- Caldwell, James (English potter)
Wood Family: …he entered a partnership with James Caldwell, when the style of the firm became Wood & Caldwell.
- Caldwell, Janet Taylor (American author)
Taylor Caldwell was a highly popular American novelist known for her family sagas and historical fiction. Caldwell moved to the United States with her family in 1907 and settled in Buffalo, New York. Interested in writing from an early age, she worked from 1923 to 1931 in various capacities in
- Caldwell, Robert (Scottish missionary)
Dravidian languages: The history of the Dravidian languages: Robert Caldwell, the Scottish missionary and bishop who wrote the first comparative grammar of the Dravidian languages (1856), argued that the term sometimes referred ambiguously to South Indian people and their languages; he adopted it as a generic name for the whole family since Tamil…
- Caldwell, Sarah (American opera conductor and producer)
Sarah Caldwell was an American opera conductor, producer, and impresario, noted for her innovative productions of challenging and difficult works. Caldwell was a musical prodigy who by age six was giving public violin recitals. She graduated from high school at 14 and attended the University of
- Caldwell, Shirley Marie (Canadian molecular biologist)
Shirley M. Tilghman is a Canadian molecular biologist and the first woman to serve as president of Princeton University (2001–13). Tilghman is also known for her research into genomic imprinting and gene regulation during embryonic and fetal development, which helped advance understanding of
- Caldwell, Taylor (American author)
Taylor Caldwell was a highly popular American novelist known for her family sagas and historical fiction. Caldwell moved to the United States with her family in 1907 and settled in Buffalo, New York. Interested in writing from an early age, she worked from 1923 to 1931 in various capacities in
- Caldy Island (island, Wales, United Kingdom)
Caldey Island, island in Carmarthen Bay of the Bristol Channel, Pembrokeshire (Sir Benfro) county, southwestern Wales. It lies 2.3 miles (3.7 km) south of the port of Tenby. The island is 1.5 miles (2.4 km) long and 1 mile (1.6 km) across at its widest. Since at least the 6th century, when it was
- Cale, Guillaume (French leader)
Jacquerie: Under their captain general, Guillaume Cale, or Carle, they joined forces with Parisian rebels under Étienne Marcel. The Parisians were defeated at Meaux on June 9 by Gaston Phoebus of Foix and Jean III de Grailly. Charles II of Navarre routed Cale at Clermont-en-Beauvaisis on June 10. A massacre…
- Cale, John (Welsh musician)
John Cale is a Welsh musician, composer, and producer known for his role as a founding member of the rock band the Velvet Underground and for his career as a solo artist. His work spans many musical genres, from classical and avant-garde to rock and electronica. Cale has also produced dozens of
- Cale, John Davies (Welsh musician)
John Cale is a Welsh musician, composer, and producer known for his role as a founding member of the rock band the Velvet Underground and for his career as a solo artist. His work spans many musical genres, from classical and avant-garde to rock and electronica. Cale has also produced dozens of
- Caleb (emperor of Aksum)
Ethiopia: From prehistory to the Aksumite kingdom: …6th century, Emperor Caleb (Ella-Asbeha; reigned c. 500–534) was strong enough to reach across the Red Sea in order to protect his coreligionists in Yemen against persecution by a Jewish prince. However, Christian power in South Arabia ended after 572, when the Persians invaded and disrupted trade. They were…
- Caleb (biblical figure)
Caleb, in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), one of the spies sent by Moses from Kadesh-barnea in southern Palestine to reconnoitre the land of Canaan. Only Caleb and Joshua advised the Hebrews to proceed immediately to take the land. For his faith, Caleb was rewarded with the promise that he and
- Caleb Williams (novel by Godwin)
novel: Proletarian: Consequently, William Godwin’s Caleb Williams (1794) and Robert Bage’s Hermsprong (1796), although, like Hard Times, sympathetic to the lot of the oppressed worker, are more concerned with the imposition of reform from above than with revolution from within, and the proletarian novel is essentially an intended device of…
- calèche (carriage)
calash, (from Czech kolesa: “wheels”), any of various open carriages, with facing passenger seats and an elevated coachman’s seat joined to the front of the shallow body, which somewhat resembled a small boat. A characteristic falling hood over the rear seat gave the name calash to any folding
- Calectasiacea (plant family)
Arecales: Classification: The Australian family Dasypogonaceae (also known as Calectasiacea), with four genera and 16 species, was traditionally allied with the family Liliaceae (lilies) but is now believed to be more closely related to the palms because of their common possession of ultraviolet-fluorescent compounds in the cell walls, a special…
- Caledon River (river, southern Africa)
Caledon River, tributary of the Orange River in southeastern Africa. It rises in the Drakensberg, on the Lesotho–South Africa border, and flows generally southwest, forming most of the boundary between Lesotho and Free State province, South Africa. Maseru, capital of Lesotho, lies on the river. The
- Caledonia (county, Vermont, United States)
Caledonia, county, northeastern Vermont, U.S., bounded on the southeast by New Hampshire, the Connecticut River constituting the border. Piedmont terrain occupies most of the county except the northeastern corner, which lies in a highland region. The principal waterways are the Passumpsic,
- Caledonia (printing)
typography: Mechanical composition: …two of which, Electra and Caledonia, have had wide use in American bookmaking. In the U.S., unlike England and the Continent, printers have relied far more upon Linotype than Monotype for book composition.
