Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/d254cac88496132cf1eb8b8760242a0296af829e752fffd13f89829c4148eb34> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 8 of
8
with 100 triples per page.
- d254cac88496132cf1eb8b8760242a0296af829e752fffd13f89829c4148eb34 accessdate "2007-09-24".
- d254cac88496132cf1eb8b8760242a0296af829e752fffd13f89829c4148eb34 date "1988-05-04".
- d254cac88496132cf1eb8b8760242a0296af829e752fffd13f89829c4148eb34 first "Carmel".
- d254cac88496132cf1eb8b8760242a0296af829e752fffd13f89829c4148eb34 isCitedBy Roe_River.
- d254cac88496132cf1eb8b8760242a0296af829e752fffd13f89829c4148eb34 last "Finley".
- d254cac88496132cf1eb8b8760242a0296af829e752fffd13f89829c4148eb34 publisher The_Oregonian.
- d254cac88496132cf1eb8b8760242a0296af829e752fffd13f89829c4148eb34 quote "Ginther said he determined that the D River flows from a fish control structure at the entrance of the lake west to where a huge driftwood log marks the point of extreme high tide, give or take five feet, and depending on sand elevation. That is 120 feet.".
- d254cac88496132cf1eb8b8760242a0296af829e752fffd13f89829c4148eb34 title "D River Reclaims 'Lost' Title".