- Pompadour, Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, marquise de (French aristocrat)
Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, marquise de Pompadour was an influential mistress (from 1745) of the French king Louis XV and a notable patron of literature and the arts. Her parents were on the fringes of a class gaining in importance, speculators in the world of finance. Some of these people made
- Pompadour, Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, marquise de (French aristocrat)
Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, marquise de Pompadour was an influential mistress (from 1745) of the French king Louis XV and a notable patron of literature and the arts. Her parents were on the fringes of a class gaining in importance, speculators in the world of finance. Some of these people made
- Pompaelo (Spain)
Pamplona, capital of both the provincia (province) and the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Navarra, northeastern Spain. It lies on the western bank of the Arga River in the fertile La Cuenca region. Situated in an irrigated cereal-producing area, Pamplona is a flourishing agricultural
- pompano (fish)
pompano, (Trachinotus), any of several marine fishes of the family Carangidae (order Perciformes). Pompanos, some of which are highly prized as food, are deep-bodied, toothless fishes with small scales, a narrow tail base, and a forked tail. They are usually silvery and are found along shores in
- Pompano Beach (Florida, United States)
Pompano Beach, city, Broward county, southeastern Florida, U.S. It lies along the Atlantic Ocean just north of Fort Lauderdale and about 5 miles (8 km) south of Boca Raton. The Intracoastal Waterway passes through the city between the mainland and the barrier beaches. The town of Pompano (so named
- Pompano dolphinfish (fish)
dolphin: …the family is the smaller pompano dolphin (C. equiselis).
- pompano, Pacific (fish)
butterfish: …cm (8 inches) long; the Pacific pompano (Peprilus simillimus), a silvery Californian fish; and Pampus argenteus, a black-spotted, Oriental fish.
- Pompe disease (pathology)
Pompe’s disease, hereditary defect in the body’s ability to metabolize glycogen, resulting in a muscle disorder that is usually fatal during the first year of life. The defect responsible, absence of the enzyme alpha-1,4-glucosidase, is extremely rare, occurring in fewer than one in every 150,000
- Pompe’s disease (pathology)
Pompe’s disease, hereditary defect in the body’s ability to metabolize glycogen, resulting in a muscle disorder that is usually fatal during the first year of life. The defect responsible, absence of the enzyme alpha-1,4-glucosidase, is extremely rare, occurring in fewer than one in every 150,000
- Pompei (ancient city, Italy)
Pompeii, preserved ancient Roman city in Campania, Italy, 14 miles (23 km) southeast of Naples, at the southeastern base of Mount Vesuvius. Around noon on August 24, 79 ce, a huge eruption from Mount Vesuvius showered volcanic debris over the city of Pompeii, followed the next day by clouds of
- Pompeii (ancient city, Italy)
Pompeii, preserved ancient Roman city in Campania, Italy, 14 miles (23 km) southeast of Naples, at the southeastern base of Mount Vesuvius. Around noon on August 24, 79 ce, a huge eruption from Mount Vesuvius showered volcanic debris over the city of Pompeii, followed the next day by clouds of
- Pompeiopolis (Spain)
Pamplona, capital of both the provincia (province) and the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Navarra, northeastern Spain. It lies on the western bank of the Arga River in the fertile La Cuenca region. Situated in an irrigated cereal-producing area, Pamplona is a flourishing agricultural
- Pompeiopolis (ancient city, Turkey)
Soli, ancient Anatolian seaport located west of modern Mersin, in south-central Turkey. Soli was founded by Greek colonists from Rhodes and was so prosperous when taken by Alexander the Great in 333 bc that he was able to exact from it a fine of 200 talents for its attachment to Persia. The city
- Pompeius Magnus Pius, Sextus (Roman leader)
Sextus Pompeius Magnus Pius was the younger son of the Roman general Pompey the Great, and a vigorous opponent of Pompey’s Caesarian rivals. After his father was killed in the Civil War (49–45 bc) against Julius Caesar, Pompeius fled to Spain, where he continued the struggle against Caesar’s
- Pompeius Magnus, Gnaeus (Roman statesman)
Pompey the Great was one of the great statesmen and generals of the late Roman Republic, a triumvir (61–54 bce) who was an associate and later an opponent of Julius Caesar. He was initially called Magnus (“the Great”) by his troops in Africa (82–81 bce), and he assumed the cognomen Magnus after 81.
