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A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about New Jersey.
See also pages that link to New Jersey or to this page.

Contents

Parent topics

  • United States of America [r]: A country of North America, north of Mexico, south of Canada. [e]
  • Colonial America [r]: The eastern United States and parts of Canada from the time of European settlement to the time of the American Revolution. [e]

Subtopics

Principal cities

Politics and government

  • E.g., the current Governor and U.S. Senators

Social, cultural, and educational

  • To include 4 yr colleges and universities, also museums, zoos, etc

Industry and agriculture

  • Principal crops and farming-related articles, industrial products, etc

Geographical and geological features

  • Atlantic Ocean [r]: Second largest ocean in the world; separates the Americas from Europe and Africa. [e]

Noteworthy places

  • Examples: Hoover Dam

People

  • Either native born or important in some way to the state

Federal

  • Institutions and installations such as military (West Point), research facilities (Los Alamos), National Paks, Wilderness areas

State history

Other related topics

Associated U.S. states and Canadian provinces

Native American

  • Tribes, reservations, etc

Bot-suggested topics

Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/New Jersey. Needs checking by a human.

  • Acid rain [r]: Deposition of acidified rain, snow, sleet, hail, gases and particles, and acidified fog and cloud water, due to nitric or sulfuric acid pollution. [e]
  • Asphalt (paving) [r]: A mix of bitumen (petroleum tar), aggregate and additives. A typical paving asphalt consists to 90 to 95 percent by weight of aggregate and 5 to 10 % of bitumen. [e]
  • Asphalt (petroleum) [r]: A sticky, black and highly viscous liquid or semi-solid that is present in most petroleum crude oils and in some natural deposits. [e]
  • Bicameral legislature [r]: A legislature divided into two deliberative bodies. [e]
  • Bill Maher [r]: (1956—) American comedian, political commentator and presenter of Real Time With Bill Maher on HBO. [e]
  • Brett Favre [r]: Famed quarterback for the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League. [e]
  • CALPUFF air pollution dispersion model [r]: An advanced, integrated Gaussian puff modeling system for the simulation of air pollution dispersion. [e]
  • Christine Todd Whitman [r]: President, The Whitman Strategy Group; member of the board, Council on Foreign Relations; Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, 2001-2003, in the George W. Bush Administration; co-chair of the moderate Republican Leadership Council (RLC) merged with her political action committee; governor of New Jersey 1994-2001. [e]
  • Conspiracy theory [r]: Belief that a covert and deceptive organization or people is responsible for important world events, and that these people are hiding their own involvement, acting from behind the scenes and spreading misinformation. [e]
  • Council on Foreign Relations [r]: An influential "think tank", publisher, and facilitator of communications in international relations; based in the US but with an international membership and not associated with a specific ideology [e]
  • Declaration of Independence [r]: Document formally declaring the independence of the thirteen American colonies from Great Britain, July 4, 1776. [e]
  • Delaware [r]: A State of the Eastern USA. [e]
  • Ellis Island [r]: The entry point for 20 million European immigrants to the United States between 1892 and 1954. [e]
  • First Great Awakening [r]: The First Great Awakening was a religious revitalization movement that swept the American colonies in the 1730s and 1740s; there was a de-emphasis on ritual and ceremony and religion became intensely personal. [e]
  • Fluid catalytic cracking [r]: A petroleum refining process that cracks the large hydrocarbon molecules in the portion of the petroleum crude oil boiling above 340 °C into lower boiling, more valuable high octane gasoline and olefinic gases. [e]
  • George Washington [r]: First President of the United States (1789-1797) and commander in chief of the Continental Army. [e]
  • Grounds for Sculpture [r]: Museum of sculpture and landscape art in Hamilton, New Jersey founded in 1992. [e]
  • Hindenburg (LZ-129) [r]: Large German commercial passenger-carrying rigid airship, the lead ship of the Hindenburg class, the largest flying machines of any kind ever built, until destroyed by fire on 6 May 1937. [e]
  • History of television technology [r]: Chronology of the development and history of television. [e]
  • Jean Shepherd [r]: (26 July 1921 – 16 October 1999) American raconteur, radio and TV personality, writer and actor, renowned for creating nostalgic and humorous storytelling. [e]
  • John Dickinson [r]: This article is a summary description of John Dickinson, emphazing the career, political, location and family factors involved in the his career. [e]
  • John McKinly [r]: This article is a summary description of John McKinly, emphazing the career, political, location and family factors involved in the his career. [e]
  • Journalism [r]: Practice of writing about daily events of interest to people - politics, international affairs, sports, etc. [e]
  • Lacrosse [r]: Team sport played outdoors by ten players (men) or twelve players (women), each of whom uses a netted stick (the crosse) in order to pass and catch a very hard rubber ball with the aim of scoring goals by propelling the ball into the opponent's goal. [e]
  • London Calling (novel) [r]: A 2006 young adult novel by Edward Bloor, which involves time travel back to London during the Blitz via a radio. [e]
  • Moving panorama [r]: Form of visual entertainment in the nineteenth century, utilising contiguous views of passing scenery, as if seen from a boat or a train window. [e]
  • My Chemical Romance [r]: An alternative rock band from New Jersey, formed in 2001, [e]
  • Nathanael Greene [r]: A general in the Continental Army during the American Revolution; he became one of George Washington's most trusted aides. [e]
  • New York City [r]: The largest city in the United States of America and a world center of finance, commerce, communications, and the arts. [e]
  • North American Great Lakes [r]: There are five large connected Lakes in Eastern North America. [e]
  • Patti Smith [r]: (1946 - ) American musician, singer, and poet, dubbed "punk rock's poet laureate". [e]
  • Paul A. Volcker [r]: Chairman of the Federal Reserve 1979-1987 [e]
  • Pennsylvania [r]: One of the fifty states in the United States [e]
  • Robert Barclay [r]: (23 December 1648 – 3 October 1690) Scottish-born writer belonging to the Religious Society of Friends and a member of the Clan Barclay. [e]
  • The Nobs [r]: A name used by Led Zeppelin during their 1970 tour of Denmark. [e]
  • The Sopranos [r]: U.S. television show on HBO depicting the daily life of an Italian-American crime family in New Jersey. [e]
  • Thirteen Colonies [r]: The historical region ranging from the present-day Canadian province of Quebec to the present-day state of Georgia which

comprised the thirteen British colonies in North America. [e]

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