• Llanos Bajos (region, South America)

    Orinoco River: Physiography of the Orinoco Llanos: The Low Plains (Llanos Bajos) are defined by two rivers, the Apure in the north and the Meta in the south. The lowest portion of the Llanos is an area that lies to the west of the lower Orinoco valley; this area is converted annually into an inland…

  • Llanos de Santa Rosa, Los (Honduras)

    Santa Rosa de Copán, city, northwestern Honduras. It is located in the highlands at 3,806 feet (1,160 metres) above sea level, near the Alash Higuito River, a tributary of the Mejocote. Founded in the 18th century, it was called Los Llanos until 1812 and Los Llanos de Santa Rosa thereafter. In 1843

  • Llanos, Los (Honduras)

    Santa Rosa de Copán, city, northwestern Honduras. It is located in the highlands at 3,806 feet (1,160 metres) above sea level, near the Alash Higuito River, a tributary of the Mejocote. Founded in the 18th century, it was called Los Llanos until 1812 and Los Llanos de Santa Rosa thereafter. In 1843

  • Llanquihue, Lake (lake, Chile)

    Lake Llanquihue, lake in southern Chile. The largest and, with neighbouring Todos los Santos, the best known of Chilean lakes, Llanquihue has an area of about 330 square miles (860 square km) and is 22 miles (35 km) long and 25 miles (40 km) wide with depths of 5,000 feet (1,500 m). Its western

  • Llanto por Ignacio Sánchez Mejía (poem by García Lorca)

    Lament for the Death of a Bullfighter, four-part poem by Federico García Lorca, written in Spanish as “Llanto por Ignacio Sánchez Mejías” (“Lament for Ignacio Sánchez Mejías”) and published in 1935. Each part of the poem is written in a different poetic metre, and each addresses a different aspect

  • Llantrisant (Wales, United Kingdom)

    Llantrisant, town, Rhondda Cynon Taff county borough, historic county of Glamorgan (Morgannwg), southern Wales. It is situated on a ridge between two steep hills overlooking the valley of the River Ely and the Vale of Glamorgan. Llantrisant (“Church of Three Saints”) takes its name from the saints

  • Llantwit Major (Wales, United Kingdom)

    Llantwit Major, town, Vale of Glamorgan county, historic county of Glamorgan (Morgannwg), southern Wales. It is situated just inland from the Bristol Channel, about 10 miles (16 km) west of Barry. Prehistoric and Roman remains have been discovered in and near the town. Its medieval importance lay

  • Llave del Nuevo Mundo, antemural de las Indias Occidentales: La Habana descripta (work by Arrate y Acosta)

    Latin American literature: Historiographies: …Arrate y Acosta finished his Llave del Nuevo Mundo, antemural de las Indias Occidentales: La Habana descripta (“Key to the New World, Holding Wall of the Indies: Havana Described”) in 1761, though it was first published in 1827. Alongside his defense of Creoles in Havana, Arrate laid out economic statistics…

  • LLC (business)

    business organization: Limited-liability companies, or corporations: The company or corporation, unlike the partnership, is formed not simply by an agreement entered into between its first members; it must also be registered at a public office or court designated by law or otherwise obtain official acknowledgment of its…

  • LLDC (economics)

    landlocked country: Economic and security issues of landlocked countries: …these states are designated as landlocked developing countries (LLDCs) by the United Nations; 17 of them are considered least developed. LLDCs have to cover considerable transport costs for merchandise to be sent to and received from overseas markets, thereby discouraging investment, decreasing their competitive edge, and isolating them from international…

  • LLDPE (chemistry)

    polyethylene: Linear low-density polyethylene: LLDPE is structurally similar to LDPE. It is made by copolymerizing ethylene with 1-butene and smaller amounts of 1-hexene and 1-octene, using Ziegler-Natta or metallocene catalysts. The resultant structure has a linear backbone, but it has short, uniform branches that, like the…

  • Lleida (Spain)

