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#####Chicago Bears 2013 2014 Game Schedule & Discount Tickets Info - Home & Away in Chicago, Illinois For Sale

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Chicago Bears xxxx - xxxx Season Game Schedule & Discount Tickets
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You can view the complete xxxx - xxxx Chicago Bears schedule displayed at the bottom of this post with links to view the tickets available for each game.
Event
Venue
Date/Time
 
Minnesota Vikings vs. Chicago Bears
Mall of America Field At Hubert H Humphrey Metrodome
Minneapolis, MN
Sunday
12/1/xxxx
12:00 PM
view
tickets
PARKING: Chicago Bears vs. Dallas Cowboys
Soldier Field Stadium Parking Lot
Chicago, IL
Monday
12/9/xxxx
TBD
view
tickets
Chicago Bears vs. Dallas Cowboys
Soldier Field Stadium
Chicago, IL
Monday
12/9/xxxx
7:40 PM
view
tickets
Cleveland Browns vs. Chicago Bears
FirstEnergy Stadium (formerly Cleveland Browns Stadium)
Cleveland, OH
Sunday
12/15/xxxx
1:00 PM
view
tickets
Philadelphia Eagles vs. Chicago Bears
Lincoln Financial Field
Philadelphia, PA
Sunday
12/22/xxxx
1:00 PM
view
tickets
PARKING: Chicago Bears vs. Green Bay Packers
Soldier Field Stadium Parking Lot
Chicago, IL
Sunday
12/29/xxxx
TBD
view
tickets
Chicago Bears vs. Green Bay Packers
Soldier Field Stadium
Chicago, IL
Sunday
12/29/xxxx
12:00 PM
view
tickets
NFC Wild Card or Divisional Home Game: Chicago Bears vs. TBD (Date: TBD - If Necessary)
Soldier Field Stadium
Chicago, IL
Saturday
1/4/xxxx
TBD
view
tickets
NFC Championship Game: Chicago Bears vs. TBD (Date: TBD - If Necessary)
Soldier Field Stadium
Chicago, IL
Sunday
1/19/xxxx
TBD
view
tickets
The food of Indigenous Australians was largely influenced by the area in which they lived. Most tribal groups subsisted on a simple hunter-gatherer diet, hunting native game and fish and collecting native plants and fruit. The general term for native Australian flora and fauna used as a source of food is bush tucker.[354][355] The first settlers introduced British food to the continent[356] which much of what is now considered typical Australian food is based on the Sunday roast has become an enduring tradition for many Australians.[357] Since the beginning of the 20th century, food in Australia has increasingly been influenced by immigrants to the nation, particularly from Southern European and Asian cultures.[356][357] Australian wine is produced in 60 distinct production areas totalling approximately 160,000 hectares, mainly in the southern, cooler parts of the country. The wine regions in each of these states produce different wine varieties and styles that take advantage of local climates and soil types. The predominant varieties are Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Merlot, Sémillon, Pinot noir, Riesling, and Sauvignon blanc.[358][359][360][227][361][362] In xxxx, an Australian red wine, Penfolds Grange, won the Wine Spectator award for Wine of the Year, the first time a wine from outside France or California achieved this distinction.[363]Approximately 24% of Australians over the age of 15 regularly participate in organised sporting activities.[226] Australia has strong international teams in cricket, field hockey, netball, rugby league, and rugby union, having been Olympic or world champions at least twice in each sport in the last 25 years for both men and women where applicable.[365][366][367][368][369][370][371][372] Australia is also powerful in track cycling, rowing, and swimming, having consistently been in the top-five medal-winners at Olympic or World Championship level since xxxx.[373][374][375] Swimming is the strongest of these sports; Australia is the second-most prolific medal winner in the sport in Olympic history.[376][377][378]Some of Australia's most internationally well-known and successful sportspeople are swimmers Dawn Fraser, Murray Rose, Shane Gould, and Ian Thorpe; sprinters Shirley Strickland, Betty Cuthbert, and Cathy Freeman;[379] tennis players Rod Laver, Roy Emerson, Ken Rosewall, Evonne Goolagong, and Margaret Court; cricketers Donald Bradman and Shane Warne; three-time Formula One world champion Jack Brabham; five-time motorcycle grand prix world champion Mick Doohan; golfers Greg Norman and Karrie Webb;[380] cyclist Hubert Opperman, prodigious billiards player Walter Lindrum[381] and basketball players Andrew Bogut[382] and Lauren Jackson. Nationally, other popular sports include Australian rules football, horse racing, squash, surfing, soccer, and motor racing. The annual Melbourne Cup horse race and the Sydney to Hobart yacht race attract intense interest.Australia has participated in every summer Olympics of the modern era,[383] and every Commonwealth Games.[384] Australia hosted the xxxx Summer Olympics in Melbourne and the xxxx Summer Olympics in Sydney,[385] and ranked among the top six medal-takers for the games of xxxx, xxxx and xxxx.[386] In the xxxx Summer Olympics in London, Australia was placed 10th in the medal table.[387] Australia has also hosted the xxxx, xxxx, xxxx, xxxx Commonwealth Games and will host the xxxx Commonwealth Games.