- Pompeius Strabo, Gnaeus (Roman consul)
Alba: …which was probably founded by Pompeius Strabo (consul, 89 bce) when he constructed the road from Aquae Statiellae (Acqui Terme) to Augusta Taurinorum (Turin). The town became an episcopal see dependent on Milan in the 4th century. The San Lorenzo Cathedral (1486) and the civic museum, with collections of Roman…
- Pompejanem (villa, Aschaffenburg, Germany)
Staatliche Antikensammlungen: …the museum has operated the Pompejanem, a Roman-style villa inspired by the Pompeii excavations, in Aschaffenburg, Germany.
- Pompeo, Mike (United States government official)
United States: Cabinet turnover: Trump loyalist Mike Pompeo, whom Trump had appointed as director of the CIA, took over at the Department of State, while John R. Bolton, a controversial former UN ambassador, became national security adviser. Both men were much closer to Trump’s worldview than their predecessors had been. Accusations…
- Pompeo, Ellen (American actress)
Ellen Pompeo is an American actress best known for her portrayal of Meredith Grey, the titular character in the popular, long-running medical drama television series Grey’s Anatomy (2005– ). She is also known for her performance opposite actors Jake Gyllenhaal and Dustin Hoffman in the drama film
- Pompeo, Ellen Kathleen (American actress)
Ellen Pompeo is an American actress best known for her portrayal of Meredith Grey, the titular character in the popular, long-running medical drama television series Grey’s Anatomy (2005– ). She is also known for her performance opposite actors Jake Gyllenhaal and Dustin Hoffman in the drama film
- Pompey (American explorer)
Sacagawea: …gave birth to a son, Jean Baptiste.
- Pompey the Great (Roman statesman)
Pompey the Great was one of the great statesmen and generals of the late Roman Republic, a triumvir (61–54 bce) who was an associate and later an opponent of Julius Caesar. He was initially called Magnus (“the Great”) by his troops in Africa (82–81 bce), and he assumed the cognomen Magnus after 81.
- Pompey’s Pillar (rock monument, Montana, United States)
Sacagawea: …Clark named Pompey’s Tower (now Pompey’s Pillar) on the Yellowstone after her son, whom Clark fondly called his “little dancing boy, Pomp.”
- Pompey’s Pillar (monument, Alexandria, Egypt)
Alexandria: City layout: …high marble column known as Pompey’s Pillar (actually dedicated to Diocletian soon after 297). Parts of the Arab wall, encompassing a much smaller area than the Greco-Roman city, survive on Ṭarīq al-Ḥurriyyah, but in Ottoman times the city contracted to the stem of the promontory, now the Turkish Quarter. It…
- Pompey’s Theatre (theater, Rome, Italy)
Rome: The lower east bank: …been built into and around Pompey’s Theatre, the first stone theatre building in Rome. Inspired by the Greek theatre of Mytilene, in which Pompey the Great had been so spectacularly entertained, it had a portico of 100 columns that was equipped to be a community centre almost as much as…
- Pompey’s Tower (rock monument, Montana, United States)
Sacagawea: …Clark named Pompey’s Tower (now Pompey’s Pillar) on the Yellowstone after her son, whom Clark fondly called his “little dancing boy, Pomp.”
- Pompey, Gnaeus (Roman statesman)
Marcus Aemilius Scaurus: …a quaestor and proquaestor to Gnaeus Pompey in the third war (74–63) between Rome and King Mithradates of Pontus (in northeastern Anatolia).