    Lleida, city, capital of Lleida provincia (province) in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Catalonia, northeastern Spain. It lies on the Segre River near its confluence with the Cinca and Ebro rivers. Of Iberian origin, the town then called Ilerda was taken in 49 bc from Pompey

  • Lleida (province, Spain)

    Lleida, provincia (province) in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Catalonia, northeastern Spain. It is bounded by France and Andorra to the north and by the provinces of Girona and Barcelona to the east, Tarragona to the south, and Zaragoza and Huesca to the west. It was formed in

  • llenor, Y (Welsh periodical)

    Celtic literature: The second revival: …high standard of the periodical Y Llenor (“The Litterateur”; 1922–51) indicated the advances made in prose. Contributors were generally involved in a wide range of activities: its editor, W.J. Gruffydd, was both poet and essayist; Saunders Lewis was a poet, dramatist, and politician; Sir Thomas Parry-Williams a poet and essayist;…

  • Lleras Camargo, Alberto (president of Colombia)

    Declaration of Sitges: …the rival Colombian political leaders Alberto Lleras Camargo of the Liberals and Laureano Gómez of the Conservatives to form a coalition National Front government to replace the dictatorial regime of Gustavo Rojas Pinilla. Lleras and Gómez, who had met in Benidorm, Spain, in 1956 to discuss the ouster of Rojas,…

  • Llérida (province, Spain)

    Lleida, provincia (province) in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Catalonia, northeastern Spain. It is bounded by France and Andorra to the north and by the provinces of Girona and Barcelona to the east, Tarragona to the south, and Zaragoza and Huesca to the west. It was formed in

  • Lleu (Celtic deity)

    Lugus, (Celtic: “Lynx,” or “Light”?), in ancient Celtic religion, one of the major gods. He is one of the deities whom Julius Caesar identified with the Roman god Mercury (Greek: Hermes). His cult was widespread throughout the early Celtic world, and his name occurs as an element in many

  • Lleu Llaw Gyffes (Celtic deity)

    Lugus, (Celtic: “Lynx,” or “Light”?), in ancient Celtic religion, one of the major gods. He is one of the deities whom Julius Caesar identified with the Roman god Mercury (Greek: Hermes). His cult was widespread throughout the early Celtic world, and his name occurs as an element in many

  • Llewellyn setter (breed of dog)

    English setter, breed of sporting dog that has served as a gun dog in England for more than 400 years and has been bred in its present form since about 1825. It is sometimes called the Llewellin setter or the Laverack setter for the developers of two strains of the breed. Like the other setters, it

  • Llewellyn the Great of Wales (legendary figure)

    Gellert: …the trusted hound of Prince Llewellyn the Great of Wales. Having been left to guard his master’s infant son, Gellert killed a wolf that attempted to attack the child. Llewellyn, returning home to find the baby missing and Gellert’s muzzle stained with blood, assumed that the dog had destroyed his…

  • Llewellyn, Karl (American legal scholar)

    philosophy of law: Karl Llewellyn: The founding figure of American legal realism is often said to be the jurist Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (1841–1935). His 1897 lecture “The Path of the Law” (published in the Harvard Law Review) sounded many of the major themes of realism: the difference…

  • Llewellyn, Richard (Welsh author)

    Richard Llewellyn was a Welsh novelist and playwright, known especially for How Green Was My Valley (1939; filmed 1941), a best-selling novel about a Welsh mining family. It was followed by Up, Into the Singing Mountain (1960), And I Shall Sleep . . . Down Where the Moon Is Small (1966), and Green,

  • Llibre d’Evast e Blanquerna (work by Llull)

    Spanish literature: Prose: The Llibre d’Evast e Blanquerna (c. 1284; Blanquerna; a Thirteenth Century Romance) founded Catalan fiction. It included the Llibre d’amic e amat (Book of the Lover and the Beloved), a masterpiece of mysticism, while his Fèlix (c. 1288) and Llibre de l’orde de cauaylería (between 1275…

  • Llibre de contemplació en Déu (work by Llull)

