Ví dụ về việc sử dụng Lord howe trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
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Lord Howe Standard Time.
Some rangers ran into a French scouting party andin the fierce skirmish that followed Lord Howe, the darling of the army, was shot through the heart.
Lord Howe Island has a warm sub-tropical climate.
It is native to the lakes, dams and coastal rivers of south-eastern Australia, New Zealand, and much of the South Pacific, including New Caledonia,Norfolk Island, Lord Howe Island, Tahiti, and Fiji.
Lord Howe Island's wonders were giving me a glimpse of His own power and beauty.
Mọi người cũng dịch
Taking its name from Lieutenant Henry Lidgbird Ball,who on the same trip discovered Lord Howe Island, which lies around 20 kilometers northwest, Balls Pyramid is not technically a pyramid, at least in the sense that it is not manmade.
The Lord Howe Island Group is recorded by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site of global natural significance.
This triggered a second wave of extinctions, including the vinous-tinted thrush,robust white-eye, Lord Howe starling, Lord Howe fantail and the Lord Howe gerygone as well as the destruction of the native phasmid and decimation of palm fruits.
The Lord Howe Island Board instigated an extensive biological and environmental survey(published in 1974), which has guided the island conservation program.
It has a number of subspecies, with three existing in Australia, longirostris from the Kimberly, Western Australia to Cape York Peninsula, chrysochlora from Cape York Peninsula to southern New SouthWales as well as Norfolk Island and Lord Howe Island, and natalis from Christmas Island.
Another endemic invertebrate, the Lord Howe Placostylus, has also been affected by the introduction of the black rat.
The Lord Howe Island Board is a NSW Statutory Authority established under the Lord Howe Island Act, 1953, to administer the island as part of the state of New South Wales.
Other oceanic plateaus, however, are made of rifted continental crust,for example Falkland Plateau, Lord Howe Rise, and parts of Kerguelen, Seychelles, and Arctic ridges.[3] Plateaus formed by large igneous provinces were formed by the equivalent of continental flood basalts such as the Deccan Traps in India and the Snake River Plain in the United States.
The Lord Howe Island wood-feeding cockroach() is listed as endangered by the New South Wales Scientific Committee, but the cockroach may be extinct on Lord Howe Island itself.
For example, when the black rat reached Lord Howe Island in 1918, over 40 percent of the terrestrial bird species of the island, including the Lord Howe fantail, became extinct within ten years.
Apart from Lord Howe Island itself the most notable of these is the pointed rocky islet Ball's Pyramid, a 551-metre-high(1,808 ft) eroded volcano about 23 km(14 mi) to the southeast, which is uninhabited but bird-colonised.
It is extinct in its largest habitat, Lord Howe Island, and has been called"the rarest insect in the world", as the rediscovered population consisted of 24 individuals living on the small islet of Ball's Pyramid.
The Lord Howe Island Group is an unincorporated part of the Australian state of New South Wales that is administered by the Lord Howe Island Board, which reports to the New South Wales Minister for Environment and Heritage.
Watercolour sketches of native birds including the Lord Howe Woodhen(Gallirallus sylvestris), White Gallinule(Porphyrio albus), and Lord Howe Pigeon(Columba vitiensis godmanae), were made by artists including George Raper and John Hunter.
The Lord Howe Island Group is part of the state of New South Wales[13] andfor legal purposes is regarded as an unincorporated area administered by the Lord Howe Island Board[13] which reports to the New South Wales Minister for Environment and Heritage.
Farther afield, both Norfolk Island and Lord Howe Island- located under the clear skies associated with the blocking high- have recorded exceptionally low rainfall so far this year, worsening the drought conditions caused by a very dry 2018.
The Lord Howe Island Group is part of the state of New South Wales that, for legal purposes,is regarded as an unincorporated area administered by the Lord Howe Island Board which reports to the New South Wales Minister for Climate Change, Environment and Water.
The first reported sighting of Lord Howe Island was on 17 February 1788 when Lieutenant Henry Lidgbird Ball, commander of the Armed Tender HMS Supply was on its way from Botany Bay to found a penal settlement on Norfolk Island.
Permanent settlement on Lord Howe was established in June 1834, when the British whaling barque Caroline, sailing from New Zealand and commanded by Captain John Blinkenthorpe, landed at what is now known as Blinky Beach.
The first reported sighting of Lord Howe Island took place on 17 February 1788, when Lieutenant Henry Lidgbird Ball, commander of the Armed Tender HMS Supply, was en route from Botany Bay to found a penal settlement on Norfolk Island.
By 2012, there were over 1,000 adult Lord Howe stick insects in captivity and around 20,000 eggs, many of which have been sent to zoos all over the world, including the Bristol Zoo in Europe, the San Diego Zoo in the United States, and the Toronto Zoo in Canada.
The first round of extinctions included the Lord Howe swamphen or white gallinule, white-throated pigeon, red-crowned parakeet and the Tasman booby, which were eliminated by visitors and settlers during the nineteenth century either from overhunting for food or protection of crops.
In geological terms at 7 million years old Lord Howe Island is relatively young and was never part of any continent, its flora and fauna colonising the island from across the sea, carried by wind, water or birds, possibly assisted at a geological time when other islands were exposed, enabling island hopping.