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Erin Forbes has come to Tatamagouche intending to spend a quiet week at the rural ancestral property she is about to inherit. On vacation, Michael Cameron has also come to the village, searching for his family roots and a grandfather he has never known. Sparks fly when Michael confronts Erin with the revelation that they may be related. Erin knows this handsome stranger can only be an imposter, showing up to lay a claim to the family property. Attraction and trust retreat and rebound with each new development until the two are able to discover the truth about dark secrets in each family’s background. Understanding and commitment grow as the two conclude that they do not want a repeat of the unhappy decisions made two generations ago. The future holds promise of happy ever afters being the true Tatamagouche inheritance.
Erin Forbes has come to Tatamagouche intending to spend a quiet week at the rural ancestral property she is about to inherit. On vacation, Michael Cameron has also come to the village, searching for his family roots and a grandfather he has never known. Sparks fly when Michael confronts Erin with the revelation that they may be related. Erin knows this handsome stranger can only be an impostor, showing up to lay a claim to the family property. Attraction and trust retreat and rebound with each new development until the two are able to discover the truth about dark secrets in each family's background. Understanding and commitment grow as the two conclude they do not want a repeat of the unhappy decisions made two generations ago. The future holds promise of happy ever afters being the true Tatamagouche inheritance.
An automobile breakdown on a desolate highway near Ingonish, Nova Scotia, leads to the chance meeting of Laura Parker and Sandy Campbell. Laura's inconvenient car problem is only the first of several difficult situations which develop as the two keep being thrown together in the life of the small village. property.
Large igneous provinces (LIPs) are intraplate magmatic events, involving volumes of mainly mafic magma upwards of 100,000 km3, and often above 1 million km3. They are linked to continental break-up, global environmental catastrophes, regional uplift and a variety of ore deposit types. In this up-to-date, fascinating book, leading expert Richard E. Ernst explores all aspects of LIPs, beginning by introducing their definition and essential characteristics. Topics covered include continental and oceanic LIPs; their origins, structures, and geochemistry; geological and environmental effects; association with silicic, carbonatite and kimberlite magmatism; and analogues of LIPs in the Archean, and on other planets. The book concludes with an assessment of LIPs' influence on natural resources such as mineral deposits, petroleum and aquifers. This is a one-stop resource for researchers and graduate students in a wide range of disciplines, including tectonics, igneous petrology, geochemistry, geophysics, Earth history, and planetary geology, and for mining industry professionals.
Dickson, Leslie and related families in Scotland, England and Canada. Family of David Wallace Dickson (1887-1982), son of George Dickson VI and Catherine Thomson Wallace. Orphaned at the very young age he lived with the Andrew Ross family at Ivy Bank, New Scone, Perthshire, Scotland. In 1912 he immigrated to Canada. He married Christina Smart Rutherford in 1916 at St. Pau'ls Presbyta- rian Church in Montreal. She came to Canada with her mother and brother, Charles, on the Empress of Ireland in 1910. She died 1972 in Shawville, Quebec. The early Leslie ancestor, Marcus Gottfried Lässle (1729-1804) of Würtemberg, Germany, sailed in 1751 from the port of Rotterdam, Holland to Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. In 1752 he married Anna Barbara Rünkin (1733-1803).
Thomas Weatherbee (Weatherby) (ca. 1682-1752) was born in Hampshire, England and immigrated to Boston, Massachusetts and married Elizabeth Freeman (d. before 1724) in 1711. He later married Sarah Warren (1698-1760) in Boston. They eventually settled in Dedham, Massachusetts. Descendants lived in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Vermont, New York, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Nebraska, Illinois, Connecticut, Ohio, Maine, and elsewhere.