    Spanish literature: Prose: His exhaustive theological treatise Llibre de contemplació en Déu (c. 1272; “Book of the Contemplation of God”) began Catalonia’s golden age of literature, providing incidentally a mine of information on contemporary society. The Llibre d’Evast e Blanquerna (c. 1284; Blanquerna; a Thirteenth Century Romance) founded Catalan fiction. It included…

  • Llibre del consolat de mar (Catalan law book)

    Book of the Consulate of the Sea, a celebrated collection of Mediterranean maritime customs and ordinances in the Catalan language, published in 1494. The title is derived from the commercial judges of the maritime cities on the Mediterranean coast, who were known as consuls. The book contains a

  • Lliga Regionalista (political party, Spain)

    Spain: Opposition movements, 1898–1923: The Regionalist League (Catalan: Lliga Regionalista), founded in 1901 and dominated by the Catalan industrialist Francesc Cambó i Batlle and the theoretician of Catalan nationalism Enric Prat de la Riba, demanded the end of the turno and a revival of regionalism within a genuine party system.…

  • LLIN (disease prevention)

    malaria: Vaccines and other forms of prevention: Long-lasting insecticide-treated nets (LLINs), in which insecticide forms a coating around the net’s fibres or is incorporated into the fibres, can be used for at least three years before re-treatment is required. Frequent washing, however, may render LLINs less effective over time. In addition, a…

  • Llívia (Spain)

    Llívia, town and enclave of Spanish territory in the French département (department) of Pyrénées-Orientales, administratively part of the provincia (province) of Girona, Spain. The area was named Julia Libyca by the Romans, and the name evolved into Julia Livia and, finally, Llívia. It lay within

  • LLM (computer science)

    large language model (LLM), a deep-learning algorithm that uses massive amounts of parameters and training data to understand and predict text. This generative artificial intelligence-based model can perform a variety of natural language processing tasks outside of simple text generation, including

  • Llobregat River (river, Spain)

    Llobregat River, river, northeastern Spain. It rises in the eastern Pyrenees and flows south, then southeast, to enter the Mediterranean Sea just south of Barcelona city, after a course of 105 miles (170 km). It irrigates the coastal plain around its mouth and has several hydroelectric power

  • Llobregat, Río (river, Spain)

    Llobregat River, river, northeastern Spain. It rises in the eastern Pyrenees and flows south, then southeast, to enter the Mediterranean Sea just south of Barcelona city, after a course of 105 miles (170 km). It irrigates the coastal plain around its mouth and has several hydroelectric power

  • llokuma (food)

    Kosovo: Daily life and social customs: A distinctive dish is llokuma (sometimes translated as “wedding doughnuts”), deep-fried dough puffs eaten with yogurt and garlic or with honey. Baklava is the most common sweet to serve for special occasions.

  • Lloq’e Yupanki (emperor of Incas)

    pre-Columbian civilizations: Settlement in the Cuzco Valley: …successor, for the third emperor, Lloque Yupanqui (Lloq’e Yupanki), had an older brother. Lloque Yupanqui, like his father, was not warlike and added no lands to the Inca domain.

  • Lloque Yupanqui (emperor of Incas)

    pre-Columbian civilizations: Settlement in the Cuzco Valley: …successor, for the third emperor, Lloque Yupanqui (Lloq’e Yupanki), had an older brother. Lloque Yupanqui, like his father, was not warlike and added no lands to the Inca domain.

  • Llorona, La (mythology)

    La Llorona, a mythological woman in Mexican and Latin American oral tradition whose siren-like wails are said to lure adults and children to their untimely deaths. The legend of La Llorona is a popular ghost story that is especially prominent on Día de los Muertos and in Chicano and Latin American

  • Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano (Bolivian company)

    Bolivia: Transportation of Bolivia: The airline Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano (LAB) was founded by a small group of German businessmen in 1925, and in the second half of the 20th century it played an indispensable political role in helping Bolivia maintain control over the plains and the eastern border regions. LAB flies…

  • Lloyd Barrage (barrage, Asia)

    Thar Desert: Economy: The Sukkur Barrage on the Indus River, completed in 1932, irrigates the southern Thar region in Pakistan by means of canals, and the Gang Canal carries water from the Sutlej River to the northwest. The Indira Gandhi Canal irrigates a vast amount of land in the…

