Sunday, October 7, 2012

THE BIG FOOT KNIFE: PART 1

Western Lithics The wood is from an old growth giant sequia - from the Central Sierra (the biggest living thing on earth), it was a windfall branch. It is from an area of several recient big foot sightings. The blade is 12 by 2 inches of silver sheen from Glass Buttes Oregon, again big foot country. The asphaltum (tar) is from McCitric tar seep near Bakersfield- no self respecting big foot would be seen near Bakersfield. BY:  RAY HARWOOD  Sasquatch" redirects here. For other uses, see Sasquatch (disambiguation) and Bigfoot (disambiguation).










 

Land Rover


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Jump to: navigation, search

Land Rover
TypePrivate Unlimited Company
IndustryAutomotive
Founded1978[1]
HeadquartersJLR Gaydon Centre, Gaydon, United Kingdom[2]
Key peopleRatan Tata (Chairman)
Dr Ralf Speth (CEO)
John Edwards (Global Brand Director)[3]
ProductsAutomobiles
Owner(s)Tata Motors
Employees13,000
ParentJaguar Land Rover
Websitewww.landrover.com
Land Rover marque
OwnerTata Motors
CountryUnited Kingdom
MarketsAutomotive
Previous owners1948–1967 Rover Company
1967–1968 Leyland Motor Corporation
1968–1986 British Leyland Motor Corporation
1986–1988 Rover Group
1988–1994 British Aerospace
1994–2000 BMW
2000–2008 Ford Motor Company
Land Rover is a British car manufacturer with its headquarters in Gaydon, Warwickshire, United Kingdom which specialises in four-wheel-drive vehicles. It has been owned by the Indian company Tata Motors since 2008, forming part of their Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) group.[4] It is the second oldest four-wheel-drive car brand in the world (after Jeep).[5]
The Land Rover name was originally used by the Rover Company for one specific vehicle model, named simply the Land Rover, launched by Rover in 1948. Over the following years it developed into a marque encompassing a range of four-wheel-drive models, including the Defender, Discovery, Freelander, Range Rover, Range Rover Sport and Range Rover Evoque. Land Rovers are currently assembled in the company's Halewood and Solihull plants, with research and development taking place at JLR's Gaydon and Whitley engineering centres. Land Rover sold 194,000 vehicles worldwide in 2009.[6]
Although the brand originates from the original 1947 model, Land Rover as a company has only existed since 1978, prior to this it was a product line of the Rover Company which was subsequently absorbed into the Rover-Triumph division of the British Leyland Motor Corporation (BL) following Leyland Motor Corporation’s takeover of Rover in 1967. The ongoing commercial success of the original Land Rover series models, and latterly the Range Rover in the 1970s in the midst of BL’s well documented business troubles prompted the establishment of a separate Land Rover company but still under the BL umbrella, remaining part of the subsequent Rover Group in 1988, under the ownership of British Aerospace after the remains of British Leyland were broken up and privatised. In 1994 Rover Group plc was acquired by BMW. In 2000, Rover Group was broken-up by BMW and Land Rover was sold to Ford Motor Company, becoming part of its Premier Automotive Group. In June 2008, Ford sold both Land Rover and Jaguar Cars to Tata Motors.[7][8][











Bigfoot
(Sasquatch)
Smalfut.jpg

Frame 352 from the Patterson-Gimlin film, alleged by Roger Patterson and Robert Gimlin to show a Bigfoot, and by some others to show a man in an ape suit.[1]
Creature
GroupingCryptid
Sub groupingHominid
Data
CountryUnited States
HabitatForest
Bigfoot, also known as sasquatch, is the name given to an ape-like creature that some people believe inhabits forests, mainly in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. Bigfoot is usually described as a large, hairy, bipedal humanoid. The term sasquatch is an anglicized derivative of the Halkomelem word sásq’ets.[2][3]















Scientists discount the existence of Bigfoot and consider it to be a combination of folklore, misidentification, and hoax,[4] rather than a living animal, because of the lack of physical evidence and the large numbers of creatures that would be necessary to maintain a breeding population.[5][6] A few scientists, such as Jane Goodall[7] and Jeffrey Meldrum, have expressed interest and some measure of belief in the creature