- Pompidou Centre (cultural center, Paris, France)
Pompidou Centre, French national cultural centre on the Rue Beaubourg and on the fringes of the historic Marais section of Paris; a regional branch is located in Metz. It is named after the French president Georges Pompidou, under whose administration the museum was commissioned. The Pompidou
- Pompidou Centre—Metz (cultural center, Metz, France)
Pompidou Centre: The Pompidou Centre—Metz, an outpost of the centre, opened in May 2010. The avant-garde building, designed by Shigeru Ban of Japan and Jean de Gastines of France, is situated in a park and features an undulating roof of woven timbre that was inspired by a Chinese…
- Pompidou, Georges (president of France)
Georges Pompidou was a French statesman, bank director, and teacher who was premier of the Fifth French Republic from 1962 to 1968 and president from 1969 until his death. The son of a schoolteacher, Pompidou graduated from the École Normale Supérieure and then taught school in Marseilles and
- pompilid wasp (insect)
spider wasp, (family Pompilidae), any of about 5,000 species of large, parasitoid wasps that paralyze spiders to feed their larval young. They are distributed throughout most of the world. About 40 species occur in Great Britain, and more than 300 species are found in North America. Although they
- Pompilidae (insect)
spider wasp, (family Pompilidae), any of about 5,000 species of large, parasitoid wasps that paralyze spiders to feed their larval young. They are distributed throughout most of the world. About 40 species occur in Great Britain, and more than 300 species are found in North America. Although they
- Pompilius, Numa (king of Rome)
Numa Pompilius was the second of the seven kings who, according to Roman tradition, ruled Rome before the founding of the republic (c. 509 bce). Numa is said to have reigned from 715 to 673. He is credited with the formulation of the religious calendar and with the founding of Rome’s other early
- Pompilli, Rudy (American musician)
Bill Haley: …piano, the screaming saxophone of Rudy Pompilli (b. April 16, 1924, Chester, Pennsylvania—d. February 5, 1976, Brookhaven, Pennsylvania), and the guitar interplay between Danny Cedrone (b. June 20, 1920, Jamesville, New York—d. June 17, 1954, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) and Billy Williamson (b. February 9, 1925, Conshohocken, Pennsylvania—d. March 22, 1996, Swarthmore,…
- Pompilus (wasp genus)
spider wasp: Pompilus, on the other hand, has a less refined sting. It sometimes kills the spider; in other cases, the spider may survive for a few weeks.
- Pompilus plumbeus (wasp)
spider wasp: Pompilus plumbeus, found in North America and Europe, carries its prey before it. Others carry the prey sideways or drag it behind. Anoplius depressipes, which captures swamp spiders (Dolomedes), drags its prey across the water. Some spider wasps fly with their prey.
- Pomponazzi, Pietro (Italian philosopher)
Pietro Pomponazzi was a philosopher and leading representative of Renaissance Aristotelianism, which had developed at Italian universities after the close of the 13th century. Pomponazzi was educated in philosophy and medicine at the University of Padua, and he taught philosophy there
- Pompoon (racehorse)
War Admiral: 1937 Triple Crown: …duel between War Admiral and Pompoon. The Pimlico track is noted for its sharp turns, and War Admiral went wide on each of them. As they approached the last turn, with Pompoon a length and a half behind but gaining, War Admiral bore out once more, and Pompoon went to…
- Poms (film by Hayes [2019])
Diane Keaton: In Poms (2019) she played a terminally ill woman who forms a cheerleading squad in her retirement community. The dramedy Mack & Rita (2022) centres on a 30-year-old social-media influencer who ages 40 years after spending time in a life-regression machine.
- pomtan (African sculpture)
African art: Mende: …in soapstone and known as nomoli, which they set up in shelters to protect the crop. The figures are similar in style and are thought to be similar in date to ivory spoons, boxes, hunting horns, and salt cellars commissioned in the 16th century by Portuguese traders in the adjacent…
- Pomus, Doc (American songwriter)
Doc Pomus was an American songwriter who teamed with Mort Shuman to write some of the most memorable rock and pop songs in the Brill Building style of the early 1960s. Pomus, who began singing in jazz and blues clubs as a teenager, met pianist Shuman during a recording session. Together (Shuman
- Pon Nya, U (Myanmar writer)
Southeast Asian arts: Burma: U Pon Nya created a freer form of dramatic verse, and his Water Seller is noted for its comparatively realistic treatment of court life.