  • Lloyd George, David (prime minister of United Kingdom)

    David Lloyd George was a British prime minister (1916–22) who dominated the British political scene in the latter part of World War I. He was raised to the peerage in the year of his death. Lloyd George’s father was a Welshman from Pembrokeshire and had become headmaster of an elementary school in

  • Lloyd Webber, Andrew (British composer)

    Andrew Lloyd Webber is an English composer and theatrical producer whose eclectic rock-based works helped revitalize British and American musical theater, beginning in the late 20th century. Lloyd Webber studied at Magdalen College, Oxford, and at the Royal College of Music. While a student, he

  • Lloyd Webber, Andrew, Baron Lloyd-Webber of Sydmonton (British composer)

    Andrew Lloyd Webber is an English composer and theatrical producer whose eclectic rock-based works helped revitalize British and American musical theater, beginning in the late 20th century. Lloyd Webber studied at Magdalen College, Oxford, and at the Royal College of Music. While a student, he

  • Lloyd Webber, Sir Andrew (British composer)

    Andrew Lloyd Webber is an English composer and theatrical producer whose eclectic rock-based works helped revitalize British and American musical theater, beginning in the late 20th century. Lloyd Webber studied at Magdalen College, Oxford, and at the Royal College of Music. While a student, he

  • Lloyd’s (insurance company)

    Lloyd’s, international insurance marketing association in London, known for insuring unusual items and distinguished by its affluent members (individuals, partnerships, and corporate groups) who underwrite and accept insurance for their own account and risk. The corporation—which provides generally

  • Lloyd’s Act (British history)

    Lloyd’s: …passed a new constitution (Lloyd’s Act, 1982) to replace the original act. To avoid conflicts of interest, the newer act regulated the amount of interest that a broker could have in an underwriter. It also established a formal governing body to write and amend bylaws and to set up…

  • Lloyd’s List and Shipping Gazette (British periodical)

    history of publishing: Britain: The subsequent Lloyd’s List and Shipping Gazette (from 1734), with its combination of general and shipping news, exemplified both the importance of the City of London’s financial activities to the newspapers and the importance of a reliable and regular financial press to business.

  • Lloyd’s News (British periodical)

    Lloyd’s: …short period, Edward Lloyd published Lloyd’s News, providing news of shipping movements and other matters of interest; this was the forerunner of Lloyd’s List, first published in 1734.

  • Lloyd’s of London (insurance company)

    Lloyd’s, international insurance marketing association in London, known for insuring unusual items and distinguished by its affluent members (individuals, partnerships, and corporate groups) who underwrite and accept insurance for their own account and risk. The corporation—which provides generally

  • Lloyd’s of London (film by King [1936])

    Henry King: Films of the 1930s: …of the year’s biggest hits, Lloyd’s of London, an entertaining account of the famous British insurance firm’s rise; the epic starred Freddie Bartholomew along with Tyrone Power in the first of his many collaborations with King. The director had less success with Seventh Heaven (1937), a romantic drama featuring a…

  • Lloyd’s Register of Shipping (ship-classification society)

    Lloyd’s Register of Shipping, world’s first and largest ship-classification society, begun in 1760 as a registry for ships likely to be insured by marine insurance underwriters meeting at Lloyd’s coffeehouse in London. It is concerned with the establishment of construction and maintenance standards

  • Lloyd’s, Society of (insurance company)

    Lloyd’s, international insurance marketing association in London, known for insuring unusual items and distinguished by its affluent members (individuals, partnerships, and corporate groups) who underwrite and accept insurance for their own account and risk. The corporation—which provides generally

  • Lloyd, Carli (American association football player)

    Carli Lloyd is an American association football (soccer) player who, as one of the sport’s leading midfielders, helped the U.S. Women’s National Team (USWNT) win two Olympic gold medals (2008 and 2012) and two World Cups (2015 and 2019). Lloyd started kicking a soccer ball at the age of five and

