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Reef Side Tattoo
Reef Side Tattoo
Business Description
Reef Side Tattoo is a highly rated tattoo shop in Melbourne, Florida. We are located at 2447 N Wickham Road, Melbourne Flordia come on down and meet the whole Reef Side Tattoo Team from 10 am to 8 pm 7 days a week. Connect with us by following us on Instagram, give us a like on Facebook or subscribe to our YouTube channel. We are a very versatile, highly skilled and professionally trained group of new schools down to earth guys. We specialize in the newest styles in The Industry so we push to be one of the Top custom Parlor's in town, Reef Side Tattoo has an excellent client to artist customer service. our artists take your idea and create one that is unique to you so that each design or sketch is hand-drawn and a one-of-a-kind piece of art.
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About Melbourne
Melbourne () is a city in Brevard County, Florida, United States. It is located 72 miles (116 km) southeast of Orlando and 175 miles (282 km) northwest of Miami. As of the 2020 Decennial Census, there was a population of 84,678. The municipality is the second-largest in the county by both size and population. Melbourne is a principal city of the Palm Bay – Melbourne – Titusville, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area. In 1969, the city was expanded by merging with nearby Eau Gallie. == History == === Early human occupation === Evidence for the presence of Paleo-Indians in the Melbourne area during the late Pleistocene epoch was uncovered during the 1920s. C. P. Singleton, a Harvard University zoologist, discovered the bones of a mammoth (Mammuthus columbi) on his property along Crane Creek, 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from Melbourne, and brought in Amherst College paleontologist Frederick B. Loomis to excavate the skeleton. Loomis found a second elephant, with a "large rough flint instrument" among fragments of the elephant's ribs. Loomis found in the same stratum mammoth, mastodon, horse, ground sloth, tapir, peccary, camel, and saber-tooth cat bones, all extinct in Florida since the end of the Pleistocene 10,000–8,000 BCE. At a nearby site a human rib and charcoal were found in association with Mylodon, Megalonyx, and Chlamytherium (ground sloth) teeth.