- Caledonia (ancient region, Britain)
Caledonia, historical area of north Britain beyond Roman control, roughly corresponding to modern Scotland. It was inhabited by the tribe of Caledones (Calidones). The Romans first invaded the district under Agricola about 80 ce and later won a decisive battle at Mons Graupius. They established a
- Caledonia Bay (archaeological site, Panama)
Gulf of Darién: …Panama coast of the gulf, Caledonia Bay is the site of remains of a 17th-century Scottish colony (New Caledonia), a shipwreck (the Olive Branch, sunk 1699), and a fortification (Fort St. Andrew, in use 1698–1700), all of which were discovered by archaeologists in 1979.
- Caledonian Canal (waterway, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Caledonian Canal, waterway running southwest to northeast across the Glen Mor fault of northern Scotland and connecting the North Sea with the North Atlantic Ocean. In 1773 James Watt was employed by the British government to make a survey for such a canal, which would link together a chain of
- Caledonian orogenic belt (geological region, Europe)
Caledonian orogenic belt, range of mountains situated in northwestern Europe, developed as a result of the opening, closure, and destruction of the Iapetus Ocean in the period from the start of the Cambrian (542 million years ago) to the end of the Silurian (about 416 million years ago). The final
- Caledonian orogeny (geological event)
Devonian Period: Significant geologic events: …by a mountain-building event, the Caledonian orogeny, that established a mountain chain stretching from present-day eastern North America through Greenland, western Scandinavia, Scotland, Ireland, and northern England and south to the fringes of western North Africa. Considerable igneous activity was associated with the Caledonian orogenic belt, both intrusive (emplacement of…
- Caledonian Union (political party, New Caledonia)
New Caledonia: History of New Caledonia: …to bring to power the Caledonian Union (Union Calédonienne) party on a ticket of full self-government in local affairs. Progress toward self-government was made in 1957 when a Territorial Assembly was created with powers to elect an executive under the presidency of a high commissioner. In the 1970s the Caledonian…
- Calendar (film by Egoyan [1993])
Atom Egoyan: Egoyan followed those films with Calendar (1993), in which he starred as a Canadian photographer taking snapshots of Armenian churches for a calendar, and Exotica (1994), which depicts the interactions between a group of people associated with an exotic strip club.
- calendar (chronology)
calendar, any system for dividing time over extended periods, such as days, months, or years, and arranging such divisions in a definite order. A calendar is convenient for regulating civil life and religious observances and for historical and scientific purposes. The word is derived from the Latin
- Calendar Girls (film by Cole [2003])
Helen Mirren: The Madness of King George, Gosford Park, and The Queen: In Calendar Girls (2003) she played a middle-aged Yorkshire woman who convinces her friends to pose nude for a calendar benefiting leukemia research. Mirren won both a British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Award and an Academy Award for best actress for The Queen…
- Calendar of Flora, The (work by Theophrastus)
biology: Botanical investigations: …historia et causis plantarum (The Calendar of Flora, 1761), in which the morphology, natural history, and therapeutic use of plants are described, Theophrastus distinguished between the external parts, which he called organs, and the internal parts, which he called tissues. This was an important achievement because Greek scientists of…
- Calendar Round (Mayan history)
Mayan calendar: …365 days, called a “Calendar Round.”