  • Lloyd, Carli Anne (American association football player)

    Carli Lloyd is an American association football (soccer) player who, as one of the sport’s leading midfielders, helped the U.S. Women’s National Team (USWNT) win two Olympic gold medals (2008 and 2012) and two World Cups (2015 and 2019). Lloyd started kicking a soccer ball at the age of five and

  • Lloyd, Chris Evert (American tennis player)

    Chris Evert is an outstanding American tennis player who dominated the sport in the mid- and late 1970s and remained a major competitor into the late 1980s. She was noted for her consistency, precision, poise, and grace and for popularizing the two-handed backhand stroke. (Read Chris Evert’s

  • Lloyd, Christopher (American actor)

    Taxi: Cast and characters: …ex-hippie “Reverend Jim” Ignatowski (Christopher Lloyd). Overseeing the drivers is cantankerous dispatcher Louie DePalma (Danny DeVito), while mild-mannered mechanic Latka Gravas (Andy Kaufman) keeps the cabs running.

  • Lloyd, Clive (Guyanan cricketer)

    Clive Lloyd is a West Indian cricketer, a powerful batsman who, as captain from 1974 to 1985, was largely responsible for the West Indies’ extraordinary success in Test (international) play. Having left school at age 14 to support his family, Lloyd worked as a hospital clerk before becoming a

  • Lloyd, Clive Hubert (Guyanan cricketer)

    Clive Lloyd is a West Indian cricketer, a powerful batsman who, as captain from 1974 to 1985, was largely responsible for the West Indies’ extraordinary success in Test (international) play. Having left school at age 14 to support his family, Lloyd worked as a hospital clerk before becoming a

  • Lloyd, Earl (American basketball player)

    Earl Lloyd was a basketball player who was the first African American to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA). In the spring of 1950 Lloyd, who played collegiate basketball at West Virginia State College, was the second black player to be drafted by an NBA team; Chuck Cooper had been

  • Lloyd, Earl Francis (American basketball player)

    Earl Lloyd was a basketball player who was the first African American to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA). In the spring of 1950 Lloyd, who played collegiate basketball at West Virginia State College, was the second black player to be drafted by an NBA team; Chuck Cooper had been

  • Lloyd, Edward (British coffeehouse proprietor)

    history of publishing: Britain: …Lloyd’s News (1696), issuing from Edward Lloyd’s coffeehouse, which had become a centre of marine insurance. The subsequent Lloyd’s List and Shipping Gazette (from 1734), with its combination of general and shipping news, exemplified both the importance of the City of London’s financial activities to the newspapers and the importance…

  • Lloyd, Frank (American film director)

    Frank Lloyd was a Scottish-born American film director who had success in both the silent and sound eras and was best known for his 1935 version of the classic adventure story Mutiny on the Bounty. Lloyd acted on the British stage until he emigrated to Canada in 1910. Three years later he moved to

  • Lloyd, Harold (American actor)

    Harold Lloyd was an American film comedian who was the highest-paid star of the 1920s silent era of film and one of cinema’s most popular personalities. (Read Lillian Gish’s 1929 Britannica essay on silent film.) Lloyd, the son of an itinerant commercial photographer, began acting as a child. He

  • Lloyd, Henry Demarest (American journalist)

    Henry Demarest Lloyd was a U.S. journalist whose exposés of the abuses of industrial monopolies are classics of muckraking journalism. Lloyd was educated at Columbia College and admitted to the bar in 1869. After reform activity in New York City, in 1872 he joined the staff of the Chicago Tribune,

  • Lloyd, Humphrey (British philosopher)

    Sir William Rowan Hamilton: Hamilton’s colleague Humphrey Lloyd, professor of natural philosophy at Trinity College, sought to verify this prediction experimentally. Lloyd had difficulty obtaining a crystal of aragonite of sufficient size and purity, but eventually he was able to observe this phenomenon of conical refraction. This discovery excited considerable interest…

  • Lloyd, John (British tennis player)