[388] Other major international events held in Australia include the Australian Open tennis grand slam tournament, international cricket matches, and the Australian Formula One Grand Prix. Australia hosted the xxxx Rugby World Cup and the annual Australia?New Zealand Bledisloe Cup is keenly watched. The highest-rating television programs include sports telecasts such as the summer Olympics, FIFA World Cup, Rugby League State of Origin, and the grand finals of the National Rugby League and Australian Football League.[389] Skiing in Australia began in the xxxxs and snow sports take place in the Australian Alps and parts of Tasmania.Western Australia (abbreviated as WA[a]) is a state occupying the entire western third of Australia. It is bounded by the Indian Ocean to the north and west, the Great Australian Bight and Southern Ocean to the south,[b] the Northern Territory to the north-east and South Australia to the south-east. Western Australia is Australia's largest state with a total land area of 2,529,875 square kilometres (976,790 sq mi), and the second-largest country subdivision in the world ? however, a significant part of it is sparsely populated. The state has approximately 2.4 million inhabitants (around 11% of the national total[1]), and 92% of the state's population lives in the south-west corner of the state.The first European to visit Western Australia was the Dutch explorer Dirk Hartog, who visited the Western Australian coast in xxxx. The British established a military outpost at King George Sound, near present-day Albany, in xxxx, which was followed by the establishment of the Swan River Colony in xxxx, including the site of the present-day capital, Perth. York was the first inland settlement in Western Australia. Situated 97 kilometres east of Perth, it was settled on 16 September xxxx.Western Australia achieved self-government in xxxx, and later federated with the other British colonies in Australia in xxxx. Today Western Australia's economy mainly relies on mining, agriculture, and tourism, with the state supplying 46% of Australia's exports.[3] Western Australia is the second-largest iron ore producer in the world.The bulk of Western Australia consists of the extremely old Yilgarn craton and Pilbara craton which merged with the Deccan Plateau of India, Madagascar and the Karoo and Zimbabwe cratons of Southern Africa, in the Archean Eon to form Ur, one of the oldest supercontinents on Earth (3 ? 3.2 billion years ago).Because the only mountain-building since then has been of the Stirling Range with the rifting from Antarctica, the land is extremely eroded and ancient, with no part of the state above 1,245 metres (4,085 ft) AHD (at Mount Meharry in the Hamersley Range of the Pilbara region). Most parts of the state form a low plateau with an average elevation of about 400 metres (1,200 ft), very low relief, and no surface runoff. This descends relatively sharply to the coastal plains, in some cases forming a sharp escarpment (as with the Darling Range/Darling Scarp near Perth).The extreme age of the landscape has meant that the soils are remarkably infertile and frequently laterised. Even soils derived from granitic bedrock contain an order of magnitude less available phosphorus and only half as much nitrogen as soils in comparable climates in other continents. Soils derived from extensive sandplains or ironstone are even less fertile, being even more devoid of soluble phosphate and also deficient in zinc, copper, molybdenum and sometimes potassium and calcium.The infertility of most of the soils has required heavy inputs of chemical fertilisers, particularly superphosphate, insecticides and herbicides, which?with the ensuing damage to invertebrate and bacterial populations, and compaction of soils through heavy machinery and hoofed mammals?has done great damage to the fragile soils.Large-scale land clearing for agriculture has damaged habitats for native flora and fauna. As a result, the South West region of the state has a higher concentration of rare, threatened or endangered flora and fauna than many areas of Australia, making it one of the world's biodiversity "hot spots". Large areas of the state's wheatbelt region have problems with dryland salinity and the loss of fresh water.The southwest coastal area has a Mediterranean climate and was originally heavily forested, including large stands of the karri, one of the tallest trees in the world.[8] This agricultural region of Western Australia is in the top nine terrestrial habitats for terrestrial biodiversity, with a higher proportion of endemic species than most other equivalent regions. Thanks to the offshore Leeuwin Current the area numbers in the top six regions for marine biodiversity, containing the most southerly coral reefs in the world.Average annual rainfall varies from 300 millimetres (12 in) at the edge of the Wheatbelt region to 1,400 millimetres (55 in) in the wettest areas near Northcliffe, but in the months of November to March evaporation exceeds rainfall, and it is generally very dry. Plants must be adapted to this as well as the extreme poverty of all soils. A major reduction in winter rainfall has been observed since the mid-xxxxs, with a greater number of extreme rainfall events in the summer months.