A list of puns related to "List of Land and Sea episodes"
Like misses, I don't care about your joe-jesus cats girl, I wants to see da b'ys out in the skiff chasin' herring, or gettin' turbot.
I can't seem to find a way to watch it. From season 35, the episode is called "The Mattea". Does anyone have a suggestion of how I can find it?
Courtesy of my friend who took more than the average amount of antidepressants
#Episode 26: The Color Of The Sea. The Color Of The Land. The Color Of The Wind. The Color Of The Heart. The Color Of You. ~Earth Color of a Calm~
MyAnimeList: Nagi no Asukara
Stream: Crunchyroll
WT!: Nagi no Asukara
Rewatch Schedule/Previous Episode Discussions
Rewatchers, please be mindful of first time watchers and tag your spoilers appropriately. .. well I guess there's nothing left to spoil now. >.<
Is there a list of all the episodes that deal with seafaring or boats or lighthouses, etc? We went night fishing tonight and played the first episode I could find with βoceanβ in the description, and listening to a story about ghost ships while on a boat at night was DELICIOUS. Please help!
For example, I'm looking at information about the age of ancient settlements found here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_in_the_Americas_by_year_of_foundation
Edit: First, apologies for implying Mexico was not part of North America. I should say the oldest settlements seem to be in Mexico, Central America, and South America, and I'm wondering why there aren't older settlements in what is now Canada and the United States.
Though I'm intrigued by this theory that seafaring peoples may have populated lost cities on the Pacific Coast of North America, it's hard to entertain this without more evidence. Underwater ruins have been discovered in other places, like the Mediterranean (though the oldest one seems to be Pavlopetri in Greece, about 5,000 years old, and it seems like the California coast was submerged more than 11,000 years ago).
It also still troubles me that there aren't lasting settlements further inland as old as those in Mexico or South America. The Pacific Coast has very fertile land further inland, like the Central Valley and Columbia River Valley, which seems like it could have sustained ancient agriculture. There is also evidence of people living in the very fertile lands of the Southern and Eastern US, yet the oldest known city in the US seems to be Cahokia in Illinois, only about 1,400 years old.
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