    Chris Evert: …her marriage to tennis player John Lloyd in 1979, she adopted the name Evert Lloyd (the couple divorced in 1987). She added to her success with victories at the U.S. Open (1980 and 1982), Wimbledon (1981), the Virginia Slims (1987), the French Open (1979, 1980, 1983, 1985, and 1986), and…

  • Lloyd, John Henry (American athlete and manager)

    John Henry Lloyd was an American baseball player and manager in the Negro leagues, considered one of the greatest shortstops in the game. Lloyd’s well-traveled Negro league career began in 1905, when he was a catcher for the Macon Acmes. He played second base for the Cuban X-Giants the following

  • Lloyd, John Selwyn Brooke (British statesman)

    Selwyn Lloyd was a British Conservative politician who was foreign secretary during Britain’s diplomatic humiliation in the Suez crisis of 1956 and later chancellor of the exchequer under Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. Lloyd studied law at Cambridge and was called to the bar in 1930. After World

  • Lloyd, Manda (New Zealand author)

    Jane Mander was a writer noted for her realistic novels about her native land and her frank treatment of sexual issues. Mander grew up on the northern New Zealand frontier and had little formal schooling. At the age of 15 she taught primary school while completing her high-school education under a

  • Lloyd, Marie (British actress)

    Marie Lloyd was the foremost English music-hall artiste of the late 19th century, who became well known in the London, or Cockney, low comedy then popular. She first appeared in 1885 at the Eagle Music Hall under the name Bella Delmare. Six weeks later she adopted her permanent stage name. T.S.

  • Lloyd, Norman (American composer and teacher)

    Norman Lloyd was an American composer and teacher, best known for his contribution to music theory. During the 1930s Lloyd collaborated with choreographers at Bennington College in Vermont, where they worked on the scoring of such dances as Panorama (1935) for Martha Graham, Lament (1946) for Doris

  • Lloyd, Pop (American athlete and manager)

    John Henry Lloyd was an American baseball player and manager in the Negro leagues, considered one of the greatest shortstops in the game. Lloyd’s well-traveled Negro league career began in 1905, when he was a catcher for the Macon Acmes. He played second base for the Cuban X-Giants the following

  • Lloyd, Richard (American musician)

    Television: 1949), Richard Lloyd (b. October 25, 1951, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), and Fred Smith (b. April 10, 1948, New York, New York).

  • Lloyd, Richard Dafydd Vivian Llewellyn (Welsh author)

    Richard Llewellyn was a Welsh novelist and playwright, known especially for How Green Was My Valley (1939; filmed 1941), a best-selling novel about a Welsh mining family. It was followed by Up, Into the Singing Mountain (1960), And I Shall Sleep . . . Down Where the Moon Is Small (1966), and Green,

  • Lloyd, Selwyn (British statesman)

    Selwyn Lloyd was a British Conservative politician who was foreign secretary during Britain’s diplomatic humiliation in the Suez crisis of 1956 and later chancellor of the exchequer under Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. Lloyd studied law at Cambridge and was called to the bar in 1930. After World

  • Lloyds Bank Ltd. (English bank)

    Lloyds Banking Group, one of the largest comprehensive commercial banks in the United Kingdom, with subsidiary banks in other countries. It is also a major insurance company. Lloyds Banking Group is headquartered in London. The bank was established as Taylor and Lloyd in 1765 and renamed Lloyds and

  • Lloyds Banking Group (English bank)

    Lloyds Banking Group, one of the largest comprehensive commercial banks in the United Kingdom, with subsidiary banks in other countries. It is also a major insurance company. Lloyds Banking Group is headquartered in London. The bank was established as Taylor and Lloyd in 1765 and renamed Lloyds and

  • Lloyds TSB Group PLC (English bank)

    Lloyds Banking Group, one of the largest comprehensive commercial banks in the United Kingdom, with subsidiary banks in other countries. It is also a major insurance company. Lloyds Banking Group is headquartered in London. The bank was established as Taylor and Lloyd in 1765 and renamed Lloyds and

  • Lluc (fossil hominid)

