Anthony Donatto, Bonnie Simmons, Michael Fruge, Mary Jackson, Augustine Fuselier, Harry Toussaint, Ella Jackson, Raymond Scott, Carolyn Reed, Betty Rideaux, David Ned, Gertrude Thomas
Youtube
Joe Arnold Exposes The Racist Jack Conway Sup...
This video paints a disturbing picture that is emerging from a recent ...
Category:
News & Politics
Uploaded:
10 Aug, 2010
Duration:
2m 33s
Dawn Tyler Watson & Paul Deslauriers - Cold S...
Dawn Tyler Watson & Paul Deslauriers En Duo - CD release party - Toron...
Category:
Music
Uploaded:
21 Jan, 2008
Duration:
6m 19s
Steven Tyler Kennedy Center Honors.2010 Honor...
Steven Tyler Kennedy Center Honors.2010 Honoring Paul McCartney www.ab...
Category:
Entertainment
Uploaded:
29 Dec, 2010
Duration:
3m 46s
Elliot Minor - "All Along" Music Video
This is a video for a song called 'All Along' from our 2nd album 'Sola...
Category:
Music
Uploaded:
14 Jan, 2010
Duration:
4m 40s
Only Fact Gulf & NZ Ice Volcano's islands sin...
This confirms 3 more things I have been screaming from the roof tops f...
Category:
Education
Uploaded:
22 Feb, 2011
Duration:
10m 31s
Dawn Tyler Watson and Paul Deslauriers feat. ...
Dawn Tyler Watson and Paul Deslauriers feat. Luck Mervil - Come Togeth...
In a programme broadcast by the BBC on Monday night, Paul Tyler, a former Liberal Democrat chief whip who now sits in the Lords as a life peer, called the institution the best day care centre for the elderly in London.
Date: Feb 20, 2017
Category: World
Source: Google
Scientists discover white, hairy Yeti crab in Antarctica
A group of researchers discovered the first species of hairy, white "Yeti crab" in hydro-thermal vents below the surface of East Scotia Ridge, Antarctica, and they revealed its existence in a paper this week. The creature has been named Kiwa tyleri after a British deep-sea biologist Paul Tyler.
The species Kiwa tyleri, found in the East Scotia Ridge of the Southern Ocean, is named after world-renowned British deep-sea and polar biologist professor Paul Tyler from the University of Southampton.
The beauty of deep-sea diving craft, says Paul Tyler at the University of Southampton, UK, is how selective they can be. Rather than trawling to collect samples, craft such as Cameron's can reach out and grab species straight from the water.