Global Warming And Solutions

Introduction to Global Warming:

Greenhouse warming has existed for quite some time, arguably since Earth was first formed. Greenhouse gases, or gases conducive to the greenhouse effect, act like a blanket or the panes of glass in a greenhouse’s walls; they reflect the heat the earth would radiate into space back down towards the earth, holding it in. You see, the balance of heat on earth is maintained by different processes. Solar radiation approaches the earth, and clouds and the atmosphere reflect some of it back into space. More radiation is absorbed by the atmosphere, clouds, and the surface of the earth. Then the earth radiates the heat back as infrared radiation. To maintain a certain, constant temperature, the rate that Earth emits energy into space must equal the rate it absorbs the sun’s energy. The greenhouse effect’s refusal to allow a certain amount of this terrestrial radiation to pass keeps the Earth’s average surface temperature at about 60°F (15°C). If there were no greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, most of the heat radiated by the Earth’s surface would be lost directly to outer space, and the planet’s temperature would be 0°F (-18°C), too cold for most forms of life (Greenhouse).

There are several atmospheric gases that act as greenhouse gases (GHGs). The most infamous is carbon dioxide, which is emitted through the respiration of humans and animals, the burning of fossil fuel, deforestation, and other changes in land use. Carbon dioxide is the main focus of many greenhouse gas sanctions, since it is the greenhouse gas that has most been released into the atmosphere. However, some other gases may have a greater effect upon climate than CO2. If one examines research into the possible warming effect of other GHGs relative to CO2, one finds that over a 100-year period, there are gases present in far smaller amounts that have a much more concentrated effect. Methane, a gas produced by livestock (flatulence), oil and gas production, coal mining, solid waste, and wet rice agriculture, has 11 times more warming potential per volume than CO2 (Science), or 25 times more per molecule (Clarkson). Nitrous oxide, produced mainly in connection with current agricultural practices, has 270 times more warming potential per volume over this period than CO2 (Science). Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), the gases used as refrigerants and in aerosol spray dispensers that were banned some time back due to their ozone depletion potential, have 3400-7100 times more warming potential per volume than CO2 (Science). Hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), the CFC substitutes, have a slightly smaller warming potential at 1200-1600 times larger per volume than CO2 (Science).

And so, as one might infer, studies are showing that additions of GHGs may cause the earth to get warmer than it naturally would. This is what is referred to as anthropogenic (human-caused) global warming. Many times, the terms global warming and climate change are used interchangeably. (We will do the same, for continuity’s sake.) But, this is not correct and the concepts are different. Climate change includes precipitation, wind patterns, and temperature. It also refers to the whole climate, not just weather conditions of one place. Global warming is an indication of climate change. It is an example of a climate change that has the atmosphere’s average temperature increase. Earth has experienced much warming and much cooling throughout its history. There is a great deal of debate as to whether or not the earth is experiencing a globally warming climate change and, if it is, whether the underlying causes are man-made or natural. Different research has given different results.

However, even when greenhouse gases were arguably at a stable level, before the onset of the Industrial Revolution, Earth’s climate tended to fluctuate widely. A period from 5,000 to 3,000 BC (when civilization began) is called the Climatic Optimum and another period from 900 – 1200 AD is called the Little Climatic Optimum or the Medieval Climatic Optimum, both so named for their unusually warm temperatures. Likewise, a period from 1550 to 1850 is known as the Little Ice Age for its unusually cold temperatures (Pidwirny). At this time, glaciers in southern Norway reached their greatest extent in 9000 years (Keigwin). With such large variations possible, it is difficult to know where the next natural fluctuation could take us. Perhaps those who find that global climate is warming are simply measuring a natural fluctuation. Or perhaps a natural fluctuation is masking the real effect of GHGs on the globe.

Global Warming: Big Questions, Big Research

As mentioned previously, there is a great debate over whether or not humans are causing global warming. Some activists and researchers have resorted to name-calling or accusing the opposing side of having “sold out” to one special interest or another. As mentioned previously, we have attempted to cut away the personal attacks between the opposing sides, search for the kernel of truth (or logic, where truth cannot be discerned), and get down to the heart of the matter.

In order to properly read any of the reports or research on global climate change, one must keep in mind that nothing (or almost nothing) is certain. Everything has a certain degree of uncertainty, a certain flavor of the unknown. There really is no conclusive evidence of global warming, and many scientists in favor of the global warming hypothesis say that it will be a decade or more before it is possible to develop any substantial evidence. As an anonymous senior climate modeler has said about global warming, “The more you learn, the more you understand that you don’t understand very much” (Kerr – Greenhouse Forecasting). Global climate is by nature always fluctuating, and that only adds to the confusion about anthropogenic global warming. If there were an anthropogenic global warming, we couldn’t be sure what temperature we were supposed to be at, as climate shifts are a natural part of life on Earth. Compounding that confusion is natural variability, which is always working to confuse researchers just as they come close to attributing a perceived change in average temperature to some external factor, such as atmospheric composition (GHGs) or solar variation. One reason for this variability is the long adjustment time of the oceans’ heat storage and current systems. It is estimated to take several hundred years for water to circulate from the deepest portions of the oceans back to the surface. This means that if, for example, a pool of extra cold water is singled out and stored in the depths by some freak mechanism, it could stay there a century or two before resurfacing and producing a local, cool climate change (Clarkson, North, and Schmandt).

Since no one can create another Earth (let alone one that behaves exactly like ours) and perform atmosphere-altering experiments on it, we are left with the alternative of theorizing based on observations. In other words, the only way we can purport to know anything about what might be changing in our climate is by playing with data, such as records of temperature, borehole measurements, etc., and seeing what scenarios the data will agree with.

Most of the body of global warming theory is based on computerized climate models called global circulation models or GCMs, for they are almost the only tools global warming researchers have. GCMs are difficult to make as making them properly involves a deep-rooted understanding of the way the atmosphere works and how its actions are interconnected with other planetary bodies, such as the oceans or the terrestrial biosphere. But our understanding of the inner workings of the atmosphere and the ways it relates to other planetary bodies is not very good. Renowned NASA climate modeler James Hansen, the man whose summer 1988 congressional testimony kicked off the climate change debate, states in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: “The forcings [outside factors] that drive long-term climate change are not known with an accuracy sufficient to define future climate changes.” One of the fundamental illustrations of chaos, the butterfly effect, displays the interconnectedness of the atmosphere system when it states that a butterfly fluttering through the air in China could cause rain in New York the following spring.

GCMs are made by formulating mathematical descriptions of the interrelationships between the atmosphere/ocean/biosphere/cryosphere system and conducting numerical experiments. They certainly are unable to form a mathematical description based on the kind of interconnections, or feedbacks, that the butterfly effect would suggest. Indeed, Michael Schlesinger, modeler at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, tells us that “in the climate system, there are 14 orders of magnitude, from the planetary scale–which is 40 million meters–down to the scale of one of the little aerosol particles on which water vapor can change phase to a liquid [cloud particle]–which is a fraction of a millionth of a millimeter.” Of these 14 orders of magnitude, only the two largest (the planetary scale and the scale of weather disturbances) can currently be included in models. Schlesinger notes that, to include the third order of magnitude (the scale of thunderstorms, at about 50 km resolution) a computer a thousand times faster would be necessary, “a teraflops machine that maybe we’ll have in 5 years.” Including all orders of magnitude would require 1036-1037 times more computing power (Kerr – Greenhouse Forecasting).

Because GCMs are so hard to make, often they account for the same processes differently; two models may have two different mathematical descriptions of what effect clouds have on warming, for example. Processes with a resolution smaller than a few hundred kilometers cannot be represented directly in the models, but instead must be parameterized, or expressed in terms of the larger scale motions, since the models do not have the resolution necessary to properly represent the actions of important weather systems such as tropical and extratropical cyclones. To offset this downfall, a few parameterizations (such as horizontal eddy viscosity, large-scale precipitation cumulus convection, gravity wave drag, etc.) are calibrated. Added to these parameterizations are adjustments commonly referred to as flux corrections, and they are an important “fudge factor” for the GCMs. These factors keep the models from floating off into nowhere. As Kerr (Model) stated, “Climate modelers have been ‘cheating’ for so long it’s almost become respectable.” Through these parameterizations, GCMs attempt to represent certain climate features reasonably well, but it is possible that they may be getting the right numbers but have the wrong underlying reason for them. As a result, such models’ ability to simulate climate change properly would be negatively impacted.

Lately, a model has been designed and tested at the National Center for Atmospheric Research to eliminate the flux corrections. This model better incorporates the effects of ocean eddies, not by shrinking the scale, but by parameterization, passing the effects of these invisible eddies onto larger model scales using a more realistic means of mixing hear through the ocean that any earlier model did. This model doesn’t drift off into chaos even after 300 years of running. This model gives a 2oC rise in temperature due to a CO2 doubling. (Some of the more popular GCMs assume that the concentration of CO2 will double in 70 years or quadruple in 140 years and use the assumption to try to predict what the climate will be like in decades or even centuries based on that doubling or quadrupling.) This figure is on the low side of estimates and puts the model’s sensitivity to greenhouse gases near the low end of current model estimates (Kerr – Model).

GCMs are very sensitive to the representations of the effects of clouds and oceans, as their effects are complex and not understood well. While some GCMs are being specially made to simulate water behavior in clouds, limited vertical resolution (i.e., they don’t go up far enough) and coarse horizontal resolution (i.e., the cloud activity of large areas of the Earth is averaged together and this average is used for the entire area) prevent even these models from accurately covering thin clouds and some cloud formation processes. Most early simulations were run with fixed cloud distributions based on observed cloud cover data, but these fixed levels didn’t allow any feedback between cloud distributions and changing atmospheric/oceanic temperatures and motions. Problems in cloud feedback are seen as the Achilles heel of GCMs. Likewise, ocean representations were initially crude; in some early models, a swamp (stagnant, heat-absorbing, heat and water vapor-releasing body of water) was used as the oceanic model. Later models had a 50 meter thick slab of ocean that allowed summertime heat storage and wintertime heat release. While not including ocean currents (caused by the movement of heat to colder areas of ocean), these models attempted to represent seasonal responses to temperature in the upper ocean, but the lack of currents resulted in tropical oceans being too hot and polar regions too cold. Even today’s most sophisticated, computationally-intense climate models are still just numerically experimental approximations of the exceedingly complex atmosphere/ocean/biosphere/cryosphere system. And yet, these GCMs are the basis of global warming theory, if for no other reason than the near-impossibility of conducting physical experiments at the global level (Cotton & Pielke).

The main means of testing these mathematical models of the climate involves taking climate data from previous years, running the programs, and seeing if the computer results are close to the actual present climatic data. The problem there is that the data are not exactly accurate. When the predicted global warming ranges from .5oC to 4oC, data accuracy is important, to say the least. Satellite data (view some) is called insubstantial by some researchers for the short length of its records, but Phil Jones states that the shortness even of global-scale surface temperature records (about 100 years) aids the uncertainty in the field. Interestingly enough, current surface temperature measurements have shown a .5oC warming over the past century, but satellite measurements for the past fifteen years (satellite data has only been available for nineteen years) shows a slight downward trend. Satellite trends in temperature vary smoothly, while in some surface data, one region will appear to be warming while those regions around it appear to cool. According to Dr. Roy Spencer, a NASA scientist, “We see major excursions [from the trend] due to volcanic eruptions like [Mount] Pinatubo and ocean current phenomena like El Niño, but overall the trend is about 0.05 degrees Celsius per decade cooling” (Horack and Spencer). Earlier this year, it was realized that the satellite data needed correction for orbital decay, or “downward drift,” in the satellites that cause erroneous cooling to show in the data. However, even after a careful readjustment the trend is still 0.01oC per decade of cooling, while weather balloons show -0.02 and -0.07oC per decade in Britain and America respectively, and British surface data show a warming of 0.15oC per decade. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) climate model predictions estimate surface warming to be 0.18oC per decade and warming in the deep layer measured by satellites and weather balloons to be about 30% faster, or +0.23oC per decade. None of the satellites or weather balloons show values anywhere near this, not even when the adjusted satellite record is updated through July 1998 to show a trend of +0.04oC per decade, which is still only 1/6 of the IPCC-predicted rate (Spencer).

Even while the satellites may need adjustments in their data for changes in orbit, this data is still more accurate than surface data. Satellites do not have anything in their surroundings to skew the data. On the other hand, many sources of error exist here on Earth. Things as seemingly minuscule as variation in the color and type of paint used for the instrument shelters can skew data slightly, for different types and colors of paint absorb small but differing amounts of solar radiation. As another example, the urban heat island effect is known to make cities warmer at night and milder during the day. The growth of urban areas during this century has resulted in a 0.4oC bias in the US climate record, making the amount of warming appear larger than it was (Cotton and Pielke). Thomas Karl, climatologist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), demonstrated in a 1989 paper that, if surface temperatures are corrected for the urban heat island effect, the years around 1940 emerge as the warmest, with readings since then showing a downward trend (Crandall). If this bias exists in the global climate data set, its use to represent a wider geographic record for climate change studies will be misleading.

Another largely-ignored factor affecting temperature data is solar variation, or periodic changes in the brightness of the sun based on sunspots and the like. Some climate modelers say that the Sun only varies with an 11-year cycle, and this period is too fast for the climate system to respond to. Hoyt points out that explosive volcanic eruptions have a one to two year long radiative forcing which does appear to affect climate, and so solar variance should have a substantial impact on climate. James Hansen, the famed NASA modeler, put it this way: “Anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHGs), which are well-measured, cause a strong positive (warming) forcing. But other, poorly measured, anthropogenic forcings, especally changes of atmospheric aerosols, clouds, and other land-use patterns, cause a negative forcing that tends to offset greenhouse warming. One consequence of this partial balance is that the natural forcing due to solar irradiance changes may play a larger role in long-term climate change than inferred from GHGs alone” (NASA’s). Current research by Daniel Cayan and Warren White of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography gives evidence that “the waxing and waning of the sun” may be behind current climate change. They studied North Pacific sea surface temperatures for the past 50 years and noticed that their pattern looked remarkably like that of satellite records of solar irradiance (Kerr – New). Based on this, it would seem logical to include these effects in GCMs, but few researchers do.

Moreover, any calculated warming would be reduced by this cooling effect of volcanoes. Even though we cannot predict the occurrence of a volcanic eruption, we have sufficient statistical information about past eruptions to estimate their average cooling effect; yet this is one of several factors not specifically considered by the IPCC (Singer – Scientific) and many other models.

If these models are wrong in their assumptions about climate, then everything that is thought to be known because of them is wrong. If, however, their assumptions are right, but essential factors or effects within the global system are being omitted from study, then GCMs thought to be wrong may actually need only an enlightened tweaking. Unfortunately, enlightenment is difficult to come by in this field. Many, many things are still unknown.

Effects of Global Warming on Our Everyday Lives

Another area where uncertainty rears its head is in the realm of the “real life” effects of global warming. The possible effects of global warming have been played out in the media: hurricanes, plagues, a great increase in sea level, etc. Some scientists refute these claims. But, again, since the climate models can tell us little with much certainty, we can not know for certain if a global warming would have these effects or not.

Some researchers, such as those involved with the IPCC, claim that global warming will lead to an increase in violent storms such as hurricanes and typhoons. But, as S. Fred Singer points out (Scientific), warming should actually lead to a reduction in these storms as the equator-to-pole temperature differences diminish, for it is this atmospheric temperature heterogeneity that drives storms and makes them strong.

Record-breaking temperatures are given by others as a consequence of global warming. But they actually are the consequence of having records to break; on an average day, 2 million square miles (the equivalent of an area 1400 miles by 1400 miles) of the Earth are experiencing weather which breaks 100-year-old records. Indeed, the probability of breaking a weather record is equal to 1/n, where n is the number of years for which records exist (Hoyt).

Some, such as virologist Robert Shope, do say that warming could cause the mosquito carrying dengue fever and yellow fever to migrate northward, causing epidemics in North America. Cholera (which is known to live in sea-borne plankton), he says, could become epidemic in America as changes in marine ecology favor the growth and transmission of the pathogen. Rita Colwell, Paul Epstein, and Timothy Ford, another group of researchers, went a step further and blamed an El Niño warming of the Pacific at least partially for a 1991 Latin American cholera epidemic affecting 500,000 and killing almost 5,000. But cholera is known to spread from humans to other humans through food, water, and feces; this is why cholera epidemics appear when public health and sanitation break down. CDC medical epidemiologist Fred Angulo stated that “We had a powder keg ready to explode, an entire continent in which the sanitation and public water supplies and everything was primed for transmission of this organism once it was introduced,” possibly by ships emptying bilge water near fishing areas. He adds that cholera has been introduced into the US several times in the past few years; it didn’t spread “because we have a public health and sanitation infrastructure that prevents it.”

As for the mosquito-borne diseases, epidemiologist Mark L. Wilson of the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor says that the predictions suffer from many levels of uncertainty. No one disputes that weather patterns have an impact: “There’s reason to believe that if it’s an extremely rainy spring, summer mosquito populations will increase,” but he and his colleagues point out that no one knows just how patterns of temperature and rainfall will change in a warmer world, or how these changes will affect the biology of diseases. Paul Epstein has attributed Latin American dengue epidemics in 1994 and 1995 to El Niño and global warming, but experts on dengue at the Pan American Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say these epidemics resulted from a breakdown in programs to eradicate the specific species of mosquito responsible and its subsequent return. The epidemics once caused by mosquitoes in the US have vanished due to mosquito control, eradication programs, piped-water systems, and lifestyle changes (we have good housing, air conditioning, and television to keep us inside, and screens to keep the mosquitoes outside). They note as an example 1995′s Mexican dengue pandemic that stopped at the Rio Grande, with over 2000 confirmed cases in Reynosa, Mexico, but only 7 across the river in Texas. And so it is a bit early to say, as the IPCC did, that “climate change is likely to have wide-ranging and mostly adverse impacts on human health, with significant loss of life” (Taubes).

It is interesting that there does appear to be an increase in sea level along the coastlines. According to Robert T. Watson, IPCC chairman, “We’ll see sea level rise that could displace tens of millions of people…and whole islands…could be significantly inundated. The shorelines of America could be severely attacked.” But Dr. David Aubrey, oceanographer and senior scientist with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute in Massachusetts, states that “I have seen no convincing evidence that recent sea level rises are caused by human effects or global warming” (Hoyt). And even global warming proponents’ estimates have been steadily falling; initially, it was projected by the EPA that an atmospheric CO2 doubling would cause 80-120 inches of rise, but by 1990 the estimate was a quarter of that. In 1996, a UN science advisory panel, predicted a rise of only 15-22 inches by 2100. Even these smaller estimates are quite uncertain, for sea level changes are terribly difficult to measure. Historical data are based on tide gauges, which are mainly from Northern Europe and North America. Long-term trends can be found only after the data is adjusted for waves, storm surges, and tidal variations (Singer – Sky). In addition, the land itself may be rising or falling. The Mid-Atlantic US coast, for example, is falling as a bulge formed by Ice Age glaciers slowly settles, according to the Detroit News in 1996 (Hoyt). The global sea level record as reconstructed and adjusted shows an interesting trend: levels have been rising at about 7 inches per century for several centuries over which much fluctuation of global climate has occurred. It is now believed that slow tectonic changes have caused the steady rise, not the melting glaciers some global warming theorists propose. Incidentally, the World Glacier Monitoring Service in Zurich determined that between 1926 and 1960, when the planet was supposedly cooler than today, 70% of US and European glaciers retreated. Since 1980, however, 55% of those same glaciers have advanced (Carlisle). This would not support the theory that global warming is happening now, it is melting glaciers, and that water is causing a rise in sea level. While global warming may cause mountainous glaciers to melt and a thermal expansion of water, accelerating the natural rise, it also may cause more water to evaporate from the surface of warmer oceans, leading to greater rainfall and a thickening of polar icecaps. Data from the period of warming from 1900-1940 shows a sea level drop, while the subsequent cooler period showed a rise in sea level (Singer – Sky).

Other areas of life global warming has an effect upon are those affected by attempts to stop global warming. Some people (Clark, Kerr – Greenhouse Report) suggest that small changes, such as using high-efficiency compact fluorescent lights, using self-powered or public transportation more often, etc., could make a big impact on the global warming problem (assuming it exists). This would go along with the idea expressed by some scientists that the only actions that should be taken until there is more certainty are those that would (or should) be taken anyway . But will people do these things if they don’t have to? Some other scientists are more pessimistic.

Greater measures are suggested by these people. As Cotton and Pielke state in Human Impacts on Weather and Climate, “Clearly, reductions in CO2 emissions in these countries [the US, China, and the former Soviet Union] will have a significant impact on global CO2 emissions and reduce the chance that human activity will have a significant impact on weather and climate.” In working with such an uncertain issue, one can only weigh one’s risks, look at the costs and benefits of all alternatives, and take one’s most competent guess at what the best course of action is. In the face of all this uncertainty, I would propose a sort of Climatologists’ Wager (a variation of Pascal’s Wager to this issue). Let’s assume for a moment that there is a global warming occurring. If this is anthropogenic global warming and it will have a negative impact on climate and life, then we must take action. If this is not anthropogenic global warming and warming will have a negative effect on climate and life, nothing can be done. If there is no anthropogenic global warming and the warming will not have a negative effect on climate and life, nothing need be done. Likewise, if humans have caused the global warming but it will not have a negative impact on climate and life, no action is necessary.

But there is one other dimension to choosing what to do: assuming that anthropogenic global warming is occurring and it will negatively impact climate and life, one must weigh the costs and benefits of maintaining that risk against the costs and benefits of action. Let us take the Kyoto Protocol as an example. President Clinton signed it on November 12, 1998, but he is waiting to give it to the Senate. This agreement, if ratified by the Senate, would force the US to cut GHG emissions (mostly of CO2) to 7% below the 1990 levels within the next 10 to 14 years. The costs of this mandatory decrease in emissions are substantial. Compliance would cost the US $3.3 trillion from 2001 to 2020, or $30,000 per household. Gas prices are expected to increase by 65 cents a gallon or more. Residents of Michigan are expected to have to pay 77.3% more for home heating oil, 73.5% more for natural gas, and 64.2% more for electricity. Industries and businesses will suffer. It is thought that some of the hardest hit sectors will include energy-intensive manufacturing (such as automobiles, cement, iron, steel, chemicals, aluminum, etc.), transportation, telecommunications, paper and allied products, petroleum refining, and utilities. Wages and salaries would fall, while food, housing, and medical costs rose. The state of Michigan would lose 96,500 jobs (49,800 in manufacturing), $9.3 billion in output, and $3.4 billion in tax revenues, decreasing the ability of the state to provide even more greatly needed social services. It is expected that the jobless rate would reach 5.5% and 1.1 million US jobs would be lost (Novak, Littmann).

This would be a grim picture if these changes were known to be necessary for survival. But a far grimmer picture is one of going through all this economic hardship for an unproven theory, and then potentially discovering that these costly changes really had a negligible effect upon climate and life as a whole. There is no scientific understanding of what GHG level is “dangerous.” How can we, then, regulate what the level should be, not knowing if the danger is above or below the standard we would set? For that matter, how can the 1992 Global Climate Treaty say that its purpose is to “achieve stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system” (Singer – Scientific)? It also seems a bit funny that only a fast-growing, prosperous society would best be able to afford the extra technology to make itself cleaner, healthier, and safer, but this treaty would certainly not have that effect upon the US economy. In not sanctioning developing countries, Kyoto almost encourages industry to move from the reasonably efficient and well-regulated developed countries to the developing countries, which have few (if any) regulations on pollution. S. Fred Singer has an interesting thought in “Dangers From the Global Climate Treaty”: “This [the Kyoto Protocol] has been rightly labeled a transfer of money from the poor in the rich countries to the rich in the poor countries.” Meanwhile, climate scientists who support the anthropogenic global warming theory say that it is unlikely that the Kyoto Protocol will even temporarily slow the accumulation of GHGs in the atmosphere. Jerry Mahlman, director of the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory at Princeton, states that “it might take another 30 Kyotos over the next century” to cut global warming down to size (Malakoff).

Fact and Fiction:

FICTION: Even if the Earth is warming, we can’t be sure how much, if any, of the warming is caused by human activities.

FACT: There is international scientific consensus that most of the warming over the last 50 years is due to human activities, not natural causes. Over millions of years, animals and plants lived, died and were compressed to form huge deposits of oil, gas and coal. In little more than 300 years, however, we have burned a large amount of this storehouse of carbon to supply energy.

Today, the by-products of fossil fuel use – billions of tons of carbon (in the form of carbon dioxide), methane, and other greenhouse gases – form a blanket around the Earth, trapping heat from the sun, unnaturally raising temperatures on the ground, and steadily changing our climate.