- calendar stone (Aztec artifact)
Aztec calendar: A circular calendar stone measuring about 12 feet (3.7 metres) in diameter and weighing some 25 tons was uncovered in Mexico City in 1790 and is currently on display in the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City. The face of the Aztec sun god, Tonatiuh, appears…
- Calendarium (work by Regiomontanus)
graphic design: Early printing and graphic design: …and date—was designed for Regiomontanus’s Calendarium in 1476.
- calender (technology)
calender, machine that has wide application in the finishing of textile fabrics, the production of vinyl plastic sheeting, rubber sheeting, coated fabrics, and the manufacture of paper. The mechanized plain calender was in common use in the mid-18th century after having been introduced into England
- calendering (manufacturing process)
calendering, process of smoothing and compressing a material (notably paper) during production by passing a single continuous sheet through a number of pairs of heated rolls. The rolls in combination are called calenders. Calender rolls are constructed of steel with a hardened surface, or steel
- Calendula (plant)
calendula, (genus Calendula), small genus of 15–20 species of herbaceous plants (family Asteraceae) found in temperate regions of Eurasia and North Africa. Calendulas are annual or perennial plants with waxy, smooth, or glandular stems. The simple leaves can be somewhat toothed and are borne
- calendula (plant)
calendula, (genus Calendula), small genus of 15–20 species of herbaceous plants (family Asteraceae) found in temperate regions of Eurasia and North Africa. Calendulas are annual or perennial plants with waxy, smooth, or glandular stems. The simple leaves can be somewhat toothed and are borne
- Calendula arvensis (plant)
calendula: Major species and uses: Field marigold (C. arvensis) is native to Europe and is used similarly. Sea marigold, or trailing calendula (C. maritima), of western Sicily is a critically endangered species.
- Calendula officinalis (plant)
calendula: Major species and uses: The pot marigold (Calendula officinalis) is grown especially for ornamental purposes and is commonly found in herbal products and cosmetics. The petal-like ray flowers are edible and are sometimes used in salads. Field marigold (C. arvensis) is native to Europe and is used similarly. Sea marigold,…
- Calepino, Ambrogio (Italian lexicographer)
Ambrogio Calepino was one of the earliest Italian lexicographers, from whose name came the once-common Italian word calepino and English word calepin, for “dictionary.” He became an Augustinian monk and compiled a dictionary of Latin and several other languages, published at Reggio nell’Emilia
- Caletti-Bruni, Pier Francesco (Italian composer)
Francesco Cavalli was the most important Italian composer of opera in the mid-17th century. The son of Gian Battista Caletti-Bruni, he assumed the name of his Venetian patron Federico Cavalli. In December 1616 he became a singer in the choir of St. Mark’s, Venice, under Claudio Monteverdi, whose
- Calexico (California, United States)
Calexico, city and port of entry, Imperial county, southern California, U.S. It is located at the southern end of the Imperial Valley and is separated from the city of Mexicali, Mexico, by a reinforced steel fence. Founded in 1900, Calexico was once a tent town for the Imperial Land Company. It
- caley (entertainment)
Scotland: Daily life and social customs: …traditional local custom is the ceilidh (visit), a social occasion that includes music and storytelling. Once common throughout the country, the ceilidh is now a largely rural institution. Sports such as tossing the caber (a heavy pole) and the hammer throw are integral to the Highland games, a spectacle that…
- calf (cattle)
cow: …baby cow is called a calf. A female calf is sometimes called a heifer calf and a male a bull calf. A heifer is a female that has not had any offspring. The term usually refers to immature females; after giving birth to her first calf, however, a heifer becomes…
- Calf of Man (islet, British Isles)
Isle of Man: …southwest lies an islet, the Calf of Man, with precipitous cliffs, which is administered by the Manx National Heritage as a bird sanctuary.
- calf roping (sport)
calf roping, rodeo event in which a lasso-wielding cowboy or cowgirl moves from horseback to foot in pursuit of a calf. The contestant chases the calf on horseback, lassoes it, and dismounts to “throw” it down by hand (if the calf is down, the contestant must wait until it has regained its footing
- calf’s liver (food)
offal: …of protein than muscle tissue; calf’s liver, for example, is a major dietary source of iron, and sweetbread (thymus) is considerably higher in the water-soluble protein albumin than is beef.
