Around the World
Page: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] 7 [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15]
Non Violence Works
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
|
Newseum: The Berlin Wall
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
|
Nettlesworth: Roman Times
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
|
National Geographic on Australia
"It’s a fact: Koalas smell like cough drops. Find out why in our new animal attraction. Sorry, it doesn’t have scratch-n-sniff. Once again, National Geographic creates a site that earns my Pick of the Day appellation. Best clicks include Creature Feature Koala, Australia Through the National Geographic Lens, Make a Boomerang (a flying disc that returns to its thrower), Desktop Wallpaper and Australian Postcards."
|
Mushing Junior
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
|
Monarchs of Britain
"Need to memorize the order of the English royals? Try this mnemonic ditty that starts withWilliam the Conqueror: "Willie, Willie, Harry, Stee. Harry, Dick, John, Harry three." You’ll findthe rest on the Monarchs front page at Brittania.com ("America’s travel gateway to the BritishIsles.") Other gems include a brief British history (thousands of years condensed into eightchapters), a guide to royal titles and honors, and many biographies."
|
Mexico: Splendors of Thirty Centuries
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
|
Mexico A Country Study
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
|
Mexico from Empire to Revolution
"Based on two recent exhibitions at the Getty Research Institute, this site " presents nineteenth-century photographs suggestive of the romance and the reality of European imperial dreams in Mexico. Images of failed French attempts to establish an empire in Mexico in the 1860s are juxtaposed with images of the ruins of ancient empires." This summer the online exhibition will expand to "document Mexico’s emergence as a modern, industrialized nation over the latter half of the nineteenth century, culminating in the tumultuous decade-long revolution that began in 1910.""
|
Mexico for Kids
"The Constitution calls our country the United Mexican States because it consists of thirty-one states and the Federal District, which have joined together to form a federation. Created by the office of the Presidency of the Republic of Mexico, this site introduces Mexican history, government, and biodiversity, and includes a page of current news (such as President’s Bush recent visit.)"
|
|
Page: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] 7 [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15]
Members currently browsing this category:
|
|
143 sites
in this category