The impacts associated with this deceptively small change in temperature are evident in all corners of the globe. There is heavier rainfall in some areas, and droughts in others. Glaciers are melting, Spring is arriving earlier, oceans are warming, and coral reefs are dying.

FICTION: The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicts an increase in the global average temperature of only 1.4°C to 5.8°C over the coming century.
This small change, less than the current daily temperature range for most major cities, is hardly cause for concern.

FACT: Global average temperature is calculated from temperature readings around the Earth. While temperature does vary considerably at a daily level in any one place, global average temperature is remarkably constant. According to analyses of ice cores, tree rings, pollen and other “climate proxies,” the average temperature of the Northern Hemisphere had varied up or down by only a few tenths of a degree Celsius between 1000 AD and about 1900, when a rapid warming began.

A global average temperature change ranging from 1.4°C to 5.8°C would translate into climate-related impacts that are much larger and faster than any that have occurred during the 10 000-year history of civilization.

From scientific analyses of past ages, we know that even small global average temperature changes can lead to large climate shifts. For example, the average global temperature difference between the end of the last ice age (when much of the Northern Hemisphere was buried under thousands of feet of ice) and today’s interglacial climate is only about 5°C .

FICTION: Warming cannot be due to greenhouse gases, since changes in temperature and changes in greenhouse gas emissions over the past century did not occur simultaneously.

FACT: The slow heating of the oceans creates a significant time lag between when carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are emitted into the atmosphere and when changes in temperature occur.

This is one of the main reasons why we don’t see changes in temperature at the same time as changes in greenhouse gas emissions. You can see the same process occur in miniature when you heat up a pot of water on the stove: there is a time lag between the time you turn on the flame and when the water starts to boil.

In addition, there are many other factors that affect year-to-year variation in the Earth’s temperature. For example, volcanic eruptions, El Niсo, and small changes in the output of the sun can all affect the global climate on a yearly basis.
Therefore, you would not expect the build-up of greenhouse gases to exactly match trends in global climate. Still, scientific evidence points clearly to anthropogenic (or human-made) greenhouse gases as the main culprit for climate change.

FICTION: Carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere fairly quickly, so if global warming turns out to be a problem, we can wait to take action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions until after we start to see the impacts of warming.

FACT: Carbon dioxide, a gas created by the burning of fossil fuels (like gasoline and coal), is the most important human-made greenhouse gas.
Carbon dioxide from fossil fuel use is produced in huge quantities and can persist in our atmosphere for as long as 200 years.

This means that if emissions of carbon dioxide were halted today, it would take centuries for the amount of carbon dioxide now in the atmosphere to come down to what it was in pre-industrial times. Thus we need to act now if we want to avoid the increasingly dangerous consequences of climate change in the future.

FICTION: Human activities contribute only a small fraction of carbon dioxide emissions, an amount too small to have a significant effect on climate, particularly since the oceans absorb most of the extra carbon dioxide emissions.

FACT: Before human activities began to dramatically increase carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, the amount of carbon dioxide emitted from natural sources closely matched the amount that was stored or absorbed through natural processes.
For example, as forests grow, they absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis; this carbon is then sequestered in wood, leaves, roots and soil. Some carbon is later released back to the atmosphere when leaves, roots and wood die and decay.

Carbon dioxide also cycles through the ocean Plankton living at the ocean’s surface absorb carbon dioxide through photosynthesis. The plankton and animals that eat the plankton then die and fall to the bottom of the ocean. As they decay, carbon dioxide is released into the water and returns to the surface via ocean currents. As a result of these natural cycles, the amount of carbon dioxide in the air had changed very little for 10,000 years. But that balance has been upset by man.

Since the Industrial Revolution, the burning of fossil fuels such as coal and oil has put about twice as much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than is naturally removed by the oceans and forests. This has resulted in carbon dioxide levels building up in the atmosphere.

Today, carbon dioxide levels are 30% higher than pre-industrial levels, higher than they have been in the last 420,000 years and are probably at the highest levels in the past 20 million years. Studies of the Earth’s climate history have shown that even small, natural changes in carbon dioxide levels were generally accompanied by significant shifts in the global average temperature.

We have already experienced a 1°F increase in global temperature in the past century, and we can expect significant warming in the next century if we fail to act to decrease greenhouse gas emissions.

FICTION: The Earth has warmed rapidly in the past without dire consequences, so society and ecosystems can adapt readily to any foreseeable warming.

FACT: The Earth experienced rapid warming in some places at the end of the last glacial period, but for the last 10,000 years our global climate has been relatively stable. During this period, as agriculture and civilization developed, the world’s population has grown tremendously. Now, many heavily populated areas, such as urban centers in low-lying coastal zones, are highly vulnerable to climate shifts.

In addition, many ecosystems and species that are already threatened by existing pressures (such as pollution, habitat conversion and degradation) may be further pressured to the point of extinction by a changing climate.

FICTION: The buildup of carbon dioxide will lead to a “greening” of the Earth because plants can utilize the extra carbon dioxide to speed their growth.

FACT: Carbon dioxide has been shown to act as a fertilizer for some plant species under some conditions. In addition, a longer growing season (due to warmer temperatures) could increase productivity in some regions.

However, there is also evidence that plants can acclimatize to higher carbon dioxide levels – that means plants may grow faster for only a short time before returning to previous levels of growth.

Another problem is that many of the studies in which plant growth increased due to carbon dioxide fertilization were done in greenhouses where other nutrients, which plants need to survive, were adequately supplied.

In nature, plant nutrients like nitrogen as well as water are often in short supply. Thus, even if plants have extra carbon dioxide available, their growth might be limited by a lack of water and nutrients. Finally, climate change itself could lead to decreased plant growth in many areas because of increased drought, flooding and heat waves.

Whatever benefit carbon dioxide fertilization may bring, it is unlikely to be anywhere near enough to counteract the adverse impacts of a rapidly changing climate.

FICTION: If Earth has warmed since pre-industrial times, it is because the intensity of the sun has increased.

FACT: The sun’s intensity does vary. In the late 1970′s, sophisticated technology was developed that can directly measure the sun’s intensity. Measurements from these instruments show that in the past 20 years the sun’s variations have been very small.

Indirect measures of changes in sun’s intensity since the beginning of the industrial revolution in 1750 show that variations in the sun’s intensity do not account for all the warming that occurred in the 20th century and that the majority of the warming was caused by an increase in human-made greenhouse gas emissions.

FICTION: It is hard enough to predict the weather a few days in advance. How can we have any confidence in projections of climate a hundred years from now?

FACT: Climate and weather are different. Weather refers to temperatures, precipitation and storms on a given day at a particular place. Climate reflects a long-term average, sometimes over a very large area, such as a continent or even the entire Earth.

Averages over large areas and periods of time are easier to estimate than the specific characteristics of weather.
For example, although it is notoriously difficult to predict if it will rain or the exact temperature of any particular day at a specific location, we can predict with relative certainty that on average, in the Northeastern United States, it will be colder in December than in July.

In addition, climate models are now sophisticated enough to be able to recreate past climates, including climate change over the last hundred years. This adds to our confidence that projections of future climates are accurate.

Finally, when we report climate projections, we use a range of results from climate models that represent the boundaries of our projections (what’s the least global average temperature could change to what’s the most global average temperature could change) and our degree of certainty of the projections.

FICTION: The science of global climate change cannot tell us the amount by which man-made emissions of greenhouse gases should be reduced in order to slow global warming.

FACT: The U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change states that emissions of greenhouse gases should be reduced to avoid “dangerous interference with the climate system.” Scientists have subsequently attempted to define what constitutes “dangerous interference.”
One study (O’Neill and Oppenheimer, 2002) supplies three criteria that could be used:

1) risk to threatened ecosystems such as coral reefs

2) large-scale disruptions caused by changes in the climate system, such as sea-level rise caused by the break-up of the Antarctic Ice Sheet and

3) large-scale disruptions of the climate system itself, such as the shutdown of the thermohaline circulation of the Atlantic Ocean (the Gulf stream), which would result in a severe drop in temperature to Europe.

This study projects that if C02 concentrations are capped at 450 parts per million (ppm), major disruptions to climate systems may be avoided, although some damage (such as that to coral reefs) may be unavoidable.

Current estimates of atmospheric CO2 concentrations likely to be reached without aggressive action to limit greenhouse gas emissions are far higher – from 550 ppm to as much as 1000 ppm in the next hundred years.

FICTION: Because of the uncertainty of climate models, it is extremely difficult to predict exactly what regional impacts will result from global climate change.

FACT: According to the IPCC, certain climate trends are highly likely to occur if greenhouse gas emissions continue at their current rate or increase: sea level will rise; droughts will increase in some areas, flooding in others; temperatures will rise, leading to heat waves becoming more common and glaciers likely to melt at a more rapid rate.

Regional impacts are very likely to occur, but exactly when and what they will be is harder to predict.

This is because:

1) regional climate models are more computer intensive than global climate models – they take longer to run and are more difficult to calibrate, and

2) many non-climate factors contribute to impacts at regional levels. For example, the risk of mosquito-borne illnesses like Dengue fever and malaria may rise due to increased temperatures, but the actual likelihood of infection will depend greatly on the effectiveness of public health measures in place.

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As has been stated previously, there are a great many unanswered questions about global warming. We wonder whether or not there really is an anthropogenic global warming or the threat of one because we don’t have the perfect climate model to tell us so. And we don’t have this model because we don’t understand what is going on; we don’t understand how the atmospheric system interacts with the oceans, the terrestrial biosphere, the cryosphere, or any of its other contributing factors. Therefore, the research that should be first and foremost in our minds is that to better understand the rich interrelationships between these bodies as well as the various features of each that may not be well understood. The effect of clouds, for example, on warming and vice versa are not understood very well. Do they simply cool by reflecting heat back to space, or is their role more complex than that? What effect does each shape and size of cloud have? What outside factors have an effect upon cloud formation? And, most importantly, how can we best relate these effects into GCMs?

Likewise, aerosols are in need of study. Do they simply cause cooling by reflecting solar radiation back out into space, or, as one researcher stated, is that effect canceled out by heating through reflection of terrestrial radiation back to earth and give their real cooling effect by fortifying clouds with water droplets, giving them a higher albedo?

Are variations in solar radiation and sunspot cycles behind part or all of the perceived global warming? Could there be changes in the sun’s energy output that would cause warming such as some have observed?

How does the tropical ocean interact with global atmospheric circulation, given that tropical cyclones (hurricanes) form there? Are there any special processes at work there that would affect the global warming theory? Likewise, how do the atmosphere, the ocean, and sea ice interact at high latitudes?

What, exactly, is the terrestrial biosphere’s place in the carbon cycle? How much CO2 does different types of vegetation, soil, or rock absorb? If CO2 is shown to be a substantial problem, would there be any way to make parts of the terrestrial biosphere take on more CO2? What effect would that have on the various ecosystems involved?

And on and on the potential questions go. As can be seen above, there are a lot of different directions global warming research can go in and is going in. All of these would be helpful in trying to better determine the climatic direction we as a planet are headed in. But there is one other dimension to this attempt to better understand global warming: the modeling. Currently, even the most sophisticated and encompassing of the GCMs is incredibly crude and oversimplified compared to the actual atmospheric system and its feedbacks. And so, given new findings in research related to above topics and others, we must continue to update the models. We must keep working on the models, improving them, until flux corrections or “fudge factors,” as they are called, are unnecessary to make them properly predict today’s conditions. As computer technologies continually become smaller and faster and more capable of complex systems, we must keep shrinking the scale of the models and bringing in more variables to account for or better, more detailed understanding of the existing variables. To have a perfect model, every variable, every ocean eddy and sulfate particle would have to be accounted for. While this is improbable as a state of modeling, we can continue to try to better explain what is going on and how things are connected and interrelated by bringing bigger and better understandings of atmospheric intricacies to the modeling table.

Unfortunately for these global climate change researchers, the computer industry is not moving nearly fast enough for this research. In many ways, climatologists are waiting on the computer industry to build more powerful supercomputers so they can make more complex models to take advantage of that computing power. And yet, there is at least a small advantage to waiting: many valuable studies being conducted with innovative, legitimate methods simply haven’t been collecting data long enough to be as useful as possible. Satellite data is a good example of this. If we wait, the data will be better.

And so, we can see that the science behind global warming is far from settled. Much is not known and conflicting theories abound, as they often do in scientific forums. New ideas and new studies keep the science of global climate change going, keep it second guessing itself, keep it looking for newer, better ways to explain what’s going on. In the end, global climate change may be a way for science to prove it can work well even under the most uncertain of circumstances. <!– / message –>

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Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/international-studies-articles/global-warming-and-solutions-2061810.html

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Nadeem Wagan

writer of Pakistan

Related eBooks

CHILD LABOR IN PAKISTAN

God has given human beings the boon of wisdom and discretion to think upon the signs of the universe and to draw conclusions. That is the reason why they disclose the hidden facts of it and its structure and have made remarkable progress in many walks of life. Children are the flowers of heaven. They are the most beautiful and purest creation of God. They are innocent both inwardly and outwardly. No doubt, they are the beauty of this world. Early in the morning when the children put on different kinds of clothes and begin to go to schools for the sake of knowledge, we feel a specific kind of joy through their innocence. Labour3 13-12.jpg

But there are also other children, those who cannot go to schools due to financial problems, they only watch others go to schools and can merely wish to seek knowledge.It is due to many hindrances and difficulties; desperate conditions that they face in life. Having been forced to kill their aspirations, dreams and other wishes, they are pressed to earn a living for themselves and for their families. It is also a fact that there are many children who play a key role in sustaining the economically life of their family without which, their families would not be able to make ends meet. These are also part of our society who have forgotten the pleasures of their childhood. When a child in addition to getting education, earns his livelihood, this act of earning a livelihood is called as child Labour. The concept of child Labour got much attention during the 1990s when European countries announced a ban on the goods of the less-developed countries because of child Labour.

The International Labour Organization (ILO) defines child Labour as:

1- when a child is working during early age
2- he overworks or gives over time to Labour
3- he works due to the psychologically, socially, and materialistic pressure
4- he becomes ready to Labour on a very low pay

Another definition states:

“Child Labour” is generally speaking work for children that harms them or exploits them in some way (physically, mentally, morally or blocking access to education),
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund(UNICEF) defines “child” as anyone below the age of 18, and “child Labour” as some type of work performed by children below age 18. (UNICEF).

Child Labour is an important and a serious global issue through which all and sundry countries of the world are directly or indirectly affected, but, it is very common in Latin America, Africa and Asia. According to some, in several Asian countries’ 1/10 manpower consists of child Labour. In India the number of children between the ages of 10-14 has crossed above 44 million, in Pakistan this number is from 8 to 10 million, in Bangladesh 8-12 million, in Brazil 7 million, whereas their number is 12 million in Nigeria.

In Pakistan children aged 5-14 are above 40 million.During the last year, the Federal Bureau of Statistics released the results of its survey funded by ILO’s IPEC (International Program on the Elimination of Child Labour). The findings were that 3.8 million children age group of 5-14 years are working in Pakistan out of total 40 million children in this age group; fifty percent of these economically active children are in age group of 5 to 9 years. Even out of these 3.8 million economically active children, 2.7 million were claimed to be working in the agriculture sector. Two million and four hundred thousand (73%) of them were said to be boys.

During the year 2001 and 2002 the government of Pakistan carried out a series of consultation of tripartite partners and stakeholders (Labour Department, trade unions, employers and NGOs) in all the provinces. The objective was to identify the occupations and the categories of work, which may be considered as hazardous under the provisions of ILO Convention 182. As a result of these deliberations, a national consensus list of occupations and categories of work was identified, which is given below:

1. Nature of occupation-category of work
2. Work inside under ground mines over ground quarries, including blasting and assisting in blasting
3. Work with power driven cutting machinery like saws, shears, and guillotines, ( Thrashers, fodder cutting machines, also marbles)
4. Work with live electrical wires over 50V.
5. All operation related to leather tanning process e.g. soaking, dehairing, liming chrome tanning, deliming, pickling defleshing, and ink application.
6. Mixing or application or pesticides insecticide/fumigation.
7. Sandblasting and other work involving exposure to free silica.
8. Work with exposure to ALL toxic, explosive and carcinogenic chemicals e.g. asbestos, benzene, ammonia, chlorine, sulphur dioxide, hydrogen sulphide, sulphuric acid, hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, caustic soda, phosphorus, benzidene dyes, isocyanides, carbon tetrachloride, carbon disulphide, epoxy, resins, formaldehyde, metal fumes, heavy metals like nickel, mercury chromium, lead, arsenic, beryllium, fiber glass, and
9. Work with exposure to cement dust (cement industry)
10. Work with exposure to coal dust
11. Manufacture and sale of fireworks explosives
12. Work at the sites where Liquid Petroleum Gas (LPG) and Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) are filled in cylinders.
13. Work on glass and metal furnaces
14. Work in the clothe printing, dyeing and finishing sections
15. Work inside sewer pipelines, pits, storage tanks
16. Stone crushing
17. Lifting and carrying of heavy weight specially in transport industry ( 15b kg and above)
18. Work between 10 pm to 8 am ( Hotel Industry)
19. Carpet waving
20. Working 2 meter above the floor
21. All scavenging including hospital waste
22. tobacco process ( including Niswar) and Manufacturing
23. Deep fishing ( commercial fishing/ sea food and fish processing
24. Sheep casing and wool industry
25. Ship breaking
26. Surgical instrument manufacturing specially in vendors workshop
27. Bangles glass, furnaces

Now we can easily imagine in the light of above mentioned facts and figures how the nation’s future namely children are deprived of pleasures of life, ignorance has reduced their abilities of thinking right or differentiating between right and wrong, as well as their life-chances, to their non-access to education. It is true that child Labour is not an isolated phenomenon.

It is an outcome of a multitude of socio-economic factors and has its roots in poverty, lack of opportunities, high rate of population growth, unemployment, uneven distribution of wealth and resources, outdated social customs and norms and plethora of other factors. According to the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) the daily income of 65.5% people of Pakistan is below 2 U.S. dollars a day. According to the Asian Development Bank (ADB) Report, 47 million people in Pakistan are leading lines below the line of poverty, whereas the Social Policy Development Centre (SDPC) Karachi has stated in one of its reports that the ratio of poverty in Pakistan was 33% during 1999 that increased in 2001 and reached 38%. The ratio of poverty in the current year is around 30%.

Consider the point that if 30% of our country’s total population is leading life below the poverty-line wherein the people are deprived of basic necessities of life like clothing, shelter, food, education and medication, the children of these people will be forced to become Labourers or workers in order to survive. Another reason of child Labour in Pakistan is that our people don’t have the security of social life. There is no aid plan or allowance for children in our country. Class-based education system is another reason for increasing child Labour; villages lack standardized education systems and as a result, child Labour is on increase in rural areas. The government has not put its laws into practice to stop child Labour in our country. Employers after exploiting child Labour, extract a large surplus, whereas child Labour, despite increasing poverty, unemployment and other problems, are pressed to do anything and everything for their livelihood and the survival of their families.

Child Labour is a complex problem which demands a range of solutions. There is no better way to prevent child Labour than to make education compulsory. The West understood this a long time ago. Laws were enacted very early to secure continued education for working children; and now they have gone a step forward, and required completion of at least the preliminary education of the child before he or she starts work.

Martin Luther as back far 1524 sent a letter to German Municipalities insisting it was their duty to provide schools, and the duty of parents to educate their children. In Sweden, a royal decree in 1723 instructed parents and guardians to diligently see to it that their children applied themselves to book reading. In Europe, one country after another; Scotland, Prussia (1817), Austria (1869), France, United Kingdom (1880) and Italy made education compulsory. In 1872, Japan became the first non-Western country to make elementary school education compulsory with the declaration by the Meiji Govt.

The present government in Pakistan has made elementary education compulsory. Along with this, the government has distributed free books in primary schools so that parents, who cannot afford their children’s school expenses, send their children to schools. The major point is that this decision must be acted upon at all levels. There is strict need to stop child Labour in this country. Awareness must be raised and the attention of parents ought to be diverted to the education of their children. Child Labour Laws should be put into practice strictly. In addition, the educational system of the country-must be reshaped and restructured according to national development goals. The orphans and other deserving children must be helped financially on a prolonged basis. It is also essential to eliminate child Labour from the country, that the political, economical and social system of the country are need to be reshaped and such steps taken that make child Labour in this country a crime. They should bring on the well-being of a lay man, good governance and end to exploitative thinking. If we succeed to act upon these principles, our country can easily get rid of this problem i.e. child Labour. The agreement that has recently been approved by Pakistan, Norway and ILO to eradicate child Labour must be given importance and we hope that our rulers must put this agreement into practice using all means at their disposal.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/causes-and-organizations-articles/child-labor-in-pakistan-2426536.html

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Lobsters of the North Atlantic

Fishermen of the North Atlantic harvest a variety of lobsters, all of which are highly sought after by seafood lovers. These include American, European , and Norway lobsters.

The largest and most valuable is the American lobster, also known as Maine or northern lobster. This species is found off the east coast of North America from Newfoundland southward to North Carolina. The species is extremely important to the Canada seafood industry and is a staple New England seafood.

Lobsters shed their shells to grow, increasing their size at every molt. Individuals molt many times before reaching market size, which takes 5 to 7 years. Typically, price and quality are dependent upon what stage of growth the lobsters are in. Hard-shells usually survive longer in live displays which are popular in USA seafood markets. A lobster that has shed its shell has less meat inside than a hard-shell lobster of the same size. This condition tends to lower prices for soft-shell lobsters. Although there is less meat in a soft-shell lobster, many people prefer the taste of soft-shell lobster meat, considering it to be sweeter and more tender.

Lobsters yield a considerable amount of meat. Their claws and tail contain the most meat but a small amount can be also be found in the legs and body. Tomalley, a soft, green substance found in the body cavity of the lobster is not widely consumed, but is considered by some to be a delicacy.

The European lobster is a large clawed lobster found in North Atlantic waters. The European species is usually darker and slightly smaller than the American version but otherwise very similar. Like American lobsters, this species is caught using traps (pots). They are marketed live, cooked, frozen or canned.

The Norway lobster, also called Dublin Bay prawn, langoustine or scampi, is a type of small lobster which reaches lengths of about 9-10 inches. Males on average are larger than females. Norway lobsters are slender, and brightly colored. The species is found in the north-eastern Atlantic Ocean and North Sea as far north as Iceland and northern Norway, and south to Portugal.

Lobsters are served in a variety of ways such as grilled, split tails, salads, bisques or other dishes. In North America, lobsters are often served whole; boiled or steamed.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/main-course-articles/lobsters-of-the-north-atlantic-2640946.html

About the Author

The author writes about seafood-related subjects including lobsters, Chesapeake Bay oysters and Commercial Fishing Jobs.

BLACK DEATH OR REVENGE OF THE UNKNOWN

BLACK DEATH OR REVENGE OF THE UNKNOWN

Posted on August 18, 2010 by chepeyja
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BLACK DEATH
Though Nobel Laureate Albert Camus immortalized it as a metaphor of the evil that lies dormant everywhere, in the fiction, The Plague, and Robert Downey, Meg Ryan and Hugh Grant made more than a passing reference to it in the movie, Restoration, Black Death or Black Plague seems to have slipped down from people’s memory of past horrors. This pandemic of the 14th century surpassed the loss of life in a catastrophe for all time to come. It is generally thought to be caused by the bacteria Yersinia Pestis (Bubonic plague) but recent findings point to other diseases as well. It is believed to have started first in Central Asia, from where it spread to Europe around 1340. Decimating a total of about 75 million people in the contemporary world, it brought about a loss of 50 million lives (or nearly 60 percent of population) in Europe. Changing medieval demography, it is thought to have reduced world population from an estimated 450 million to 375 million in 1400.

The plague continued with its visits to Europe till the end of the 18th century but its spread and death toll varied. There were about 100 plague outbreaks during this period, among which the London plague of 1603 finished 38,000. Other killer epidemics were Italian (1629-31), Seville (1647-52), London (1665-66), Vienna (1679), Marseille (1720) and Moscow (1771). The origins of such virulent forms of the disease are debated but from the 19th century on it seemed to have been absent in Europe. The looming threat of death at all times affected the society and the Roman Catholic faith to a great extent and gave rise to intolerance of minorities like Jews, foreigners, beggars and lepers. In 1833, the term black death was first used, derived from the symptoms like blackening of skin and gangrene of limb extremities. There was also the bubonic type, in which glands swelled in armpits and other parts of the body leading to formation of buboes. The buboes filled with pus and burst open subsequently. Patients usually died within 3-5 days after the appearance of the buboes and disease spread through flies sitting on the dead. It was believed earlier that the epidemic was spread by black rats and flies, but recent research suggests that it is always present and is only lying dormant.

