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Two brothers, Francis (b. 1660) and Philip Yarnall (1664-1734) immigrated to Pennsylvania in 1683. Descendants lived in Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Ohio, Missouri, Texas, Tennessee, Arizona, Indiana, and elsewhere.
Includes entries for maps and atlases.
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Family history and genealogical information about the descendants of William Passmore Sr. who was born in England and married Margery (surname unknown) sometime prior to the year 1664. They had two sons (William Jr. and Thomas Sr.) who became Quakers, immigrated to America ca. 1713 and settled in Philadelphia. William married Ann Fielding Smith and Thomas married Mary Buxey. Descendants of William Jr. and Thomas Sr. lived primarily in Pennsylvania.
Here's quick access to more than 490,000 titles published from 1970 to 1984 arranged in Dewey sequence with sections for Adult and Juvenile Fiction. Author and Title indexes are included, and a Subject Guide correlates primary subjects with Dewey and LC classification numbers. These cumulative records are available in three separate sets.
The Corydiidae (Polyphagidae, sensu lato) is a family of extremo-phile cockroaches that have received little taxonomic attention. Their cryptic subterranean way of life in some of the most in-hospitable parts of the planet makes the study of this group particularly difficult. Arenivaga (Rehn) is a genus of Corydiid cock-roach endemic to the American Southwest, Florida, and Mexico. This unusual group of insects, not examined in nearly a century, is revised in this volume. This work includes redescriptions of the genus and its nine known species, descriptions of 39 new species, a key to the adult males, and distribution maps for each species. A photographic series of the habitus and detailed drawing of the genitalia of each species are also provided, and novel morphological characters are described. In addition, the locality data of more than 5000 specimens used in this study is now available to researchers. Even though this research increases the number of species in Arenivaga five-fold, there is little doubt that there are many more species to be found in Mexico, which is poorly surveyed in comparison to the US terrain.