    Lluc, (Anoiapithecus brevirostris), nickname for the nearly complete upper and lower jaws and much of the associated facial region of an adult male hominid found in 2004 at the Abocador de Can Mata site in Catalonia, Spain. Lluc is the only known specimen of Anoiapithecus brevirostris, a species

  • Lludd of the Silver Arm (Celtic mythology)

    Nuadu, in Celtic mythology, king of the Tuatha Dé Danann, who lost his hand in the battle of Mag Tuired and with it his right to govern. Dian Cécht replaced the hand with a hand made of silver; he later received a functional human hand from Dian Cécht’s son Miach and was thereupon able to overthrow

  • Llull, Ramon (Catalan mystic)

    Ramon Llull was a Catalan mystic and poet whose writings helped to develop the Romance Catalan language and widely influenced Neoplatonic mysticism throughout medieval and 17th-century Europe. He is best known in the history of ideas as the inventor of an “art of finding truth” (ars inveniendi

  • Llullaillaco, Mount (mountain, South America)

    Andes Mountains: Physiography of the Central Andes: …of El Cóndor, Sierra Nevada, Llullaillaco, Galán, and Antofalla all exceed 19,000 feet. The two main ranges and several volcanic secondary chains enclose depressions called salars because of the deposits of salts they contain; in northwestern Argentina, the Sierra de Calalaste encompasses the large Antofalla Salt Flat. Volcanoes of this…

  • LLW (radioactive waste)

    nuclear ceramics: Low-level waste: ) Over the years low-level wastes (LLW) have accumulated from the processing of nuclear fuels and wastes. These consist of aqueous solutions and sludges, which customarily have been stored in steel-lined underground tanks. However, concerns over actual and potential leaks from these tanks leading…

  • Llwyd, Elfyn (Welsh politician)

    Elfyn Llwyd is a Welsh politician who served as parliamentary leader of the Plaid Cymru (PC) party in the Welsh National Assembly from 1999 to 2005; he also served as PC’s parliamentary group leader in the British House of Commons (2007–15). Llwyd was educated at Aberystwyth University and at

  • Llwyd, Morgan (Welsh author)

    Morgan Llwyd was a Puritan writer whose Llyfr y Tri Aderyn (1653; “The Book of the Three Birds”) is considered the most important original Welsh work published during the 17th century. One of the most widely read of Welsh classics, the work is in two parts, on the theory of government and on

  • Llyfr y Tri Aderyn (work by Llwyd)

    Morgan Llwyd: …was a Puritan writer whose Llyfr y Tri Aderyn (1653; “The Book of the Three Birds”) is considered the most important original Welsh work published during the 17th century. One of the most widely read of Welsh classics, the work is in two parts, on the theory of government and…

  • Llyr (Celtic deity)

    Llyr, in Celtic mythology, leader of one of two warring families of gods; according to one interpretation, the Children of Llyr were the powers of darkness, constantly in conflict with the Children of Dôn, the powers of light. In Welsh tradition, Llyr and his son Manawydan, like the Irish gods Lir

  • Llythur ir Cymru Cariadus (work by Llwyd)

    Celtic literature: Welsh literature in the 17th century: …government and religious liberty, and Llythur ir Cymru Cariadus (c. 1653; “Letter to the Beloved Welsh”), which expounded a mystical gospel. Among the clergy who produced some of the many translations, mostly of religious originals, during this period were Edward Samuel; Moses Williams, a diligent searcher into manuscripts; Griffith Jones,…

  • Llywarch Hen (Welsh hero)

    Llywarch Hen was the central figure in a cycle of poems composed in the 9th or 10th century in Powys (Wales). Set against the background of the struggle of the Welsh of the kingdom of Powys against the Anglo-Saxons of Mercia, the poems speak of heroic virtues, express laments for fallen heroes, and

  • Llywelyn Ap Gruffudd (prince of Wales)

    Llywelyn Ap Gruffudd was the prince of Gwynedd in northern Wales who struggled unsuccessfully to drive the English from Welsh territory. He was the only Welsh ruler to be officially recognized by the English as the prince of Wales, but within a year after his death Wales fell completely under