BEGINNING AND SPREAD

Though populations of ground rodents in Central Asia are common carriers of the disease, it is not clear how the 14th century outbreak started. The popular belief is that it began in the steppes of Central Asia while some think that North India was the place of origin. Yet another view is that considering the historical evidence of Mediterranean epidemics (plague of Justinian and so on) it probably began in Africa and found among the rodents of Central Asia a suitable vector and then travelled to Mongolia via the Silk Route. The trading city of Caffa in Crimea was besieged by the Mongols under Janibeg in 1347. When his soldiers died of the disease, the Mongol chief catapulted dead bodies over the city walls in order to infect the citizens. Genoese traders living in the city fled by ships and brought the disease to Sicily, from where it spread to Europe. Though it is merely a hypothesis, it points to several factors like war, weather and famine as contributing to the spread. Mongol invasion of China in the !4th century severely affected agriculture and trade, brought famines and reduced the Chinese population by nearly 60 million. Then came the plague killing a further 20 million.

Europe had unusually warm periods intermittently throughout the !4th century, at the end of which there were harsh winters leading to reduced harvests. Before that time, in the centuries preceding, European population had been increasing steadily, and a stage was reached when the agricultural output was barely sufficient. When a famine started in North Western Europe in 1315, it quickly assumed catastrophic dimensions. Innovative farming practices like heavy plows and three-field system introduced in the mediterranean for bringing in virgin lands under cultivation were not successful in North Europe because of the clayey soil there. Consequently, high prices were prevailing even a century before the plague, everything was scarce and hunger and malnutrition was rampant. People became vulnerable to diseases due to feeble immune systems. Compounding the situation further, the ruling classes of England and France, afraid that their lifestyles would go down, raised taxes. With diets getting limited by the day, the poor suffered terribly, and their health conditions became increasingly bad. Then it began to rain heavily in late 1314, several years of bitingly cold winters followed, the already reduced harvests went down further and the seven-year famine began killing about 10 percent of the population. Such was the economic and social condition when portends of the calamity in waiting appeared. The first was a typhoid outbreak in which many thousands perished in congested urban areas like Ypres. The second was a disease of unknown origin (presumably anthrax) killing in 1318 a large number of animals in Europe and affecting food source and income of people.

IN ASIA

Probable conditions which had caused the plague to break out in Central Asia were similar to those recorded during the first reports of the disease in the Chinese province of Hubei in 1334. Thereafter, following the catastrophe in Europe, the plague appeared in Jiangxi, Shanxi, Hunan, Guangdong and Suiyuan in China in 1353-54. There are extensive records of the pestilence and social disruption of the times in Chinese, but no one seems to have studied them properly. In 1347, the plague struck the trading cities of Constantinople and Trebizond and then spread among the soldiers of Mongol chief Janibeg laying a siege on the Genoese commercial enclave of Caffa in Crimea. Probably the first in history to wage a biological warfare, Janibeg catapulted the dead bodies of his soldiers over the city walls to infect the citizens. The strategy worked and Genoese traders left the city. The ships sailed into the Sicilian port of Messina in October 1347 carrying infected crews and rats, some were ghost ships with everyone on board dead from the disease, while some more ran aground to be looted by people living by the shores. There was thus no dearth of carriers or vectors of the disease, which spread to Genoa, then Venice and next to most of Italy. Onto France, Spain, Portugal and England by June 1348, when it turned and ravaged Germany and Scandinavia between 1348 and 50. Skipping Poland and some remote areas of Belgium and Holland, the vectors finally travelled to North Western Russia in 1351. As regards the horrors experienced by people, a resident of Siena in Tuscany, Italy wrote:

“They died by the hundreds, both day and night, and all were thrown in … ditches and covered with earth. And as soon as those ditches were filled, more were dug. And I, Agnolo di Tura … buried my five children with my own hands … And so many died that all believed it was the end of the world.”

IN THE MIDDLE EAST

The plague spread in the countries in the Middle East after reaching the port city of Alexandria in Egypt in the autumn of 1347 presumably through trading connections of the city with Constantinople and ports on the Black Sea. Next year, it travelled to Gaza in east and then to north to eastern coastal cities of Lebanon, Ashkelon, Acre, Israel, Jerusalem, Sidon, Damascus and Aleppo. Antioch came under its attack in 1348-49, when most of the residents deserted the city to go to north and died during the journey. The spread of infection, however, did not stop and struck the people of Asia Minor. Makkah fell to the disease in 1349 and so did Mawsil (modern Mosul) where records show a large number of deaths due to the pandemic. In Baghdad, it struck twice. King Mujahid of Yemen released from imprisonment in Cairo returned to his kingdom in 1351 and apparently brought the disease with his party.

RETURN VISITS

Without any census figures to depend on, historians usually estimate the population of England between 4 to 7 million in 1300 and as low as 2 million after the plague. It was absent from 1350 but never really extinct in England. In the next few centuries, it returned time and again, notably at Norwich (1579) and Newcastle (1636) killing nearly 40 percent of people there. Actually, 8 major outbreaks in Tudor and Stuart England coincided with those in Germany, Belgium and Holland in the years 1498 to 1636. Europe and the Mediterranean were under its attack repeatedly from the 14th to 17th century, and there are isolated instances of bubonic plague even today. The Great Plague of London (1665-66) is regarded as one of the last major outbreaks, others being Italian Plague (due to army movements in war, 1629-31), Vienna (1679), Moscow (2 lakkhs dead, 1654-56), Oslo (1654), Naples (1.5 lakh, 1656), Amsterdam (1665) and Helsinki & Stockholm (1710).

HOW BUBONIC INFECTION STARTS

Michel Drancourt prepared models of sporadic, limited and large plague outbreaks by reviewing the ecology of Yersinia pestis in soil and in rodents along with a study of human ectoparasites. It is found that plague among prairie dogs are more due to occasional reservoirs of infection like an infectious carcass than the conventional “blocked fleas” theory. It was also observed that epidemiology, appearance, spread and eventual disappearance of plague from Europe was due to the succession by another species of the flea-bearing rodent reservoir of disease. Originally introduced by trade from Asia to Europe, the black rat was subsequently displaced by the bigger brown rat in Europe. That specis was not as prone to transmit germ-bearing fleas to humans as the black rat in large die-offs due to a different rat ecology. The dynamic complexities of rat ecology, herd immunity of the specis in that particular reservoir, interaction with human ecology, secondary transmission routes between humans with or without fleas, human herd immunity and changes in each of the above are possible causes of the eruption, dissemination and recurrence of the plague for centuries in Europe. It probably also holds true for the plague’s so far unexplained disappearance from the continent.

INDICATIONS

Actually, there are two more forms of plague besides the bubonic, each with its different signs and symptoms. Blood poisoning is the consequence of septicaemic plague while pneumonic type attacks the lungs first through aspirated air and then other parts of the body. Bubonic causes buboes, resulting from internal bleeding, to appear in the neck, groin and armpits. The damages to the skin and tissue beneath turn the body black, pus and blood ooze out from the swellings and the patient dies within seven days of the infection. Black Death in Europe came in the bubonic form mostly, first in the port cities and then to countrysides. Its mortality rate was over 80 percent and symptoms included fever, aching joints, nausea and vomitting. The pneumonic form was second most common witha mortality rate of about 90 percent. The
signs were fever, cough and bloody sputum, which became more and more red as the disease took hold. Septicaemic plague was not quite common. It came with high fever and purple patches on the body and had a hundred percent mortality. According to David Herlihy, a further symptom of the disease was freckle like spots and rashes in the body. Unlike buboes, these were darkish points or pustules covering large parts of the body.

OTHER THEORIES

The long-held belief that the Black Death was an epidemic of bubonic plague has been challenged by recent historic and scientific findings. Gunnar Karlsson in 2000 pointed out that the Black Death killed between half and two-thirds of the population of Iceland, although there were no rats in Iceland at that time. Rats were accidentally Introduced accidentally only in the nineteenth century, rats have never spread beyond a small number of urban areas attached to seaports. In the fourteenth century there were no urban settlements in Iceland had no urban settlements the 14th century, and was unaffected by the later plagues known to have been spread by rats. Nonetheless, in the absence of a rodent reservoir, it is possible for pneumonic plague to spread from human to human by respiratory transmission, and likewise bubonic plague by human-biting fleas. Although a study carried out on tooth pulp tissue from a 14th century plague cemetery in Montpellier showed molecules associated with Y pestis, other similar studies yielded different results. A team of researchers from Oxford University conducted tests on 121 teeth from 66 skeletons from a 14th century mass grave in 2003, and did not find any genetic trace of Y. pestis.

Samuel K. Cohn in a controversial article, “The Black Death: End of the Paradigm” (2002) says that the medieval and modern plagues are two distinct diseases having different signs, symptoms and epidemiologies. He argues that the agent causing the bubonic plague, Yersinia pestis, “was first cultured at Hong Kong in 1894.” So, the medieval European plague was not the bubonic plague carried by fleas on rats as conventionally held by both scientists and historians. Supporting his argument that medieval plague was not rat-based, Cohn further states that the modern and medieval plagues hit in different seasons, had unparalleled cycles of recurrence, and varied in the manner in which immunity was acquired. As fleas on rats thrive in temperatures below 26 degrees C with high humidity, modern plague reaches its peak in seasons with that kind of weather. As opposed to this, Black Death is recorded as breaking out in periods when rats’ fleas could not survive, seasons having weather conditions similar to hot Mediterranean summers with temperatures above 26 degrees C. As regards return period, the Black Death generally did not come back in an area 5 to 15 years after the event, while modern plagues often hit an affected area after an interval of eight to forty years. Cohn also presents evidence that individuals acquired immunity against the Black Death during the 14th century, unlike the modern plague. It seems that in 1348 two-thirds of those suffering from plague died as compared to one-twentieth in 1382. Current statistical figures also support the notion that immunity to the modern plague has not been acquired so far.

Arguing further, Cohn points out that in the latter part of the nineteenth century buboes appeared mostly on an infected person’s groin, while medieval primary sources indicate that the Black Death caused buboes to appear on necks, armpits, and groins. According to Cohn, this difference corresponds to the fact that fleas caused the modern plague and not the Black Death. As fleas do not usually bite in the areas covered by the dress (down to a person’s ankles in colder climes), in modern period the groin is the nearest lymph node that could be infected. Considering that the neck and the armpit were often infected during the medieval plague, those infections did not appear to have been caused by fleas on rats.

About two decades before (1984) Cohn, Graham Twigg published The Black Death: A Biological Reappraisal, and stated that the climate and ecology of Europe and specially England are such that its very difficult if not impossible for fleas and rats to spread the bubonic plague. Studying the biology of black and brown rats as also of common fleas he cross checked the details with modern findings of plague epidemiology, particularly in India, where the black rat is a native species and conditions are always favourable for plague to be spread. His conclusion is that it would have been nearly impossible for Yersinia pestis to start the plague, and propagating its explosive spread across Europe is out of question. According to him, the common theory of entirely pneumonic plague is not quite correct. He puts forward, after a re-examination of the evidence and symptoms, the theory that the Black Death may actually have been an epidemic of pulmonary anthrax.

A DIFFERENT VIRUS

Susan Scott and Christopher Duncan of Liverpool University in 2001 suggested that the outbreak of Black Death is probably due to an Ebola-like virus and not a bacterium. In support of their theory, they pointed out that this plague spread much faster and the incubation period was much longer than other confirmed Y.Pestis-caused plagues.Viruses with a longer period of incubation would allow vectors to travel farther and infect more people than did one with a shorter period. As the primary vectors are humans, and not birds, this aspect becomes significant. This is corroborated in English church records showing an unusually long incubation period in excess of thirty days, which accounted for the rapid spread, reaching a speed of 5 km/day. In places in Europe, such as Iceland, where rats are not common, the plague struck as well. It would appear from epidemiological studies that the disease was transferred between humans-an extremely rare happening with Yersinia pestis and yet more unusual for anthrax bacilli. Also, there are some genes found widely in Europe, which contribute significantly to the development of immunity to anthrax bacilli. Such genes are not so common in other parts of the world. Publishing their research and findings in Biology of Plagues, the researchers recently brought out computer models showing how the Black Death immunised about 10 percent Europeans against HIV.

ANTHRAX

Likewise, historian Norman Cantor in his book In the Wake of the Plague, says that the Black Death could be a combination of pandemics along with a form of anthrax known as cattle murrain. His evidences include reported disease symptoms unlike the known effects of either bubonic or pneumonic plague, the discovery of anthrax spores in a plague pit in Scotland, and the reported sale of meat from infected cattle in many rural English areas prior to the onset of the plague. The point to note is that the means of infection varied widely, from human-to-human contact as in Iceland (rare for plague and skin-related anthrax bacilli) to infection in the absence of living or recently-dead humans, as was seen in Sicily. Actually, the Sicilian example is generally against most viruses. Then, diseases with similar symptoms were generally not differentiated in that period because disease identification, at least in the Christian world, was not that detailed. It is possible that Chinese and Muslim medical records of the period may give better information pertaining to the specific diseases, which affected those areas.

POINTS AGAINST

Supporters of bubonic plague based theory of Black Death argue that the very rapid spread of the plague could be due to respiratory droplet transmission coupled with low levels of immunity in the European population at that time. In populations without previous exposure, historical examples (like transmission of smallpox and tuberculosis by aerosols amongst indigenous people of the Americas) show that the first instance of an epidemic spreads faster and is far more virulent than later instances among the descendants of survivors, for whom natural selection by then has produced characteristics protective against the disease.

A historian belonging to the above group, Michael McCormick cites archaeological research confirming that the black or “ship” rat was indeed present in Roman and medieval Europe. Moreover, the DNA of Y. pestis has been found in the teeth of the human victims, the DNA widely believed to have come from infected rodents. Not disputing the point that there was a pneumonic type of Y. pestis transmitted by human-to-human contact, he states that this does not spread as easily as imagined earlier. According to him, the rat is the only plausible agent of transmission capable of such a wide and quick spread of the plague. It is so because rats tend to live near humans and their blood has the ability to withstand very large concentrations of the bacilli. The fleas infected with bacterial blood of dead rats found new hosts in humans and animals. Gradual disappearance of Black Death in the eighteenth century has its explanation in a rat-based theory of transmission, according to McCormick. Black Death killed a lot of peole making the cities desolate. Consequently, more and more people were isolated, and geography combining with demography did not allow rats to have as much contact with Europeans as before. Communications were few and far between and transportation was curtailed. There were drastic reductions in the number of people in the cities and replenishment of decimated rat colonies did not occur.

SHADOW OF MALTHUS

Historians also attribute social, agricultural, and sometimes economic causes to the Black Death. The term Malthusian Limit is often used by scholars to describe certain tragedies throughout history. Malthus in his 1798 essay work on In his 1798 Essay on the Principle of Poulation averred that in time to come humans would reproduce so greatly that they would go beyond the limits of food supplies. When this stage is reached, some sort of “adjustment” was inevitable. The Black Death with its devastation appeared to be an “adjustment” of this sort. Nonetheless, it was an external, unpredictable factor and therefore did not fit into the Malthusian theory. David Herlihy in his book, The Black Death and the Transformation of the West examines whether or not plague was an inevitable crisis brought upon on humanity so as to control the population and human resources. In another book The Black Death; A Turning Point in History? (edited by William Bowsky) he writes that the Black Death’s pivotal role in late medieval society was now being challenged and that arguing on the basis of a neo-Malthusian economics, revisionist historians recast the Black Death as a necessary and long overdue corrective to an overpopulated Europe.

Detailing the arguments against the Malthusian crisis, Herlihy writes, “if the Black Death was a response to excessive human numbers it should have arrived several decades earlier” because population was growing at a fast pace years before the outbreak of the Black Death. Herlihy also brings up other, biological factors that argue against the plague as an “adjustment” by stating that “the role of famines in affecting population movements is also problematic. The many famines preceding the Black Death, even the ‘great hunger’ of 1314 to 1317, did not result in any appreciable reduction in population levels”. Continuing, Herlihy says that “the medieval experience shows us not a Malthusian crisis but a stalemate, in the sense that the community was maintaining at stable levels very large numbers over a lengthy period” and that the phenomenon should be referred to as more of a deadlock, rather than a crisis, to describe Europe before the epidemics.

RAVAGES OF THE PLAGUE

The numbers of people killed vary widely by area and from source to source as new materials come to light. The estimated death is 75-200 million people in the 14th century while medieval historian Philip Daileader stated in 2007 that “The trend of recent research is pointing to a figure more like 45% to 50% of the European population dying during a four-year period. There is a fair amount of geographic variation. In Mediterranean Europe and Italy, the South of France and Spain, where plague ran for about four years consecutively, it was probably closer to 80% to 75% of the population. In Germany and England . . . it was probably closer to 20%.”

Jean Froissart, a contemporary observer, estimated the toll to be one-third-less an accurate assessment than an allusion to the Book of Revelation considered to be a pointer to the ravages of the plague. Rural villages, mostly the smaller communities, suffered the most as the few survivors fled to larger towns and cities. Towns and cities were not spared either. Some rural areas, like Eastern Poland and Lithuania, had such low populations and were so isolated that the plague made little progress. Parts of Hungary and Belgium remained unaffected during the first attack but were affected by the second plague outbreak in 1360-1363 and later during the numerous resurgences. Other such areas were isolated mountainous regions like the Pyrennes. Larger cities fared badly, as population densities and close living quarters made disease transmission easier. Due to infestation with lice, fleas and rats along with mounds of filth, the residents there were exposed to diseases related to malnutrition and poor hygiene. A medieval Europe urban commentator, John Kelly says, “Woefully inadequate sanitation made medieval urban Europe so disease-ridden, no city of any size could maintain its population without a constant influx of immigrants from the countryside.” This influx of new citizensin turn helped the movement of the disease between communities, and contributed to its longevity within larger communities.

Florence lost nearly half of its citizens; Bremen, Hamburg and Normandy more than that. Historians observe a decline of 60% of fiscal hearths, and in some regions annihilation of two thirds of the population. The friar of the town of Givry in France, who used to conduct 28 to 29 funerals a year, recorded 649 deaths in 1348, half of them in September. Only two of the eight physicians there survived the plague. All social classes in Europe were affected, while the lower orders living together in unhealthy places suffered most. Alfonso XI of Castille was the only European king to die of the plague while Peter IV of Aragon lost his wife, his daughter and a niece in six months. A 13 year old daughter of the English king Edward III died on her way to marry Alfonso’s son Pedro.The plague came back to haunt Europe again in 1360-62, 1366-1369, 1374-1375, 1400, 1407, and so on until the 19th century.

Deaths in Asia are based on both population figures at that time and estimates of the disease’s toll on population centers. The first outbreak of plague in Hubei province of China in 1334 claimed up to ninety percent of the population, an estimated five million people. Then followed the attack in eight distinct areas in 1353-54 of Mongol-Chinese empires killing possibly two-thirds of population, an estimate of twenty-five million. There were several epidemics and famines in China from 1200 to around1350 reducing its population from an estimated 125 million to 65 million in the late 14th century. It seems Japan has no recorded outbreak of plague.

Like other places, mortality in the Middle East was particularly high in rural areas, including significant areas of Palestine and Syria. The survivors in rural areas fled, leaving their fields and crops, and entire rural provinces are recorded as being totally depopulated. Syria’s total loss was about half a million by the time in 1349 the disease subsided. Gaza city recorded 10,000 deaths in1348, Aleppo recorded a death rate of 500 a day during the same year and Damascus at the disease’s peak in September and October 1348 a thousand deaths every day. However, John Fields of Trinity College, Dublin is of the view that as opposed to the high mortality rate in Europe, it was less than one-third of the total population in the Middle East, with higher rates in selected areas.

PROTECTIVE MEASURES

There was no apparent response to the crisis from the governments of Europe because no one knew its cause or how it spread. Nearly a third of the European population had already perished in 1348 before the state could do anything about it. It was not uncommon in crowded cities for as much as fifty percent of the population to die. Though people living in isolated areas suffered less, monasteries and priests were particularly hit hard because they cared for the Black Death’s victims. Healers and physicians of fourteenth century were at a loss to explain the cause. So, Europeans turned to astrological forces, earthquakes, and the poisoning of wells by Jews as possible reasons for the plague’s outbreak. It did not occur to anyone at that time that rat control could be a way to ward off the plague, and people veered to the belief that only God’s anger produced such horrific displays. Jews were held responsible for the calamity and punished severely. In February 1349, Christians murdered two thousand Jews in Strasbourg followed by decimation of the Jewish communities of Mainz and Cologne in August. All the affected monarchies instituted measures prohibiting exports of foodstuffs, condemned black market profiteering, set price controls on grain and outlawed large-scale fishing. Such belated efforts, to say the least, were mostly ineffective, and at worst contributed to a continent-wide downward economic spiral. England, desperately needing grain, was unable to buy it from France because of the prohibition, and from most of the rest of the grain producers because of crop failures from shortage of labour. Grain procured somehow was looted for sale in the black market. As if that was not enough, many of the countries, most notably England and Scotland went to war using up much of their resources and exacerbating inflation. Just before the first wave of the Black Death, England and France went to war in 1337 in what would become known as the Hundred Years’ War. Malnutrition, poverty, disease and hunger, joined hands with war, growing inflation and other economic concerns making Europe in the mid-fourteenth century a haven for tragedy.

While reducing heavily the medieval population, the plague brought about a substantial change in economy and society in all areas of the world. Economic historians like Ferdinand Braudel are of the opinion that Black Death accelarated a downslide in the European economy that had been under way since the beginning of the century. Consequently, social and economic conditions changed radically during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, the church’s hold was weakened, and in some instances, the social roles it had played were taken over by secular groups. The plague also brought about peasant rebellions in many parts of Europe, like the Jacquerie in France, the Ciompi in Italy and the one in England.

UNEXPLAINED EFFECTS

Before the plague, Europe was overpopulated, and therefore a reduction of 30% to 50% of population should have resulted in higher wages and more available land and food for peasants because of less competition for resources. However, for reasons that are still unclear, population levels declined after the Black Death’s first outbreak until around 1420 and did not begin to rise again until 1470. It seems the happening on its own does not entirely provide a satisfactory explanation to this extended period of decline in prosperity and why improvements in living standards took longer to evolve. The great population loss, bringing economic changes, gave rise to increased social mobility, which in turn further eroded the peasants’ already weakened obligations to remain on their traditional holdings. To stop this process, authorities in Western Europe worked to maintain social order through instituting wage controls. Such governmental measures were meant to ensure that workers received the same salary post-plague as they had before the onslaught of the Black Death. In England, the Ordinance of Labourers, created in 1349, and the Statute of Labourers, created in 1351, restricted both wage increases and the relocation of workers. Workers attempting to leave their current posts were liable to be stopped and imprisoned by their employers under the law The Statute was strictly enforced in areas like Essex county, where more than 7,000 people were fined for not obeying the Statute in 1352. Anyway, despite examples such as this, the Statute quickly proved to be difficult to enforce due to the scarcity of labour. Landlords in Western Europe, due to the sudden shortage of cheap labour, began to compete for peasants with wages and freedoms, an innovation, which, according to some, is at the roots of capitalism. The ensuing social upheaval brought about the Renaiissance as also the Reformation.

By the end of the 15th century, the Black Death and its aftermath improved the situation of surviving peasants in several ways. Labourers gained more power and were more in demand because of the shortage of labour in Western Europe. While they gained more power, workers in the period following the Black Death often moved away from annual contracts in favour of taking on successive temporary jobs offering higher wages. Even domestic servants had the option to leave their current employment to seek better-paying, more attractive positions in areas previous off limits to them. One more positive development of the period was that there was more fertile land available to the population. Anyway, these benefits would not be fully available until 1470, nearly 120 years later, when overall population levels finally began to rise again.

Laws in Eastern Europe at that time were made more stringent, thus binding the remaining peasant population more tightly to the land than ever before through serfdom. Anyway, population of Eastern Europe was much less than that of its western part, and consequently it was less affected by the Black Death. Thus peasant revolts there were less common in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, and did not occur until the sixteenth century. As social upheavals of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century in Western Europe resulting from the Black Death are seen by some as influencing factors in the Renaissance and the Reformation, historians have cited the smaller impact of the plague as the reason for Eastern Europe’s inability to experience either of these movements on a similar scale. Extending the argument further, the Black Death may be seen as partly responsible for Eastern Europe’s considerable lag in scientific and philosophical advances as also in the move to liberalise government by restricting the power of the monarch and aristocracy. For example, England abolished serfdom by 1550 and introduced a more representative government while Russia did not abolish serfdom until an autocratic tsar decreed so in 1861.