- calfkill (shrub)
lambkill, (species Kalmia angustifolia), an open upright woody shrub of the heath family (Ericaceae). Lambkill is 0.3–1.2 m (1–4 feet) tall and has glossy, leathery, evergreen leaves and showy pink to rose flowers. It contains andromedotoxin, a poison also common to other Kalmia species (including
- Calgary (Alberta, Canada)
Calgary, city, southern Alberta, Canada. The physical setting of Calgary distinguishes it from other cities of the Prairie Provinces. It is situated on the western edge of the Great Plains, in the foothills of the spectacular Canadian Rockies (about 60 miles [100 km] to the west), and the
- Calgary 1988 Olympic Winter Games
Calgary 1988 Olympic Winter Games, athletic festival held in Calgary, Alta., Can., that took place Feb. 13–28, 1988. The Calgary Games were the 15th occurrence of the Winter Olympic Games. The city of Calgary first organized a bidding committee for the Winter Olympics in 1957; 24 years later it was
- Calgary Flames (Canadian hockey team)
Calgary Flames, Canadian professional ice hockey team based in Calgary, Alberta, that plays in the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Flames have won three conference titles (1986, 1989, and 2004) and one Stanley Cup championship (1989). The franchise was originally located
- Calgary Roughnecks (Canadian lacrosse team)
Calgary: The contemporary city: … (Canadian Football League), and the Calgary Roughnecks (National Lacrosse League). It is the Calgary Stampede, however, that gains the most international notice. This world-famous rodeo festival was founded in 1912 by Guy Weadick, a former Wyoming cowboy, with the backing of major Alberta cattlemen, and has been held annually since…
- Calgary Stampede (festival, Calgary, Alberta, Canada)
Calgary Stampede, exhibition and stampede (rodeo) held in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, annually since 1923. The world-famous rodeo festival was started in 1912 by Guy Weadick, a former Wyoming cowboy, with the backing of major Alberta cattlemen. Held in July, it is a colourful 10-day celebration of
- Calgary Stampeders (Canadian football team)
Calgary: The contemporary city: …play at the Saddledome, the Calgary Stampeders (Canadian Football League), and the Calgary Roughnecks (National Lacrosse League). It is the Calgary Stampede, however, that gains the most international notice. This world-famous rodeo festival was founded in 1912 by Guy Weadick, a former Wyoming cowboy, with the backing of major Alberta…
- Calgary, University of (university, Calgary, Alberta, Canada)
University of Calgary, Public university in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. It was founded in 1945 as part of the University of Alberta and gained full autonomy in 1966. It has faculties of education, engineering, environmental design, fine arts, graduate studies, humanities, law, management, medicine,
- Calheiros, Renan (Brazilian politician)
Petrobras scandal: …the president of the Senate, Renan Calheiros; the speaker of the Chamber of Deputies (the lower house of Brazil’s legislature), Eduardo Cunha; and Lula’s former minister of finance, Antonio Palocci, who served briefly as Rousseff’s chief of staff before being ousted in a separate lobbying scandal. Also targeted were the…
- Calhern, Louis (American actor)
Asphalt Jungle, The: …corrupt lawyer “Lon” Emmerich (Louis Calhern) to rob a jewelry store. They recruit several criminal experts to carry out the robbery, but, despite careful planning, things quickly go awry.
- Calheta, Luiz de Vasconcelos e Sousa, 6o conde da (Portuguese statesman)
Luiz de Vasconcelos e Sousa, 3o count de Castelo Melhor was a Portuguese royal favourite who, as effective governor of Portugal from 1662 to 1667 during the reign of Afonso VI, was responsible for the successful prosecution of the war against Spain, which led, in 1668, to Spanish recognition of
- Calhoun (county, South Carolina, United States)
Calhoun, county, central South Carolina, U.S. It consists of a low-lying Coastal Plain region south of Columbia. At the southeastern extremity is Lake Marion, and the Congaree River forms the northeastern border. More than half the county is wooded, with pine forests predominant. Congaree Indians
- Calhoun (Georgia, United States)
Calhoun, city, seat of Gordon county, northwestern Georgia, U.S. It lies near the Oostanaula River, 21 miles (34 km) northeast of Rome. Known formerly as Oothcaloga (“Place of the Beaver Dams”) and, later, as Dawsonville, the town was renamed in 1850 to honour the South Carolina statesman John C.
