01057cam0 22002533 450 SOB00430120230511144241.0881322987920040211d2000 |||||ita|0103 baitaITDidattica del diritto privato e laboratorio di didattica delle discipline giuridiche privatistiche con le esperienze di tirocinioa cura di Igino GrendeneCon contributi di Igino GrendeneClaudio SpagnoliFrancesca LazzariCon la prefazione di Umberto MargiottaPadovaCEDAM2000LIX, 275 p.24 cm.GRENDENE, IginoAF00016908070ITUNISOB20230511RICAUNISOBUNISOB340104845SOB004301M 102 Monografia moderna SBNM340003034SI104845ACQUISTOcarranoUNISOBUNISOB20120514114306.020120514114348.0carranoDidattica del diritto privato e laboratorio di didattica delle discipline giuridiche privatistiche962797UNISOB01551nam 2200289z- 450 99106985754033211-61640-625-9(CKB)3710000000125403(VLeBooks)9781616406257(Exl-AI)993710000000125403(EXLCZ)99371000000012540320240129c2003uuuu -u- -engThunderbirdsU.S. Air ForceArlington, Va1 online resource (1 p.)1-931044-97-X In this compelling compilation of evidence, researcher Mark Hall presents the case for terrifying, monstrous bird that has roamed our continents since the days of the ancient legends of the Thunderbird. Some very large birds are being sighted in the skies over North America. Described as an enormous black bird with a white ring around its long neck and a wingspan of up to 20 feet and more, this giant bird of prey has been sighted from Alaska, Canada, and the Pacific Northwest, and into the Midwest, Appalachia, and Pennsylvania. The accounts are puzzling and hard to believe yet eyewitnesses swear by what they saw. Evidence from around the world indicates that our ancestors knew and feared the bird, which can carry away small children and animals.CryptozoologyGenerated by AIAnimals, MythicalGenerated by AICryptozoologyAnimals, MythicalHall Mark A1621426BOOK9910698575403321Thunderbirds4178405UNINA