Substantial reduction in population due to the plague led to cheaper land prices, more food for the average peasant and a relatively large increase in per capita income among the peasantry, if not immediately, in the coming century. As the plague left vast areas of farmland untended, these were made available for pasture which in turn put more meat on the market. So, meat and dairy products were consumed more and export of beef and butter from the Low Countries, Scandinavia and northern Germany increased. The upper classes often attempted to stop these changes, initially in Western Europe, and more forcefully and successfully in Eastern Europe, by enacting sumptuary laws. Such laws regulated what people (particularly of the peasant class) could wear, so that nobles could ensure that peasants did not begin to dress and act as a higher class member with their increased wealth. One more tactic was to fix prices and wages so that peasants could not demand more by increasing the value of their services and products. The success of this measure depended on its compliance by the people involved, which was not always there. In fact, such a law was one of the causes of the 1381 Peasant’s Revolt in England.
Social mobility resulting from the Black Death and rebellions such as this are regarded as the most likely cause of the Great Vowel Shift, the principal reason why the spelling system in English today no longer reflects its pronunciation.

PERSECUTIONS

One of the plague’s sociocultural impacts was renewed religious fervor and fanaticism blooming in its wake. It was an additional catastrophe for minority populations of all sorts, with Christians attacking Jews, friars, foreigners, beggars, pilgrims gypsies, thinking that they were responsible for the crisis. Equally unfortunate were lepers and other individuals with skin diseases such as acne or psoriasis, who were singled out and exterminated throughout Europe. The lepers were believed to show an outward sign of a defect of the soul while differences in cultural and lifestyle practices between Jews and Christians were regarded by some by some as having provoked the plague. The Jews due to their religious obligation to be clean did not use water from public wells and were therefore suspected of causing the plague by deliberately poisoning wells. Furthermore, comparatively fewer Jews died from the Black Death, in part due to their religious laws promoting habits generally cleaner than that of a typical medieval villager. As a socially isolated group, they usually lived in Jewish ghettos which were less infected than other settlements. The consequent differences in mortality rates between Jews and non-Jews led to raised suspicions in people who had no concept of bacterial transmission. Marauding
Christian mobs attacked Jewish settlements across Europe, and by 1351 destroyed sixty major and 150 smaller Jewish communities in addition to more than 350 separate massacres. It was more than a manifestation of ethnic hatred; it was also a criticism of monarchical policy of protecting the Jews, who were often called the royal treasure, and the fiscal set up usually administered by them. This persecution led to the eastward movement of what was left of north European Jewry to Poland and Russia, where it remained until the 20th century.

Muslim women in Cairo faced persecution during the Black Death, writes Joseph P. Byrne in his book, The Black Plague. They became scapegoats when the plague struck because in 1438 sultan of Cairo was informed by his religious lawyers that the arrival of the plague was Allah’s punishment for the sin of fornication. In accordance with this theory, a law was enacted stating that women were not allowed to make public appearances as they may tempt men into sin.The law was only lifted after “the wealthy complained that their female servants could not shop for foods.”

EFFECTS ON RELIGION

A pervasive cynicism towards religious officials who could not keep their promises of curing plague victims and banishing the disease was a legacy of the Black Death. As no body, including Church personnel, was able to cure or accurately explain the reasons for the plague, one theory of transmission was that it spread through air, and was referred to as miasma or ‘bad air’. This belief increased the doubt in the clergy’s divine powers. The bitter alienation with the Church culminated in either support for different religious groups like the flagellants, which from their late 13th century beginnings grew tremendously during the opening years of the Black Death. Later on, a pursuit of pleasure and hedonism took hold. A common belief of the time was that the plague was due to God’s wrath, a punishment for the sinful ways of the mankind. To propitiate God, flagellants travelled from town to town, whipping themselves in an effort to mimic the sufferings of Jesus prior to his crucifixion. Beginning in Germany, several miraculous tales emerged from their efforts, such as a child being revived from the dead, and a talking cow. Rumours like this strengthened the belief that the flagellants were more effective than church leaders. Possibly, the flagellant’s later involvement in hedonism was an effort to accelerate or absorb God’s wrath, so as to shorten the time with which others suffered. It is also probable that the popularity of their cause resulted in a conviction that the world itself was ending, and that the actions of an individual were of no consequence.

It is, however, another matter that the flagellants may have actually contributed to the spread of the disease, rather than its cure. Presumably, there were towns which the flagellants visited or passed through, and such places were largely unaffected by the plague until that time, only to be infected by fleas carried either by the flagellant’s followers, or the flagellants themselves. It was a tragically common theme of the time, how individuals dealt with the plague. In most of the instances, the methods employed to defend against the plague often encouraged its spread.
Monasteries were hard hit during The Black Death because of their close proximity with the sick, who sought refuge there. It resulted in a severe shortage of clergy after the epidemic. A mass influx of hastily-trained and inexperienced clergy members ensued, many of whom knew little of the discipline and rigour of the veterans they replaced. Abuses by the clergy became common thereafter and the position of the Church in the eyes of the people further went down.
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Looking back, it appears everything the people thought to do at the time simply made the problem worse. An example of such misplaced zeal is the contemporary belief that the plague was God’s wrath against sin. Now, cats were often regarded by many to be in league with the Devil. Those zealots began a wholesale slaughter of cats to assuage God, little realising that if the cats were not annihilated, local rodent populations could have been under check thereby lessening the spread of plague-infected fleas from host to host.

MEDICAL MEASURES

Alchemy, considered as medicine at that time, was used by most of the physicians for treating ailments. Its practice, however, slowly began to wane as the citizens realized that it rarely checked the spread of the epidemic and that some of the potions and cures used by many alchemists only made the condition of the sick worse. Liquor made by alchemists was liberally prescribed as a remedy for the Black Death, leading to a steep rise in the consumption of liquor in Europe after the plague. The Church also tried to meet the medical needs of the victims. The duties of doctors attending plague victims consisted mostly of visits to victims to verify whether they had been afflicted or not. Existing records of contracts drawn up between cities and plague doctors show that they enjoyed considerable freedom of action plus heavy financial compensation, having regard to the risk of death to which they exposed themselves. Most of them were volunteers, because trained physicians by then had already fled, realising that they could do nothing for the relief of the victims. The attire of the plague doctor resmbled somewhat the protective suit of personnel trained in handling hazardous materials nowadays and consisted of:

A black hat with wide brim placed tightly over the head. It was a partial shield from infection and identified the wearer as a doctor.

A sort of gas mask in the shape of a bird’s beak because birds were believed to be carriers of plague. It was believed that by dressing in a bird-like mask, the wearer could draw the plague away from the patient and onto the garment the plague doctor wore. Red glass eyepieces in the mask were thought to make the wearer impervious to evil while the beak of the mask was filled with strongly aromatic herbs and spices to overpower the miasma or bad air thought to be carrying the plague. It also served the dual purpose of dulling the smell of unburied corpses, sputum and ruptured buboes in plague victims.

A long black overcoat, which was tucked in behind the beak mask at the neckline to minimize skin exposure. Hanging down to the feet, the overcoat was coated from head to toe in solid fat (suet) or wax with the thought that the plague could be drawn away from the flesh of the infected victim and either trapped by the suet, or repelled by the wax. The coating also made this outer cover moistureproof (blood, pus, sputum and so on).

A cane, probably to be used as a pointer. Precise use was not known.

Leather breeches used for wading into water. The leather breeches were worn beneath the cloak to protect the legs and groin from infection. As the plague usually manifested itself first in the lymph nodes, particular attention was paid to protecting the armpits, neck, and groin. A secondary use of the attire was to intentionally frighten and warn onlookers, to communicate that something very, very wrong was nearby, and that they too might become infected. It is not known how many plague doctors were there and how effective they were in treatment of the disease. The attire, while offering some protection to the wearer, may have actually contributed more to the spreading of the disease, with the plague doctor unknowingly serving as a vector for infected fleas to move from host to host.

The far and wide spread of the Black Death was mostly due to the deficiencies of medical science in the medieval era, but the lacuna also led to positive changes in the field of medicine. David Herlihy says in The Black Death and the Transformation of the West that more emphasis was placed on “anatomical investigations” following the Black Death. There was a marked change in the manner of studies concerning human body in varied states of sickness and health. Moreover, the importance of surgeons in matters of healing became more evident. Stephen O’Brien suggests that the Black Death is probably responsible through natural selection for the high frequency of the CCR5-?32 genetic defect in people of European origin. This gene influences T cell function and provides protection against HIV, smallpox, and possibly plague.. The possibility, however, appears doubtful because CCR5-?32 gene has been found to be just as common in Bronze Age samples of tissues.

CULTURAL FALLOUT

Danse Macabre, an allegory on the universality of death and a common painting motif in late-medieval periods, happens to be the direct outcome of the terror experienced by people during the Black Death. It is somewhat similar to the Nataraja in Hindu mythology, dancing over life and death. Nataraja’s dance, however, is joyous unlike the morbid pessimism prevailing during the march of the Black Death. From 1350, European culture became acutely morbid, and contemporary art turned dark with representations of death. Under the influence of the Black Death, European architecture moved in two different directions – there was a revival of Greco-Roman styles, which, in stone and paint, expressed Petrarch’s love of antiquity, and there was a refurbishing of the Gothic style.Churches built in this era emphasised verticality, where one’s eye is drawn up towards the high ceiling for a religious experience bordering on the mystical. As regards the Gothic style, it was brightened with elaborate decoration in this late medieval period while sculptors in Italian city-states emulated the work of their Roman forefathers. Their counterparts in northern Europe, no doubt shaken by the devastation they had gone through, brought forth a heightened expression of emotion and an emphasis on individual differences. In architecture, in literature and in painting, a tough realism shone through, and images of intense sorrow, decaying corpses, and individuals with faults as well as virtues were put forward. The Flemish school of Jan Van Eyck (circa 1385-1440) reproduced the natural world in precise and meticulous details bordering on photography.

CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE

The generation suffering from Black Death recorded the experience of their frightful, borderline existence between life and death in arts and literature. Such chronicles are very useful to historians of the period, giving (as they do) a feel of how it was to live through those terrible times with horror unfolding in an unimaginable scale. Philosopher rulers like Petrarch and famous writers like Giovanni Boccacio were among the narrators, even though their works remained unknown to a majority of the contemporary European population. Genrally, merchants and wealthy nobles of Italian city states read Petrarch’s works composed of hundreds of letters and vernacular poetry of great distinction as also a revised interpretation of courtly love. Giovanni Boccacio, known for his magnum opus Decameron, narrated (c. 1350-53) tales under the shadow of the Black Death, in which Church and religious belief become the satirical source of comedy throughout. Contrastingly, there was Peire Montech writing romantic poetry in the out of fashion lyric style during the height of the plague in Toulouse. Anyway, romances were still written then but such courtly tradition began to face increasing competition from other writers who produced gritty realist literature based on their fearful precarious experience of the Black Death. It was possible because of popularity of vernacular education and literature, as also of the study of Latin and classical antiquity. All these changes helped in making the written word accessible during the fourteenth century, and the grim scenario of devastation was a common theme of literature. Thus, Gabriele de’Mussi, a Sicilian Notary writes of the early spread from Crimea:

Alas! our ships enter the port, but of a thousand sailors hardly ten are spared. We reach our homes; our kindred…come from all parts to visit us. Woe to us for we cast at them the darts of death! …Going back to their homes, they in turn soon infected their whole families, who in three days succumbed, and were buried in one common grave. Priests and doctors visiting…from their duties ill, and soon were…dead. O death! cruel, bitter, impious death! …Lamenting our misery, we feared to fly, yet we dared not remain.

In England, Henry Knighton informs:

Then the grievous plague came to the sea coasts from Southampton, and came to Bristol, and it was as if all the strength of the town had died, as if they had been hit with sudden death, for there were few who stayed in their beds more than three days, or two days, or even one half a day.

Friar John Clyn recorded its effects in Leinster after its spread to Ireland in August 1348:

That disease entirely stripped vills, cities, castles and towns of inhabitaints of men, so that scarcely anyone would be able to live in them. The plague was so contagious that those touching the dead or even the sick were immediately infected and died, and the one confessing and the confessor were together led to the grave … many died from carbuncles and from ulcers and pustles that could be seen on shins and under the armpits; some died, as if in a frenzy, from pain of the head, others from spitting blood … In the convent of Minors of Drogheda, twenty five, and in Dublin in the same order, twenty three died … These cities of Dublin and Drogheda were almost destroyed and wasted of inhabitants and men so that in Dublin alone, from the beginning of August right up to Christmas, fourteen thousand men died … The pestilence gathered strength in Kilkenny during Lent, for between Christmas day and 6 March, eight Friars and Preachers died. There was scarcely a house in which only one died but commonly man and wife with their children and family going one way, namely, crossing to death…

Besides these personal accounts and in addition to Decameron, many presentations of the Black Death have entered the general consciousness as great literature, such as The Canterbury Tales (Geoffrey Chaucer), Piers Plowman (William Langland) and so on. Danse Macabre or the Dance of Death, with its theme of the universality of death, expressed the common wisdom of the time, that no matter one’s station in life, the dance of death united all. It consists of Death personified and leading a row of dancing figures from all walks of life to the grave – emperor, king, pope, monk, youngster, beautiful girl – all in skeleton-state. Black Death, in a sense its creator, reminded people of how fragile their lives were and how vain the glories of earthly life. Its apparently first expression in an art form is the frescoed cemetery of the Church of the Holy Innocents in Paris (1424). In Basel, there are the works of Konrad Witz (1440); Bernt Notke (1463) in Lubeck; and woodcuts by Hans Holbein the Younger (1538). According to Israil Bercovici the Danse Macabre was conceptualised by Sephardic Jews in 14th century Spain.

In his poem, The Rattle Bag, the Welsh poet Dafydd ap Gwilym (who died young at the age of 30 or 35) recounts the hardships he endured during the Black Death. Stating his personal belief that the Black Death was the end of humanity, the Apocalypse, he shores up his argument by numerous biblical references, particularly the events described in the Book of Revelation. Thomas Nashe ran away from London to save himself from the plague and wrote a sonnet, A Litany in Time of Plague in his work Summers last will and Testament (1592):

Adieu, farewell earths blisse, This world uncertaine is, Fond are lifes lustful joyes, Death proves them all but toyes, None from his darts can flye; I am sick, I must dye: Lord, have mercy on us.

Much later, Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837) wrote the verse play, “Feast in the Time of the Plague”.

In many European countries, Black Death quickly became folklore and was personified as an old, bent woman covered and hooded in black, carrying a broom and a rake. It appears the Norwegians believed that if she used the rake, some of the population involved might survive, escaping through the teeth of the rake. If, however, she used the broom, then the entire population in the area were doomed. The painter Theodor Kittelson created a vivid picture of the apparition called the Plague-hag or Pesta.

The growing popularity of venacular literature during and after the Black Death also benefited women because a broader cultural forum became available to them which had previously been restricted to men by the Latin church. They began to write and helped others like them by supporting women’s writings and translations of others. Christine de Pizan (1364-1430) of France became the first woman in Europe to support herself by writing. Her writings were in many different literary forms, like autobiography and books of moral advice for men and women, along with poetry on a wide range of topics. To Jean de Meun’s anti-feminist diatribe in the concluding part of his Romance of the Rose, she gave an effective reply in her composition The Letter to the God Of Love. This rebuttal is significant because it marks the first instance in European history when a woman raised a voice against the slanders women in general had long endured. The ensuing debate among de Meun and Pizan supporters continued upto the sixteenth century.

RECENT TIMES

In view of its major impact on ancient and modern history, and its sybolism and connotations, Black death has often figured in modern lierature and media. While Camus’ novel The Plague describes the coming of a plague to Algeria, Herman Hesse in Narcissus and Goldmund
narrates the story of rwo monks living during the Black Death, one of whom leaves the monastery to wander around the country, seeing the epidemic’s devastations firsthand. Roger Zelzany talks about the abduction of the protagonist of the novel Nine Princes in Amber from his land of birth to plague-infested England where his life comes to an end. The locale of Edgar Allan Poe’s short story The Masque of the Red Death (1842) is an unnamed country during a fictional plague that bears strong resemblance to the Black Death. Poe added a sinister touch by staging the climax of the story in a black room.

Norwegian Nobel laureate Sigrid Undst deals with the outbreak of plague in his country in the 14th century in the novel Kirstin Lavransdatter. In her unusual book Year of Wonders, Geraldine Brooks chronicles the impact of the plague upon the residents of an isolated mountain village in England of 1666, who choose to quarantine themselves rather than contribute to the spread of the disease. The book went on to be declared as a notable fiction by The Washington Post and The New York Times. Doomsday Book, Connie Willis’ Hugo Award winning science fiction novel imagines a future in which historians do field work by travelling into the past as observers. Due to a mistake, the historian hero arrives in England when the plague is just setting in to unleash havoc. Michael Crichton’s Timeline is als a journey to the past to a village that is apparently affected by the Black Death. Alternate History presenting a “if – then” scenario (if Babar had lost the Battle of Panipat, then what would have happened) is the basis of Kim Stanley Robinson’s novel, The Years of Rice and Salt. It is imagined that Black Death with a virtually 100% mortality rate depopulates Medieval Europe, utterly destroys Western Christendom civilization and Europe no longer plays a major role in world history.
Three novels by Ann Benson play on Parallels between the Black Death and emerging diseases in the modern world are the themes Ann Benson’s three novels – The Plague Tales (1998), Burning Road (2000), The Physician’s Tale (2007). Weaving in allusions to many of the contemporary sources like Geraldine Brooks’ Year of Wonders, Benson shifts back and forth between the fourteenth century and a world in the near future that has been devastated by an antibiotic-resistant bacterium. Melanie Rawn fantasizes in her book Dragon Prince that the plague affects people of so-called high birth less than the commoners. Other fictional works of this kind are – Eifelheim (Michael Flynn), World Without End (Ken Follett), Temple of the Winds (Terry Goodkind) and so on. Since 1961, it is thought that Black Death has inspired one of the long lasting nursery rhymes in the English language, Ring a Ring o’roses, a pocket full of posies…It is, however, not clear how ashes, sneezing and falling down referred to in the rhyme are connected to Black Death.

In cinema, Ingmar Bergman’s 1957 classic The Seventh Seal lifted Black Death to a dream like mythical level. A knight-crusader returns home to find that his home and country is ravaged by the Black Death. He is dismayed but not surprised when he discovers that Death has come for him as well. The climactic final scene comes with a sort of Danse Macabre. A science fiction film of 1988, The Navigator : A Medieval Odyssey portrays a group of 14th-century English villagers who, with the aid of a boy’s clairvoyant visions, dig a tunnel to 20th-century New Zealand to escape the Black Death. Elia Kazan directed a black and white, 96-minute film, Panic in the Streets which was released in 1950 by 20th Century Fox. A semidocumentary shot exclusively on location in New Orleans, Louisiana and featuring numerous New Orleans citizens in speaking and non-speaking roles, it tells the story of Clinton Reed, an officer of the U.S. Public Health Service played by Richard Widmark. Reed and a police captain (Paul Douglas) have only a day or two in which to prevent an epidemic of pneumonic plague after Reed determines a waterfront homicide victim is an index case. The film marked the debut of Jack Palance And Zero Mostel.

In music, The Black Metal band !349 named itself after the year the Black Death spread through Norway.

The player in the Neverwinter Nights videogame is first taken to a city which suffers from a fictitious, epidemic disease called the “Howling Death”, which bears some resemblance to the Black Death.

From Wikipedia and other sources.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/journalism-articles/black-death-or-revenge-of-the-unknown-3068049.html

About the Author

chartered engineer(India), B.Sc., risk management consultant, blogger and layabout

Economy Of Kuwait

Economy in greater depth

Kuwait is one of the richest countries in the Muslim world. Current GDP per capita reached astonishing peak growth of 439% in the 1970s. But this proved unsustainable and contracted by 58% in the 1980s. However rising global oil demand helped register growth of 91% in the 1990s. Diversification is a long-term issue for this over-exposed economy.

Macro-economic trend

This is a chart of trend of gross domestic product of Kuwait at market prices estimated by the International Monetary Fund with figures in millions of Kuwaiti Dinars.

Year

Gross Domestic Product

US Dollar Exchange

Inflation Index

(2000=100)

Per Capita Income

(as % of USA)

1980

7,764

0.27 Kuwaiti Dinars

55

171.08

1985

6,450

0.29 Kuwaiti Dinars

68

71.58

1990

5,328

0.29 Kuwaiti Dinars

80

37.00

1995

8,114

0.29 Kuwaiti Dinars

92

62.14

2000

11,570

0.30 Kuwaiti Dinars

100

48.92

2005

21,783

0.29 Kuwaiti Dinars

108

64.35

For purchasing power parity comparisons, the US Dollar is exchanged at 0.48 Kuwaiti Dinars only. Average wages in 2007 hover around $4,250 per month for Kuwaitis. As for skilled and experienced non-Kuwaiti (Engineers, Doctors, and Managers) the average monthly salary is hiked up tremendously, to an average of $10,000+ a month excluding living and other benefits. Please, also keep in mind that Kuwait is a tax free country so all the above figures reflect actual take home numbers.

Kuwait is a small country with massive oil reserves, whose economy has been traditionally dominated by the state and its oil industry. During the 1970s, Kuwait benefited from the dramatic rise in oil prices, which Kuwait actively promoted through its membership in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). The economy suffered from the triple shock of a 1982 securities market crash, the mid-1980s drop in oil prices, and the 1990 Iraqi invasion and occupation. The Kuwaiti Government-in-exile depended upon its $100 billion in overseas investments during the Iraqi occupation in order to help pay for the reconstruction. Thus, by 1993, this balance was cut to less than half of its pre-invasion level. The wealth of Kuwait is based primarily on oil and capital reserves, and the Iraqi occupation severely damaged both.

In the closing hours of the Persian Gulf War in February 1991, the Iraqi occupation forces set ablaze or damaged 749 of Kuwait’s oil wells. All of these fires were extinguished within a year. Production has been restored, and refineries and facilities have been modernized. Oil exports surpassed their pre-invasion levels in 1993 with production levels only constrained by OPEC quotas.

Oil

Main article: Oil industry of Kuwait

In 1934, the ruler of Kuwait granted an oil concession to the Kuwait Oil Co. (KOC), jointly owned by the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (later British Petroleum Company) and Gulf Oil Corp. In 1976, the Kuwaiti Government nationalized KOC. The following year, Kuwait took over onshore production in the Divided Zone between Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. KOC produces jointly there with Texaco, Inc., which, by its 1984 purchase of Getty Oil Co., acquired the Saudi Arabian onshore concession in the Divided Zone.

In the Offshore Divided Zone, the Arabian Oil Co. 80% owned by Japanese interests and 10% each by the Kuwaiti and Saudi Governments has produced on behalf of both countries since 1961. The original concession agreements will expire in January 2003; negotiations to replace the concession with a technical service agreement should be completed in 2002.

The Kuwait Petroleum Corporation. (KPC), an integrated international oil company, is the parent company of the government’s operations in the petroleum sector, and includes Kuwait Oil Company, which produced oil and gas; Kuwait National Petroleum Co., refining and domestic sales; Petrochemical Industries Co., producing ammonia and urea; Kuwait Foreign Petroleum Exploration Co., with several concessions in developing countries; Kuwait Oil Tanker Co.; and Santa Fe International Corp. The latter, purchased outright in 1982, gives KPC a worldwide presence in the petroleum industry.

KPC also has purchased from Gulf Oil Co. refineries and associated service stations in the Benelux nations and Scandinavia, as well as storage facilities and a network of service stations in Italy. In 1987, KPC bought a 19% share in British Petroleum, which was later reduced to 10%. KPC markets its products in Europe under the brand Q8 and is interested in the markets of the United States and Japan.

Kuwait has about 94 billion barrels (15 km) of recoverable oil reserves. Estimated capacity, before the war, was about 2.4 million barrels (380,000 m) per day. During the Iraqi occupation, Kuwait’s oil-producing capacity was reduced to practically nothing. However, tremendous recovery and improvements have been made. Oil production was 1.5 million barrels (240,000 m) per day by the end of 1992, and pre-war capacity was restored in 1993. Kuwait’s production capacity is estimated to be 2.5 million barrels (400,000 m) per day. Kuwait plans to increase its capacity to 3.5 million (560,000 m) barrels per day by 2005.

v  d  e

Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)

Algeria  Angola  Ecuador  Iran  Iraq  Kuwait  Libya  Nigeria  Qatar  Saudi Arabia  United Arab Emirates  Venezuela

Social benefits

Kuwait has a fairly open economy with a lot of multi-national companies operating in the oil-rich nation. Shown here is a Burger King restaurant situated at the Kuwait International Airport.

Diversification

In 2007, hydrocarbon industries accounted for well over 95% of the Kuwaiti economy. Diversification of the economy into manufacturing industries remain a long-term issue.

