate Passage is a high-current tidal strait in Puget Sound connecting Port Madison and mainland Kitsap County in the US state of Washington. It lies between Bainbridge Island and the mainland of the Kitsap Peninsula near Suquamish. It leads south towards Bremerton, extending about one mile (1.6 km) in a straight, southwesterly direction. The depth is about 20 feet (6.1 m). The shores are wooded and fairly steep. The shoreline is mostly rocky and fringed with kelp to Point Bolin. The tidal currents have velocities up to six knots; the flood tide sets southwesterly, and the ebb tide northeasterly. The traditional winter village of the Suquamish people was located on Agate Pass. It was the site of Old Man House, the largest longhouse on Puget Sound, and Haleets, a petroglyph. Agate Pass was unknown to non-native people until it was discovered by the Wilkes Expedition in 1841. Before then, Europeans thought Bainbridge Island was a peninsula. It was named by U.S. Navy Lt. Charles Wilkes in honor of one of the members of the expedition, Alfred Thomas Agate. In 1950, a fixed highway bridge, the Agate Pass Bridge was built, connecting Bainbridge Island to the Kitsap Peninsula for the first time. The bridge is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
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[ "Agate Pass", "connects with", "Port Orchard" ]
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[ "1 West Bridge Street", "connects with", "Perth Bridge" ]
1 West Bridge Street is an historic building in the Bridgend area of Perth, Scotland. A former tollbooth building, it is a Category C listed building dating to around 1800 and is located on the southern side of the eastern end of Perth Bridge. The part of the building that curved around onto Commercial Street has been demolished.It was one of three toll houses in Perth, the others being on the Edinburgh and Dundee Roads (the latter being the Barnhill Tollhouse). A bye-law on the building's noticeboard specified that locomotives crossing the bridge had to be preceded by a flagbearer. The law was enacted after a locomotive with spiked wheels damaged the road surface.After its original use, it was J. I. Laing's fruiter, fishmonger and poulterer (as of 1911) and J. S. Lees Fish & Poultry Shop later in its life.
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[ "Kobe Airport", "connects with", "Port Island Line" ]
Statistics Ground and water transportation On February 2, 2006, Kobe Airport Station was connected to Sannomiya Station in central Kobe by an extension of the existing Port Liner automated guideway transit system, using 2000 series trains as well as some older 8000 series trains (older trains being gradually replaced by newer 2000 ones). Travel time to Sannomiya is 18 minutes. From Sannomiya, it is 21 minutes to Ōsaka Station and 51 minutes to Kyoto Station by JR special rapid express. Kobe Airport is connected to Kansai Airport by the Kobe–Kanku Bay Shuttle (神戸-関空ベイ・シャトル), a high speed ferry which completes the airport-to-airport journey in 31 minutes for ¥500 for visitors to Japan. There are bus services to Shin-Kobe Station (on the San'yō Shinkansen), Sannomiya Station, and Kōbe Station in 25–38 minutes. A single trip to Shin-Kobe Station costs ¥330.
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[ "Turnpike Lane tube station", "connects with", "Turnpike Lane bus station" ]
History In the 1920s buses operated from a garage on the adjacent Whymark Avenue until in 1932 Turnpike Lane station was built. It was originally conceived as an integrated bus, train and tram station, with the bus interchange located behind the main building. It was roofed over in the 1960s.By the 1990s the bus station was deemed too small, both for the number of buses using it and the increasing length of vehicles. A new bus station was thus built which involved demolishing an adjacent cinema to extend the hardstanding.Location It is located on the junction of, and directly serves, Turnpike Lane, Wood Green High Road Wood Green and Green Lanes. London Buses routes 29, 41, 67, 121, 123, 141, 144, 184, 217, 221, 230, 231, 232, 329, 444 and W4 and night routes N29 and N91 serve the station.
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[ "Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway", "connects with", "Virginia Avenue" ]
Route description The Parkway has two points of origination on its southern end, one at the traffic circle around the Lincoln Memorial, and the other at the intersection of Ohio Drive and Independence Avenue. The eastern portion of the Lincoln Memorial traffic circle has been closed for several years, and there is no longer any easy access to the northbound parkway from that point. The Ohio Drive branch is now the main originating branch. Before the Theodore Roosevelt Bridge (I-66) was built, Constitution Avenue ran to the parkway, with Ohio Drive ending at Constitution Avenue. The parkway's entrance is framed by two monumental statues, Music and Harvest and Aspiration and Literature, which together form a group known as The Arts of Peace. They were designed by James Earle Fraser and erected in 1951.After passing under the Roosevelt Bridge, the parkway passes the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts, including an at-grade intersection with F Street Northwest north of the building. Prior to the building of the Kennedy Center, New Hampshire Avenue ran to the parkway. Beyond F Street, the parkway runs past the Watergate building; there it intersects Virginia Avenue, which provides easy access to and from the Potomac River Freeway (I-66). The Potomac River sweeps to the west at approximately this point; the parkway continues along its rough north–south path and instead parallels the small Potomac tributary of Rock Creek.Past Virginia Avenue, the parkway has many characteristics of a freeway, most notably limited access by ramp. The first interchange is with K Street Northwest, lying inside the newer Whitehurst Freeway/Potomac River Freeway interchange. Due to the partial nature of the interchange, some movements are made via Virginia Avenue instead. Just to the west, K Street crosses Rock Creek over the L Street Bridge, with the Whitehurst Freeway overhead and separate side bridges for the ramps to and from the northbound Parkway. After K Street, the parkway crosses Rock Creek, paralleling it to the west for a while.