- Ponape (island, Micronesia)
Pohnpei, high coral-capped volcanic island, eastern Caroline Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, western Pacific Ocean. Pohnpei is roughly square in shape; it is well watered and hilly (rising to Dolohmwar, 2,595 feet [791 metres] above sea level) and is surrounded by a barrier reef with many
- Ponca (people)
Ponca, North American Indians of the Dhegiha branch of the Siouan language family. The Ponca were never a large tribe; an early estimate places their number at 800 individuals. Perhaps because of their small population, they have moved frequently over the past several centuries. Their original
- Ponca City (Oklahoma, United States)
Ponca City, city, Kay county, northern Oklahoma, U.S. It lies along the Arkansas River, near the Kansas border. Founded overnight in 1893 with the opening of the Cherokee Strip, it was named for the Ponca Indians, who moved in 1879 to a reservation south of the town site. Surrounded by farm and
- Ponca City Regional Airport (airport, Ponca City, Oklahoma, United States)
Ponca City: The city’s airfield (now Ponca City Regional Airport) was used as a training facility for British and American pilots during World War II. One of the hangars from this period has been preserved and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Its Pioneer Woman bronze statue, honouring…
- Ponce (Puerto Rico)
Ponce, major city and principal port of southern Puerto Rico. The third most populous urban centre of the island, after San Juan and Bayamón, the city is situated 3 miles (5 km) north of its port, Playa de Ponce. Founded in either 1670 or 1680 as Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe de Ponce, it was raised
- Ponce de León, Juan (Spanish explorer)
Juan Ponce de León was a Spanish explorer who founded the first European settlement on Puerto Rico and who is credited with being the first European to reach Florida in 1513. Born into a noble family, Ponce de León was a page in the royal court of Aragon and later fought in a campaign against the
- Ponce de León, Pedro (Spanish Benedictine monk)
Pedro Ponce de León was a Spanish Benedictine monk believed to have been the first person to develop a method for teaching the deaf. Ponce achieved his first success with Gaspard Burgos, a deaf man who, because of his difficulty with oral communication, had been denied membership in the Benedictine
- Ponceau SX (dye)
dye: Food dyes: …includes one other azo dye, Ponceau SX, which is banned in the United States.
- Poncelet, Jean-Victor (French mathematician)
Jean-Victor Poncelet was a French mathematician and engineer who was one of the founders of modern projective geometry. As a lieutenant of engineers in 1812, he took part in Napoleon’s Russian campaign, in which he was abandoned as dead at Krasnoy and imprisoned at Saratov; he returned to France in
- Poncet, Charles-Jacques (French pharmacologist)
Charles-Jacques Poncet was a French resident pharmacist in Cairo known for the account of his travels in Ethiopia, which was closed to Europeans after about 1630. Poncet was summoned to Gonder, the Ethiopian capital, to treat the emperor Iyasu I and his son for leprosy. His account of the journey,
- Ponchielli, Amilcare (Italian composer)
Amilcare Ponchielli was an Italian composer, best known for his opera La gioconda (“The Joyful Girl”). Ponchielli studied at Milan and produced his first opera, I promessi sposi (“The Betrothed”; based on the novel by Alessandro Manzoni), in 1856; its revised version was popular in Italy and
- poncho (clothing)
poncho, article of clothing of ancient origin, a cloak made of a square or rectangle of cloth with a hole in the middle through which the wearer’s head protrudes. The original poncho, consisting of a rough, brightly coloured, handloomed cloth, was worn in early cultures of Latin America. Ponchos
- Poncirus (plant genus)
Rutaceae: Among the ornamentals are Poncirus, a spiny hedge shrub of temperate regions, and Japanese skimmia (Skimmia japonica) and Chinese skimmia (S. reevesiana), which have attractive white flowers and red berries. Orange jessamine (Murraya paniculata) is native to Southeast Asia and is widely grown in the tropics as an ornamental.…
- pond (body of water)
lake: …grasses, trees, or shrubs; and ponds are relatively small in comparison with lakes. Geologically defined, lakes are temporary bodies of water. For a list of the major natural lakes of the world, see below.
- pond apple (plant)
alligator apple, (Annona glabra), fruit tree (family Annonaceae) of tropical America valued for its roots, which serve many of the same purposes as cork. The edible fruit has a poor flavour and is not usually eaten fresh but is sometimes used for making jellies. See custard apple. The alligator
- pond crowfoot (plant)
buttercup: Major species: Both the pond crowfoot (R. peltatus) and the common water crowfoot (R. aquatilis) have broad floating leaves and finely dissected submerged leaves.
