US /ˈprɑsˌpɛktɚ/
・UK /prə'spektə(r)/
Prospector.
The Prospector who's like in the box?
This mountain got the name Mount McKinley from a gold prospector from Ohio who wrote about it in the New York sun newspaper in 1897, just before McKinley won the presidency.
This mountain got the name Mount McKinley from a gold prospector from Ohio, who wrote about it in the New York Sun newspaper in 1897, just before McKinley won the presidency.
The mountain has gotten its name from Charles E Rushmore, a New York lawyer and prospector
Rushmore, a New York lawyer and prospector who searched the mountain for minerals during the late 19th century.
We got a forensic dentist, twin boy detectives, an old-timey prospector with a divining rod, a sack full of magic eight balls, and
an old timely prospector with a divining rod,
It was named Mount McKinley by a gold prospector in the 1890s, but it's been called Denali by the indigenous Koyukon people for thousands of years.
It was named Mount McKinley by a gold prospector in the 1890s,
The Tomb Prospector set reads, "A tire of the Tomb Prospectors who explore the old labyrinth on behalf of the Healing Church.
The tomb prospector set reads:
At ages 19 and 20, they raised $100,000 to make a movie about a Colorado prospector named Alfred Packer, who was forced to dine on his colleagues while snowbound in the mountains.
At ages 19 and 20, they raised $100,000 to make a movie about a Colorado prospector named Alfred Packer, who was forced to dine on his colleagues while snowbound in the mountains.
For Swiss gold prospector Marcel Siegenthaler, this is the magical moment.
For Swiss gold prospector Marcel Siegenthaler, this is the magical moment.
You're right, Prospector, I can't stop Andy from growing up.