Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Bald Eagle (clipper), an American sailing ship. Bald Eagle (horse), American Champion Thoroughbred raceflag. Woapalanne (d. 1779), known as Chief Bald Eagle, Lenape tribal leader. Categories: Disambiguation pages. Place name disambiguation pages.

  2. Today bald eagle numbers continue to soar despite threats like illegal hunting and electrocution from power lines. A 2019 survey found that the population in the lower 48 states quadrupled since 2009.

  3. Bald Eagle (clipper) Bald Eagle. (clipper) Bald Eagle was a clipper ship launched in 1852 which made four round-trip passages from eastern U.S. ports before being lost on her fifth voyage in the Pacific Ocean in 1861. She set the record, 78 days 22 hours, for the fastest passage of a fully loaded ship between San Francisco and New York.

  4. The Bald eagle is an easily identified species of bird. Its body and wings are dark browns in color while the head and tail are white. The legs and feet are bright yellow and the eyes are light yellow. The Bald eagle has sharp talons on its feet and large, hooked beaks. Males of this species are smaller than females.

  5. 15.5 kts. USNS Bald Eagle (T-AF-50) was a Maritime Commission type C2-S-B1 cargo ship delivered to the War Shipping Administration (WSA) in May 1943. The ship was operated by WSA agent shipping companies until July 1948 when laid up in the James River Reserve Fleet briefly before beginning operation for the U.S. Army in October.

  6. Haliaeetus leucocephalus. L'aquila di mare testabianca cova 2-4 grosse uova, pesanti anche 750 grammi, da cui escono pulcini grossi quanto un pettirosso e totalmente bianchi. Spesso in una covata di tre o più uova, uno, più debole, muore. I genitori alimentano i pulcini con pesci e lucertole.

  7. Bald Eagle (1955–1977) was an American-bred Thoroughbred Eclipse Award-winning racehorse who competed successfully in both the United Kingdom and the United States. He won the Washington, D.C. International Stakes twice, in 1959 and 1960.