- pond cypress (plant)
bald cypress: The smaller pond, or upland, cypress of the southeastern U.S. is usually listed as a variety of the bald cypress (T. distichum, variety imbricatum); however, it is sometimes considered to be a separate species (T. ascendens). The closely related Montezuma, or Mexican, cypress (T. mucronatum) is native…
- pond duck (bird)
dabbling duck, any of about 38 species of Anas and about 5 species in other genera, constituting the tribe Anatini, subfamily Anatinae, family Anatidae (order Anseriformes). They feed mainly on water plants, which they obtain by tipping-up in shallows—uncommonly by diving (with opened wings); they
- pond lily (plant)
Nymphaeales: Nymphaeaceae: The fragrant N. odorata, native to the eastern United States, with 13-cm (5-inch) white flowers, and its cultivars (horticultural varieties) are widely grown in parks, gardens, and natural ponds in warm temperate regions. Nuphar (yellow pond lily) is noted for its globose flowers, which are often held…
- pond scum (green algae)
spirogyra, (genus Spirogyra), any member of a genus of some 400 species of free-floating green algae (division Chlorophyta) found in freshwater environments around the world. Named for their beautiful spiral chloroplasts, spirogyras are filamentous algae that consist of thin unbranched chains of
- pond skater (insect)
water strider, any insect of the family Gerridae (order Heteroptera), which numbers about 350 species. Water striders, often seen running or skating in groups over the surface of a pond or stream, are slender, dark coloured, and generally more than 5 mm (0.2 inch) long. With their short front legs
- pond snail (gastropod family)
gastropod: Classification: pond snails (Physidae); all restricted to freshwater habitats. Superorder Stylommatophora Mantle cavity a pulmonary sac; gonopores with common opening on right side or at most narrowly separated; shell conical to vestigial, heavily to weakly calcified; eyes at tips of upper (usually) tentacles; terrestrial; about 26,800…
- pond tadpole
frog and toad: From tadpole to adult: The tadpoles of the pond breeders characteristically have rather large bodies and deep caudal (tail) fins, which in some have a terminal extension, as do the familiar swordtail fishes (Xiphophorus). The mouth is relatively small, either at the end of the snout or on the underside, and usually contains…
- pond turtle (reptile)
pond turtle, any of several freshwater turtles of the families Emydidae and Bataguridae. Two of the best known are emydids: the Pacific, or western, pond turtle (Clemmys marmorata) and the European pond turtle (Emys orbicularis). The Pacific pond turtle is one of the few turtles native to western
- Pond, Arthur (English printmaker)
caricature and cartoon: 18th century: About 1740 the English printmaker Arthur Pond published together 25 caricatures after original drawings by a number of artists. This collection must have been effective in spreading the idea and the word, for it was an excellent publication. Pier Leone Ghezzi, one of the artists included, was probably the first…
- Pond, Ashley (American explorer)
Los Alamos: …Alamos (Spanish: “the cottonwoods”) by Ashley Pond, founder of the Los Alamos Ranch School for Boys (1918–43).
- Pond, John (British astronomer)
John Pond was the sixth astronomer royal of England, who organized the Royal Greenwich Observatory to an efficiency that made possible a degree of observational precision never before achieved. Pond was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1807 and served from 1811 to 1835 as astronomer royal.
- Pond, Peter (British explorer)
Mackenzie River: History of Mackenzie River: In 1778 one of them, Peter Pond, found Portage La Loche (Methy Portage) connecting the headwaters of Churchill River with the Clearwater River, itself one of the east-bank tributaries of the Athabasca River. In 1789 Alexander Mackenzie made his historic journey northward from the trading post of Fort Chipewyan on…
- Pondaungia (fossil primate genus)
primate: Eocene: …remains of further early simiiforms, Pondaungia and Amphipithecus. These have been known since the 1920s, but it was only in the 1980s and ’90s that further remains were discovered to confirm their simiiform status.
