Council Bluffs was at one time known as BLUFFSBURG Omaha was at one time known as OMABURG So I believe the answer is OMABURG & BLUFFSBURG ...
World Water Council's motto is '« A global water movement for a water secure world »'.
kenya
To my knowledge the only countries which have a "National Water Resources Council" are India, where the Chairman of this council is always the current Prime Minister, and Vietnam, where the chairman is the current Vice-Prime Minister. The Philippines has a National Water Board, which chaired by the current Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources. The United States and United Kingdom have no such entity; responsibility for such topics would generally fall under the Environmental Protection Agency or Department of the Interior (in the United States), or the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (in the U.K.).
They're separated and Ganju uses fireworks and bombs to destroy the dolls, once the dolls die, so do the bounts
Finland and Sweden share a border. There is also a large body of water known as the Gulf of Bothnia between a large part of the two countries.
Omaha and Council Bluffs
The entire questionThis is a question from Marlboro Outwit contest. The entire question reads, "On the fabled tenth of May there was much hoopla and hooray but it was all a bluff because even with the Douglas folks and the council celebrating a body of water still separated them. What two burgs still seem oceans apart?" This refers to the 10th of May in 1869 when, at Promontory Summit, Utah, the last spike for the "completion" of the transcontinental railroad was driven. The track was in fact not complete due to the fact that cargo and passengers had to be ferried across the Missouri river between Council Bluffs, Iowa and Omaha, Nebraska. (The two burgs.) A train from Ogden, Utah brought the band from Fort Douglas that played for the celebration at Promontory Summit.
This refers to the 10th of May in 1869 when, at Promontory Summit, Utah, the last spike for the "completion" of the transcontinental railroad was driven. The track was in fact not complete due to the fact that cargo and passengers had to be ferried across the Missouri river between Council Bluffs, Iowa and Omaha, Nebraska. (The two burgs.) A train from Ogden, Utah brought the band from Fort Douglas that played for the celebration at Promontory Summit.
This refers to the 10th of May in 1869 when, at Promontory Summit, Utah, the last spike for the "completion" of the transcontinental railroad was driven. The track was in fact not complete due to the fact that cargo and passengers had to be ferried across the Missouri river between Council Bluffs, Iowa and Omaha, Nebraska. (The two burgs.) A train from Ogden, Utah brought the band from Fort Douglas that played for the celebration at Promontory Summit.
This refers to the 10th of May in 1869 when, at Promontory Summit, Utah, the last spike for the "completion" of the transcontinental railroad was driven. The track was in fact not complete due to the fact that cargo and passengers had to be ferried across the Missouri river between Council Bluffs, Iowa and Omaha, Nebraska. (The two burgs.) A train from Ogden, Utah brought the band from Fort Douglas that played for the celebration at Promontory Summit.
Omaha, Nebraska & Council Bluffs, Iowa
This refers to the 10th of May in 1869 when, at Promontory Summit, Utah, the last spike for the "completion" of the transcontinental railroad was driven. The track was in fact not complete due to the fact that cargo and passengers had to be ferried across the Missouri river between Council Bluffs, Iowa and Omaha, Nebraska. A train from Ogden, Utah brought the band from Fort Douglas that played for the celebration at Promontory Summit.
This refers to the 10th of May in 1869 when, at Promontory Summit, Utah, the last spike for the "completion" of the transcontinental railroad was driven. The track was in fact not complete due to the fact that cargo and passengers had to be ferried across the Missouri river between Council Bluffs, Iowa and Omaha, Nebraska. (The two burgs.) A train from Ogden, Utah brought the band from Fort Douglas that played for the celebration at Promontory Summit.
This refers to the 10th of May in 1869 when, at Promontory Summit, Utah, the last spike for the "completion" of the transcontinental railroad was driven. The track was in fact not complete due to the fact that cargo and passengers had to be ferried across the Missouri river between Council Bluffs, Iowa and Omaha, Nebraska. (The two burgs.) A train from Ogden, Utah brought the band from Fort Douglas that played for the celebration at Promontory Summit.
Water can be separated by evaporation.
Hydrogen can be separated from water molecules :)
Sodium chloride can be separated from water by water evaporation or by distillation.