Industry in Kuwait consists of several large export-oriented petrochemical units, oil refineries, and a range of small manufacturers. It also includes large water desalinization, ammonia, desulfurization, fertilizer, brick, block, and cement plants. During the invasion, the Iraqis looted nearly all movable items of worth, especially high-technology items and small machinery. Much of this has been replaced with newer equipment.

Agriculture

Agriculture is limited by the lack of water and arable land. The government has experimented in growing food through hydroponics and carefully managed farms. However, most of the soil which was suitable for farming in south central Kuwait was destroyed when Iraqi troops set fire to oil wells in the area and created vast “oil lakes”. Fish and shrimp are plentiful in territorial waters, and largescale commercial fishing has been undertaken locally and in the Indian Ocean.

Shipping

The Kuwait Oil Tankers Co. has 35 crude oil and refined product carriers and is the largest tanker company in an OPEC country. Kuwait also is a member of the United Arab Shipping Company.

External trade and finance

Kuwaiti exports in 2006

The Kuwaiti dinar is a strong currency pegged to a basket of currencies in which the U.S. dollar has the most weight. Kuwait ordinarily runs a balance-of-payments surplus.

Government revenues are dependent on oil revenues. Kuwait’s fiscal surplus in 2000 was some 15% of GDP, while it reversed to a deficit of more that 2% of GDP in 2001 on sliding oil prices.

The government’s two reserve funds: the Fund for Future Generations and the General Reserve Fund, which totalled nearly $100 billion prior to the invasion in 1990, were the primary source of capital for the Kuwaiti Government during the war. While these funds were depleted to $40-$50 billion after the war, they currently are estimated around $208 billion. The bulk of this reserve is invested in the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, France, Japan, and Southeast Asia. In order of importance, foreign assets are believed to be invested in stocks and bonds, fixed yield instruments (mostly short term), and real estate. Kuwait follows a generally conservative investment policy.

Kuwait has been a major source of foreign economic assistance to other states through the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development, an autonomous state institution created in 1961 on the pattern of Western and international development agencies. In 1974, the fund’s lending mandate was expanded to include all not just Arab developing countries.

Over the years aid was provided to Egypt, Syria, and Jordan, as well as the Palestine Liberation Organization. During the Iran-Iraq war, significant Kuwaiti aid was given to the Iraqis. The Kuwait Fund issued loans and technical assistance grants totaling over $520 million during its fiscal year ending 30 June 2000.

The stock market capitalisation of listed companies in Kuwait was valued at $130,080 million in 2005 by the World Bank.

Other statistics

Investment (gross fixed): 6.6% of GDP (2005 est.)

Household income or consumption by percentage share:

lowest 10%: NA

highest 10%: NA

Agriculture – products: practically no crops; fish

Industrial production growth rate: -5% (2002 est.)

Electricity:

production: 38.19 billion kWh (2003)

consumption: 35.52 billion kWh (2003)

exports: 0 kWh (2002)

imports: 0 kWh (2002)

Electricity – production by source:

fossil fuel: 100%

hydro: 0%

other: 0% (2001)

nuclear: 0%

Oil:

production: 2.418 million bbl/day (2005 est.)

consumption: 400,000 bbl/day (2006 est.)

exports: 2.57 million barrel/day (2008)

imports: NA

proved reserves: 105.0 billion barrel (2005 est.), including the divided zone.

Natural gas:

production: 8.3 billion cu m (2003 est.)

consumption: 8.3 billion cu m (2003 est.)

exports: 0 m (2002 est.)

imports: 0 m (2002 est.)

proved reserves: 1.572 trillion cu m (2005)

Current account balance: $31.51 billion (2005 est.)

Exports – commodities: oil and refined products, fertilizers

Imports – commodities: food, construction materials, vehicles and parts, clothing

Reserves of foreign exchange & gold: $9.296 billion (2005 est.)

Exchange rates: Kuwaiti dinars per US dollar – 0.3014 (2004), 0.298 (2003), 0.3039 (2002), 0.3067 (2001), 0.3068 (2000)

See also

Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development

Kuwait Investment Authority

References

^ GDP: GDP per capita, current US dollars

^ Select Country or Country Groups

External links

Kuwait Investment Authority

Kuwait Investment Office

Kuwait Economic Development at the Open Directory Project

Tax Articles, Kuwait Economy Review

Tax Articles, “The Tax System and Accounting Principles in Kuwait At a Glance”

Deletionpedia, Companies of Kuwait

v  d  e

Kuwait

Subdivisions

Terminology

Coat of arms

History

Timeline  History of Kuwait

Law

Courts  Nationality  Legislation

Politics

Government  Legislature  Emir  Prime Minister  Departments  Constitution  Elections  Parties  Foreign relations

Geography

Geology  Mountains  Lakes  Rivers

Economy

History  Kuwait Stock Exchange  Kuwaiti dinar  Banks (Central Bank of Kuwait)  Taxation  Transport  Communications  Energy

Military

History  Navy  National Police  Coast Guard  Military  Kuwait Air Force  Weapons of mass destruction

Demography

Demographics  Languages  Religion  Cities  Towns

Culture

Art  Cinema  Cuisine  Education  Literature  Media  Music  Sport  Television  Public holidays

Portal  Topics

v  d  e

Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)

Algeria  Angola  Ecuador  Iran  Iraq  Kuwait  Libya  Nigeria  Qatar  Saudi Arabia  United Arab Emirates  Venezuela

v  d  e

Members of the World Trade Organization (WTO)

Albania  Angola  Antigua and Barbuda  Argentina  Armenia  Australia  Bahrain  Bangladesh  Barbados  Belize  Benin  Bolivia  Botswana  Brazil  Brunei  Burkina Faso  Burma  Burundi  Cambodia  Cameroon  Canada  Cape Verde  Central African Republic  Chad  Chile  PR China  Colombia  Democratic Republic of the Congo  Republic of the Congo  Costa Rica  Cte d’Ivoire  Croatia  Cuba  Djibouti  Dominica  Dominican Republic  Ecuador  Egypt  El Salvador  European Union  Fiji  Gabon  The Gambia  Georgia  Ghana  Grenada  Guatemala  Guinea  Guinea-Bissau  Guyana  Haiti  Honduras  Hong Kong  Iceland  India  Indonesia  Israel  Jamaica  Japan  Jordan  Kenya  South Korea  Kuwait  Kyrgyzstan  Lesotho  Liechtenstein  Macau  Macedonia  Madagascar  Malawi  Malaysia  Maldives  Mali  Mauritania  Mauritius  Mexico  Moldova  Mongolia  Morocco  Mozambique  Namibia  Nepal  New Zealand  Nicaragua  Niger  Nigeria  Norway  Oman  Pakistan  Panama  Papua New Guinea  Paraguay  Peru  Philippines  Qatar  Rwanda  St. Kitts and Nevis  St. Lucia  St. Vincent and the Grenadines  Saudi Arabia  Senegal  Sierra Leone  Singapore  Solomon Islands  South Africa  Sri Lanka  Suriname  Swaziland  Switzerland  Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, and Matsu  Tanzania  Thailand  Togo  Tonga  Trinidad and Tobago  Tunisia  Turkey  Uganda  Ukraine  United Arab Emirates  United States  Uruguay  Venezuela  Vietnam  Zambia  Zimbabwe

All twenty-seven member states of the European Union are also members of the WTO in their own right: Austria  Belgium  Bulgaria  Cyprus  Czech Republic  Denmark  Estonia  Finland  France  Germany  Greece  Hungary  Ireland  Italy  Latvia  Lithuania  Luxembourg  Malta  Netherlands and Netherlands Antilles  Poland  Portugal  Romania  Slovakia  Slovenia  Spain  Sweden  United Kingdom.

Special administrative region of the People’s Republic of China.

Designated name for the Republic of China (commonly known as Taiwan)

v  d  e

Economy of Asia

Sovereign

states

Afghanistan  Armenia1  Azerbaijan1  Bahrain  Bangladesh  Bhutan  Brunei  Burma2  Cambodia  People’s Republic of China  Cyprus1  East Timor3  Egypt4  Georgia4  India  Indonesia  Iran  Iraq  Israel  Japan  Jordan  Kazakhstan4  North Korea  South Korea  Kuwait  Kyrgyzstan  Laos  Lebanon  Malaysia  Maldives  Mongolia  Nepal  Oman  Pakistan  Philippines  Qatar  Russia4  Saudi Arabia  Singapore  Sri Lanka  Syria  Tajikistan  Republic of China5  Thailand  Turkey4  Turkmenistan  United Arab Emirates  Uzbekistan  Vietnam  Yemen

States with limited

recognition

Abkhazia1  Nagorno-Karabakh  Northern Cyprus  Palestine  South Ossetia1 

Dependencies,

autonomies,

other territories

Aceh  Adjara1  Akrotiri and Dhekelia  Altai  British Indian Ocean Territory  Buryatia  Christmas Island  Cocos (Keeling) Islands  Guangxi  Hong Kong  Inner Mongolia  Iraqi Kurdistan  Khakassia  Macau  Nakhchivan  Ningxia  Papua  Sakha Republic  Tibet  Tuva  West Papua  Xinjiang 

1 Sometimes included in Europe, depending on the border definitions.  2 Officially known as Myanmar.  3 Sometimes included in Oceania, and also known as Timor-Leste.  4 Transcontinental country.  5 Commonly known as Taiwan. 

Categories: Economy of Kuwait | World Trade Organization member economies | Economy of the Arab League | OPEC

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/networking-articles/economy-of-kuwait-3082830.html

About the Author

I am an expert from China Manufacturers, usually analyzes all kind of industries situation, such as stethoscope parts , pediatric stethoscope.

Traveling To Spain- Part-4

It is Saturday, and we know where to go to eat tonight!

Last time we were here, we found this restaurant on our last day of our vacation, but this time we have saved it for our first Saturday night here.

The name of the place is Escuela de Pieter.  It is an oasis and a small paradise – both outside and inside the restaurant – on this 300 m2 well planed area.

It is not so easy to find, because from the outside it looks like a barn with a fence around, but if you stop and take a look on the other side of this fence – you will discover a paradise on the inside – with palm trees, soft lights and a small beach.  All these things neatly placed – for the pleasure of the eye, and the relaxing of the body – like you step into another world.

 

But first we go for a walk on the beach.

This time on the Mediterranean side of the building we stayed in.  It is a long beach, about 20 Km, with white sand underneath our feet and a warm breeze in our faces.

We stop and say hello to the fishermen who is waiting patiently for the fish to bite.  They don’t speak so much English, but when my husband ask if he can take a picture of them, and ask them about their fishing on the beach – they are friendly and smiling – and let him take all the pictures he want, and try to speak  with him in a mix of the Spanish and the English language.

We have bought “how to learn the Spanish language” some months ago, but have not had the time to start – maybe we should have.  It makes it so much easier to get contact with the local people, and for me, it is there my stories lays – since I like to tell the stories to the people we meet as well as the landscape we travel in – in my traveling letters.

 

Escuela de Pieter is exactly the way we remembered it to be.

It is sometimes good that some things don’t change, because it can give you a feeling of coming home – in a way – even though you are far from home.

The man in charge maneuvers his body around with the help of two crutches, because he has lost a foot – don’t know when, or how – but you will have great trouble keeping up with him if you try.  He is everywhere, making sure you have what you need and want at all times.

 

The waiters don’t let you out of their sight either; if your glass is empty they come at once and fill it up again for you.  In Norway they fill up the glasses when they bring the wine, and then they leave the bottle with you, for you to do the rest of the pouring yourself.

A basket of warm bread came with the wine and some garlic butter as well.  It tastes wonderful, and so does the steaks we ordered.  Also the wine is perfect, both temperatures and taste.  We wished we had bigger bellies, so that we could enjoy this meal a bit longer.

 

The atmosphere is relaxing, all though the restaurant is nearly full of people. They come from near and far to this place – even the Spanish people do – and they bring their children too.  It looks like Spanish people bring their children with them everywhere they go.  We don’t do that in Norway, not so late in the evening, but maybe we should?

 

We took the last drops of wine with us outside, sitting there in the dim light – listening to soft Spanish instrumental music – feeling relaxed and satisfied.

Chris de Burgh’s song “At the end of a perfect day” comes to my mind.

Yes, this is really a perfect day!

 

We take a taxi back to Playa Principe, and the driver tells us that he lived in America for eleven years – and his English is good – we can tell.

He also tells us that he has been to Norway several times, because he worked on a ship that was there from time to time.  This ship had an accident and sank in the ocean outside Bergen some years ago, and eighteen people died.  He was supposed to be on board this ship, but had his holiday here in La Manga instead – and that probably saved his life.

He shows us a picture he got from somebody, just three days ago – from this accident, and now he keeps it with him in the car always.  Life is a mystery.

Ten minutes drive in a taxi gave us an important view of a stranger’s life – and it made us feel as blessed as he does.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/vacation-rentals-articles/traveling-to-spain-part-4-3129007.html

About the Author

Irene Rødelv

Likes writing poetry and articles + I am a hobby photographer

Visit our website(s): www.la-manga-apartment.com

 

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http://globaltrafficmaker.com

Cherry Springs State Park

History

Native Americans

Archeological evidence shows that humans have lived in what is now Pennsylvania since at least 10,000 BC. The first settlers were Paleo-Indian nomadic hunters known from their stone tools. The hunter-gatherers of the Archaic period, which lasted locally from 7000 to 1000 BC, used a greater variety of more sophisticated stone artifacts. The Woodland period marked the gradual transition to semi-permanent villages and horticulture, between 1000 BC and 1500 AD. Archeological evidence found in the state from this time includes a range of pottery types and styles, burial mounds, pipes, bows and arrows, and ornaments.

Map of the park and its facilities

Historical records show that the earliest known inhabitants of the West Branch Susquehanna River drainage basin, which includes Cherry Springs State Park, were the Iroquoian-speaking Susquehannocks. They were a matriarchal society that lived in large long houses in stockaded villages. Decimated by disease and warfare with the Five Nations of the Iroquois, by 1675 they had died out, moved away, or been assimilated into other tribes. Another name for the tribe is “Susquehanna”, and both the river and the Susquehannock State Forest which almost completely surrounds the park are named for them.

After the departure of the Susquehannocks, the lands of the West Branch Susquehanna River valley were under the nominal control of the Iroquois, who lived in long houses, primarily in what is now upstate New York, and had a strong confederacy which gave them power beyond their numbers. The Seneca, members of the Iroquois Confederacy, hunted in the area of what is now Cherry Springs State Park. Their nearest villages were 51 miles (82 km) to the northeast at modern Painted Post, New York, and 43 miles (69 km) to the southeast at what is now Lock Haven, Pennsylvania. The Seneca had temporary hunting camps to the east in the area of Pine Creek Gorge. To fill the void left by the demise of the Susquehannocks, the Iroquois also encouraged displaced tribes from the east to settle in the West Branch watershed, including the Lenape (or Delaware) and Shawnee.

The Seneca allowed very few travelers to pass through the area and kept non-native settlement to a minimum. The French and Indian War (17541763) led to the migration of many Native Americans westward to the Ohio River basin, and more departed after the American Revolutionary War (17751783). The United States acquired the Last Purchase, including what is now Cherry Springs State Park, from the Iroquois in the second Treaty of Fort Stanwix in October 1784. In the years that followed, Native Americans almost entirely left Pennsylvania.

Pioneers and lumber

Potter County was formed from part of Lycoming County on March 26, 1804, but the difficult terrain and thick old-growth forest prevented the new county from being settled by European-Americans until 1808. Prior to the arrival of William Penn and his Quaker colonists in 1682, up to 90 percent of what is now Pennsylvania was covered with woods: more than 31,000 square miles (80,000 km2) of Eastern White Pine, Eastern Hemlock, and a mix of hardwoods. The forests in and near the three original counties, Philadelphia, Bucks, and Chester, were the first to be harvested, as the early settlers used the readily available timber and cleared land for agriculture. By the time of the American Revolution, logging had reached the interior and mountainous regions, and became a leading industry in Pennsylvania. Trees furnished fuel to heat homes, tannin for the state’s many tanneries, and wood for construction, furniture, and barrel making. Large areas of forest were harvested by colliers to fire iron furnaces. Rifle stocks and shingles were made from Pennsylvania timber, as were a wide variety of household utensils, and the first Conestoga wagons.

The CCC built this replica of the Cherry Springs Hotel, the tavern built by Jonathan Edgcomb in 1818.

The area surrounding Cherry Springs State Park has been a wilderness for much of its history. A bridle path was cut through the woods in 18061807, and was widened to accommodate wagons in 1812. (Modern Pennsylvania Route 44, which passes through the park, follows the course of this path between Jersey Shore and Coudersport.) In 1818 the Ceres Land Company, which owned much of the land in Potter County and sought to open the area to settlement, hired an early settler, Jonathan Edgcomb, to build a tavern or hotel for travelers at the site of the park. The hotel was in a very remote location 16 miles (26 km) south of Coudersport, and its visitors were few, occasional wandering travelers or Native Americans.

Edgcomb and his wife received 100 acres (40 ha) of land in exchange for building the hotel and running it for three years. When the contract expired in 1821, they sold their land and left the area, but the hotel and land that Edgcomb had cleared became known as “Edgcomb’s Clearing”. The Jersey Shore and Coudersport Turnpike was constructed along the wagon path between 1825 and 1834, and tolls were collected for travel on the road until 1860. The park is in West Branch Township, which was incorporated from Eulalia Township in 1856. A post office was opened at Edgcomb’s Clearing in 1873; the locals petitioned the United States Post Office to change the name to “Cherryville”, for a nearby group of Black Cherry trees. However, since there was already a Cherryville, Pennsylvania, post office in Lehigh Township in Northampton County, the name “Cherry Spring” was chosen as a compromise. In time an “s” was added, hence the name “Cherry Springs”. There are also at least two springs in the park.

In 1874 a new, larger hotel was built on the other side of the road from the original tavern. It provided accommodations for wealthy summer visitors from Coudersport. This part of Potter County became known for an abundance of game and fish, and attracted hunters and anglers who also stayed at the Cherry Springs Hotel. This era as a “sportsmen paradise” was not to last, as the more profitable lumber industry came to West Branch and surrounding townships, which were home to “some of the tallest, straightest timber left standing” along the East Coast of the United States.

When lumbermen reached the Cherry Springs area in the late 1880s, Eastern White Pine and Eastern Hemlock covered the surrounding mountains. Lumberjacks harvested the trees and sent them down the creeks to the West Branch Susquehanna River to the Susquehanna Boom and sawmills at Williamsport. Clearcutting allowed silt to choke the streams, and nothing was left except the dried-out tree tops, which became a fire hazard. As a result, large swaths of land burned and were left barren, and much of the central part of the state became known as the “Pennsylvania Desert”. The Cherry Springs Hotel itself burned in 1897 and the property was abandoned.

Civilian Conservation Corps

As the timber was exhausted and the land burned, many companies simply abandoned their holdings. In 1897 the Pennsylvania General Assembly passed legislation which authorized the purchase of “unseated lands for forest reservations” and the first Pennsylvania state forest lands were acquired the following year. The first land for the Susquehannock State Forest was acquired in 1901; the cost for the major acquisitions was an average of $2.50 per acre ($6.18 per ha). This is roughly equivalent to $43 per acre ($107 per ha) in 2010 terms. As of 2003, the Susquehannock State Forest, which almost entirely surrounds the park, covered 265,000 acres (107,000 ha), chiefly in Potter County with small tracts in Clinton and McKean counties.

 

“The largest and most unique of the CCC-built picnic pavilions” in Pennsylvania was constructed in 1939.

Top: highway side; bottom: Astronomy Field side.

The park traces its existence back to 1922, when the Pennsylvania Department of Forestry established three scenic areas in state forests as part of a “plan for retaining their natural beauty”. One of these was the 6.5-mile (10.5 km) “Cherry Springs Scenic Drive” on the old Coudersport-Jersey Shore Turnpike. That same year, one of 16 ”Class B” public campgrounds in the state forests was located on Cherry Springs Drive.[b] These campgrounds were free for the public to use and all had potable water, picnic tables, a fire place, garbage can, and a latrine. The land where the hotel sat was purchased by the state in 1932.

Like many state parks in north central Pennsylvania, development of the facilities at Cherry Springs was the work of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), a work relief program for young men from unemployed families. Established in 1933 as part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal legislation, the CCC was designed to combat unemployment during the Great Depression. It operated in every U.S. state, and established ten CCC camps in the Susquehannock State Forest, of which eight were in Potter County.

Cherry Springs was home to CCC Camp S-136-Pa, which was established on May 27, 1933. According to the camp’s 1936 History: “Through the efforts of the [CCC] enrollees Cherry Springs Park, formerly a clearing, has been transformed into a park of which the people of Potter County can be proud of.”[sic] A historic recreation of the original tavern was built, as were a rifle range, picnic tables and shelters, roads, and hiking trails. The young men of the CCC camps worked to clear brush from the woods as a fire prevention measure. After clearing the woods, they planted stands of Norway Spruce and white pine, as well as an apple orchard. Camp-136-Pa closed on July 10, 1937.

The other CCC-built picnic pavilion has a hexagonal roof and is in the camping area.

Men from CCC Camp S-88-Pa, based at nearby Lyman Run in Potter County, were also active in the park. In 1939, they built a structure at Cherry Springs which is “the largest and most unique of the CCC-built picnic pavilions” in the state, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The pavilion overlooks PA Route 44 and is shaped like an H, with two partially enclosed structures (the vertical lines of the H) connected by a breezeway (the horizontal bar). The breezeway is a roof supported by eight log columns with log railings. The ends of the pavilion are built from log walls with white chinking, like log cabins. Each end has a large opening to the breezeway in one wall, while the other three sides are fully enclosed with a large window in the wall facing the highway, a stone fireplace and chimney on the opposite wall, and a door flanked by windows on the wall opposite the breezeway.

A 1984 survey of Pennsylvania state parks found the “three picnic pavilions, and their associated latrines” at Cherry Springs “typical of the smallest day use areas constructed by the CCC”. These pavilions are examples of the rustic style built by the CCC in state parks throughout the Great Depression. Local materials were used in a way that minimized impact on the natural surroundings, and in a manner that resembled the building style of the pioneer settlements of the Appalachian Mountains.

In addition to the two CCC camps active at the park, Cherry Springs also was home to Camp Elliott, which was run by the Pennsylvania Department of Forests and Waters (precursor to the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR)) for college students and other unemployed men. In 1935 they built an airfield, Cherry Springs Intermediate Field, just north of the park. The 40-acre (16 ha) airfield was originally built for emergency landings and later became a small airport. In 1936 it had a sod runway of dimensions 2,400 by 500 feet (730 by 150 m), and a hangar. The United States’ entry into the Second World War led to the end of the CCC and all its camps were closed by the summer of 1942.

Modern era

The park has had several names through the years, starting with its 1922 establishment as “Cherry Springs Scenic Drive” and the associated “Cherry Springs ‘Class B’ public campground”. The 1941 Pennsylvania Department of Highways official map of Potter County shows it as “Cherry Springs State Park”. On November 11, 1954, the Pennsylvania Geographic Board officially named it “Cherry Springs State Forest Picnic Area”. Forrey’s 1984 History of Pennsylvania’s State Parks and the 1986 NRHP nomination form still used this name, but Forrey clarified that it was “under the jurisdiction of the Bureau of State Parks”. Cupper’s 1993 Our Priceless Heritage: Pennsylvania State Parks 18931993 refers to it as “Cherry Springs State Park”, and this remains the official name as of 2009.

Up to 10,000 stars, such as these in the constellation Cygnus, can be seen from the park

In the post-war era, the park was long known chiefly for its isolated location and primitive camping facilities. In August 1952 it played host to the first Woodsmen’s Carnival, an annual celebration of the lumbering industry, which was again active in the second growth forests in the area. The festival, originally sponsored by the Penn-York Lumbermen Club, features lumberjack competitions as a reminder of the past, as well as displays of new equipment. In 1987 the Galeton Rotary Club took over sponsorship, and renamed the event the Woodsmen Show in 1990.

In the 1980s, the CCC and its work in the park were honored. Cherry Springs State Park was one of several to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Civilian Conservation Corps with a CCC reunion in the summer of 1983. On May 11, 1987, the Cherry Springs Picnic Pavilion was listed on the NRHP. None of the other remaining CCC structures in the park had retained its historic integrity sufficiently to be included on the NRHP.

