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find a dealer near you + show more info AS LOW AS $79/MONTH AS LOW AS $99/MONTH As low as $99/month* Don't have a MY KAWASAKI account? Click here to sign up. Please provide the username or email address that you used when you signed up for your My Kawasaki account. We will send you an email that will allow you to reset your passwordAn email will be sent to you shortly. No account found with that email address.Call us @ 618-988-9194. Welcome to Good Guys Motorsports! We are your Kawasaki, Suzuki, and Yamaha power sports dealer located in sunny Herrin in Southern Illinois, just a short drive from St Louis and Southeastern Missouri, Southern Indiana, Paducah and Western Kentucky.We carry a great selection of our best selling ATV's, Side x Sides, Motorcycles, and Jet Ski Watercraft, including; Kawasaki Teryx and Teryx4, Kawasaki Mule Pro FXT & Mule Pro FX, Kawasaki Mule SX and Mule 4010, Kawasaki Ninja motorcycles like the ZX6R, ZX10R, ZX14R, 650 Ninja, Versys, Kawasaki Motocross bikes KX250F, KX450F, and Kawasaki Play Bikes like the KLR110 and KLR140, Kawasaki Bruteforce ATV's including the Bruteforce 300, KFX90, KFX50 and Kawasaki Jet Ski Watercraft such as the STX-15F, Ultra LX
, and the all-new SX-R. Yamaha ATV's like the Yamaha Grizzly and Kodiak, Raptor 700 & Raptor 90, and YFZ450. Yamaha Side-by-Side models like the Yamaha YXZ1000R and YXZ1000 SS, Yamaha Wolverine and Yamaha Viking and Viking6, Yamaha Street bikes like the Yamaha FZ07, FZ09, FZ10, R1S, R3, FJ09, FJR 1300, and the new XSR900. Suzuki motorcycles like the DRZ400, DR650, SV650, GSXR750 and GSX1000, Bandit 1250Good Guys Motorsports, just a short drive from Marion, Carbondale, Johnston City, West Frankfort, Benton, Mt Vernon, Paducah and worth the drive from Evansville, St Louis, Perryville, Sikeston, Cape Girardeau, Jackson 2014 Kawasaki CONCOURS 14 ABS RED (Kawasaki)2015 Suzuki GSX-R750 (Suzuki)2015 Suzuki GSX-R750 (Suzuki)2015 Yamaha Stryker (Yamaha)1989 Ford MUSTANG (Ford)2015 Kawasaki Ninja ZX-6R 30th Anniversary (Kawasaki)2016 Kawasaki NINJA ZX-14R ABS ZX14R (Kawasaki)2016 Kawasaki NINJA ZX-6R KRT Edition (Kawasaki) line in Lenox, MA. At the same location for Honda and Suzuki
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Specialising in Stomp, Welshpitbikes, Demon X and Thumpstar pit bike models. DirtyB 160 pit bike from Thumpstar DirtyB 140 pit bike from Thumpstar LAST EVER ISSUE OF DIRT (#159) ON SALE MAY 14TH Newsletter Terms & Conditions Please enter your email so we can keep you updated with news, features and the latest offers. If you are not interested you can unsubscribe at any time. We will never sell your data and you'll only get messages from us and our partners whose products and services we think you'll enjoy. Read our full Privacy Policy as well as Terms & Conditions. Home › Dealer Info › About Us With over 500 New and Used vehicles in stock at our stores, Motorsports of New Mexico is one of the largest sport vehicle dealerships in the great state of New Mexico. Find Your New Ride Today Whether you're looking for a street bike, an offroad vehicle or a recreational watercraft, we're sure to have the perfect model for you. Shop online or stop by in person at one of our three convenient store locations:
Fun and Games … and Prizes, Too We regularly host special events and activities at our stores, including monthly Bike Nights where we give away up to $1,000 in prizes. Be sure to join our email list to be notified about our next event. Motorsports of New Mexico 2125 South Valley Dr. Las Cruces NM 88005 Phone: 575-524-3626 Fax: 575-523-0699 Two loops totaling over 41 miles of wooded technical ATV and Dirt Bike Trails Single Track – Dirt Bikes Only Pee Wee Motocross Track & Trail Swim, Canoe & Fish in pond @ Campground ATV’s, Dirt Bikes, 3-Wheelers, Side-by-Sides, snowmobiles, mountain bikes, Horses & Hikers Children and Pets Welcome Search Our Used Bikes View Our Yamaha Bikes View Our Helmet Page View Our Clothing Page View our Service Centres View our Accessories page View our parts page Get your bike mapped FREE - On the App Store MobilesMusical InstrumentsJewellery & WatchesElectronicsSound & VisionDVDs & GamesHome & Leisure