- Ponde Town (Connecticut, United States)
Mansfield, town (township), Tolland county, northeastern Connecticut, U.S. It lies just north of Willimantic city. Settled in 1686, it was originally part of Windham, known as Ponde Town. In 1702 it was incorporated as a separate town and renamed for Major Moses Mansfield, an early settler. A busy
- Ponder Heart, The (novella by Welty)
The Ponder Heart, comic novella by Eudora Welty, published in 1954. Cast as a monologue, it is rich with colloquial speech and descriptive imagery. The narrator of the story is Miss Edna Earle Ponder, one of the last living members of a once-prominent family, who manages the Beulah Hotel in Clay,
- ponderosa pine (tree)
pine: Major North American pines: Ponderosa, western yellow, or bull pine (P. ponderosa), which grows 45 to 60 metres (148 to 197 feet) high, with a trunk 1.5 to 2.5 metres (5 to 8 feet) in diameter, is noted for its soft, easily worked wood. It is the most widely distributed American pine, found…
- Pondicherry (India)
Puducherry, city, capital of Puducherry union territory, southeastern India. The city constitutes an enclave surrounded by Tamil Nadu state, on the Coromandel Coast of the Bay of Bengal, 105 miles (170 km) south of Chennai (Madras). It originated as a French trade centre in 1674, when it was
- Pondicherry (union territory, India)
Puducherry, union territory of India. It was formed in 1962 out of the four former colonies of French India: Pondicherry (now Puducherry) and Karaikal along India’s southeastern Coromandel Coast, surrounded by Tamil Nadu state; Yanam, farther north along the eastern coast in the delta region of the
- Pondicherry vulture (bird)
vulture: Old World vultures: …(Sarcogyps calvus), often called the Pondicherry vulture or the Indian (black) vulture, is an Old World vulture ranging from Pakistan to Malaysia. It is about 75 cm (30 inches) long and has a wingspan of about 2.7 metres (8.9 feet). It is black with white down on the breast and…
- Pondicherry, Siege of (Anglo-French War [1778])
Siege of Pondicherry, (21 Aug–18 Oct 1778), engagement in the Anglo-French War. The outbreak of war between Britain and France over French support for the rebel United States of America had repercussions in India. The hostilities provided a convenient opportunity for the British to make inroads
- Pondichéry (union territory, India)
Puducherry, union territory of India. It was formed in 1962 out of the four former colonies of French India: Pondicherry (now Puducherry) and Karaikal along India’s southeastern Coromandel Coast, surrounded by Tamil Nadu state; Yanam, farther north along the eastern coast in the delta region of the
- ponding (Earth science)
hydrosphere: Groundwaters and river runoff: …a hillslope only after surface ponding takes place. Ponding cannot occur until the surface soil layers become saturated. It is now widely recognized that surface saturation can occur because of two quite distinct mechanisms—specifically, Horton overland flow (named for American hydraulic engineer and hydrologist Robert E. Horton) and Dunne overland…
- Pondo (people)
Mpondo, group of Nguni-speaking peoples who have for several centuries occupied the area between the Mtata and Mtamvuna rivers in Eastern province of South Africa. The Mpondo homeland formed one of the largest parts of the former Transkei (until 1994), an independent republic that was established
- Pondoland (region, South Africa)
Pondoland, region on the African coast of the Indian Ocean, located in Eastern Cape province, South Africa. It lies between the Mtamvuna and Mtata rivers, bordering KwaZulu-Natal province in the north. Settled by the Mpondo (Pondo) peoples at the end of the 16th century ad, it is divided by the
- pondweed (plant)
pondweed, any of numerous cosmopolitan freshwater plants sometimes grown in ponds or aquariums. They belong to two families in the order Alismatales: the Potamogetonaceae (pondweed family) and the Aponogetonaceae (Cape pondweed family), both of which have species that develop submerged or floating
- poneratoxin (chemical compound)
bullet ant: Sting: …in waves, is caused by poneratoxin, a paralyzing neurotoxic peptide found in the ant’s venom. Scientists are investigating potential medical applications of this bioactive peptide, including its potential use in analgesic drugs.
