Xavier Mertz

Xavier Mertz
Mertz at the expedition's main hut, 1912
Born
Xavier Guillaume Mertz

(1882-10-06)6 October 1882
Basel, Switzerland
Died8 January 1913(1913-01-08) (aged 30)
George V Land, Antarctica
Education
Occupation(s)Polar explorer, mountaineer, skier
Known for
Signature

Xavier Guillaume Mertz (6 October 1882 – 8 January 1913) was a Swiss polar explorer, mountaineer, and skier who took part in the Far Eastern Party, a 1912–1913 component of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, which claimed his life. Mertz Glacier on the George V Coast in East Antarctica is named after him.

While a student, Mertz became active as a skier, competing in national competitions, and as a mountaineer, climbing many of the highest peaks in the Alps. In early 1911, Mertz was hired by geologist and explorer Douglas Mawson for his Antarctic expedition. He was initially employed as a ski instructor, but in Antarctica, Mertz instead joined Belgrave Edward Ninnis in the care of the expedition's Greenland huskies.

In the summer of 1912–1913, Mertz and Ninnis were chosen by Mawson to accompany him on the Far Eastern Party, using the dogs to push rapidly from the expedition's base in Adélie Land towards Victoria Land. After Ninnis and a sledge carrying most of the food disappeared down a crevasse, 311 miles (500 km) from the expedition's main hut, Mertz and Mawson headed back west, gradually using the dogs to supplement their remaining food stocks.

About 100 miles (160 km) from safety, Mertz died, leaving Mawson to carry on alone. The cause of Mertz's death has never been firmly established; the commonly purported theory is hypervitaminosis A—an excessive intake of vitamin A—from consuming the livers of the Huskies. Other theories suggest he may have died from a combination of malnutrition, cold exposure, and psychological stresses.

Early life

Xavier Mertz was born in Basel, the son of Emile Mertz, who owned a large engineering firm in the city. With the aim of working in the family business, which manufactured textile machinery, Mertz attended the University of Bern, where he studied patent law.[1][2]

While in Bern, he became active as a mountaineer and skier.[2] Mertz competed in several national competitions; in 1906 he was third in the Swiss cross-country skiing championship, and second in the German championship.[3] In 1908, he won the Swiss ski jumping championship, with a distance of 31 metres (102 ft).[4] As a mountaineer, he was particularly prolific in the Alps; he climbed Mont Blanc—the highest peak in the range—and claimed several first ascents of other mountains.[5]

After he attained his degree of Doctor of Laws from the University of Bern, Mertz studied science at the University of Lausanne; he specialised in glacier and mountain formations, for which he received his second doctorate.[nb 1][1]

Australasian Antarctic expedition

Mertz exploring ice ravines near Cape Denison

In early 1911, Mertz went to London to meet with the Australian geologist and explorer Douglas Mawson.[2] Mawson, who had served as physicist during Ernest Shackleton's 1908–1909 Nimrod expedition, was planning his own Antarctic expedition.[7]

In his application letter, Mertz wrote that he hoped Mawson would be using skis, as "they have proved so good for the purpose & knowing that I am as good as any one on skys."[5] While Mawson was intending to recruit only British subjects (chiefly Australians and New Zealanders), Mertz's qualifications prompted him to make an exception, and hire the Swiss as a ski instructor.[5] First, however, he was given responsibility for the expedition's 48 dogs, aboard the expedition ship SY Aurora, bound for Hobart.[8]

On the Aurora, Mertz met Belgrave Edward Sutton Ninnis, a lieutenant in the Royal Fusiliers. Like Mertz, Ninnis was responsible for the expedition's dogs; Aurora's captain, John King Davis, regarded the pair as "idlers". "I wish we had some one on board who could look after [the dogs]," he wrote in his diary, "it is a great shame that they should suffer from neglect."[9] On 2 December 1911, after final preparations and loading were completed in Hobart, the Aurora sailed south;[10] she stopped briefly at Macquarie Island, where a wireless relay base was established, and reached the site of the expedition's main base at Cape Denison in Adélie Land, on the Antarctic continent, in early January.[11][12]

Adélie Land

Over the following winter, preparations were made for the summer sledging. Because the conditions—constant, strong winds and an excessive slope by the hut—prevented Mertz from conducting skiing lessons as regularly as intended, he focussed instead on helping Ninnis to care for the dogs.[13] On days when the weather was good they drove the dogs around outside the hut, teaching them to run in teams; when the winds returned the pair fitted and sewed harnesses for each dog, and prepared their sledging food.[14] By this time Mertz and Ninnis developed a close friendship, as the expedition's taxidermist Charles Laseron later wrote:

The two [Mertz and Ninnis] had joined the Expedition together in London, and had been associated longer and in a more intimate manner than any other members of the Expedition. During the winter months we had all been drawn together, but between Mertz and Ninnis there existed a very deep bond. Mertz, in his warm-hearted impulsive way, had practically adopted Ninnis, and his affection was almost maternal. Ninnis, less demonstrative, reciprocated this to the full, and indeed it was hard to dissociate them in our thoughts. It was always 'Mertz and Ninnis' or 'Ninnis and Mertz', a composite entity, each the complement of the other.[15]

Mertz on the ice cliff near the base

In August, the preparations extended to laying depots; an early party established a depot 5.5 miles (8.9 km) to the south of the expedition's main hut—a grotto in the ice known as Aladdin's Cave—but returned without the dogs. Mertz and two others set off to rescue the dogs, but in heavy winds covered less than a mile in two hours, and returned to the hut. "If it depended only on me," Mertz wrote in his diary, after four days' more wind confined them to the hut, "we would be in our sleeping bags outside in the snow, and we would at least try to find the dogs. Mawson is definitely too cautious, and I wonder if he would show enough gumption during the sledging expedition."[16] The following day Mertz was part of a party of three that made it to Aladdin's Cave to rescue the dogs; when strong winds confined them to the depot for three days they spent the time expanding the cave.[17]

In September, Mertz, Ninnis, and Herbert Murphy formed a survey party, man-hauling to the south-east of Aladdin's cave. In strong winds, they travelled just 12.5 miles (20 km) in three days, before the temperature dropped to −34 °C (−29 °F) and the wind speed increased to 90 miles per hour (78 kn), confining them to the tent. When a gap in the wind allowed, they hurried back to the hut.[18]

Far Eastern Party

Last photograph taken of the Far Eastern Party

On 27 October 1912, Mawson outlined the summer sledging program.[19] Mertz and Ninnis were assigned to Mawson's own party, which would use the dogs to push quickly to the east of the expedition's base in Commonwealth Bay, towards Victoria Land.[20] The party departed Cape Denison on 10 November, heading first to Aladdin's Cave, and from there south-east towards a massive glacier encountered by Aurora on the outward journey.[21] Mertz skied ahead, scouting and providing a lead for the dogs to chase; Mawson and Ninnis manoeuvred the two dog teams behind.[22] They reached the glacier on 19 November; negotiating fields of crevasses, it was crossed in five days.[23][24] The party made quick progress once on the plateau again, but they soon encountered another glacier, far larger than the first. Despite strong winds and poor light, Mertz, Mawson and Ninnis reached the far side on 30 November.[25]

On 14 December, the party were more than 311 miles (501 km) from the Cape Denison hut. As Mertz skied ahead, singing songs from his student days, Ninnis, the largest sledge and the strongest dog team were lost when they broke through the snow lid of a crevasse.[26][27] Together with the death of their companion, Mawson and Mertz were now severely compromised; on the remaining sledge they had just ten days' worth of food, and no food for the dogs.[28] They immediately turned back west, gradually using the six remaining dogs to supplement their food supply; they ate all parts of the animals, including their livers.[29]

They initially made good progress, but as they cleared the largest glacier Mertz began to feel ill; he had lost his waterproof overpants on Ninnis' sledge, and in the cold his wet clothes were unable to dry.[30] On 30 December, a day Mawson recorded that his companion was "off colour", Mertz wrote that he was "really tired [and] shall write no more."[nb 2] Mertz's condition deteriorated over the following days—Mawson recorded he was "generally in a very bad condition. Skin coming off legs, etc"—and his illness severely slowed their progress.[32] On 8 January, with the pair about 100 miles (160 km) from the hut, Mawson recorded:

He [Mertz] is very weak, becomes more and more delirious, rarely being able to speak coherently. He will eat or drink nothing. At 8 pm he raves & breaks a tent pole. Continues to rave & call 'Oh Veh, Oh Veh' [O weh!, 'Oh dear!'] for hours. I hold him down, then he becomes more peaceful & I put him quietly in the bag. He dies peacefully at about 2 am on morning of 8th.[33][34]