Cherry Springs began attracting stargazers in the early 1990s. In 1999 the “Dark Sky Fund” was established and continues “to enhance the stargazing and astronomy experience” by funding improvements at the park. In 2000 Cherry Springs was officially named a “Dark Sky Park” by the DCNR, and that same year it became part of the Hills Creek State Park complex, an administrative grouping of eight state parks in Potter and Tioga counties. The headquarters for Cherry Springs are at nearby Lyman Run State Park. The National Public Observatory picked it “as the pilot for the Stars-n-Parks program” in April 2001. The DCNR acquired the Cherry Springs Airport in 2006 ”to expand the overall Dark Sky observation area and allow for increased programming opportunities” at the park, and closed it in 2007. On June 11, 2008, the International Dark-Sky Association named Cherry Springs State Park the second “International Dark Sky Park”. (The first was Natural Bridges National Monument in Utah.)

Geology and climate

1938 aerial view of the park, airport, PA 44, West Branch Pine Creek, and Hopper House Run

Cherry Springs State Park is at an elevation of 2,300 feet (701 m) above sea level, atop the Allegheny Plateau and “near the glaciated boundary”. The plateau and the Appalachian Mountains were all formed in the Alleghenian orogeny some 300 million years ago, when Gondwana (specifically what became Africa) and what became North America collided, forming Pangaea. Although the region appears mountainous, these are not true mountains: instead millions of years of erosion have made this a dissected plateau, causing the “mountainous” terrain seen today. The hardest of the ancient rocks are on top of the ridges, while the softer rocks eroded away forming the valleys.

The park is in the West Branch Pine Creek drainage basin, where the underlying rocks are primarily conglomerate, sandstone, and shale. Two major rock formations are present in Cherry Springs State Park, both at least partly from the Carboniferous period. The youngest of these, which forms the highest points in the park, is the early Pennsylvanian Pottsville Formation, a gray conglomerate that may contain sandstone, siltstone, and shale, as well as anthracite coal. The lower formation is the late Devonian and early Mississippian Huntley Mountain Formation, which is made of relatively soft grayish-red shale and olive-gray sandstone. Outside the park the creek has cut down into the Devonian Catskill Formation, a reddish sandstone.

The Allegheny Plateau has a continental climate, with occasional severe low temperatures in winter and average daily temperature ranges of 20 F (11 C) in winter and 26 F (14 C) in summer. The mean annual precipitation for the West Branch Pine Creek watershed is 40 to 42 inches (1,016 to 1,067 mm). January is the coldest month at Cherry Springs, July the warmest, and June the wettest. The highest recorded temperature at the park was 94 F (34 C) in 1966, and the record low was 28 F (33.3 C) in 1963.

Climate data for Cherry Springs State Park

Month

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

Dec

Average high F (C)

29

(-1.7)

34

(1.1)

42

(5.6)

56

(13.3)

67

(19.4)

75

(23.9)

78

(25.6)

77

(25)

69

(20.6)

58

(14.4)

45

(7.2)

33

(0.6)

Average low F (C)

13

(-10.6)

15

(-9.4)

23

(-5)

33

(0.6)

43

(6.1)

51

(10.6)

54

(12.2)

53

(11.7)

47

(8.3)

37

(2.8)

28

(-2.2)

18

(-7.8)

Precipitation inches (mm)

2.47

(62.7)

2.28

(57.9)

2.84

(72.1)

3.12

(79.2)

3.73

(94.7)

5.63

(143)

4.13

(104.9)

3.99

(101.3)

3.99

(101.3)

3.34

(84.8)

3.59

(91.2)

2.87

(72.9)

Source: The Weather Channel March 7, 2009

Ecology

Northern Saw-whet Owls have been studied in the park.

Cherry Springs State Park and the surrounding Susquehannock State Forest have recovered from the clearcutting of the lumber era. However, the composition of the forests has changed, so that there are now more hardwoods, including Sugar Maple and Black Cherry, and fewer Eastern White Pine and Eastern Hemlock. The park also has apple trees from the CCC orchard. Over 400 species of birds have been found in Pennsylvania, including 186 that breed in the state. Birds such as Ospreys, hawks, owls, nightjars, and Bald Eagles have returned to the park and state forest, and Saw-whet Owls have been studied in the park.

Some animals which had been locally extinct have also returned or been reintroduced to the area, including White-tailed deer, Elk, Fishers (a type of weasel), and otters. Although banned in the park, hunting is allowed in the surrounding state forest, which regained its title as a “sportsmen’s paradise” in the 20th century. Game species include Black Bears, White-tailed Deer, ducks, Ruffed Grouse, rabbits, Gray and Red Squirrels, and Wild Turkeys. Other animals present in the park and forest include chipmunks, Minks, Raccoons, Porcupines, Groundhogs, and the occasional Bobcat, as well as frogs, beetles, and moths.

A branch of Hopper House Run rises within the park, and flows east and then north into the West Branch Pine Creek. West Branch Road (or Branch Road) follows the valleys of the run and creek from Pennsylvania Route 44 east 10 miles (16 km) to Galeton. PA 44 roughly follows the line dividing the Pine Creek watershed to the north and the Sinnemahoning Creek watershed to the south. East Fork Road leaves PA 44 in the park and follows the East Fork Sinnemahoning Creek valley southwest 12 miles (19 km) to the village of Conrad. Both creeks are approved trout streams for fishing, which means they are stocked with trout in season.

Recreation

Dark skies

The Trifid Nebula (M20) in Sagittarius, as seen from the park

Astronomers and stargazers appreciate Cherry Springs State Park for the darkness and clarity of its skies, which make it “perhaps the last best refuge of the natural night sky” in the eastern half of the United States. The sky at Cherry Springs has been classified as a 2 on the Bortle Dark-Sky Scale, meaning it has almost no light pollution. Such “truly dark, starry skies are unavailable to two-thirds of the world population, including 99 percent of people in the continental U.S. and Western Europe”. With optimum conditions, 10,000 stars are visible with the naked eye at the park, clouds appear only as black holes in the starry sky, and the Milky Way is so bright that it casts a discernible shadow. In contrast, big city residents can see a few dozen stars at best, and even those in rural areas can typically only see 2,0003,000 stars. The Milky Way cannot be seen by most in the eastern US, even when there is no moonlight to obscure it.

The quality of the night skies at the park and its growing popularity for stargazing are the result of several factors. Cherry Springs is in the midst of the largely undeveloped 262,000-acre (106,000 ha) Susquehannock State Forest, and is on a summit 2,300 feet (701 m) above sea level. Because it is on the Allegheny Plateau, there are no mountain peaks to block the sky, and the Astronomy Field offers a 360 degree unobstructed view. The closest city is Williamsport, 60 miles (97 km) to the southeast. Surrounding communities sit in deep valleys, so the intervening terrain screens much of the light they produce; the park has no artificial skyglow in any direction. Cherry Springs is generally fog-free and its latitude puts it in excellent position to observe the Galactic Center of the Milky Way. The remote location also means there is little commercial air traffic to interfere with astrophotography, while PA Route 44 still offers relatively easy access to the park from Interstate 80.

In addition to these natural factors, much has been done intentionally to make the skies at the park clear and dark and help keep them that way. Within the park, former overhead electrical lines have been buried so they do not obstruct views, all lighting is shielded, and all white lights have been converted to red, which has the least effect on night vision and astrophotography. Light from passing vehicles is blocked by earthen berms covered with grass, or shrubbery and spruce trees; the Astronomy Field gate has a special light-blocking tarp. The park’s Dark Sky Fund has paid for many of these improvements since 1999.

Two of the park’s three astronomy domes, the walls prevent the wind from moving telescopes during observation

Since the 2006 acquisition of the Cherry Springs airport, a new Public Programming field has been established on the former airstrip. This field is northeast of PA Route 44 and is intended for educational programs or stargazing, but not for those who spend the night. Overnight observers and those with large telescopes use the Astronomy Field southwest of the highway. Nighttime visitors may only use flashlights with red filters, and may only point them at the ground. The Astronomy Field has further restrictions on lights, and parts of the park are light-free zones.

To help preserve the dark skies at Cherry Springs State Park, Tri-County Rural Electric company installs light-shielding caps on outdoor lights at local homes for free. In 2001 the Pennsylvania General Assembly passed the “Outdoor Lighting Control Act”, which both established the park as a “Dark Sky Preserve” and required minimal and shielded lighting at all new state facilities to reduce light pollution. A design guide for the Pennsylvania Wilds region, which includes the park, emphasizes the importance of maintaining dark skies. The DCNR spent $396,000 in June 2007 to buy mineral rights under 1,980 acres (800 ha) of the park and state forest to prevent natural gas drilling and associated development there.

A wind farm has been proposed on a site 13.7 miles (22.0 km) from the park. In 2008 Potter County passed an ordinance that wind turbine lights shall not “interfere with the state-designated Dark Skies Preserve at Cherry Springs State Park”. That same year the DCNR commissioned a study on the wind farm’s impact, which concluded the red warning lights on the wind turbines would not impact the darkness of the sky and would only be directly visible from the Astronomy Field under rare conditions. Others in the astronomy community challenged these conclusions and feared that new lights on “several dozen wind turbines near the park” will degrade observations and astrophotography. The study also recommended that the DCNR shield and redirect lights at the nearby Denton Hill State Park downhill ski area to make the sky even darker at Cherry Springs.

Astronomical observing

Telescopes belonging to amateur astronomers await nightfall

The staff at Cherry Springs State Park did not intend for it to become an attraction for amateur astronomers; the astronomers came to them instead. In 1997 or 1998 Chip Harrison, the park supervisor, noticed a man looking through a telescope at the park at about 1 AM. When Harrison asked why the man had come there, the astronomer said he had noticed an isolated black patch over north central Pennsylvania on nighttime satellite photos. Cherry Springs State Park is in that patch, one of the best locations east of the Mississippi River for stargazing.

An increasing number of astronomers began to come to Cherry Springs, most in the 14-day dark sky period around the new moon, between the last quarter and first quarter phases. The park is open year-round and between 60 and 85 nights each year have ideal conditions, when the apparent magnitudes of the faintest stars visible can range from 7.1 to 7.5. The park’s Astronomy Field has been upgraded to accommodate these astronomers. In 2005 a rotating 15-foot (4.6 m) slotted observatory dome, two 12-foot (3.7 m) clamshell domes, and a 10-by-12-foot (3.0 by 3.7 m) sky shed were added, as well as a small amphitheater for programs. The four structures protect telescopes from the wind and thermal currents. The next year concrete pads 4 and 6 feet (1.2 and 1.8 m) in diameter were placed at random in the field, and electrical pedestals, each with six outlets, were added to power telescopes and computers. In 2009, Wi-Fi internet access will be added to the Astronomy Field.

The Whirlpool Galaxy (M51) in the constellation Canes Venatici, as seen from the Astronomy Field

While a typical clear night might have 50 to 100 observers, each year the park hosts two major star parties which both attract several hundred astronomers for several nights. The Black Forest Star Party, sponsored by the Central Pennsylvania Observers of State College, has been held each fall since 1999. The Cherry Springs Star Party, sponsored by the Astronomical Society of Harrisburg, has been held each June since 2005. There are also free public programs at the amphitheater on the former airport site, some of which are part of the National Public Observatory’s Stars-n-Parks program. Meteor showers will also attract a crowd and the Aurora Borealis can be seen from the park. A stargazing business, “Crystal Spheres”, has been established and presents Music and Stars programs, with an hour-long concert followed by an hour of stargazing. Such “nature tourism” has a positive economic impact for the area.

Awards and press recognition have come to Cherry Springs and its staff. Thom Bemus, who initiated and coordinates the Stars-n-Parks program, was named DCNR’s 2002 Volunteer of the Year. In 2007 the park’s Dark Sky Programming and staff received the Environmental Education Excellence in Programming award from the Pennsylvania Recreation and Parks Society. Operations manager Chip Harrison and his wife Maxine, who directs the Dark Sky Fund, received a 2008 award from the Pennsylvania Outdoor Lighting Council for “steadfast adherence and active promotion of the principles of responsible outdoor lighting at Cherry Springs State Park”. The DCNR has named Cherry Springs one of “Twenty Must-See Pennsylvania State Parks”, specifically for having the “darkest night skies on the east coast”. Cherry Springs State Park was featured in the national press in 2003 when USA Today named it one of “10 Great Places to get some stars in your eyes”, in 2006 when National Geographic Adventure featured it in “Pennsylvania: The Wild, Wild East”, and in the The New York Times in 2007. All these were before it was named an International Dark Sky Park by the International Dark-Sky Association in 2008.

Woodsmen’s Show

A chainsaw event at the Woodsmen’s Show

The Woodsmen’s Show attracts thousands of visitors to Cherry Springs State Park on the first weekend in August. It has been held every year since 1952, and has been sponsored by the Galeton Rotary Club since 1987. In 2008 events at the three-day show included tree-felling, cross-cutting, log rolling, axe-throwing, horse pulling, spring board chopping, the standing block chop, and chainsaw competitions and demonstrations. The 2008 show also featured historic recreations of life in a logging camp, musical performances, and vendors selling food, crafts, and equipment related to the lumber industry.

The show and its events, which celebrate Potter County’s lumbering history, have changed with time. In the early years, up to three working sawmills were set up just for the carnival, and there was an associated Woodsmen Ball on Saturday evening, after the carnival ended. The Woodsmen’s Show had its first female competitor in 1979. Some events have been tried and discontinued; in 1987 one-hour seminars on topics such as “Outdoor Adventures on Mules” and the first “Woodsmen’s Carnival Queen” were introduced, and in 1993 there was tractor pulling with lawn tractors. In 1990 the name was changed from the “Woodsmen’s Carnival” to the “Woodsmen’s Show”, a third day was added, and an ecumenical church service was held Sunday morning in the large picnic pavilion. The next year the show was part of the STIHL Timbersports Series and some of the competition was televised on ESPN. Although it is no longer part of the STIHL series, as of 2008 many of the same athletes competed at the show.

Attendance was 4,000 the first year and grew to 12,000 three years later in 1955, then peaked at 33,000 in 1962, with nearly as many in 1965 (32,000) and 1981 (30,000). In 1983, 20,000 visitors came to the show, 15,000 came in 1985, and by the early 21st century attendance was about 14,000. Admission is charged and cash prizes are awarded in the competitions. Proceeds from the show under the Penn-York Lumbermen Club went to promote the lumber industry and support the Pennsylvania Lumber Museum. The Galeton Rotary Club has used the funds to improve the standard of living in and around Galeton, including college scholarships, a new roof for the Community building, support for the local public library, and clean-up and maintenance of the downtown.

Camping, picnicking, and trails

The camping area at the park, with picnic tables

The park has 30 camping sites which can each accommodate a tent, or a recreational vehicle (RV) up to 30 feet (9.1 m) long. The sites all have a fire ring, lantern hanger, and picnic table, and are classified as rustic because they have no running water. The camping area, which is southeast of Pennsylvania Route 44, is open from April to December and does not accept reservations. The park has two modern latrines, one in the camping area and the other at the Astronomy Field. There is also a holding tank dump station for RVs. Although the Astronomy Field is not an official camping area, overnight observers may set up tents and vehicles there in which to camp. In addition to the picnic tables and small pavilion in the camping area, the main picnic area at Cherry Springs is on the southwest side of Route 44, in and around the large historic, CCC-built pavilion. The area surrounding the pavilion has many picnic tables situated in an old apple orchard and a stand of huge White Pine and Norway spruce trees.

Cherry Springs State Park is at the southern end of a 15-mile (24 km) long, single-track mountain bike trail, which begins at Denton Hill State Park and passes through Patterson State Park. In 2005 the snowmobile trailhead at Cherry Springs was moved to the southern end of the park to avoid the Astronomy Field. The snowmobile trail is one of many trails available for cross-country skiing, backpacking, hiking, and all-terrain vehicle and horseback riding in the surrounding Susquehannock State Forest. The 85-mile (137 km) long Susquehannock Trail System passes close to the park and loops around it. South of the park the trail passes through the Hammersley Wild Area, which at 30,253 acres (12,243 ha) without roads is the second largest wild area in Pennsylvania.

Nearby state parks

Cherry Springs State Park is on Pennsylvania Route 44 in West Branch Township, 10 miles (16 km) southwest of Galeton. The following state parks are within 30 miles (48 km) of Cherry Springs State Park:

Bucktail State Park Natural Area (Cameron and Clinton Counties)

Colton Point State Park (Tioga County)

Denton Hill State Park (Potter County)

Hyner Run State Park (Clinton County)

Hyner View State Park (Clinton County)

Kettle Creek State Park (Clinton Counties)

Leonard Harrison State Park (Tioga County)

Lyman Run State Park (Potter County)

Ole Bull State Park (Potter County)

Patterson State Park (Potter County)

Prouty Place State Park (Potter County)

Sinnemahoning State Park (Cameron and Potter Counties)

Sizerville State Park (Cameron and Potter Counties)

Panoramic view of the park, left to right: astronomy bulletin board, CCC-built picnic pavilion, pumphouse, Astronomy Field, sky shed and three astronomy observation domes, information display, modern latrines, amphitheater, and CCC-built replica of the Cherry Springs Tavern (log cabin across Pennsylvania Route 44).

Notes

a. ^ As of April 2009, the official website for Cherry Springs State Park still lists the area as 48 acres (19 ha), as does Forrey’s 1984 History of Pennsylvania’s State Parks. This was the size of the park before the Cherry Springs Airport was closed and much of its land was transferred to the park. When built the airport was 40 acres (16 ha), and it had expanded in size to 59 acres (24 ha) by 1981. The airport land was owned by the Bureau of Forestry, which is part of the DCNR along with the Bureau of State Parks.

b. ^ Although the park was along the 6.5-mile (10.5 km) Cherry Springs Drive, the exact endpoints of the drive are not clear. Two vistas are southeast of the park on Pennsylvania Route 44: it is 3.1 miles (5.0 km) from the park to Water Tank Hollow Vista (which looks north), and 1.8 miles (2.9 km) from the park to Cherry Springs Vista (which looks south). The Cherry Springs fire tower is 1.9 miles (3.1 km) south of the park, just south of Cherry Springs vista. Coudersport is 15 miles (24 km) northwest of the park along Route 44, and the Cherry Springs “Class B” public campground was about11 miles (18 km) from Coudersport, or about 4 miles (6.4 km) from the current park. As of 2009 this area is part of the state forest, but does not have any park facilities. The United States Geological Survey topographic map (Ayers Hill quadrant) does show a “Little Cherry Springs Park” in this area. Patterson State Park is a short distance northwest of the site of Little Cherry Springs Park, and it is 6.5 miles (10.5 km) along PA 44 from Patterson to the Cherry Springs vista.

References

^ a b “Cherry Springs State Park”. Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. August 30, 1990. http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:1171676. Retrieved February 10, 2008. 

^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q “Cherry Springs State Park”. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/stateparks/Parks/cherrysprings.aspx. Retrieved November 4, 2006. 

^ a b c d e f g h i j “Pennsylvania WildsDarkSkies: An Early Implementation Conceptualization for Cherry Springs State Park”. Fermata Inc. December 2004. http://www.fermatainc.com/penn/documents/CherrySprings02_000.pdf. Retrieved March 20, 2009.  Note: the official map of the park before the Cherry Springs Airport was added to its territory is on page 5.

^ a b “Twenty Must-See Pennsylvania State Parks”. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/stateparks/twenty/20parks.aspx. Retrieved August 8, 2007.  Note: Despite the title, there are twenty-one parks in the list, with Colton Point and Leonard Harrison State Parks treated as one.

^ a b Kent, Barry C.; Smith III, Ira F.; McCann, Catherine (Editors) (1971). Foundations of Pennsylvania Prehistory. Anthropological Series of the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. 1. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. OCLC 2696039. 

^ a b c d e f Wallace, Paul A. W. (2000). Indians in Pennsylvania. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. ISBN 978-0892710171. 

Note: For a general overview of Native American History in the West Branch Susquehanna watershed, see Meginness, John Franklin (1892). “Chapter I. Aboriginal Occupation.”. History of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania: including its aboriginal history; the colonial and revolutionary periods; early settlement and subsequent growth; organization and civil administration; the legal and medical professions; internal improvement; past and present history of Williamsport; manufacturing and lumber interests; religious, educational, and social development; geology and agriculture; military record; sketches of boroughs, townships, and villages; portraits and biographies of pioneers and representative citizens, etc. etc. (1st ed.). Chicago, IL: Brown, Runk & Co. ISBN 0-7884-0428-8. http://www.usgennet.org/usa/pa/county/lycoming/history/Chapter-01.html. Retrieved June 17, 2008.  Note: ISBN refers to the Heritage Books July 1996 reprint. URL is to a scan of the 1892 version with some OCR typos.

^ a b Wallace, Paul A.W. (1987). Indian Paths of Pennsylvania (Fourth Printing ed.). Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. pp. 6672. ISBN 0-89271-090-X.  Note: ISBN refers to 1998 impression

^ Donehoo, Dr. George P. (1999) (PDF). A History of the Indian Villages and Place Names in Pennsylvania (Second Reprint ed.). Lewisburg, Pennsylvania: Wennawoods Publishing. pp. 215219. ISBN 1-889037-11-7. http://www.srbc.net/docs/IndianNamesDataChart.PDF. Retrieved November 9, 2006.  Note: ISBN refers to a 1999 reprint edition, URL is for the Susquehanna River Basin Commission’s web page of Native American Place names, quoting and citing the book

^ a b Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Susquehannock State Forest Map [map], 1 inch = 2 miles. Retrieved on March 3, 2009.

^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Morey, Tim; Harrison, Maxine (2002). “Cherry Springs State Park: Hidden Resource in the Dark (part of the “Emerald Gems” series)”. Pennsylvania Recreation & Parks (State College, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania Recreation and Park Society) 33 (No. 2). ISSN 0742-793X. http://www.kwastronomy.com/History_of_Cherry_Springs_Park.htm. Retrieved October 14, 2008.  Note: URL is to an authorized reprint of the article as “History of Cherry Springs State Park” on Kevin Wigell’s Astronomy Page

^ a b Michels, Chris (1997). “Latitude/Longitude Distance Calculation”. Northern Arizona University. http://www2.nau.edu/~cvm/latlongdist.html. Retrieved February 2, 2009. 

^ a b “Potter County 8th class” (PDF). Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/counties/pdfs/Potter.pdf. Retrieved May 4, 2007. 

^ a b c d “The Pennsylvania Lumber Museum – History”. Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. http://www.lumbermuseum.org/history.html. Retrieved May 1, 2009. 

^ Taber III, Thomas T. (1995). “Chapter Two: The Boom Making It All Possible”. Williamsport Lumber Capital (First ed.). Montoursville, Pennsylvania: Paulhamus Litho, Inc. pp. 2334. OCLC 35920715. 

^ a b c Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Cherry Springs State Park [map]. (January, 2008) Retrieved on March 10, 2009. Note: One spring feeding Hopper House Run is between the Cherry Springs Tavern and the parking lot (photo), while another is between PA Route 44 and West Branch Road, just east of their junction (photo).

^ a b Owlett, Steven E. (1993). “The Death of a Forest”. Seasons Along The Tiadaghton: An Environmental History of the Pine Creek Gorge (1st ed.). Petaluma, California: Interprint. pp. 5362. ISBN 0-9635905-0-2. 

^ “History of the William Penn State Forest”. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/forestry/stateforests/valleyforgehistory.aspx. Retrieved March 4, 2009. 

^ “Consumer Price Index (Estimate) 1800-2008″. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. 2009. http://www.minneapolisfed.org/community_education/teacher/calc/hist1800.cfm. Retrieved February 25, 2009. 

^ a b c d Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Bureau of Forestry. A Public Use Map for Susquehannock State Forest [map]. (July 2003) Note: This is a map on one side, with a guide to the state forest and its resources on the other side

^ a b c d e “Emergency Conservation Work (ECW) Architecture in Pennsylvania State Parks: 19331942, Thematic Resources”. National Park Service, National Register of Historic Places. January 5, 1987. http://www.nr.nps.gov/multiples/64000724.pdf. Retrieved March 6, 2009. 

^ a b c d e Forrey, William C. (1984). History of Pennsylvania’s State Parks. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Bureau of State Parks, Office of Resources Management, Department of Environmental Resources, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. pp. 1316, 90, 91, 97. OCLC 17824084. 

^ a b Paige, John C. (1985). “Chapter One: A Brief History of the Civilian Conservation Corps”. The Civilian Conservation Corps and the National Park Service, 19331942: An Administrative History. Washington, C.C.: U.S. National Park Service, Department of the Interior. OCLC 12072830. http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/ccc/ccc1.htm. Retrieved February 11, 2009. 

^ Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. CCC Camps in Pennsylvania 19331942 [map]. Retrieved on March 6, 2009.

^ a b “Camp Information for S-136-Pa”. Pennsylvania CCC Archive. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/stateparks/ccc/camp.aspx?ID=63. Retrieved March 6, 2009. 

