no
John E. McLaughlin has written: 'Timbisha (Panamint)' -- subject(s): Grammar, Morphology, Panamint language, Phonology
About 300 including employees of the concessionaires who run the stores, restaurants and hotels, employees of the National Park Service and members of the Timbisha-Shoshone tribe.
· Taino · Takla · Tano · Tewa · Timbisha · Tinde · Tiwa · Tolowa · Towa · Tsooke · Tunica · Tupi · Tuscarora · Twana
Yes. ☺☺☺☺☺ Within the actual boundaries of the National Park - about 300 people live who work for Xanterra, the concession company that runs the stores and hotels and the employees of the National Park Service.
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Food web.
Food IS food.
Did you had your food? is not correct.It is:Did you have your food?Have you had your food?
There is all types of food in California. There is Italian food, Chinese food, British food, Mexican food, Japanese food, and of course, American food.
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Well, "Who discovered Death Valley?" It depends what you're really asking. The first people to inhabit the place we call "Death Valley" were the Timbisha-Shoshone tribe of Native Americans. Of course there may have been other, earlier people but their records are gone - or are recorded in petroglyphs (rock-writings) unfamiliar to the Timbisha tribe. If you're asking who named Death Valley - well, credit for that has to go to a group of pioneers who came for the gold rush of 1849. In the winter of that year they took a shortcut and ended up in the deepest, driest, hottest valley in the western hemisphere. Fortunately for them it was winter. Only one of their party died. But as they were departing the valley and thought about their suffering there and the one member that died - one of them looked back and said, "Goodbye Death Valley" or "Goodbye Valley of Death" (probably referencing the 23rd Psalm) - and as they repeated the story - of course the press got a hold of it - and in 1861 an article was published and the first map appeared with that most feared and dreaded name attached to that forlorn place: Death Valley! And then the myths and legends began. See the related link for more information on Death Valley.
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