Search results for : Monuments
REMARKS The Most Hon. Hubert A. Minnis, M.P. Prime Minister and Minister of Finance The Commonwealth of The Bahamas The Official Opening of Monument Road, Long Island
It is a great pleasure to be with you on the occasion of the official opening of the Monument Road....
Bannister says new Long Island airport will be ‘wonderful’
Engineering and architectural studies for the design of a new airport in Long Island will begin in 2020 announced the Hon. Desmond Bannister, Minister of Public Works...
Lucayan bones unearthed in Long Island
Lucayan bones unearthed in Long Island
THE remains of two Lucayans, the people who inhabited The Bahamas from the year 600 to the 1500s, have been discovered in graves in Long Island.
Long Island Office Opening - FNM Leader Hubert Ingraham
Long Island;
FNMs:
Colour Red is in the great constituency of Long Island. We are in FNM country. You have been with us for a long time. Like the saying goes, ?Love is a many splendored thing!? We love you. Pappa love you. We know you love us back.
Prime Minister Minnis opens two infrastructure projects for Long Island
Newton Cay Bridge and Monument Road part of plan to improve infrastructure across Family Islands...
Excavation begins of purported Lucayan remains in Long Island
A multi-sectoral team of researchers and scientists has begun the tedious work of excavating ancient remains buried in the sand dunes of Clarence Town, Long Island.
Excavation Begins on Purported Lucayan Remains in Long Island
A multi-sectoral team of researchers and scientists has begun the tedious work of excavating ancient remains buried in the sand dunes of Clarence Town, Long Island. The remains are believed to be those of Lucayans who inhabited the islands between 600 AD and the 1500s.
Search for Ancient Remains in Long Island
Search for Ancient Remains in Long Island
The University of The Bahamas (UB) in collaboration with the Antiquities, Monuments and Museums Corporation (AMMC) and the Florida Museum of Natural History held a press conference at the university, November 29, 2016 to announce plans to search for Ancient Remains in Long Island.
Project aims to explore Lucayan past
Project aims to explore Lucayan past
AN excavation project for the discovery of additional ancient Lucayan remains in Long Island is set to begin today, with local and international archaeological experts yesterday touting the excavation project as a big step towards the redefinition and subsequent better understanding of recorded Bahamian history.
Lucayan bones unearthed
Lucayan bones unearthed
THE remains of two Lucayans, the people who inhabited The Bahamas from the year 600 to the 1500s, have been discovered in graves in Long Island.