The south-directed Redbank Shear Zone accommodated much of the exhumation and lead to the unearthing of the Moho.
Carlos Oquendo de Amat (April 17, 1905 – March 6, 1936) was a Peruvian poet born in Moho, generally recognized by his only book of poetry 5 Meters of Poems, first published on 1927, which is an accordion book or pop-up book which extends to approximately 5 meters in length when fully opened.
Moho | Moho, Peru |
Then in 1805 he married a widow, Mary (Will) Wilbore, daughter of Nuff Will and Sarah Moho (Mohho), a Native American woman of the Ponkapoag tribe, and settled in what is now Canton, Massachusetts.
A related species, the North Island Takahē (P. mantelli) or mōho is extinct and only known from skeletal remains.