FACTOID # 38: Southern European women hugely outnumber their menfolk amongst the unemployed.
 
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Encyclopedia > Seamark
For the group sometimes known as Landmark, see Landmark Education

Originally, a landmark literally meant a geographic feature, used by explorers and others to find their way back through an area on a return trip. In modern usage, it is anything that easily recognisable, such as a monument, building, or other structure.


These are often used for casual navigation, such as giving directions. Examples of landmarks include the Eiffel Tower in Paris, Big Ben in London, Mount Fuji in Japan, and Stone Mountain near Atlanta.


A variant is a sea mark, usually built intentionally to aid sailors on featureless coasts. An example is the tower at Walton-on-the-Naze.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Seamark Asset Management (651 words)
Seamark’s equity style is characterized by a fundamental bottom-up approach that identifies high quality companies of value for long term investment.
Seamark considers a balanced fund to be a distinct specialty assignment in which two fundamental asset classes, equities and fixed-income, are managed.
George Loughery joined Seamark in 1996 after gaining 20 years experience in finance and treasury responsibilities with a major industrial concern in Saint John, N.B. George participates in the portfolio management process as both the head of research and as a portfolio manager.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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