[9]The central four-fifths of the state is semiarid or desert and is lightly inhabited with the only significant activity being mining. Annual rainfall averages 200?250 millimetres (8?10 in), most of which occurs in sporadic torrential falls related to cyclone events in summer months.An exception to this is the northern tropical regions. The Kimberley has an extremely hot monsoonal climate with average annual rainfall ranging from 500 to 1,500 millimetres (20?60 in), but there is a very long almost rainless season from April to November. Eighty-five percent of the state's runoff occurs in the Kimberley, but because it occurs in violent floods and because of the insurmountable poverty of the generally shallow soils, the only development has taken place along the Ord River.Occurrence of snow in the state is rare, and typically only in the Stirling Range near Albany, as it is the only mountain range far enough south and with sufficient elevation. More rarely, snow can fall on the nearby Porongurup Range. Snow outside these areas is a major event; it usually occurs in hilly areas of southwestern Australia. The most widespread low-level snow occurred on 26 June xxxx when snow was reported in the Perth Hills, as far north as Wongan Hills and as far east as Salmon Gums. However, even in the Stirling Range, snowfalls rarely exceed 5 cm (2 in) and rarely settle for more than one day.[10]cThe highest observed maximum temperature of 50.5 °C (122.9 °F) was recorded at Mardie Station on 19 February xxxx. The lowest minimum temperature recorded was -7.2 °C (19.0 °F) at Eyre Bird Observatory on 17 August xxxx.[11]Western Australia is home to around 540 species of birds (depending on the taxonomy used). Of these around 15 are endemic to the state. The best areas for birds are the southwestern corner of the state and the area around Broome and the Kimberley.The Flora of Western Australia comprises xxxx published native vascular plant species of xxxx genera within 226 families, there are also xxxx naturalised alien or invasive plant species more commonly known as weeds.[12] In the southwest region are some of the largest numbers of plant species for its area in the world.Specific ecoregions of Western Australia include: the sandstone gorges of The Kimberley on the northern coast and below that areas of dry grassland (Ord Victoria Plain) or semi-desert (Western Australian Mulga shrublands), with Tanami Desert inland from there. Following the coast south there is the Southwest Australia savanna and the Swan Coastal Plain around Perth, and then farther south the Warren on the southwest corner of the coast around the wine-growing area ofThe first inhabitants of Australia arrived from the north approximately 40,000 to 60,000 years ago. Over thousands of years they eventually spread across the whole landmass. These Indigenous Australians were well established throughout Western Australia by the time European explorers began to arrive in the early seventeenth century.The first European to visit Western Australia was a Dutch explorer, Dirk Hartog who on 25 October xxxx landed at what is now known as Cape Inscription, Dirk Hartog Island. For the rest of the 17th century, other Dutch (and other nationalities) travellers encountered the coast, usually unintentionally, as many shipwrecks along the coast of ships that deviated (because of poor navigation and storms) from the Brouwer Route illustrate.[citation needed]. It was a further 200 years before it was proven that the Great Southern continent actually existed. By the late 18th century, British and French sailors had begun to explore the Western Australian coast.The origins of the present state began with the establishment of a British settlement at King George Sound in xxxx (later named Albany from xxxx). The settlement was founded in response to British concerns about the possibility of a French colony being established on the coast of Western Australia.In xxxx, a new constitution was drafted, providing for the right of self-governance and in xxxx, the act granting self-government to the colony was passed by the British Parliament. John Forrest became the first Premier of Western Australia.In xxxx, the Western Australian Parliament authorised the raising of a loan to construct a pipeline to transport five million gallons of water per day to the Goldfields of Western Australia. The pipeline, known as the Goldfields Water Supply Scheme, was completed in xxxx. C.Y. O'Connor, Western Australia's first engineer-in-chief, designed and oversaw the construction of the pipeline. It carries water 530 km (330 mi) from Perth to Kalgoorlie, and is attributed by historians as an important factor driving the state's population and economic growth.[13]Following a campaign led by Forrest, residents of the colony of Western Australia (still informally called the Swan River Colony) voted in favour of federation, resulting in Western Australia officially becoming a state on 1 January xxxx.WA Population Growth xxxx?xxxx.Distribution of the Western Australian population.Europeans began to settle permanently in xxxx when Albany was claimed by Britain to forestall French claims to the western third of the continent. Perth was founded as the Swan River Colony in xxxx by British and Irish settlers, though the outpost languished, eventually requesting convict labour to augment its population. In the xxxxs, interstate migration resulting from a mining boom in the Goldfields region resulted in a sharp population increase.Western Australia did not receive