Mawson buried Mertz in his sleeping bag under rough-hewn blocks of snow, along with the remaining photographic plates and an explanatory note.[35] Mawson staggered back into the Cape Denison hut a month later, missing the Aurora by a matter of hours; she had waited for Mertz, Mawson and Ninnis for three weeks until—concerned by the encroaching winter ice—Davis had sailed her out of Commonwealth Bay and back to Australia.[36][37]

Legacy

Memorial cross erected at Cape Denison

In November 1913, a month before the Aurora returned for the final time, Mawson and the six men remaining at Cape Denison erected a memorial cross for Mertz and Ninnis on Azimuth Hill to the north-west of the main hut.[38][better source needed] The cross, constructed from pieces of a broken radio mast, was accompanied by a plaque cut from wood from Mertz's bunk.[39] The cross still stands, although the crossbar has required reattaching several times, and the plaque was replaced with a replica in 1986.[40]

The first glacier the Far Eastern Party crossed on the outward journey—previously unnamed—was named by Mawson after Mertz, becoming the Mertz Glacier.[41] At a speaking engagement upon his return to Australia, Mawson praised his dead comrades: "The survivors might have an opportunity of doing something more, but these men had done their all."[42] At another, Mawson said that "Dr. Mertz was a Swiss by birth, but he was a man every Englishman would have liked to have called an Englishman ... He was a man of great feelings, generous—one of Nature's gentlemen."[43] A telegram was sent on behalf of the Australian people to Emile Mertz, condoling him on his "great loss, but congratulating you on your son's imperishable fame."[44]

The cause of Mertz's death is not certain; at the time, it was believed Mertz may have died of colitis.[45] A 1969 study by Sir John Cleland and Ronald Vernon Southcott, of the University of Adelaide, concluded that the symptoms Mawson described—hair, skin and weight loss, depression, dysentery, and persistent skin infections—indicated the men had suffered hypervitaminosis A, an excessive intake of vitamin A. Vitamin A is found in unusually high quantities in the livers of Greenland huskies, of which both Mertz and Mawson consumed large amounts;[45] indeed, as Mertz's condition deteriorated, Mawson may have given him more of the liver to eat, believing it to be more easily digested.[46]

This theory is the most widely accepted, but there have been other theories.[47] Phillip Law, former director of Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions, believed cold exposure could account for Mertz's symptoms.[48] A 2005 article in The Medical Journal of Australia by Denise Carrington-Smith, noting certain sources indicating that Mertz was essentially a vegetarian, suggested that general malnutrition and the sudden change to a predominantly meat diet could have triggered Mertz's illness. Carrington-Smith adds a more hypothetical reason: "the psychological stresses related to the death of a close friend [Ninnis] and the deaths of the dogs he had cared for, as well as the need to kill and eat his remaining dogs".[49]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Mertz's biography in the official account of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, The Home of the Blizzard, records that he also studied law at the University of Leipzig.[6]
  2. ^ Mertz's last entry in his diary was on 1 January, a week before his death. After he died, Mawson tore the remaining blank pages from the diary to save weight.[31]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b "The people: Xavier Mertz - Home of the Blizzard". Archived from the original on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 11 July 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  2. ^ a b c "Dr. Xavier Mertz: how he joined the expedition", The Hobart Mercury, National Library of Australia: 5, 27 February 1913
  3. ^ "Concerning people", The South Australian Register, National Library of Australia: 8, 14 May 1914
  4. ^ Ayres 2000, p. 56.
  5. ^ a b c Riffenburgh 2009, p. 46.
  6. ^ Mawson 1915, p. 287.
  7. ^ Jacka, Fred (1986). "Mawson, Sir Douglas (1882–1958)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
  8. ^ Ayres 2000, p. 53.
  9. ^ Ayres 2000, pp. 56–57.
  10. ^ Ayres 2000, pp. 57–58.
  11. ^ Bickel 2000, pp. 37–38.
  12. ^ Ayres 2000, p. 63.
  13. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, pp. 80–81.
  14. ^ Bickel 2000, pp. 67, 77.
  15. ^ Laseron 1947, pp. 212–213.
  16. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, pp. 91–92.
  17. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, p. 92.
  18. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, p. 94.
  19. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, p. 98.
  20. ^ Bickel 2000, pp. 78–79.
  21. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, pp. 103–104.
  22. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, p. 107.
  23. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, p. 108.
  24. ^ Mawson 1915, p. 230.
  25. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, pp. 110–112.
  26. ^ Hayes 1936, p. 163.
  27. ^ Ayres 2000, pp. 72–73.
  28. ^ Hall 2000, p. 126.
  29. ^ Ayres 2000, pp. 74–76.
  30. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, pp. 126–127.
  31. ^ Ayres 2000, p. 76.
  32. ^ Mawson 1988, p. 156.
  33. ^ Mawson 1988, p. 158.
  34. ^ Ayres 2000, p. 77.
  35. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, p. 131.
  36. ^ Hall 2000, pp. 138–139.
  37. ^ Ayres 2000, pp. 86–87.
  38. ^ "Home of the Blizzard". Archived from the original on 20 August 2011. Retrieved 7 July 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  39. ^ Bickel 2000, p. 254.
  40. ^ "History". Mawson's Huts Foundation. Australian Antarctic Division. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
  41. ^ "Mertz Glacier". Australian Antarctic Data Centre. Australian Antarctic Division. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
  42. ^ "Dr. Mawson's Reply", The Advertiser, National Library of Australia: 16, 4 March 1914
  43. ^ "Nature's Gentlemen", The South Australian Register, National Library of Australia: 10, 3 March 1914
  44. ^ "The Cable of Sympathy", The Advertiser, National Library of Australia: 16, 4 March 1914
  45. ^ a b Riffenburgh 2009, p. 136.
  46. ^ Bickel 2000, p. 260.
  47. ^ Riffenburgh 2009, p. 137.
  48. ^ Ayres 2000, pp. 80–81.
  49. ^ Carrington-Smith 2005, p. 641.

