Lundy


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Lundy

an island in SW England, in Devon, in the Bristol Channel: now a bird sanctuary. Pop.: 50 (latest est.)
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
References in periodicals archive ?
The Landmark Trust, which runs Lundy Island, has posted avacancy for a general assistant coupleto work at the Marisco Tavern and with the island's housekeeping team.
National Police chief Lundy died in a helicopter crash in 2008.
The RSPB said the population of seabirds on Lundy has tripled to 21,000 birds, with the Manx shearwater population growing from 297 pairs to 5,504 and puffins increasing from just 13 birds to 375.
National Trust director of science and nature Rosie Hails said: "We were really concerned as previous records showed that puffin numbers on Lundy had plummeted from over 3,500 pairs in 1939 to fewer than 10 pairs in 2000.
Lundy and Clark said by joining AssuredPartners it will be able to collaborate with partner companies nationwide with the dedicated team AssuredPartners has invested in.
John Lundy also assaulted a security guard as he tried to leave the Accident and Emergency Department at the Northumbria Specialist Emergency Care Hospital, in Cramlington.
Sgt Tim Lundy, 44, had also been accused of lining up his former girlfriend's sex toys in her window for neighbours to see.
The speaker was Paul Lundy, partner at Dixon Hughes Goodman, LLC.
VICTOR LUNDY DIDN'T ACHIEVE THE SAME FAME as his Sarasota School of Architecture compatriot (and Harvard classmate) Paul Rudolph, but in his eight years in Sarasota (1951-1960), he designed some of its most innovative and beautiful buildings--among them St.

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