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Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: A Survey Of Nubian Origins
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: A note describing the Bayuda volcanic field, a volcanic field in Sudan, within the Bayuda Desert. It covers a surface of about 11 by 48 kilometres (6.8 mi × 29.8 mi) and consists of a number of cinder cones as well as some mars and explosion craters.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: The final page of S.Hillelson's article disputing the work of Werne on the dialects of the Shukrya people.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: Notes following a trip to study the natural history particularly of the great mass of mountains lying centrally in the province of Darfur.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Description: Pyroxenite specimen
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: The Nuer are a people located primarily in Southern Sudan along the banks of the Nile River, as well as parts of western Ethiopia. They form one of the largest ethnic groups in Southern Sudan.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: A series of reviews including G.Doiun, 'Histoire du Règne du Khédive Ismail. Tome III. L'Empire Africain, Première Partie (1863-1869), and Lois. A.C. Raphael, 'The Cape-to-Cairo Dream' (New York: Columbia University Press)
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: An update from the editorial staff of the journal addressing changes in their personal and press.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Description: Pond frog specimen
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Description: European hoopoe
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: Membership and Annual General Meeting information for the Philosophical Society Of The Sudan P.O. Box 526 Khartoum: Hon. Secretaries' Annual Report: For The Period 1St January 1966 To 31St December 1966.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: A short piece of correspondence describing a custom of the Nyangbara people.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: The first piece of publish literature to exist on the disease of plants caused by fungi in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Description: Grass frog specimen
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Description: Part of an African Giraffe jaw and teeth
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: A passage on the dangers of pearl diving such as sharks, rays, teleosts, starfish or sea urchins.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: Review of 'The Travels of Werne' which traces the history of Ferdinand Werne, a German Government service worker with a keen interest in natural history who travelled throughout Sudan.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: Tanganyika was a territory located on the continent of Africa, and administered by the United Kingdom from 1916 until 1961. The UK initially administered the territory as an occupying power with the Royal Navy and British Indian infantry seizing the territory from the Germans in 1916. From 20 July 1922, British administration was formalised by Tanganyika being created a British League of Nations mandate.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannotesandrecords
Description: A response to a previous issue of the Royal Geographical Society's Journal containing an article on the Pibor River. The Pibor River, also called the River Pibor, is a river in Eastern South Sudan, which defines part of South Sudan's border with Ethiopia. From its source near Pibor Post it flows north for about 320 kilometres (200 mi), joining the Baro River to form the Sobat River, which is a tributary of the White Nile.
Collection: universityofkhartoum.sudannaturalhistorymuseum
Items: 1123

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