Bibliography

  • Ayres, P. J. (2000). Mawson: a life. Melbourne University Press. ISBN 9780522848113.
  • Bickel, L. (2000). Mawson's Will: the greatest polar survival story ever written. South Royalton: Steerford. ISBN 9781586420000.
  • Carrington-Smith, D. (2005). "Mawson and Mertz: a re-evaluation of their ill-fated mapping journey". Med. J. Aust. 183 (11): 638–641. PMID 16336159.
  • Hall, L.; et al. (2000). Douglas Mawson: the life of an explorer. Sydney: New Holland. ISBN 9781864366709.
  • Hayes, J. G. (1936). The conquest of the South Pole: Antarctic exploration, 1906–1931. London: T. Butterworth. OCLC 38702053.
  • Laseron, C. F. (1947). South with Mawson: reminiscences of the Australasian Antarctic expedition. Sydney: Harrap & Co. OCLC 1065222652.
  • Mawson, D. (1915). The home of the blizzard: the story of the Australasian Antarctic expedition. London: Heinemann. OCLC 502644949.
  • Mawson, D. (1988). Jacka, F.; et al. (eds.). Mawson's Antarctic diaries. North Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 9780043202098.
  • Riffenburgh, B. (2009). Racing with death: Douglas Mawson, Antarctic explorer. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 9780747596714.

Read other articles:

Artikel ini tidak memiliki referensi atau sumber tepercaya sehingga isinya tidak bisa dipastikan. Tolong bantu perbaiki artikel ini dengan menambahkan referensi yang layak. Tulisan tanpa sumber dapat dipertanyakan dan dihapus sewaktu-waktu.Cari sumber: Tri Sakti Purwosari Makmur – berita · surat kabar · buku · cendekiawan · JSTORPT Tri Sakti Purwosari MakmurNama dagangKT&G TSPM (merek Nasional)KT&G Indonesia (merek Global)JenisPublikIndustriRok...

 

Radio station in Bismarck-Mandan, North DakotaKLXXBismarck-Mandan, North DakotaBroadcast areaBismarck-MandanFrequency1270 kHzBrandingSuper Talk 1270ProgrammingFormatCommercial; TalkAffiliationsABC News RadioGenesis Communications NetworkPremiere NetworksRadio AmericaSalem Radio NetworkUSA Radio NetworkWestwood OneBismarck BobcatsBismarck LarksMinnesota TimberwolvesOwnershipOwnerTownsquare Media(Townsquare License, LLC)Sister stationsKACL, KBYZ, KKCT, KUSBHistoryFirst air date1926 (as KGCU)For...