^ “History Company 5437, S-136-Pa. Galeton, Pa.”. Pennsylvania CCC Archive. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/stateparks/ccc/docs/140.pdf. Retrieved March 6, 2009. 

^ “Lyman Run State Park”. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/stateparks/Parks/lymanrun.aspx. Retrieved October 30, 2007. 

^ a b c d “National Historic Landmarks & National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania” (Searchable database). ARCH: Pennsylvania’s Historic Architecture & Archaeology. http://www.arch.state.pa.us. Retrieved October 25, 2008.  Note: This includes John Milner Associates (1986). “Pennsylvania Historic Resource Survey Form: Cherry Springs State Park” (PDF). http://www.arch.state.pa.us/pdfs/H088873_01B.pdf. Retrieved October 25, 2008. 

^ Civil Aeronautics Bulletin. United States Civil Aeronautics Administration. 1936. p. 22. http://books.google.com/books?id=_OO3AAAAIAAJ&dq=Cherry+Spring+Airport&q=”Cherry+Springs”&pgis=1. Retrieved March 6, 2009. 

^ Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. General Highway Map Potter County Pennsylvania [map]. Cartography by Pennsylvania Department of Highways in cooperation with the Public Roads Administration Federal Works Agency. (1941 (Culture Features as of 1939)) Retrieved on March 9, 2009.

^ a b c Cupper, Dan (1993). Our Priceless Heritage: Pennsylvania State Parks 18931993. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission for Pennsylvania Department of Natural Resources, Bureau of State Parks. pp. 25, 27, 54. ISBN 0-89271-056-X. 

^ “Woodsman’s Carnival set”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 2. May 27, 1987. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=14509737&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=5&currentPage=10. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ a b “Woodsmen’s show set in Galeton”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 8. July 25, 1990. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=18601372&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=2&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ a b c d e f g “The Dark Skies of Cherry Springs State Park”. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/stateparks/parks/cherrysprings/cherrysprings_darkskies.aspx. Retrieved March 11, 2009. 

^ “Manager named at Hills Creek Lake”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 6. February 2, 2000. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=12106011&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=4&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 9, 2009.  Note: the eight parks in the Hills Creek State Park Complex are Cherry Springs, Colton Point, Denton Hill, Hills Creek, Leonard Harrison, Lyman Run, Patterson, and Prouty Place.

^ a b c “Progress through Partnerships: A Three-Year Report on the Pennsylvania Wilds”. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. January, 2007. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/info/pawilds/progressthroughpartnerships.pdf. Retrieved March 11, 2009. 

^ “It was the news: stories of 2007″. Endeavor News. January 5, 2008. http://www.endeavornews.com/news/2008/0105/front_page/005.html. Retrieved March 11, 2009. 

^ a b c Frank Roylance. “Pa. park wins “dark sky” designation”. The Baltimore Sun / MarylandWeather.com. http://weblogs.marylandweather.com/2008/06/pa_park_wins_dark_sky_designat.html. Retrieved June 21, 2008. 

^ a b Van Diver, Bradford B. (1990). Roadside Geology of Pennsylvania. Missoula, Montana: Mountain Press Publishing Company. p. 115. ISBN 0-87842-227-7. 

^ a b Shultz, Charles H. (Editor) (1999). The Geology of Pennsylvania. Harrisburg and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania Geological Society and Pittsburgh Geological Society. ISBN 0-8182-0277-0. 

^ a b Shaw, Lewis C. (June 1984). Pennsylvania Gazetteer of Streams Part II (Water Resources Bulletin No. 16). Prepared in Cooperation with the United States Department of the Interior Geological Survey (1st ed.). Harrisburg, PA: Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Environmental Resources. p. 162. OCLC 17150333. 

^ Berg, T. M. (1981). “Atlas of Preliminary Geologic Quadrangle Maps of Pennsylvania: Cherry Springs” (PDF). Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Bureau of Topographic and Geologic Survey. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/topogeo/map61/conrad15ne.pdf. Retrieved March 8, 2009. 

^ “Map 67: Tabloid Edition Explanation” (PDF). Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Bureau of Topographic and Geologic Survey. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/topogeo/pub/map/pdfs/map067_tabloid_exp.pdf. Retrieved June 3, 2008. 

^ “Climate of Pennsylvania” (PDF). Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania State Climatologist. http://climate.met.psu.edu/data/ncdc_pa.pdf. Retrieved April 12, 2008. 

^ a b “Monthly Averages for Cherry Springs State Park”. The Weather Channel Interactive, Inc. http://www.weather.com/outlook/recreation/outdoors/wxclimatology/monthly/PASPCS:13. Retrieved March 7, 2009. 

^ Audubon Pennsylvania; Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Searchable database). Susquehanna River Birding and Wildlife Trail. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. p. 2. http://web1.audubon.org/trailMaps/. Retrieved March 8, 2009. 

^ “Pennsylvania Wilds Discovery Weekend Offers Outdoor Adventure” (PDF). Pennsylvania State Government. http://www.state.pa.us/papower/cwp/view.asp?A=11&Q=455724. Retrieved June 3, 2008. 

^ a b Miller, Jason (2006). Pennsylvania Camping: The Complete Guide to Tent and RV Camping. Moon Outdoors. Miller, Jason Jack (photographer). Avalon Travel Publishing. ISBN 978-1566919869. http://books.google.com/books?id=-5EWcHhCUSwC&pg=PA89&dq=cherry+Springs+Camping+moon. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ a b c d Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, Bureau of Planning and Research, Geographic Information Division. 2007 General Highway Map Potter County Pennsylvania [map], 1:65,000. Retrieved on July 27, 2007. Note: shows Cherry Springs State Park

^ “PFBC County Guide”. Searchable interactive map. Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission. http://pfbc.state.pa.us/CountyGuide/County_Guide.htm. Retrieved March 10, 2009. 

^ a b c d e Clanton & Associates (May 27, 2008). “Cherry Springs State Park: Light Pollution Analysis and Recommendations”. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/info/wind/documents/cherry-springs-state-park-light-pollution-analysis-05-29-08.pdf. Retrieved March 21, 2009. 

^ a b c d e f g Caldwell, Dave (September 14, 2007). “Dark Sky, Bright Lights Over Pennsylvania”. The New York Times. http://travel.nytimes.com/2007/09/14/travel/escapes/14dark.html. Retrieved February 1, 2009. 

^ a b c Lamey, Jessica (June 29, 2008). “‘Awesome’: Stargazers revel in Cherry Springs dark skies”. Williamsport Sun-Gazette: pp. E1, E3. http://www.sungazette.com/page/content.detail/id/512360.html?nav=5013. Retrieved March 23, 2009. 

^ a b Beatty, Kelly (June 27, 2008). “Cherry Springs Earns Dark-Sky Status”. Sky and Telescope. http://www.skyandtelescope.com/news/21914474.html. Retrieved March 27, 2009. 

^ “An Act Providing for management of outdoor night lighting (House Bill No. 300, Session of 2001)”. The General Assembly of Pennsylvania. November 13, 2001. http://www.legis.state.pa.us/CFDOCS/Legis/PN/Public/btCheck.cfm?txtType=PDF&sessYr=2001&sessInd=0&billBody=H&billTyp=B&billNbr=0300&pn=2860. Retrieved March 23, 2009. 

^ The Pennsylvania Wilds Planning Team (February 13, 2009). “Pennsylvania Wilds Design Guide” A Design Guide for Community Character Stewardship”. Clinton County, Pennsylvania. http://www.clintoncountypa.com/PA Wilds/PA Wilds Guide/PA Wilds Design Guide2.pdf. Retrieved March 29, 2009. 

^ Hopey, Don (May 3, 2009). “Goddard State Park’s gas wells may be first of hundreds: Where mineral rights are privately owned, Pennsylvania officials can’t prevent drilling”. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09123/967360-113.stm. Retrieved May 6, 2009. 

^ “Potter County Wind Energy Ordinance”. Potter County, Pennsylvania. 2008. http://pottercountypa.net/wind/index.html. Retrieved March 29, 2009. 

^ “State: Proposed wind farm would not affect dark skies at Cherry Springs State Park”. Williamsport Sun-Gazette: p. E3. June 29, 2008. http://www.sungazette.com/page/content.detail/id/512363.html. Retrieved March 23, 2009. 

^ a b Nephin, Dan (September 15, 2006). “Pennsylvania peak is heaven for stargazers”. Associated Press / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06258/721452-37.stm. Retrieved March 23, 2009. 

^ “2009 Cherry Springs Star Party”. The Astronomical Society of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. http://www.astrohbg.org/CSSP/Information.html. Retrieved May 6, 2009. 

^ “About the Black Forest Star Party”. Central Pennsylvania Observers, Inc.. http://www.bfsp.org/starparty/about.cfm. Retrieved March 29, 2009. 

^ “Cherry Springs Star Party 2009 Schedule”. The Astronomical Society of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. http://www.astrohbg.org/CSSP/Schedule.html. Retrieved March 29, 2009. 

^ Morey, Tim (June 2007). “A PA Wilds Business Success Story: The Sky the Limit for Astronomy in Potter County”. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/info/pawilds/0706-twotw.aspx. Retrieved March 29, 2009. 

^ a b August, Henry (April 9, 2003). “Volunteer receives DCNR award”. Wellsboro Gazette (The Marketplace). http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=29872600&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=0&currentPage=0. Retrieved March 29, 2009. 

^ “Cherry Springs wins environmental award”. Wellsboro Gazette (The Marketplace). 2007-05-30. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=131773422&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=1&currentPage=0. Retrieved March 29, 2009. 

^ “Cherry Springs State Park team of husband-wife receives award”. Williamsport Sun-Gazette. September 21, 2008. http://www.sungazette.com/page/content.detail/id/515859.html. Retrieved March 29, 2009. 

^ “10 Great Places to get some stars in your eyes”. USA Today. July 31, 2003. http://www.usatoday.com/travel/destinations/10great/2003-09-29-star-gazing_x.htm. Retrieved March 29, 2009. 

^ Minarcek, Andrea (May 2006). “Pennsylvania: The Wild, Wild East”. National Geographic Adventure. http://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/travel/pennsylvania.html. Retrieved March 30, 2009. 

^ “57th Annual Woodsmen’s Show”. T. Dennison Promotions. http://www.woodsmenshow.com/MAJOR EVENTS.htm. Retrieved February 11, 2009. 

^ a b c Lamey, Jessica (July 27, 2008). “Cherry Springs State Park hosts 57th edition of Woodsmen Show”. Williamsport Sun-Gazette. http://www.sungazette.com/page/content.detail/id/513424.html. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Ann’l Woodsmen’s Carnival Aug. 5-6, Cherry Springs Park”. Wellsboro Agitator: p. 7. August 4, 1956. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=12215681&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=3&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Woodsmen’s Show – Largest Yet”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 4. August 8, 1979. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=14477673&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=4&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ a b “Lots going on at woodsmen’s carnival”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 7. July 8, 1987. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=14511071&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=5&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Potter County’s annual Woodsmen’s Show buzzes into Cherry Springs State Park”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 15. July 28, 1993. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=12385470&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=0&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Annual Woodsmen’s show to open at Cherry Springs”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 19. July 24, 1991. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=12327062&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=3&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Woodsmen Hold Carnival August 3, Cherry Springs Park”. Wellsboro Agitator: p. 1. July 26, 1956. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=12219153&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=0&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Woodsmen’s Carnival Attracts 33,000 Persons Winners Announced”. Wellsboro Agitator: p. 8. August 9, 1962. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=12109868&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=7&currentPage=10. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Annual Woodsmen’s Carnival Aug. 5-6 Arena Enlarged”. Wellsboro Agitator: p. 12. July 7, 1966. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=12124813&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=8&currentPage=10. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Woodsmen’s Carnival is Success”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 17. August 5, 1981. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=12209540&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=7&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 7, 2009. 

^ a b “Woodsmen’s Carnival A Success? … You Bet!”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 19. August 10, 1983. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=12222660&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=3&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “15,000 Attend Woodsmen’s Show”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 25. August 7, 1985. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=14493088&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=0&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Galeton Rotary Club”. T. Dennison Promotions. http://www.woodsmenshow.com/galeton_rotary_club.htm. Retrieved February 10, 2009. 

^ “Camping Locations: Pennsylvania Wilds”. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/stateparks/recreation/camplist_wilds.aspx. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Patterson State Park”. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/stateparks/Parks/patterson.aspx. Retrieved November 4, 2006. 

^ “Cherry Springs State Park snowmobile trailhead relocated”. Wellsboro Gazette: p. 14. November 30, 2005. http://greenfreelibrary.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewer.aspx?img=74402018&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=0&currentPage=0. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “Hammersley Wild Area becomes official”. The Resource. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. January 2004. http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/news/resource/res2004/01-hammersley.aspx. Retrieved April 6, 2009. 

^ “”Cherry Springs Airport”". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. August 30, 1990. http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:1194270. Retrieved 2009-03-30. 

^ Federal Aviation Administration. “Cherry Springs Airport”. Public 5010 Web. http://www.gcr1.com/5010web/main.cfm?Site=5G6. Retrieved 2009-03-30. 

^ “Pennsylvania: Allegheny Plateau Scenic Drive”. The Weather Channel. http://www.weather.com/outlook/driving/scenicdrives/?sd=paalleghenyplateau.jsp&param1=USPA1799&param2=USPA0930&param3=USPA0339. Retrieved 2009-04-06.  This cites Ostertag, George; Ostertag, Rhonda (1999). Scenic Driving Pennsylvania. Helena, Montana: Falcon Press Publishing Co. ISBN 1-56044-732-X. 

^ Illick, Joseph S.; Shoemaker, Henry W. (1925). Bulletin: In Penn’s woods. A handy and helpful pocket manual of the natural wonders and recreational facilities of the state forests of Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania. Dept. of Forests and Waters. pp. 3941. http://books.google.com/books?id=bO5DAAAAIAAJ&dq;=”cherry+springs+drive”&q=”cherry+springs”&pgis=1. Retrieved 2009-04-07. 

^ “Little Cherry Springs Park”. Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. August 2, 1979. http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:1179501. Retrieved 2009-04-07. 

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Cherry Springs State Park

Cherry Springs State Park official mapPDF (209 KB)

The Dark Skies of Cherry Springs State Park Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources

Cherry Springs State Park Clear Sky Chart Attilla Danko

Black Forest Star Party Central Pennsylvania Observers

Cherry Springs Star Party The Astronomical Society of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

Annual Woodsmen’s Show

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General Knowledge Pt. XIII

 

What is the coriolis force?

The Coriolis Force is an important element in meteorology. It” acts on the atmosphere and is caused by the rotation of Earth, which rotates on its own axis from west to east with an angular velocity of 15 degree per hour and gives rise to an apparent force called Coriolis Force or geostrophic force. It acts at right angles to the wind vector, to the right in the northern hemisphere and to the left in the southern hemisphere. It was first postulated by a scientist named Coriolis.

What are t-rays?

T-rays stand for terahertz radiation. It is used to scan airline passengers for explosives and illegal drugs. The rays are particularly effective, as they can see through clothing, paper, leather, plastic, wood, and ceramics. They don’t penetrate as well as x-rays, but they also don’t damage living tissue. They can read spectroscopic signatures, detecting the difference between, say, hair gel and an explosive.

What is the scopes trial?

The Scopes Trial brought about a prosecution in 1925 in Dayton, Tennessee. The prosecution was of a high school biology teacher who taught the theory of evolution. The teacher, John T Scopes, was accused of having violated the Butler Act, a Tennessee law that forbade the teaching of the theory of evolution in public schools because it contradicted the account of creation in the Bible. The press dubbed it the Monkey Trial because, according to popular belief, evolution meant that humans had evolved from monkeys. The defence argued for the scientific validity of evolution and against the constitutionality of the Butler Act, but it did not deny that Scopes had broken the law. He was convicted and fined $100, but the verdict was later reversed on technical grounds by the Supreme Court. The Butler Act remained on the books until 1967.

When was the kite invented?

The exact date and origin of the kite is not known but it is believed that they were flown in China more than 2,000 years ago. The earliest written account’ of kite flying was in about 200 BC when the Chinese general Han Hsin of the Han dynasty flew a kite over the walls of a city he was attacking to measure how far his army would have to tunnel to reach past the defences. Calculating this distance correctly, his troops reached the inside of the city surprised their enemy, and were victorious. Kite flying was eventually spread by traders from China to Korea, and across Asia to India.

Which country has the highest male-female ratio?

The male-female ratio is the proportion of males to females in a given population at a specified stage in life e.g. at conception, at birth and at any chosen stage between birth and death. This is usually expressed as the number of males per 100 females. Qatar has the highest ratio with 187 males to 100 females. However, the ratio for the entire world population is 101 males to 100 females. Qatar’s high male-female ratio is mainly on account of large immigrant labourers staying without families. In Qatar, the ratio goes up to 284 males to 100 females for the population above 65 years on account of aging male immigrants and comparatively higher average mortality rate for females.

Why is earthing necessary for electrical appliances?

As it’s a safety factor, earthing is essential and mandatory. It’s an electrical connection between the exposed metallic parts of an electrical appliance or installation and the earth, regarded to have zero potential. Proper earthing provides an alternative and easy path for leakage or faulty current to flow. It ensures that any exposed conductive part of the appliance does not reach a dangerous level of potential or voltage that endangers the life of the user. A proper earthing system should have least electrical resistance, good corrosion resistance and ability of dissipating high faulty current.

What is ethical fashion?

Ethical fashion involves taking into consideration the various people involved in making a piece of clothing. For instance, even as one buys a pair of jeans, not many think about the farmers who grew the cotton that went into creating the material, the workers (mainly from poor countries) who helped sew the jeans, the various chemicals used on it and the economics of production. Ethical fashion involves creating clothes that don’t adversely impact people or the environment.

What is the fenian movement?

The Fenian Movement or Fenians is a secret revolutionary society organized in 1858 in Ireland and the United States to achieve Irish independence from England by force. It was known variously as the Fenian Brotherhood, Fenian Society, Irish Republican Brotherhood, and Irish-American Brotherhood. The famine of the 1840s brought to a crisis Irish discontent with English rule, culminating in the abortive Young Ireland uprising of 1848, led by William Snpth O’Brien.

What is project blue beam?

Project Blue Beam is a conspiracy theory about a supposed project whose purpose is to create an artificial Second Coming, in order to control people. As per the alleged theory, the new world order’s purpose is: 1. To abolish all Christian and traditional religions in order to replace them with a one-world religion based on the cult of man. 2. To abolish all national identities and national pride in order to establish a world identity and a world pride. 3. To abolish the family as known today in order to replace them with individuals all working for the glory of the new one-world government. 4. To destroy all individual artistic and scientific creativity to implement a one-world government, one-mindset.

What is the priory of sion?

The Priory of Sion is a very obscure group whose presence has not been established with concrete evidence. Papers relating to their existence were found in 1975 at Paris Bibliothhque Nationale, which named Da Vinci and Isaac Newton among its Grand Masters. According to the most popular theory, it is believed that the priory started out as an administrative wing of the Knights Templar. They had something (though it’s not very clear what it is) that gave them immense power and authority, even over the Pope. The most accepted answer among scholars is that they had documents written in the years Christ walked the Earth, which gave evidence that He was married to Mary Magdalene.

What is dragon’s triangle?

The Dragon’s Triangle is at the polar opposite of the Bermuda Triangle. Both triangles are located at 35 degrees west and 35 degrees east latitude and longitude which means if you were to start out at the Bermuda Triangle and travel straight through the centre of the Earth, you would come out at the Dragon’s Triangle. This dangerous ocean triangle has reportedly claimed hundreds, if not thousands, of ships, airplanes, and submarines since it was first written about in the 13th century. This is a result of bad oceanic conditions or maybe something more mysterious.

What is bear bile farming?

The Chinese practice of extracting bile from captive bears for use in traditional medicinal products is called bile farming. Many animal welfare groups decry this as inhumane. Bear bile has been prized in the traditional Chinese medicine community for thousands of years. It’s got a reputation as being a sort of wonder drug, and its active ingredient, ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), is believed to cure a number of ailments — everything from cardiac illness to impotence, according to the Humane Society of the United States. As an unhappy consequence, more than 10,000 bears are currently held in captivity on bear bile farms in China today, according to the Animals Asia Foundation.

What is guano?

Guano is accumulated dung or excrement and remains of seabirds, bats and seals found along certain coastal areas and caves. It’s found mainly on the coastal islands of Peru, Africa, Chile and the West Indies. It contains about 6% phosphorus, 9% nitrogen, 2% potassium and moisture. Guano is found mixed with feathers and bones and used mainly as a fertilizer. Bird guano is comparatively a better fertilizer than bat guano found in caves and seal guano, accumulated on islands off north-western Peru. Since the global reserves of phosphorus will only last another 30 years, the use of guano as a fertilizer is gaining importance.

What is coriolis force?

Coriolis Force occurs whenever a rotating body moves along a curved path. Hence, two rotary movements (rotation on its axis and precession about a line) are necessary conditions. Whenever a vehicle in motion takes a turn, the wheels rotate about their axis and the entire vehicle, including the wheels, goes round the bend, resulting in Coriolis Force. This is the most common occurrence of this force.

What is the principle of a voltage stabilizer?

A voltage stabilizer is an electro cal appliance used to feed constant voltage current to costly electrical gadgets like ACs and computers, and protects them from damage due to voltage fluctuations. A voltage stabilizer works on the principle of a transformer, where the input current is connected to primary windings and output is received from secondary windings. Whenever there is a drop in incoming voltage, it activates electromagnetic relays which add to more number of turns in the secondary winding, thus giving higher voltage which compensates for loss in output voltage due to drop in incoming voltage. When there is rise in the incoming voltage, the reverse happens, and, thus, the voltage at the output side remains almost unchanged.

What is haarp?

HAARP is an acronym for the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program, a research initiative aimed at studying the effect on the performance of communication, navigation and surveillance systems by simulated heating of the ionosphere. It was started in 1993 and is expected to continue till 2013. It is defence oriented and toided by various US defence agencies, including the air force and the navy. A powerful HF signal is transmitted to heat a limited area of the ionosphere for a specified time. Scientists then record the effects of temporarily altered conditions through advanced instruments. It’s been at the centre of controversies, with some organizations claiming that the transmission antennae may be used as weapons.

What is argemone oil?

Argemone oil is extracted from argemone seeds. It is mixed with sunflower oil and sesame oil to raise their quantity. Consumption of this oil leads to health disorders among children. To avoid this, we must check the contents of the cooking oil. Many oil brands mention ‘no argemone oil’ on their packs.

What is switchgrass?

Switchgrass, known in Botany as Panicum Virgatum L., is the perennial tall grass found in the prairies of North America and many parts of Mexico. Its height varies from 5 ft to 12 ft, and the diameter of its stem at ground level is about 20 inches. It can grow easily even in poor-quality soil, with low requirement of inputs like fertilisers, and can tolerate hostile environmental conditions, including floods and drought. The grass has both main roots that penetrate deep into the soil, and many temporary fine roots, which enable it to conserve the soil in which it grows, and make the soil nutritionally rich. Therefore, switchgrass has been grown traditionally for soil conservation and to serve as fodder. Since the 1990s, interest in this plant has increased because it generates a lot of biomass, which can be used for producing fibre, ethanol, electricity, and other chemicals.

Which compound is used in making bulletproof jackets?

Bulletproof jackets were being manufactured with ballistic nylon material till the 1970s. In 1965, a compound — poly- paraphenyleneterephthalamide — was invented with the brand name Kevlar. This is a liquid polymer which can be spun into fibre and woven into cloth. Kevlar was originally developed for tyres and, later, for ropes, gaskets and various parts of planes and boats. The efficacy of the material led to its usage for the manufacture of bulletproof jackets. Another product with the brand name Spectra was developed in 1989 as a competitor for Kevlar. Spectra is a polyethylene fibre originally developed as a sail cloth and, later, used to make stronger and lighter non-woven material for bulletproof jackets.

Who invented the board game monopoly?

Charles Darrow, a US citizen, invented Monopoly in 1931, during the Great Depression. Out of work, Darrow earned a living doing part time jobs and inventing puzzles and games, to sell to toy-makers. With some difficulty, he sold Monopoly to Parker Brothers on a royalty basis. The game sold so well that Darrow soon became a millionaire. The original game had properties named after streets, hotels, etc. in Atlantic City, where Darrow lived. In India, we initially played with the British version, containing London-based names like Old Kent Road and Piccadilly. Later, an Indian version was released; it was called Trade and featured, sites in Mumbai, such as Churchgate Station and Byculla.

What is maniole?

The average temperature in Maniole is perhaps 25 degrees Celsius (Aug. 24).

Who is a wardriver?