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[ "Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway", "topic's main category", "Category:Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway" ]
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[ "Ōuchi-juku", "connects with", "Aizu Nishi Kaido" ]
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[ "Cape Erimo", "connects with", "Hokkaido Prefectural Road Route 34" ]
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[ "Dag Hammarskjöld Library", "connects with", "United Nations Secretariat Building" ]
The Dag Hammarskjöld Library is a library on the grounds of the headquarters of the United Nations, located in the Turtle Bay/East Midtown neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It is connected to the Secretariat and Conference buildings through ground level and underground corridors. It is named after Dag Hammarskjöld, the second Secretary-General of the United Nations. The library was founded in 1946, and the current library building was completed in 1961. The library provides research and reference services to staff of the UN Secretariat as well as members of UN permanent missions. Additionally, the library is the main depository for United Nations documents and publications and maintains a selected collection of materials of the specialized agencies and United Nations affiliated bodies, as well as a collection of books, periodicals and other materials related to the organization's programs of activities. The library also produces a digital library of UN materials, an index to the proceedings and documentation of the major UN bodies, as well as providing research guides for finding UN-related material and information. The library also supports the network of UN libraries throughout the world by supporting collaborative information resource purchasing.
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[ "Provo Central station", "different from", "Provo" ]
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[ "Provo Central station", "connects with", "Provo" ]
Provo Central station is an intermodal transit station in Provo, Utah, United States. It is served by the Utah Transit Authority's (UTA) FrontRunner commuter rail line as well as local, intra-county, and interstate buses. It is the southern terminus of the commuter rail system, with service running north as far as Ogden. The station is also known as Provo Intermodal Hub, Provo Station, or Provo CRS. It is part of the FrontRunner South extension.
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[ "Provo Central station", "owned by", "Utah Transit Authority" ]
Description The station is at 690 South University Avenue U.S. Route 189 on 15 acres and covers a two city block area between Freedom Boulevard (200 West) and University Avenue. It is accessed from I-15 by way of either the University Avenue or Provo Center Street (SR 114) interchanges. The station has a Park and Ride lot with over 800 free parking spaces available. The station is one block east of the Provo Amtrak station, which is a stop for the California Zephyr. While there are several retail business (including fast food restaurants) just south of the station, it is within walking distance of downtown Provo. The station is within the Quiet Zone, so all trains (including Amtrak's and Union Pacific's) do not routinely sound their horns when approaching public crossings within this corridor. The station opened, along with the rest of FrontRunner South, on December 10, 2012 and is operated by Utah Transit Authority. The Provo FrontRunner Station is the main part of the Provo Intermodal Center. UTA refers to it as an intermodal center because of the UVX BRT transfer station just south of the rail platform. UVX connects the station with Orem Central station by way of BYU and UVU.
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[ "Silures", "connects with", "Nidum" ]
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[ "Jimbōchō Book Town", "connects with", "Tokyo Metropolitan Road Route 302" ]
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[ "Albysjön (Botkyrka)", "connects with", "Fittjaviken" ]
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[ "Sannenzaka", "connects with", "Gojōzaka" ]
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[ "Sannenzaka", "connects with", "Ninenzaka" ]
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[ "Sapporo TV Tower", "different from", "Sapporo Television Broadcasting" ]
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[ "Sapporo TV Tower", "connects with", "Sapporo Chikagai" ]
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[ "Musashi Kyūryō National Government Park", "located on terrain feature", "Hiki Hills" ]
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[ "Musashi Kyūryō National Government Park", "connects with", "Saitama Prefectural Road Route 250" ]
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[ "Wakkanai Station", "said to be the same as", "Roadside station Wakkanai" ]
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[ "Wakkanai Station", "owned by", "Hokkaido Railway Company" ]
Wakkanai Station (稚内駅, Wakkanai-eki) is a railway station on the Sōya Main Line in the city of Wakkanai, Hokkaido, operated by Hokkaido Railway Company (JR Hokkaido). It is the northern terminus of the Sōya Main Line, and is also the northernmost railway station in Japan.Adjacent stations History The station opened on 26 December 1926, initially named Wakkanai Minato Station (稚内港駅, lit. "Wakkanai Port Station"). It was renamed Wakkanai on 1 February 1939 at the same time as the original Wakkanai Station was renamed Minami-Wakkanai Station.With the privatization of Japanese National Railways (JNR) on 1 April 1987, the station came under the control of JR Hokkaido.