- Calhoun (Illinois, United States)
Springfield, city, seat (1821) of Sangamon county and capital of Illinois, U.S. Lying along the Sangamon River in the central part of the state, Springfield is situated about 100 miles (160 km) northeast of St. Louis, Missouri, and some 185 miles (300 km) southwest of Chicago. Settlement of the
- Calhoun, John C. (vice president of United States)
John C. Calhoun was an American political leader who was a congressman, the secretary of war, the seventh vice president (1825–32), a senator, and the secretary of state of the United States. He championed states’ rights and slavery and was a symbol of the Old South. Calhoun was born to Patrick
- Calhoun, John Caldwell (vice president of United States)
John C. Calhoun was an American political leader who was a congressman, the secretary of war, the seventh vice president (1825–32), a senator, and the secretary of state of the United States. He championed states’ rights and slavery and was a symbol of the Old South. Calhoun was born to Patrick
- Calhoun, Lee (American athlete)
Lee Calhoun was an American athlete, the first to win successive gold medals in the Olympics for the 110-metre hurdles. Calhoun competed for North Carolina College, winning national collegiate championships in the 120-yard hurdles in 1956 and 1957; he was national outdoor hurdles champion three
- Cali (Colombia)
Cali, city, capital of Valle del Cauca departamento, western Colombia. It lies on both sides of the Cali River at an elevation of 3,327 feet (1,014 metres), in the subtropical intermontane Cauca Valley. The city was founded on July 25, 1536, by Sebastián de Benalcázar. Cali did not develop
- Cali Mahdi Maxamed (Somalian warlord)
Somalia: Civil war: …Somali National Alliance (SNA) and Cali Mahdi Maxamed (Ali Mahdi Muhammad) of the Somali Salvation Alliance (SSA), tore the capital apart and battled with Siad’s regrouped clan militia, the Somali National Front, for control of the southern coast and hinterland. This brought war and devastation to the grain-producing region between…
- Caliari, Paolo (Italian painter)
Paolo Veronese was one of the major painters of the 16th-century Venetian school. His works usually are huge, vastly peopled canvases depicting allegorical, biblical, or historical subjects in splendid colour and set in a framework of classicizing Renaissance architecture. A master of the use of
- Caliban (fictional character)
Caliban, a feral, sullen, misshapen creature in Shakespeare’s The Tempest. The son of the sorceress Sycorax, Caliban is the sole inhabitant of his island (excluding the imprisoned Ariel) until Prospero and his infant daughter Miranda are cast ashore. Shakespeare gives Caliban some complexity, with
- Caliban (work by Fernández Retamar)
Roberto Fernández Retamar: …of culture in Latin America, Caliban (1971), which refutes the ideas of the Uruguayan writer José Enrique Rodó. It also discusses Cuban writer and patriot José Martí, a frequent subject of Fernández Retamar. Todo Caliban (“All Caliban”) appeared in 2003. He also wrote such works of criticism as La Poesía…
- Caliban (work by Renan)
Ernest Renan: Later writings of Ernest Renan: …acceptance of the Republic, especially Caliban (written 1877) and L’Eau de jouvence (written 1879; “The Water of Youth”). In the former, the aristocracy (Prospero and Ariel) loses to democracy (Caliban) because alchemical spells (traditional sanctions) are powerless against a people infected by positivism; scientific power politics would be an effective…
- caliber (firearms measurement)
calibre, in firearms, unit of measure indicating the interior, or bore, diameter of a gun barrel and the diameter of the gun’s ammunition; or the length of a gun expressed in relation to its interior diameter (now used only of naval and coastal defense guns). See
- calibration (measurement)
measurement: Measurement instruments and systems: …quantity by a process called calibration. The comparison may be an analog process in which signals in a continuous dimension are brought to equality. An alternative comparison process is quantization by counting, i.e., dividing the signal into parts of equal and known size and adding up the number of parts.