 

Bagian dari Alkitab KristenPerjanjian BaruLukas 7:36-37 pada Papirus 3 Injil Matius Markus Lukas Yohanes SejarahKisah Para Rasul Surat Surat-surat Paulus Roma 1 Korintus 2 Korintus Galatia Efesus Filipi Kolose 1 Tesalonika 2 Tesalonika 1 Timotius 2 Timotius Titus Filemon Ibrani Surat-surat umum Yakobus 1 Petrus 2 Petrus 1 Yohanes 2 Yohanes 3 Yohanes Yudas ApokalipsWahyu Perjanjian Lama Portal Kristenlbs Rasul Paulus ditangkap di Roma Surat Paulus Kepada Jemaat di Roma adalah salah sa...

Term used in financial capital Share in GDP of US financial sector since 1860[1] Financialization (or financialisation in British English) is a term sometimes used to describe the development of financial capitalism during the period from 1980 to present, in which debt-to-equity ratios increased and financial services accounted for an increasing share of national income relative to other sectors. Financialization describes an economic process by which exchange is facilitated through t...

 

Not to be confused with Domald. Legendary King of Sweden DomaldeMidvinterblot (1915) by Carl Larsson, which depicts the offering of king DomaldeLegendary King of SwedenPredecessorVisburSuccessorDomarIssueDomarDynastyHouse of YnglingFatherVisburMothersecond wife of VisburReligionNorse Paganism Domalde, Dómaldi or Dómaldr (Old Norse possibly Power to Judge[1]) was a legendary Swedish king of the House of Ynglings, cursed by his stepmother, according to Snorri Sturluson, with ósgæss...

 

Les Invasions barbaresPoster film asliSutradaraDenys ArcandProduserDaniel LouisDenise RobertDitulis olehDenys ArcandPemeranRémy GirardStéphane RousseauDorothée BerrymanLouise PortalMarie-Josée CrozeMarina HandsPenata musikPierre AviatSinematograferGuy DufauxPenyuntingIsabelle DedieuPerusahaanproduksiCanal+Telefilm CanadaDistributorPyramide Distribution (Prancis)Vivafilm (Kanada)Miramax Films (AS)Tanggal rilis 21 Mei 2003 (2003-05-21) (Cannes) 24 September 2003 (2003-09...

Ne doit pas être confondu avec Twitter. Cet article concerne l'acoustique. Pour les autres significations, voir Tweeter (homonymie). Cet article est une ébauche concernant l’acoustique. Vous pouvez partager vos connaissances en l’améliorant (comment ?) selon les recommandations des projets correspondants. Un tweeter à dôme Un tweeter (anglicisme, voir prononciation[1]) est un haut-parleur destiné à reproduire les fréquences sonores élevées, soit les sons aigus[2]. Gén...

 

Malayalam cinema Before 1960 1960s 1960 1961 1962 1963 19641965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970s 1970 1971 1972 1973 19741975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980s 1980 1981 1982 1983 19841985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990s 1990 1991 1992 1993 19941995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000s 2000 2001 2002 2003 20042005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010s 2010 2011 2012 2013 20142015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020s 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 vte The following is a list of Malayalam films released in the year 1978. Opening Sl.No. Film Cast Directo...

 

Запрос «Св. Лаврентия» перенаправляется сюда; см. также другие значения.Река Святого Лаврентияфр. fleuve Saint-Laurent, англ. Saint Lawrence River Берег реки Святого Лаврентия недалеко от Камураски в Квебеке Характеристика Длина 1197 км Бассейн 1 344 200 км² Расход воды 10 100[1] ...

У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Тур. Запрос «Bos taurus primigenius» перенаправляется сюда; см. также другие значения. † Тур Скелет тура Научная классификация Домен:ЭукариотыЦарство:ЖивотныеПодцарство:ЭуметазоиБез ранга:Двусторонне-симметричныеБез ранга:В...

 

Patung Robert Burns, Bernard Street, Leith, 1898, oleh David Watson Stevenson John MacMillan, Master of the Merchant Company, Edinburgh pada tahun 1899, oleh David Watson Stevenson 1901 Mary Ratu Skotlandia oleh D.W. Stevenson, Monumen Scott, Edinburgh David Watson Stevenson (25 Maret 1842 – 18 Maret 1904) adalah seorang pematung berkebangsaan Skotlandia, Ia dikenal karena pekerjaannya sebagai pembuat patung potret dan monumen dari bahan marmer dan perunggu. Biografi Stevenson lahir di Rath...

