Muckle Mou'd Meg - Geograph
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Muckle Mou'd Meg - Geograph
Muckle may refer to: People * Ansetta Muckle de Chabert (1908–1976), businesswoman and activist from Saint Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands * John Muckle (born 1954), writer of fiction, poetry, and literary criticism Places * Muckle Bluff, a bluff on the south coast of Elephant Island in the South Shetland Islands of Antarctica *Muckle Flugga, a small rocky island north of Unst in the Shetland Islands, Scotland *Muckle Flugga Lighthouse, punctuates the rocky stack of Muckle Flugga, in Shetland, Scotland *Muckle Green Holm, uninhabited island in the North Isles of the Orkney archipelago in Scotland *Muckle Holm (other), the name of a number of islands in Orkney and Shetland *Muckle Holm, Yell Sound, small island in Shetland *Muckle Roe, island in Shetland, Scotland, in St. Magnus Bay, to the west of Mainland, Shetland *Muckle Skerry, the largest of the Pentland Skerries that lie off the north coast of Scotland *Muckle Ward, the highest hill in Vementry, an uninhabited isla ...
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Ansetta Muckle De Chabert
Ansetta de Chabert (also known as Annie Muckle de Chabert, Annie de Chabert Clarke, Annie de Chabert, or simply Miss Annie) (February 11, 1908–1976), was a United States Virgin Islands businesswoman and civic activist. de Chabert sold a significant amount of her family land to Hess Oil and Chemical for an oil refinery in 1955, negotiating face-to-face with owner Leon Hess. With some of the money, she invested and brought the Sunny Isle Shopping Center to St. Croix. A member of the Democratic Party (United States), Democratic Party, she was made National Committee Woman from 1967 to 1972. She was also elected to and served on the Virgin Islands Board of Education as the chair from 1964 to 1970 and was active in several community organizations. She died of a stroke in 1976. She was married first to Ralph de Magne de Chabert Sr., a local civil servant, farmer, and real estate investor. After his death, she married Reverend Clarke, the vicar of St. John's Episcopal Church in Chri ...
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Vementry
Vementry (Old Norse: "Vemunðarey") is an uninhabited Scottish island in Shetland on the north side of the West Mainland, lying south of Muckle Roe. Description and history The island is known for its well-preserved chambered cairn. The well-preserved remains of a Neolithic heel-shaped cairn about in diameter and rising to over in height."Vementry"
RCAHMS. Retrieved 27 September 2013. Also on the island are two 6-inch QF Mk I emplacements which overlook the narrow entrance into the former naval anchora ...
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MUCL (other)
MUCL may refer to: Organisations * BCCM/MUCL, an environmental and applied mycology collection part of the Belgian Co-ordinated Collections of Micro-organisms * Vilo Acuña Airport Vilo Acuña Airport () is an international airport serving Cayo Largo del Sur, a small coral island in Cuba. It is located within the special municipality (''municipio especial'') of Isla de la Juventud. Facilities The airport resides at an e ...
(IATA: CYO, ICAO: MUCL) {{disambig ...
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Willcock V Muckle
Willcock and similar can mean: * Alex Willcock, the founder and CEO of Imagini the owner of VisualDNA technology * Amy Willcock, an American-born British-based cookery book writer, who having specialised in cooking on the AGA cooker * Chris Willcock, Christopher Willcock (born 1947) is an Australian Jesuit priest * Eric Willcock (born 28 September 1947), a former English cricketer * Harry Willcock (23 January 1896 - 12 December 1952), a member of the Liberal Party, was the last person to be prosecuted for refusing to produce an Identity Card *John Willcock, John Collings Willcock (9 August 1879–7 June 1956) was the 15th Premier of Western Australia * Kevin Willcock, Kevin James Willcock (born 8 March 1973), a former English cricketer See also * Wilcock *Wilcox (other) *Wilcox (surname) * Willcocks * Willcox (other) *Willcox (surname) Willcox is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Anita Parkhurst Willcox, American artist, feminist and pacifist * ...
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Muckle Spate (1829)
The Muckle Spate was a great flood in August 1829, which devastated much of Strathspey, Scotland, Strathspey, in the north east of Scotland. Muckle is a Scots language, Scots word for 'much' or 'great'. It began raining on the evening of 2 August 1829, and continued into the next day when a thunderstorm broke over the Cairngorms. To the south, the River Dee, Aberdeenshire, River Dee rose rapidly above its normal level - 15 ft (4.6 m) in places (27 ft at Banchory). The Rivers River Nairn, Nairn, River Findhorn, Findhorn, River Lossie, Lossie and River Spey, Spey were affected, to the north. Damage As well as flooding, many bridges were washed away, including those over the Linn of Dee and Linn of Quoich. The original Mar Lodge was affected. Carrbridge's most famous landmark, the old bridge, built in 1717, from which the village is named, was severely damaged and left in the condition we see today. Homes were lost in Kingston, Moray, a small village on the Moray Firth c ...
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Muckle Snippeck
The Eurasian woodcock (''Scolopax rusticola'') is a medium-small wading bird found in temperate and subarctic Eurasia. It has cryptic camouflage to suit its woodland habitat, with reddish-brown upperparts and buff-coloured underparts. Its eyes are set far back on its head to give it 360-degree vision and it probes in the ground for food with its long, sensitive bill, making it vulnerable to cold weather when the ground remains frozen. The male performs a courtship flight known as "roding" at dusk in spring. It is widely believed that the female will sometimes carry chicks between her legs whilst flying, though evidence of this is purely anecdotal. The world population is estimated to be 14 million to 16 million birds. Taxonomy The Eurasian woodcock was formally described by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the tenth edition of his ''Systema Naturae'' under the current binomial name ''Scolopax rusticola''. The genus name is Latin for a snipe or woodcock. The spe ...