  • Llywelyn Ap Iorwerth (Welsh prince)

    Llywelyn Ap Iorwerth was a Welsh prince, the most outstanding native ruler to appear in Wales before the region came under English rule in 1283. Llywelyn was the grandson of Owain Gwynedd (d. 1170), a powerful ruler of Gwynedd in northern Wales. While still a child, Llywelyn was exiled by his

  • Llywelyn Goch Amheurug Hen (Welsh poet)

    Celtic literature: The Middle Ages: Llywelyn Goch Amheurug Hen wrote some early poems in the gogynfeirdd tradition, but his “Elegy to Lleucu Llwyd” successfully combined the Welsh elegy tradition with the imported serenade form.

  • Llywelyn the Great (Welsh prince)

    Llywelyn Ap Iorwerth was a Welsh prince, the most outstanding native ruler to appear in Wales before the region came under English rule in 1283. Llywelyn was the grandson of Owain Gwynedd (d. 1170), a powerful ruler of Gwynedd in northern Wales. While still a child, Llywelyn was exiled by his

  • Llywelyn y Glyn (Welsh poet)

    Lewis Glyn Cothi was a Welsh bard whose work reflects an awakening of national consciousness among the Welsh. Reputedly a native of Carmarthenshire, Lewis was, during the Wars of the Roses, a zealous Lancastrian and partisan of Jasper Tudor, the uncle of Henry VII of England. His awdl (ode)

  • LM (Chinese launch vehicles)

    Long March, family of Chinese launch vehicles. Like those of the United States and Soviet Union, China’s first launch vehicles were also based on ballistic missiles. The Long March 1 (LM-1, or Chang Zheng 1) vehicle, which put China’s first satellite into orbit in 1970, was based on the Dong Feng 3

  • LM (spacecraft)

    Apollo: …of the CSM was the lunar module (LM). One astronaut stayed in the CSM while the other two landed on the Moon in the LM. The LM had a descent stage and an ascent stage. The descent stage was left on the Moon, and the astronauts returned to the CSM…

  • lm (unit of energy measurement)

    lumen, unit of luminous flux, or amount of light, defined as the amount streaming outward through one steradian (a unit of solid angle, part of the volume of space illuminated by a light source) from a uniform point source having an intensity of one candela. The lumen is used in calculations

  • LM (industrial process)

    machine tool: Laser machining (LM): LM is a method of cutting metal or refractory materials by melting and vaporizing the material with an intense beam of light from a laser. Drilling by laser, although costly in energy since material must be melted and vaporized to be removed, is…

  • LMC (Liberian company)

    Tubmanburg: …was long associated with the Liberian Mining Company (LMC; a subsidiary of Republic Steel Corporation), which closed down mining operations in the late 1970s. The firm, the first in Liberia to export iron ore, completed a 43-mile (69-km) narrow-gauge railway to the port at Monrovia in 1951. Iron interests added…

  • LMC (galaxy)

    Magellanic Cloud: One of them, the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), is a luminous patch about 5° in diameter, and the other, the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), measures less than 2° across. The Magellanic Clouds are visible to the unaided eye in the Southern Hemisphere, but they cannot be observed from most…

  • Lmele le dag Chun (African dance)

    African dance: Rhythm: …dance pattern, as in the Lmele le dag Chun dance of the Birom girls of the Jos Plateau.

  • LMFBR

    nuclear reactor: Liquid-metal reactors: Sodium-cooled fast-neutron-spectrum liquid-metal reactors (LMRs) received much attention during the 1960s and ’70s when it appeared that their breeding capabilities would soon be needed to supply fissile material to a rapidly expanding nuclear industry. When it became clear in the 1980s that this…

  • LMRP cap (geology)

    Deepwater Horizon oil spill: Leaking oil: …to an apparatus called the Lower Marine Riser Package (LMRP) cap. With the damaged riser shorn from the LMRP—the top segment of the BOP—the cap was lowered into place. Though fitted loosely over the BOP and allowing some oil to escape, the cap enabled BP to siphon approximately 15,000 barrels…