- calibre (firearms measurement)
calibre, in firearms, unit of measure indicating the interior, or bore, diameter of a gun barrel and the diameter of the gun’s ammunition; or the length of a gun expressed in relation to its interior diameter (now used only of naval and coastal defense guns). See
- Calicalicus (bird)
vanga-shrike, any of the 15 species of Madagascan birds constituting the bird family Vangidae (order Passeriformes). The coral-billed nuthatch is sometimes included. They are 13 to 30 cm (5 to 12 inches) long, with wings and tails of moderate length. The hook-tipped bill is stout and of remarkably
- Calicalicus madagascariensis (bird)
vanga-shrike: The smallest species is the red-tailed vanga-shrike, or tit-shrike (Calicalicus madagascariensis).
- caliche (geology)
calcrete, calcium-rich duricrust, a hardened layer in or on a soil. It is formed on calcareous materials as a result of climatic fluctuations in arid and semiarid regions. Calcite is dissolved in groundwater and, under drying conditions, is precipitated as the water evaporates at the surface.
- calichimicin (drug)
organosulfur compound: Reactions: Calichimicin (esperamicin) is a highly potent antitumour agent produced by bacteria of the Actinomycetales order and containing a pendant methyl trisulfide component (CH3SSS―). Acting much like a molecular “mouse trap,” cleavage of the sulfur-sulfur bond is thought to trigger a chain of events culminating in…
- Caliciviridae (virus group)
calicivirus, any virus belonging to the family Caliciviridae. Caliciviruses have nonenveloped virions (virus particles) that are about 35–39 nm (1 nm = 10−9 metre) in diameter. They are icosahedral, with capsids (the protein shell surrounding the viral nucleic acids) composed of 32 capsomeres
- calicivirus (virus group)
calicivirus, any virus belonging to the family Caliciviridae. Caliciviruses have nonenveloped virions (virus particles) that are about 35–39 nm (1 nm = 10−9 metre) in diameter. They are icosahedral, with capsids (the protein shell surrounding the viral nucleic acids) composed of 32 capsomeres
- calico (textile)
calico, all-cotton fabric woven in plain, or tabby, weave and printed with simple designs in one or more colours. Calico originated in Calicut, India, by the 11th century, if not earlier, and in the 17th and 18th centuries calicoes were an important commodity traded between India and Europe. In the
- Calico Act (Great Britain [1791])
Western colonialism: English ascendancy in India: …in 1721 Parliament passed the Calico Act to protect English manufacturers, forbidding the use of calico in England for apparel or for domestic purposes (repeal of the act in 1774 coincided with inventions of mechanical devices that made possible English cloth production in successful competition with Eastern fabrics).
- calico back (insect)
harlequin cabbage bug, (Murgantia histrionica), a species of insect in the stinkbug family, Pentatomidae (order Heteroptera), that sucks sap and chlorophyll from crops, such as cabbage, causing them to wilt and die. Though of tropical or subtropical origin, this insect now ranges from the Atlantic
- calico bass (fish)
crappie: …in colour than the similar black crappie, or calico bass (P. nigromaculatus), which tends to frequent clear lakes and streams.
- calico bush (shrub)
mountain laurel, (Kalmia latifolia), Flowering evergreen shrub of the heath family, occurring in most mountainous regions of eastern North America. It grows to about 3–18 feet (1–6 metres) in height and has oval leaves. The rosy, pink, or white flowers appear in large clusters above the foliage.
- calico cat (domestic cat)
calico cat, In North America, a blotched or spotted domestic cat, usually predominantly white with red and black patches (a pattern also called tortoiseshell-and-white). Because genetic determination of some coat colours in cats is linked to the sex chromosome, calicoes are almost always
- Calico Jack (English pirate)
Anne Bonny: …she became involved with pirate John (“Calico Jack”) Rackham. He offered to pay her husband to divorce her—a common practice at the time—but John Bonny refused.
- Calico Joe (novel by Grisham)
John Grisham: (2003), Playing for Pizza (2007), Calico Joe (2012), and Sooley (2021). The crime thrillers Camino Island (2017) and Camino Winds (2020) centre on a female writer.