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Muckle–Wells Syndrome
Muckle–Wells syndrome (MWS) is a rare autosomal dominant disease which causes sensorineural deafness and recurrent hives, and can lead to amyloidosis. Individuals with MWS often have episodic fever, chills, and joint pain. As a result, MWS is considered a type of periodic fever syndrome. MWS is caused by a defect in the CIAS1 gene which creates the protein cryopyrin. MWS is closely related to two other syndromes, familial cold urticaria and neonatal onset multisystem inflammatory disease—in fact, all three are related to mutations in the same gene and subsumed under the term cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS). Sign and symptoms * Sensorineural deafness * Recurrent urticaria (hives) * Fevers * Chills * Arthralgia (painful joints) Causes Muckle-Wells syndrome occurs when a mutation in the ''NLRP3'' gene leads to increased activity of the protein NLRP3 (cryopyrin). This protein is partly responsible for the body's response to damage or infection. During th ...
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Muckle Men
Finn-men, also known as, Muckle men, Fion and Fin Finn, were Inuit sighted in the 17th century around the Northern Isles of Scotland. Sightings The first recorded sighting was in Orkney, in 1682. James Wallace, writing in about 1688, described a Finn-man in his "little Boat" at the south end of Eday being seen by the people of the island from the shore, and then fleeing swiftly when the islanders put out a boat to try and apprehend him. In 1684, a Finn-man seen at Westray was connected with the disappearance of fish from the area. A boat was captured in Orkney, and sent to the Physicians Hall in Edinburgh. Origins The "Finn-men" were initially identified as " Finns", an umbrella term used in the local language of the Orcadians to denote either Sami, Kven or Forest Finns. However, these "Finn-men" were in fact Inuit from the Davis Strait region, a fact recognised by Wallace. As it was considered more probable that they had sailed to the islands from the Cap of the North, the mi ...
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Muckle Water
Muckle Water is a long, narrow fresh water loch on Ward Hill on Rousay, Orkney, Scotland. It is the biggest loch on the island and is popular for fishing. It can be reached by a track from the roadside. The Suso Burn on the north eastern shore drains the loch into the Sound of Rousay. A rare hybrid pondweed (''Potamogeton'' sp.) is found in the loch as a result of its unique nutrient levels. The loch was surveyed in 1906 by James Murray and later charted as part of The Bathymetrical Survey of Fresh-Water Lochs of Scotland 1897-1909 . The Nuggle In Orkney folklore it is said that Muckle Water is haunted by a Nuggle, a magical creature usually in the form of horse similar to the Celtic kelpie A kelpie, or water kelpie (Scottish Gaelic: '' each-uisge''), is a mythical shape-shifting spirit inhabiting lochs in Scottish folklore. Legends of these shape-shifting water-horses, under various names, spread across the British Isles, appea .... The Nuggle waits at the loch side un ...
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Muckle Ward
Vementry (Old Norse: "Vemunðarey") is an uninhabited Scottish island in Shetland on the north side of the West Mainland, lying south of Muckle Roe. Description and history The island is known for its well-preserved chambered cairn. The well-preserved remains of a Neolithic heel-shaped cairn about in diameter and rising to over in height."Vementry"
RCAHMS. Retrieved 27 September 2013. Also on the island are two 6-inch QF Mk I emplacements which overlook the narrow entrance into the former naval anchorag ...
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John Muckle
John Muckle (born 9 December 1954) is a British writer who has published fiction, poetry and literary criticism. Born in Kingston-upon-Thames, he grew up in the village of Cobham, Surrey. After qualifying as a teacher and working in London FE colleges, he moved into book publishing, first for literary publisher Marion Boyars, moving on to Grafton Books (later subsumed into HarperCollins) as a paperback copywriter. In the mid-1980s he initiated the Paladin Poetry Series. He was general editor of its flagship anthology ''The New British Poetry'' and commissioned a number of other titles, including selected poems of John Ashbery, Lee Harwood and Tom Raworth. The poetry imprint was edited subsequently by writer Iain Sinclair. Muckle worked extensively as a freelance copywriter for Penguin before he returned to teaching. ''The Cresta Run'', Muckle's first book, was reviewed enthusiastically by Norman Shrapnel in ''The Guardian'': "An identifiable vernacular for this still measurable se ...
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Muckle Skerry
Muckle Skerry is the largest of the Pentland Skerries, a group of uninhabited Islet, islets that lie off the north coast of Scotland in the Pentland Firth. It is home to the Pentland Skerries Lighthouse, in the north of the island. The skerry is approximately by , with an area of . It is surrounded by low cliffs, with caves and Geo (landform), geos. There is a small landing point in Scartan Bay, to the east, with a track to the lighthouse. There is also a small burial ground. Together with Swona, it forms the Pentland Firth Islands Site of Special Scientific Interest, SSSI. Geography Muckle Skerry lies in the Pentland Firth at . It is the westernmost of the skerries. At long and rising to an elevation of above sea level, it is sizable enough to be considered an island. However, the notoriously bad weather of the firth has historically rendered Muckle Skerry uninhabitable and as such it is more often thought of as a skerry. Possible remains of a Broch at the head of Saltwa ...
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