Webshop Home>Home & Leisure>Sport & Fitness>Sporting Equipment>Bicycles Second Hand & Used Bicycles for Sale Genesis Croix De Fer Bike -collection Only £999.99 Instant buy Item C Boardman - Team Carbon Road Bike - 53 £599.99 Instant buy Item Reduced De Rosa King Xs 51cm Road Bike - Black / Orange £1200.00 Instant buy Item £19.94 Instant buy Item Fi'zi:k Arione R5 K:ium Rail 205 G (unused) £49.99 Instant buy Item £549.99 Instant buy Item Trax Apollo Bmx Bike £59.99 Instant buy Item Cat Eye Volt 80 Rapid Micro Front And Rear Set Rechargable Bike Lights Brand New £29.99 Instant buy Item Scott Aspect 760 Hard Tail Mountain Bike £249.99 Instant buy Item Polar Cs400 Cycle Computer £71.99 Instant buy Item Garmin Edge 25 Bicycle Gps £39.99 Instant buy Item Zombie Apocalypse 20 Inch Bmx Collection Only on July 14, 2015 at 6:30 AM, updated Archaeological dig in Sheffield by Cleveland Museum of Natural History (video)
SHEFFIELD TOWNSHIP, Ohio -- The earliest known residents of Lorain County left no historical records of who they were and how they lived. They left only fragments of evidence, buried by time, that yield their secrets only to patient exploration and trained eyes. Patience, hard work and study paid off this summer for Dr. Brian Redmond, curator of archaeology at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, and his team of dedicated diggers. In a clearing that once was farmland and now is part of the Lorain County Metroparks, they uncovered the floor of a dwelling built 4,000 years ago. "There's nothing like this anywhere in Ohio. It's very significant, a much more significant site than we previously thought," Redmond said. "These are house structures. This was like a village site." The builders lived in what archaeologists classify as the Late Archaic period in North America, so far back that they don't have a tribal name. "We have no idea what they called themselves or what language they spoke," Redmond said.
"The only reason we know anything about them is archaeology." The excavation in the Metroparks, he said, delivers "direct evidence of what they did and how they lived." Redmond prefers to keep the specific location of the dig confidential, because of the potential for vandalism and illegal digging. Farmers plowed up arrowheads and other artifacts on the land over the years, and smaller digs explored the site as far back as 1971. Systematic test holes over several acres led to the current dig, in square grids ranging from a depth of about 10 inches to almost three feet. The uncovered floor, which is about 3 inches thick, is built of layers of yellow clay that was carried from nearby areas. An unmistakable basin is built into it, as are cooking pits and storage holes that held hickory nuts, which were an important source of nutrition. Dark spots in the clay around the edges of the floor are the remains of organic material. They are "post molds" from the post holes that would have anchored hickory saplings.
The saplings would have been tied together, wigwam-style, in a framework for the prehistoric house. Layers of cattail mats would have covered the framing. "A small family would be very comfortable. They were well insulated, and sheltered under the tree canopy of oaks," Redmond said. "Unlike at other sites, they're going to the trouble to make floors. They're here for months at a time." They were not people indigenous to Northeast Ohio, he said, but migrants from the southeast, most similar to tribes found in northwest Kentucky and southern Illinois. Every few years, if not annually, for 200 or 300 years, their travels would bring them to the site in Lorain County to spend the fall and winter. They were hunters and gatherers who lived before the advent of pottery or farming, and 2,000 years before moundbuilding. They ate fish from the nearby Black River and Lake Erie, small game such as squirrels and muskrat, and they specialized in deer. "We find a lot of butchered deer bones," Redmond said.
He and Brian Scanlan, supervisor of archaeology field programs at the Natural History Museum, lead the "Archaeology in Action" digging crews, whose members have ranged in age from 18 to beyond 80. Paying for the privilege of learning and using excavation techniques, they include college students earning credits or experience and museum members who use their vacation time to dig into the past. "These folks really want to be out here and learn," Redmond said. "They do a great job." He's been doing summer field work since coming to the museum more than 21 years ago. It's something he started at Indiana University, where he earned his doctorate. This summer's crew also included two archaeologists from Libya's official department of antiquities. Under sponsorship of Oberlin College, they're learning excavation and documentation best practices from Redmond. "It's a little different for them here," he said with a nod to the pools and puddles in and around the excavation.