significant flows of migrants from Britain, Ireland or elsewhere in the British Empire until the early 20th century when local projects?such as the Group Settlement Scheme of the xxxxs which encouraged farmers to settle the southwest?increased awareness of Australia's western third as a destination for colonists.Led by migrants from the British Isles, Western Australia's population developed at a faster rate during the twentieth century than it had previously. Along with the eastern states, Western Australia received large numbers of Italians, Croatians and Macedonians after World War II. Despite this, Britain has contributed the greatest number of migrants to this day, and Western Australia?particularly Perth?has the highest proportion of British-born of any state: 10.6% in xxxx, compared to a national average of 5.3%. This group is heavily concentrated in certain parts where they account for a quarter of the population.In terms of ethnicity, the xxxx census data reveals that 77.5% of Western Australia's population is of European descent: the largest single group was those reporting English ethnicity, accounting for 733,783 responses (32.7%), followed by Australian with 624,259 (27.8%), Irish with 171,667 (7.6%), Italian with 96,721 (4.3%), Scottish with 62,781 (2.8%), German with 51,672 (2.3%) and Chinese with 48,894 responses (2.2%). There were 58,496 Indigenous Australians in Western Australia in xxxx, forming 3.1% of the population.In terms of birthplace, according to the xxxx census[14] 27.1% of the population were born overseas?higher than the Australian average of 22.2%. 8.9% of Western Australians were born in England, 2.4% in New Zealand, 1.2% in Scotland, 1.1% in South Africa, and 1.1% in Italy.Perth's metropolitan area had an estimated population of 1.55 million in xxxx (75% of the state). Other significant population centres include Mandurah (78,612), Bunbury (32,499), Geraldton (31,553), Kalgoorlie (28,242), Albany (25,196), Broome (14,436), and Port Hedland (14,000).[15]Western Australia is a major extractor of bauxite, which is also processed into alumina at four refineries providing more than 20% of total world production. It is the world's third-largest iron-ore producer (15% of the world's total) and extracts 75% of Australia's 240 tonnes of gold. Diamonds are extracted at Argyle diamond mine in far north of the Kimberley region. Coal mined at Collie is the main fuel for baseload electricity generation in the state's south-west.Agricultural production in WA is a major contributor to the state and national economy. Although tending to be highly seasonal, xxxx?07 wheat production in WA was nearly 10 million tonnes, accounting for almost half the nation's total.[21] and providing $1.7 billion in export income.[22]Other significant farm output includes barley, peas,[21] wool, lamb and beef. There is a high level of overseas demand live animals from WA, driven mainly by South East Asia's feedlots and Middle Eastern countries, where cultural and religious traditions and a lack of storage and refrigeration facilities favour live animals over imports of processed meat. Approximately 50% of Australia's live cattle exports come from Western Australia.[23Resource sector growth in recent years has resulted in significant labour and skills shortages, leading to recent efforts by the state government to encourage interstate and overseas migration.[24] According to the xxxx census,[14] the median individual income was A$500 per week in Western Australia (compared to A$466 in Australia as a whole). The median family income was A$xxxx per week (compared to A$xxxx for Australia). Recent growth has also contributed to significant rises in average property values in xxxx, although values plateaued in xxxx. Perth property prices are still the second highest in Australia behind Sydney, and high rental prices continue to be a problem.Located south of Perth, the heavy industrial area of Kwinana has the nation's largest oil refinery which produces petrol and diesel for local consumption,[25] along with iron, alumina, and nickel processing plants, port facilities for grain exports, and support industries for mining and petroleum such as heavy and light engineering, and metal fabrication. Shipbuilding (e.g. Austal Ships) and associated support industries are found at nearby Henderson, just south of Fremantle. Significant secondary industries include cement and building product manufacturing, flour milling, food processing, animal feed production, automotive body building, and printing.In recent years, tourism has grown in importance, with significant numbers of visitors to the state coming from the UK and Ireland (28%), other European countries (14%) Singapore (16%), Japan (10%) and Malaysia (8%).