- calico salmon (fish)
chum salmon, (Oncorhynchus keta), lightly speckled North Pacific fish, family Salmonidae, weighing up to 15 kg (33 pounds). During the spawning season in autumn, it may swim more than 3,200 km (2,000 miles) up the Yukon River. (See also
- Calicut (India)
Kozhikode, city, northern Kerala state, southwestern India. It is situated on the Malabar Coast, 414 miles (666 km) west-southwest of Chennai (Madras) by rail. Kozhikode was once a famous cotton-weaving center, and it is remembered as the place of origin of calico, to which it gave its name (i.e.,
- Calidris (bird genus)
Calidris, bird genus in the family Scolopacidae (order Charadriiformes), which includes the shorebirds known as dunlin, knot, and sanderling (qq.v.). Some sandpipers are also classified as Calidris (see
- Calidris alba (bird)
sanderling, (Calidris alba; sometimes Crocethia alba), abundant shorebird, a worldwide species of sandpiper belonging to the family Scolopacidae (order Charadriiformes). Sanderlings nest on barrens near the sea around the North Pole, and they winter on sandy beaches virtually everywhere. About 20
- Calidris alpina (bird)
dunlin, (Calidris alpina), one of the most common and sociable birds of the sandpiper group. The dunlin is a member of the family Scolopacidae (order Charadriiformes). It is about 20 cm (8 inches) long and has a bill curved downward at the tip. In breeding season, its plumage is brightly coloured,
- Calidris canutus (bird)
knot: The common knot (C. canutus), about 25 cm (10 inches) long including the bill, has a reddish breast in breeding plumage (hence another name, robin sandpiper); in winter it is plain gray. It breeds on dry, stony Arctic tundra and migrates great distances along the coasts…
- Calidris fuscicollis (bird)
sandpiper: The white-rumped sandpiper (C. fuscicollis), which breeds in Arctic North America and winters in southern South America, is rust-coloured in breeding season but gray otherwise. The upland sandpiper (Bartramia longicauda), also called Bartram’s sandpiper and, mistakenly, the upland plover, is an American bird of open fields.…
- Calidris maritima (bird)
sandpiper: The purple sandpiper (C. maritima) breeds in foggy Arctic highlands, chiefly in eastern North America and northern Europe, and winters as far north as Greenland and Great Britain. It is grayish with yellow legs and bill and is easily approached in the field. Another Old World…
- Calidris minutilla (bird)
sandpiper: The least sandpiper (C. minutilla), less than 15 cm in length, is the smallest sandpiper. It is sometimes called the American stint and is abundant in Alaska and across sub-Arctic Canada to Nova Scotia. It winters on coasts from Oregon and North Carolina to South America.…
- Calidris ruficollis (bird)
sandpiper: …Old World species is the rufous-necked sandpiper (C. ruficollis), which breeds in Siberia and winters as far south as New Zealand and Tasmania. The white-rumped sandpiper (C. fuscicollis), which breeds in Arctic North America and winters in southern South America, is rust-coloured in breeding season but gray otherwise. The upland…
- Calidris tenuirostris (bird)
knot: The great, or Asiatic, knot (C. tenuirostris) is a rare species in Siberia.
- Calidritinae (bird subfamily)
ruff: …bird of the sandpiper subfamily Calidritinae (family Scolopacidae, order Charadriiformes) remarkable for its unusual courtship plumage and behaviour. The name ruff applies to the species or may be applied to the male only. In spring the 30-cm (12-inch) male acquires a double crest (“cape”) and a collar (“ruff”); these may…
- calif (Islamic title)
caliph, in Islamic history the ruler of the Muslim community. Although khalīfah and its plural khulafāʾ occur several times in the Qurʾān, referring to humans as God’s stewards or vice-regents on earth, the term did not denote a distinct political or religious institution during the lifetime of the
- Califano, Joseph A., Jr. (United States official)
Judith Heumann: …of Health, Education, and Welfare Joseph A. Califano, Jr.’s refusal to sign regulations that would have put Section 504 into effect. The sit-in, commonly referred to as the “504 Sit-in,” attracted international media attention as the government increased pressure on the activists (many of whom were disabled) to leave by…
- California (state, United States)
California, constituent state of the United States of America. It was admitted as the 31st state of the union on September 9, 1850, and by the early 1960s it was the most populous U.S. state. No version of the origin of California’s name has been fully accepted, but there is wide support for the