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[ "Aloha Garden Tateyama", "connects with", "Chiba Prefectural Road Route 257" ]
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[ "Lake Kawaguchi", "connects with", "Yamanashi Prefectural Road Route 21" ]
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[ "Saiko Lake", "replaces", "Se-no-umi" ]
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[ "Saiko Lake", "connects with", "Yamanashi Prefectural Road Route 21" ]
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[ "Saiko Lake", "cause", "Jōgan eruption of Mount Fuji" ]
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[ "Saiko Lake", "different from", "Saiko" ]
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[ "Nishiki Market", "connects with", "Shinkyōgoku-dōri Street" ]
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[ "Lake Inawashiro", "located on terrain feature", "Inawashiro Basin" ]
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[ "Lake Inawashiro", "connects with", "Fukushima Prefectural Road Route 9" ]
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[ "Lake Inawashiro", "topic's main category", "Category:Lake Inawashiro" ]
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[ "Ninenzaka", "connects with", "Sannenzaka" ]
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[ "Lake Haruna", "connects with", "Gunma Prefectural Road Route 28" ]
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[ "Lake Haruna", "located on terrain feature", "Mount Haruna" ]
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[ "Island of Sculptures", "significant event", "park" ]
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[ "Island of Sculptures", "connects with", "Pontevedra Campus" ]
Description The island, which has been declared a protected natural area, is almost a kilometre long and has an elongated shape. It has an area of rushes, meadows, a main path and secondary paths. Three wooden bridges cross the inner canal and a cable-stayed footbridge over the Lérez River connects it to the Paseo del Lérez. On the island there are 12 granite sculptures by international artists. On the island come the tides and it is used by many birds as a breeding ground. It is a protected area declared LIC (place of community interest). Located near the Pontevedra Campus, the island is also used by many people as a place for walking or sports training.
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[ "Island of Sculptures", "connects with", "Pasarela peatonal sobre el Lérez" ]
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[ "Prince Albert's Front", "connects with", "Zoca Flank Battery" ]
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[ "Prince Albert's Front", "connects with", "Line Wall Road" ]
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[ "Afon Cefni (1892 ship)", "connects with", "Afon Cefni" ]
Afon Cefni was an iron, four-masted barque. She was named after Afon Cefni, one of the rivers of Anglesey. Her sister ship was Afon Alaw, also named after an Anglesey river. Like Afon Alaw, Afon Cefni was built in Glasgow, Scotland by A. Stephens & Sons for Hughes & Co from Menai Bridge, Anglesey. The ship's career, however, was not long. In January 1894 it was en route to San Francisco from Swansea when it was lost with all crew. Later, pieces of the ship washed up on the Cornish and Sussex coasts.
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[ "Afon Cefni (1892 ship)", "significant event", "destruction" ]
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[ "Pwyll Pendefig Dyfed", "connects with", "Efelffre" ]
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[ "Black Book of Basingwerk", "connects with", "The Chronicle of the Princes" ]
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[ "Maes-e", "connects with", "Hedd Gwynfor" ]
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[ "Paternoster Square", "owned by", "Mitsubishi Estate" ]
Paternoster Square is an urban development, owned by the Mitsubishi Estate, next to St Paul's Cathedral in the City of London. The area, which takes its name from Paternoster Row, once centre of the London publishing trade, was devastated by aerial bombardment in The Blitz during World War II. It is now the location of the London Stock Exchange which relocated there from Threadneedle Street in 2004. It is also the location of investment banks such as Goldman Sachs, Merrill and Nomura Securities, and of fund manager Fidelity Investments. The square itself, i.e. the plaza, is privately owned public space. In 2004, Christopher Wren's 1669 Temple Bar Gate was re-erected here as an entrance way to the plaza. The Square is near the top of a modest rise known as Ludgate Hill, the highest part of the City of London. It is characterised by its pedestrianisation and colonnades.
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[ "Paternoster Square", "significant event", "The Blitz" ]
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[ "Paternoster Square", "connects with", "Paternoster Row" ]
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[ "History of San Diego State University", "connects with", "San Diego State College" ]
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[ "Cais do Sodré railway station", "connects with", "Cais do Sodré" ]
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