[22] Revenue from tourism is a strong economic driver in many of the smaller population centres outside of Perth, especially in coastal locations.Western Australia was granted self-government in xxxx with a bicameral Parliament located in Perth, consisting of the Legislative Assembly (or lower house), which has 59 members; and the Legislative Council (or upper house), which has 36 members. Suffrage is universal and compulsory for citizens over 18 years of age.With the federation of the Australian colonies in xxxx, Western Australia became a state within Australia's federal structure; this involved ceding certain powers to the Commonwealth (or Federal) government in accordance with the Constitution; all powers not specifically granted to the Commonwealth remained solely with the State, however over time the Commonwealth has effectively expanded its powers through increasing control of taxation and financial distribution.Whilst the sovereign of Western Australia is the Queen of Australia (Elizabeth II), and executive power nominally vested in her State representative the Governor (currently Malcolm McCusker), executive power rests with the premier and ministers drawn from the party or coalition of parties holding a majority of seats in the Legislative Assembly. The current Premier is Colin Barnett.Secessionism has been a recurring feature of Western Australia's political landscape since shortly after European settlement in xxxx. Western Australia was the most reluctant participant in the Commonwealth of Australia.[26] Western Australia did not participate in the earliest federation conference. Longer-term residents of Western Australia were generally opposed to federation; however, the discovery of gold brought many immigrants from other parts of Australia. It was these residents, primarily in Kalgoorlie but also in Albany who voted to join the Commonwealth, and the proposal of these areas being admitted separately under the name Auralia was considered.In a referendum in April xxxx, 68% of voters voted for the state to leave the Commonwealth of Australia with the aim of returning to the British Empire as an autonomous territory. The State Government sent a delegation to Westminster, but the British Government refused to intervene and therefore no action was taken to implement this decision.[27Education in Western Australia consists of one year of pre-school at age 5, followed by six or seven years of primary school education (some primary schools only go to year 6, with year 7 beginning in high school). At age 13, students begin five years of secondary education. The final two years of secondary education are now compulsory.[29] From xxxx, all students who completed Year 10 were required to undertake further studies in Year 11, and to complete the year in which they turned 16 (usually Year 11). Since xxxx, all students are required to complete 12 years of study before leaving school.[29] Students have the option to study at a TAFE college in their eleventh year or continue through high school with a vocational course or a specific university entrance course.There are five universities in Western Australia. They consist of four Perth-based public universities, the University of Western Australia, Curtin University, Edith Cowan University and Murdoch University, and one Fremantle-based private Roman Catholic university, the University of Notre Dame. The University of Notre Dame is also one of only two private universities in Western Australia, alongside with the Bond University, a not-for-profit private education provider based in Gold Coast, Queensland.Western Australia has two daily newspapers: the independent tabloid The West Australian and The Kalgoorlie Miner. Also published is one weekend paper The Weekend West and one Sunday tabloid newspaper, News Corporation's The Sunday Times. There are also 17 weekly Community Newspapers with distribution from Yanchep in the North to Mandurah in the South. There are two major weekly rural papers in the state, Countryman the Rural Press-owned Farm Weekly. The interstate broadsheet publication The Australian is also available, although with sales per capita lagging far behind those in other states. With the advent of the Internet, local news websites like WAtoday, which provide free access to their content, are becoming a popular alternative source of news. Other online publications from around the world like the New South Wales based The Sydney Morning Herald and The Australian are also available.Western Australia is home to one of the country's leading performance training institutions, the acclaimed Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA), as well as a burgeoning theatrical and musical scene. Notable musicians and bands to have been born in or lived in Western Australia include Adam Brand, Karnivool, Birds of Tokyo, Bon Scott, Eskimo Joe, Johnny Young, Gyroscope, the John Butler Trio, Tame Impala, Kevin Mitchell, The Kill Devil Hills, Pendulum, The Pigram Brothers, Rolf Harris and The Triffids. The West Australian Music Industry Awards (WAMis) have been awarded every year to the leading musicians and performers in WA since xxxx.Notable actors and television personalities from Western Australia include Heath Ledger, Sam Worthington, Ernie Dingo, Jessica Marais, Megan Gale, Rove McManus, Isla Fisher, and Melissa George. Films and television series filmed or partly filmed in Western Australia include Cloudstreet, Australia, Bran Nu Dae, ABBA: the Movie and Last Train to Freo.The West Australian Symphony Orchestra (WASO) is based at the Perth Concert Hall. Other concert, performance and indoor sporting venues in Western Australia include His Majesty's Theatre, the now demolished Perth Entertainment Centre, the Burswood Dome and Theatre and the Perth Arena, which opened in xxxx.
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