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  2. Category:Record labels by genre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Record_labels_by...

    Explore the diversity of record labels by genre, from Atlantic to Opium, from black metal to rap, on Wikipedia.

  3. Young (record label) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young_(record_label)

    Young (formerly known as Young Turks) is a British independent record label that sits in the Beggars Group of labels [2] [3] launched by Caius Pawson in 2006. [4] It has grown from an imprint of XL Recordings into a successful and influential label now partnered with XL and operates across a range of genres. [4]

  4. Affinity label - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affinity_label

    Affinity labels are a class of enzyme inhibitors that covalently bind to their target causing its inactivation. The hallmark of an affinity label is the use of a targeting moiety to specifically and reversibly deliver a weakly reactive group to the enzyme that irreversibly binds to an amino acid residue.

  5. Leeuwin Current - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leeuwin_Current

    The Leeuwin Current is very different from the cooler, equatorward flowing currents found along coasts at equivalent latitudes such as the southwest African Coast (the Benguela Current); the long Chile-Peru Coast (the Humboldt Current), where upwelling of cool nutrient-rich waters from below the surface results in some of the most productive ...

  6. Deco Labels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deco_Labels

    Deco was founded in 1962, by Doug Ford Sr. and Ted Herriott. [2] The company was originally a Toronto location for Avery labels, but quickly separated from its parent company. [2] In 1965, Herriott left the company, over a dispute whether it should expand into the tag business. [2]

  7. Japanese naval codes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_naval_codes

    This was a naval code used by merchant ships (commonly known as the "maru code"), [22] broken in May 1940. 28 May 1941, when the whale factory ship Nisshin Maru No. 2 (1937) visited San Francisco, U.S. Customs Service Agent George Muller and Commander R. P. McCullough of the U.S. Navy's 12th Naval District (responsible for the area) boarded her ...

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