 

2010 studio album by In Fear and FaithImperialStudio album by In Fear and FaithReleasedJune 15, 2010 (2010-06-15)RecordedSpring 2010StudioSalad Days Studio, Baltimore, MarylandGenreMetalcore, post-hardcoreLength43:21LabelRiseProducerBrian McTernanIn Fear and Faith chronology Your World on Fire(2009) Imperial(2010) Symphonies(2011) Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAlternative Press[1]Review Rinse Repeat[2] Imperial is the second album by In Fe...

Untuk latihan tahun 1942, lihat Latihan Tiger (1942). Untuk kejadian militer lainnya, lihat Operasi Tiger (disambiguasi). Pendaratan tentara Amerikan di Slapton Sands di Inggris selama gladiresik untuk Penyerangan Normandia. lbsOperasi OverlordInvasi Normandia Pengenalan Tembok Atlantik Bodyguard Fortitude Zeppelin Titanic Taxable, Glimmer & Big Drum Combined Bomber Offensive Pointblank Transport Plan Postage Able Tarbrush Tiger Fabius Serangan udara pembuka Daerah Britania raya Tonga Dea...

 

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Cheonmin – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Korean lower caste Joseon class system Class Hangul Hanja Status Yangban 양반 兩班 noble class Jungin 중인 中人 intermediate class Sangmin 상�...

 

Jewish American nonprofit organization HIAS, Inc.FoundedNovember 27, 1881; 142 years ago (1881-11-27)[1]Founded atNew York, New York, U.S.[1]Tax ID no. 13-5633307[2]Legal status501(c)(3) nonprofit organization[2]PurposeTo rescue people whose lives are in danger for being who they are; to protect the most vulnerable refugees, helping them build new lives and reuniting them with their families in safety and freedom; to advocate for the protectio...

Daftar penghargaan untuk Robert Downey Jr. Downey di Prancis (Paris) pemutaran perdana Iron Man 3, April 2013 Penghargaan Menang Nominasi Academy Awards 0 2 BAFTA Awards 1 2 Critics' Choice Movie Awards 0 3 Golden Globe Awards 3 5 MTV Movie Awards 2 8 People's Choice Awardss 7 21 Primetime Emmy Awards 0 1 Saturn Awards 4 7 Screen Actors Guild Awards 1 4 Teen Choice Awardss 2 17 Overall 24 53 Berikut adalah daftar penghargaan dan nominasi yang diterima oleh Robert Downey Jr. sepanjang karier ...

 

Peta Teluk Dublik di Pulau Irlandia Teluk Dublin (bahasa Irlandia: Cuan Bhaile Átha Cliath, bahasa Inggris: Dublin Bay) adalah inlet berbentuk C dari Laut Irlandia di pantai timur Republik Irlandia. Teluk ini lebarnya sekitar 10 kilometer di sepanjang pangkalan utara-selatan, dan panjangnya 7 km ke puncaknya di pusat kota Dublin; membentang dari Howth Head di utara ke Dalkey Point di selatan. North Bull Island terletak di bagian barat laut teluk, di mana salah satu dari dua tepian pa...

 

  ميّز عن ابن كثير المكي. الإمام  ابن كثير الدمشقي معلومات شخصية اسم الولادة إسماعيل بن عمر بن كثير القرشي الدمشقي الميلاد سنة 1301 [1][2]  مجدل  الوفاة سنة 1373 (71–72 سنة)  دمشق  مكان الدفن مقابر الصوفية  [لغات أخرى]‏  المذهب الفقهي شافعي أقربا�...

Indigenous people of northwestern Canada Not to be confused with Chippewa. For the language, see Chipewyan language. Ethnic group Dënesųłı̨neA Chipewyan woman and child set out to hunt muskrat in Garson Lake, SaskatchewanTotal population30,910 (2016 census)[1]Regions with significant populationsCanadaSaskatchewan12,875Northwest Territories7,820Alberta6,350Manitoba1,905British Columbia1,225LanguagesEnglish, DenesulineReligionChristianity, AnimismRelated ethnic groupsDene, Yellowkn...

 

Valerio ScanuValerio Scanu durante il Parto da qui Tour Nazionalità Italia GenerePop[1] Periodo di attività musicale2008 – in attività Strumentovoce, pianoforte EtichettaEMI (2009-2013)NatyLoveYou Srl(2013-presente)[2] Album pubblicati9 Studio7 Live2 Sito ufficiale Modifica dati su Wikidata · Manuale Festival di Sanremo 2010 CampioniValerio Scanu (La Maddalena, 10 aprile 1990) è un cantautore e personaggio televisivo italiano. Dopo alcune es...