- Ponferrada (Spain)
Ponferrada, city, León provincia (province), in the Castile-León comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), northwestern Spain. It lies at the confluence of the Sil and Boeza rivers, west of the city of León. Identified with the Roman Interamnium Flavium, Ponferrada was refounded in the 11th
- Pong (electronic game)
Pong, groundbreaking electronic game released in 1972 by the American game manufacturer Atari, Inc. One of the earliest video games, Pong became wildly popular and helped launch the video game industry. The original Pong consisted of two paddles that players used to volley a small ball back and
- Pongal (Hindu festival)
Pongal, three-day Hindu festival held throughout South India. It is celebrated on the winter solstice, when, according to the traditional Hindu system of reckoning, the Sun, having reached its southernmost point, turns to the north again and reenters the sign of makara (Capricorn), usually on
- Ponge, Francis (French author)
Francis Ponge was a French poet who crafted intricate prose poems about everyday objects. He sought to create a “visual equivalence” between language and subject matter by emphasizing word associations and by manipulating the sound, rhythm, and typography of the words to mimic the essential
- Ponge, Francis Jean Gaston Alfred (French author)
Francis Ponge was a French poet who crafted intricate prose poems about everyday objects. He sought to create a “visual equivalence” between language and subject matter by emphasizing word associations and by manipulating the sound, rhythm, and typography of the words to mimic the essential
- Ponginae (primate subfamily)
primate: Classification: Subfamily Ponginae (orangutans) 1 genus, 3 species. Southeast Asia. Subfamily Homininae (African apes and humans) 3 genera, 4 living species. Traditionally, zoologists divided subfamily Homininae into 2 “tribes”: Gorillini, containing the gorillas,
- pongo (water gap)
Andes Mountains: Physiography of the Central Andes: …narrow transverse water gaps (pongos) that cut the cordillera to reach the Amazon basin. These include Rentema (about one and one-fourth miles long and 200 feet wide), Mayo, Mayasito, and Huarcaya gaps and—the most important—Manseriche Gap, which is seven miles long.
- Pongo (primate)
orangutan, (genus Pongo), any of three species of Asian great apes found in rainforests on the Southeast Asian islands of Sumatra and Borneo. The Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) inhabits large portions of Borneo, whereas the Sumatran orangutan (P. abelii) and the Tapanuli orangutan (P.
- Pongo abelii (mammal)
orangutan: …portions of Borneo, whereas the Sumatran orangutan (P. abelii) and the Tapanuli orangutan (P. tapanuliensis) are limited to northern Sumatra. Orangutans possess cognitive abilities comparable to those of the gorilla and the chimpanzee, which are the only primates more closely related to humans.
- Pongo pygmaeus (mammal)
biodiversity loss: Human-driven biodiversity loss: …as the Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus), which could become extinct by the middle of the 21st century. Hunters killed 2,000–3,000 Bornean orangutans every year between 1971 and 2011, and the clearing of large areas of tropical forest in Indonesia and Malaysia for oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) cultivation became an…
- Pongo pygmaeus abelii (mammal)
orangutan: …portions of Borneo, whereas the Sumatran orangutan (P. abelii) and the Tapanuli orangutan (P. tapanuliensis) are limited to northern Sumatra. Orangutans possess cognitive abilities comparable to those of the gorilla and the chimpanzee, which are the only primates more closely related to humans.
- Pongo pygmaeus morio (primate)
orangutan: Classification: …are divided into three subspecies: P. pygmaeus morio, P. pygmaeus pygmaeus, and P. pygmaeus wurmbii. During the Pleistocene Epoch (about 2,600,000 to 11,700 years ago), the orangutan range was much more extensive, and orangutan remains have been found as far north as southern China.
- Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus (primate)
orangutan: Classification: pygmaeus morio, P. pygmaeus pygmaeus, and P. pygmaeus wurmbii. During the Pleistocene Epoch (about 2,600,000 to 11,700 years ago), the orangutan range was much more extensive, and orangutan remains have been found as far north as southern China.
- Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii (primate)
orangutan: Classification: pygmaeus pygmaeus, and P. pygmaeus wurmbii. During the Pleistocene Epoch (about 2,600,000 to 11,700 years ago), the orangutan range was much more extensive, and orangutan remains have been found as far north as southern China.
- Pongo tapanuliensis (primate)
orangutan: abelii) and the Tapanuli orangutan (P. tapanuliensis) are limited to northern Sumatra. Orangutans possess cognitive abilities comparable to those of the gorilla and the chimpanzee, which are the only primates more closely related to humans.
- Pongola Rift (geological feature, Africa)
Precambrian: Sedimentary basins, basic dikes, and layered complexes: …and South Africa is the Pongola Rift, which is the oldest such continental trough in the world; it is 2.95 billion years old, having formed only 50 million years after the thrusting of adjacent greenstone-granite belts. If there were earlier rifts, they have not survived, or, more likely, this was…