A wardriver is someone who accesses an unsecured wireless connection through a PDA or laptop in a moving vehicle. It’s derived from the word wardialling from the film WarGames. Other related concepts are warbiking (accessing a wi-fi connection on a motorbike or bicycle) and warwalking/ jogging (doing the same while on foot). While there are several softwares to enable wardriving, they can be easily misused as well. In India, terror e-mails were sent by wardrivers who accessed anunprotected wireless connection.

What are the cod wars?

The three Icelandic Cod Wars that took place in 1958, 1973 and 1975 were precipitated by concerns on the part of Iceland that the stocks of cod fish were being seriously depleted by over-fishing. With timber, agriculture, fuel or mineral deposits being the few natural resources in Iceland, the country relies heavily on its stocks of cod fish and the Cod Wars have been vital in protecting this industry In 1958, the first Icelandic Cod War took place after it extended its fishing limits from 4 miles to 12 miles off Iceland’s coast. In 1972, Iceland further extended its limits to a 50-mile radius which prompted a hostile response from other nations, not least Britain, and the second war took place. An agreement was reached in 1973, when Britain agreed to limit fishing for cod to designated areas within the 50-mile radius. What further instigated the third war, apart from the expiry of the agreement made at the end of the second war, was Iceland’s move to extend the radius to 200 miles.

What is the karakoram highway?

The Karakoram Highway (KH) or Friendship Highway or N35 connects the Kashgar town in Xinjiang region in China to Havelian (Abbottabad district) in Pakistan, which extends further to the junction of Grand Trunk (GT) Road at Hasan Abdal in Pakistan. KH is the world’s highest paved international road constructed across the Karakoram mountain range and through the Khunjerab Pass located at an altitude of 4,877 metres. It was built by the governments of China and Pakistan between 1966 and 1986. KH has given a boost to adventure tourism by giving easier access to high mountains, five major lakes and glaciers like Baltoro for mountaineers and adventure-seekers. KH is sometimes referred to as the Ninth Wonder of the World because of its high altitude and difficulties encountered in construction.

What is magic acid?

Magic Acid, H2S03F+, is one of the inorganic superacids. This extremely strong acid has a pKa of 20 and is strong enough to protonate saturated alkanes to form carbonium ions. Magic Acid is made by mixing antimonypentafluoride (SbF55) and fluorosulphonic acid. It is considered a superacid and is called Magic Acid because of its strength. It can dissolve a wax candle, something that even sulphuric acid cannot do.

What is enneagram personality?

The term enneagram is derived from two Greek words, ennea (nine) and grammos (something written or drawn). The Enneagram is a ninepointed figure inscribed in a circle. The meaning of the symbol itself, together with the personality types organized around the nine points, convey a system of knowledge about nine distinct but interrelated personality types, or nine ways of seeing and experiencing the world. The enneagram of personality is generally presented as a psycho-spiritual system for mapping the nine possible personalities, like nine facets of a stone that develop through the natural growth of the human psyche.

What is the bossa nova?

The Bossa Nova is a type of Brazil- ian music system, innovated in 1958. The system merges the samba rhythms, typical to traditional Brazilian dance music, with the melodies of jazz. Catching the fancy of college students, this system of fusion reached the peak of popularity between 1958 and 1963. The system contributed a lot of popular songs to the standard set of jazz compositions of that era. Later, Bossa Nova underwent many modifications and enhancements giving rise to several variants. In Europe, electronic music was incorporated in Bossa Nova, producing a new musical system called Bossa Electrica. The term Bossa Nova in Portuguese language means ‘new way’.

What is a fitbit tracker?

It’s a tiny fitness gadget which constantly monitors if you’re eating right, exercising enough and sleeping adequately The rationale is to motivate people to lead a healthy lifestyle. The FitBit tracker is wireless and functions with the help of a motion sensor called accelerometer, which keeps tabs on movements. When a person walks by a wireless base station, the information thus collected is uploaded on to the website fitbit.com.

Do magnets work in space?

A magnet works on the principal of electromagnetism. Magnetic force is independent of the Earth’s gravitational force. Therefore, a magnet will work in space. As the Earth is also a big magnet with two poles (south and north), it too exerts a force on other astronomical bodies.

What is an atomic pile?

The atomic pile is an early model of a nuclear reactor whose core consisted of layers of graphite blocks interspersed with uranium, designed to create a sustained fission reaction. The first atomic pile was created by Ernico Fermi and his colleagues at Columbia in 1942. It consisted of a stack of pure graphite bricks surrounding a neutron source. This first step enabled the examination of graphite’s effect on neutron activity: absorption and re-emission, quantities, fissions. Later, they added uranium pieces in some of the graphite bricks.

What is chi-x?

Chi-x Europe Limited has received recognition as a Multilateral Trading Facility (MTF) from the Financial Services Authority (FSA) and is authorized to provide services to firms throughout Europe. Established in response to clients’ demands for a faster, cheaper and higher capacity alternative to trading, Chi-x is the first orderdriven, pan-European matching engine and central limit order book. It is up to 10 times faster and. cheaper than trading equities on traditional equity exchanges. Live trading in European equities started on March 30, 2007.

Which is the strongest industrial glue?

There are many adhesives and they are used depending on the application and material to be bonded. The most common one is e-600 series, a high-performance elastomeric adhesive, which bonds a broad range of materials.

What is sweet crude oil?

If the percentage of sulphur is less than 0.5% in petroleum, then it is called sweet crude oil. It came to be called ‘sweet’ because the low level of sulphur gives the oil a mildly sweet taste and pleasant smell. It also contains a small amount of hydrogen sulphide and carbon dioxide.

What is confessionalism?

The word confessionalism occurs in the fields of religion, politics and poetry, each having a different meaning. In religion, particularly in Christianity, confessionalism refers to the belief that a truly religious person should accept the entire teaching of the religion, both its values and rituals. It lays a lot of emphasis on religious dogma and does not allow for alternative interpretations of the religion. Non-confessionalists, on the other hand, believe that shared values and religious spirit and religious experience are more important than ritual and dogma of a religion. In the field of politics, it signifies a system of government which apportions seats in its legislature and various government jobs to different groups of people strictly based on demographic composition. For instance, the government of Lebanon is based on the confessionalist model. In poetry, confessionalism refers to a movement, which became popular in the 1950s and ’60s. In this form of poetry, the work focuses on intimate details of the poet’s life, however unpleasant they may be.

What is the snow white project?

Installation artist Catherine Bay obviously feels rather strongly about consumerism. In her recent work, the Snow White Project, currently on display in New York, she makes a grand statement against it by showcasing several avatars of the fairytale character Snow White. They are clad in various costumes and hold placards proclaiming ‘I Am An Everyday Consumer Product’ and ‘My Life Depends On People Wanting To Use Me.

What are ironwoods?

It’s a tree, and as the name implies, an ironwood is an extremely dense hardwood. The ironwood tree is an evergreen and grows only in the Sonoran Desert, and can live for over 1,000 years. Its woord is very hard and very heavy, and doesn’t rot easily.

Why is a bmw car also kmrwn as a beemer?

The terms Bimmer, Beemer or Beamer refer to BMW vehicles. However, Bimmer is the correct term for BMW cars while Beemer and Beamer are used for BMW motorcycles. Why all these different terms? BMW started big in motorcycles and was very active in motorsports then. One of its biggest competitors at the racing track was BSA, which was. also a big name in motorcycles. Since BSA motorcycles were known as Beesers, BMW fans decided to call BMW motorcycles Beemers. Over time, different people (who couldn’t spell very well and didn’t take the trouble to find out) started to use the term Beamer. BMW went on to design and manufacture cars which subsequently outshone their two-wheeler cousins. The BMW car enthusiasts wanted a new term to differentiate cars from motorcycles and coined the term Bimmer.

What is the inert pair effect?

To understand the inert pair effect, we need to understand the periodic table. There are some inherent properties of elements in the table. The inert pair effect is nothing but the extra stability concept. Generally p-block elements belonging to 3A, 4A, 5A, 6A, etc. show variable valency. For example, Sn element of group 4A shows +4 and +2 oxidation state. The higher oxidation stats is called the group number oxidation state and +2 oxidation state is called the lower oxidation state which is equal to Group-2. Consider the configuration, if the electrons are lost from ns and np level, then group oxidation state of +4 is obtained while np electrons are only lost then +2 oxidation state is obtained due to its extra stability of ns electrons which are called inert pair. The effect is the inert pair effect.

What is an amoled display?

The term AMOLED stands for Active Matrix Organic Light Emitting Diode/ Device/ Display. An Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED), also Light Emitting Polymer (LEP) and Organic Electro Luminescence (OEL), is any Light Emitting Diode (LED) whose emissive electroluminescent layer is composed of a film of organic compounds. The layer usually contains a polymer substance that allows suitable organic compounds to be deposited. They are deposited in rows and columns onto a flat carrier by a simple printing process. The resulting matrix of pixels can emit light of different colours.

Does an electric field affect plant growth?

Yes, an electric field affects plant growth. In the presence of an electric field, the height of the stem and the length of the roots are more than those without an electric field. The change in growth rate depends on electric field, temperature and humidity. Experiments show that if an electric field intensity of 25 kv/m is applied and temperature and humidity are controlled at 28 degree Celsius and 65% respectively, then the height of the stem increases by 24% and length of roots by 33 %.

What is air hunger?

Air hunger is the urge to brythe, which is caused by the deytion of high levels of carbon dioxide in the blood by sensors in the carotid sinus. It is one of the body’s homeostatic mechanisms to ensure proper oxygenation. Air hunger may be caused by insufficient pulmonary minute ventilation, a sustained breath-hold constriction of the alveoli of the lungs, as in asthma, or high ambient levels of carbon dioxide in the air. Air hunger can be very distressing and triggers strong reactions to restore breathing. Air hunger is caused due to excess of carbon dioxide rather than lack of oxygen.

What is the address’ made of?

Alfred Aquilizan and his wife Isabel specialize in installation art works comprising articles of dayto-day use and ownership. Their work Address5 is made of articles such as books, clothes, bedsheets, blankets, CD/ DVDs, PC keyboards, toys, printers, fake flowers, etc.

What are wave snakes?

Wave snakes are long red tubes that help convert the motion of waves into electricity and form part of a commercial wave power station. It was developed by a British company and took 10 years to create. Currently, the pilot wavepower project has been launched off the coast of a Portuguese town called Agucadoura, and aims to power 1,000 families homes in its initial phase.

What is summer ploughing?

Ploughing one month in advance i.e. in the month of May for kharif crops is known as summer ploughing. There are the three usual harvests known as the kharif or autumn (June-September), the rabi or spring (October-March) and zaid or extra harvest (March-June). Summer ploughing helps to kill weeds, hibernating insects and diseasecausing organisms by exposing them to the summer heat. Summer ploughing of groundnut is always advantageous.

What is the god particle?

God Particle is the nickname given to Higgs boson particle, so far a hypothetical sub-atomic particle believed to impart mass to the atom and, eventually, to all matter in the universe. The particle has come to the limelight in the wake of the ongoing Big Bang experiment in the Large Hadron Collider at Geneva, which expects to verify the very existence of the particle for the first time.

What is munchausen syndrome?

Munchausen Syndrome, also known as hospital addiction, factitious illness, afflicting those referred to as professional patients, is a repeated fabrication of clinically convincing simulations of disease for the purpose of gaining medical attention. It refers to patients who wander from hospital to hospital feigning acute medical or surgical illness and giving false and fanciful information about their medical and social background for no apparent reason other than to gain attention. The cause is unclear, prognosis poor and treatment often unsuccessful in these psychiatric patients.

What is einstein’s rule of 72?

The rule of 72 is a rule of thumb (credited to Albert Einstein) that investors use to approximate the time it takes for money to double at a given rate of return. It states that if you divide the number 72 by any given rate of return, the answer you get is the time it takes for money to double at that given interest rate (assuming you can get the same rate each year and it is compounded annually). For example, if you earn 10% on your money it would double in 7.2 years (72 divided by 10 = 7.2). The value 72 is a convenient choice of numerator, since it has many small divisors: 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, and 12. It provides a good approximation for annual compounding, and for compounding at typical rates (from 6% to 10%). The approximations are less accurate at higher interest rates.

What is concentrated solar power plant?

Concentrated solar power plants (CSPs) generate electricity by using the sun’s energy to convert water into steam to run turbines connected to generators. Such a power plant consists of large sun-tracking mirrors (heliostats) to focus sunlight on a receiver at the top of a tower. The receiver uses solar power to heat up a heat-transfer fluid to generate steam which, in turn, is used in a convection turbine generator to produce electricity Such plants are similar to those of coal or gas-based plants. Nowadays, molten ammonium nitrate salt is used as a heat-transfer fluid, which can store heat inside it. Hence, these plants can even work at night or on a cloudy day

Which is the first company to use barcode for sales?

On June 26,1974, a 10-pack Wrigley’s chewing guni was the first product logged in a grocery store by a barcoding system using the modern universal product code. Later that year, the Uniform Grocery Product Code Council became the UPCC which regulates the issue and use of all universal product codes. At the same time, companies pursued the use of barcodes in industrial and other applications. In 1971, th Plessey Company developed a barcode scanner and tracking system for library book checkout. The Codabar barcode was developed by Monarch Marking Systems around the same time for blood collection and book tracking applications. Intermec developed Code 3 of 9, a barcode that could store alphanumeric information. All other codes prior to this could only represent numeric digits.

What does acropolis mean?

Acropolis is a Greek term, and refers generally to an elevated area in the centre of a city, acting as its focal point for cultural, religious, and civil activities. In particular, the term refers to the rocky hill at the centre of Athens, Greece, on which are located several ancient monuments, including the famous Parthenon, the temple for the Goddess Athena, constructed around 5th century BC. In Greek, aero means high and polls means city All ancient cities were supposed to have been first set up on elevated areas, primarily for defence. Even after a city grew around the initial elevated area, the elevated area continued to act as a nucleus for the city’s growth and culture. By generalization, the term acropolis is now used to refer to a central complex of structures in some cities.

What is round tripping?

Round tripping has several meanings. In finance, it refers to money that leaves the country, often routed to the diaspora, making its way back to the country in the form of foreign direct investment. It also refers to a company that sells an unused asset to another company, while agreeing to buy it or a similar asset at the same price. This is also referred to as Lazy Susans. In technology round tripping refers to the repeated conversion of a document from one format to another – for instance, a rich text format to a doc format and so on. This sort of round tripping may affect the quality of the content.

What is creative capitalism?

It is a new idea that aims to achieve both the goals of generating profits as well as solving the problem of inequality between the rich and poor by using market forces in a better way. Several companies around the world have adopted this concept by integrating philanthropic motives with product development, and treating the poor as a new class of customers. It involves a systematic approach to research, product design, distribution, partnership and profit models to help this new class of customers which businesses have traditionally ignored. .

What is the kit-cat club?

Kit-Cat Club was London’s political and literary club, active between 1700 and 1720. The four dozen members included leading Whig politicians and London’s best young writers. Among them were Charles Seymour, the sixth duke of Somerset; Sir Robert Walpole; Thomas Pelham-Holles, the duke of Newcastle; William Congreve; Joseph Addison; Sir Richard Steele; and Sir Godfrey Kneller, who did portraits of the members. The club was the centre of opposition during Queen Anne’s Tory ministry (1710-14).

What is the captcha project?

CAPTCHA refers to a category of information technologies used to ensure that a human rather than a computer is making an online transaction. It is an acronym for Completely Automated Turing Test to Tell Computers and Humans Apart and patented by Carnegie Mellon University It is a challengeresponse test used in computing to determine whether the user is a human. A typical CAPTCHA requires a user to type the letters of a distorted image, sometimes with the addition of an obscured sequence of letters or digits that appear on the user’s screen. The origin of the CAPTCHAs was to counter the characteristics of software agents (bots) that automatically fill up web forms as individual users.

What is a false vacuum?

False vacuum and true vacuum form a metastable system. Metastable state is a state which does not change with time but is susceptible to falling into lower-energy states with only slight interaction. It is analogous to being at the bottom of a small valley when there is a deeper valley close by. True vacuum is the name applied to a condition of the true lowest energy state of the vacuum. False vacuum refers to a condition with an elevated vacuum energy density. The two conditions are separated by some energy barrier — which is why they form a metastable system. If the current universe is in a state of false vacuum, it is conceivable that some experiment would concentrate enough energy into a small enough place to coax the vacuum over the energy barrier and into the true vacuum state. This could perhaps be catastrophic.

What is dissociative identity disorder?

Dissociative Identity Disorder is defined as the occurrence of two or more personalities within the same individual, each of which, during some time in the person’s life, is able to take control. This is not often a mentally healthy thing when the personalities vie for control. It’s also known as multiple personality disorder (MPD). In 1994, the American Psychiatric Association’s DSM-IV replaced the acronym MPD with dissociative identity disorder (DID).

Why does the moon appear upside down in the southern hemisphere?

The moon orbits near the equator of the Earth. In the southern hemisphere, we are standing at the opposite side of the globe, from a person who is standing in the northern hemisphere. So, we are literally standing upside down with relation to the person at the other end. We, therefore, see the moon from a completely different vantage point. So, if a man sees the moon crescent facing up in the northern hemisphere, it’ll appear upside down to a person in the southern hemisphere.

Which is the world’s hottest pepper?

The bhut jolokia variety which grows in north-eastern India, was given a rating of 8,55,000 Scoville heat units by Ritesh Mathur and his colleagues at the Defence Research and Development Establishment, Gwalior. They reported their finding in an August 2000 issue of Current Science. The scientists tested a Tezpur variety of the bhut, or Capsicum Frutescens var. (botanists know it as Nagahari). The Guinness Book of World Records recently certified the bhut jolokia as the world’s hottest chilli pepper. The chilli probably gets its name owing to its demonic bite — bhut means ghost and jolokia means chilli. A single seed of the bhut can cause intense spicy sensations in the mouth for up to 30 minutes. Smeared on fences, they are also employed to scare off wild elephants.

What is iceland’s hdi ranking?

With a ranking of 0.968, Iceland had the highest Human Development Index (HDI) ranking in 2007. The HDI ranking takes into consideration a country’s life expectancy literacy educational attainment and GDP per capita. Currently though, Iceland’s top-ranking status is rather ironic, considering the global financial crisis has almost wiped out its economy and the country is virtually bankrupt.

What is the aufbau principle?

The Aufbau Principle states that in the ground state of an atom, an electron enters the orbital with lowest energy first and subsequent electrons are fed in the order of increasing energies. The word ‘aufbau’ in German means ‘building up Here, it refers to the filling up of orbitals with electrons.

What is chargafts rule of base equivalence?

Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is the genetic material found in the chromosomes of all animals and plants. It is made up of only four types of organic nitrogenous bases: adenine (A), guanine (G), thymine (T) and cytosine (C). Of these, A and G are the purines and T and C are the pyrimidines. Chargaff gave the base pairing rule or the rule of base equivalence which states that only one purine can combine with one. pyrimidine. That means A can combine with T and G with C. Two purines or two pyrimidines cannot combine with each other; if they do so, there will be a sudden change in the characteristic of an organism. This sudden change is called mutation.

Who are neo consumers?

The NEO consumers are new highvalue consumers of the new economic order (NEO). It is a newly emerging segment of customers from all age groups, ethnicities, income bands, locations and have high propensity to spend their income on disposable goods, NEO consumers are valuable as they consume constantly and favour a sense of investment, discretionary choices and value-added services. They seek rich information and authenticity; are motivated by choice, options and quality; sceptical about whether deals and discounts will deliver to their expectations; loyal to brands that understand them and comfortable with calculated risk.

What is pansori?

Pansori is a folk art which has lasted since the 17th century in Korea. Singers sing and gesture according to the beats of the traditional Korean drum, tambour. Pansori consists of 12 episodes and is based on classical literature. It typically takes a few hours to complete a Pansori performance. Most young Koreans don’t go see to see it now. It is aired on television on traditional Korean holidays like the lunar new year day and Korean thanksgiving day called ‘Chuseok’.

What is skinflation?

It refers to the increase in marketing of beauty products, which use scientific jargon that confuses consumers. Such marketing works on the premise that using words that sound scientific may be considered more effective by the consumer, and help justify high prices.

What are auroras?

The beautiful patterns of green and blue lights that occur in the atmosphere of the polar region are known as auroras. Although there are several mythological stories related to auroras, in 1716, perhaps the first scientific research on auroras began in Europe. They occur in the mesosphere, which is present about 50 to 80 miles above sea level. They are known as Aurora Borealis or northern lights, and Aurora Australis or the southern lights, in northern and southern hemisphere respectively. Auroras are natural phenomena and occur when a flow of charged particles from the sun (called solar wind) collide with air molecules in the atmosphere. lonization takes place and this produces coloured light. Although such collisions only take place near magnetic poles of the Earth, auroras are also visible in mid-latitude regions in case of intense solar activity.

What is love bombing?

Whenever an individual or a group of individuals overtly convey to another individual or group their concern and affection frequently, consistently and profusely, then the former is said to be love bombing the latter. There is a controversy on whether love bombing indicates genuine affection. Love bombing is said to be practised by members of several religious organizations and cults. Critics of cults feel that love bombing is a ploy to lure recruits. Members of Unification Church, where the above term was said to have originated, oppose this view. According to them, love bombing involves giving a lot of positive attention, thereby fulfilling the basic human need for self-esteem and love.

What are the speeds of diesel and electric locomotive engines?

Diesel locomotive engines are classified as diesel-mechanical (DM), diesel-electric (DE) and diesel-hydraulic (DH) engines. DM engines run at an average speed of 60 kmph, while DE engines travel at an average speed of 80 kmph, also the average speed of an electric engine. The DH engines are heavy-duty ones and maintain an average speed of 120 kmph.

Who is capeta?

It’s a sport anime about cart racing. Capeta is a 10-year-old boy with a single-parent. His father works for a paving company. While working on a go-karting track, his father gets broken pieces out of a trash pile and cobbles together a kart. A determined Capeta masters the mangled kart and impresses the manager of a racing team, who helps him gain entry into the world of racing, secretly as a rival to her son.

What is pork barrel politics and why is it called so?

Pork barrel politics refers to government spending intended to benefit constituents of a politician in return for his or her political support, either in the form of campaign contribution or votes. Typically, it involves funding for government programmes whose economic or service benefits are concentrated in a particular area but whose costs are spread among all taxpayers. Public projects and agricultural subsidies are the common examples. This has been associated with US politics, where legislators seek to base military or transport facilities, and government agencies, in their constituency. Pork barrel originally referred to American slaves’ rushed attempts to obtain some of the pork given to them as a group in large barrels. Electoral prospects, especially for Congressmen, often depended on how much pork they could divert to their home district.

What is the oera linda?

The Oera Linda Book is an ancient manuscript that was discovered in the Netherlands in the 19th century It is allegedly several thousand years old. The book tells of the destruction of Atlantis in 2194 BC, and the subsequent history of the Frisian people. The book was forgotten until 1977, when ancient mysteries writer Robert Scrutton wrote a lengthy commentary and introduction for an abridged edition of the Oera Linda Book. Entitled ‘The Other Atlantis’, it was an instant bestseller.

Who is a stealth shopper?

A stealth shopper is a person who shops secretly to avoid flaunting wealth or to hide expenses from a spouse.

How was the first world map drawn?

The first world map was chis elled on a clay tablet in ancient Babylon in 6 BC. The first reasonably accurate world map was drawn by hand on paper by Gerardus Mercator, a Flemish geographer. His first world map was produced in 1538 and improved upon in 1585.

What is the meaning of ‘go over like a lead balloon’?

The correct phrase in English is ‘It went down like a lead balloon’. It means it dropped straight to the floor, or was a disaster. The phrase ‘Go over like a lead balloon’ means to fail completely or to go over badly and be considered a flop. It is the US version of the original phrase.

What is a black forest dress?

Black Forest or Schwarzwald is a thickly wooded mountainous region in southwest Germany, extending over 4,600 square miles. Three neighbouring parishes — Gutach, Wolfach-Kirnbach, and Hornberg-Reichenbach of Black Forest — are’known for their women’s traditional costumes known as the ‘Black Forest dress’ worn on special occasions.

What is a wedsite?

It is a website where a couple posts information about their upcoming or recent wedding. After the wedding, pictures and posts are uploaded; it could also be interactive. It is a relatively new concept and includes information as to how the couple met, invitations to friends and relatives, wedding clothes of the bride and groom, the ‘wedding album’ photo gallery and blogs related to preand post wedding events.

What is an amap?

An aMap (argument map) is a visual representation of the structure of an argument in informal logic. It includes the components of an argument such as the main contention, premises, objections and rebuttals. The techniques were first presented by Facione and Facione in ‘Thinking and Reasoning in Human Decision Making: The Method of Argument and Heuristic Analysis’.

Why are the emmy awards so called?

The Emmy Awards were instituted,by the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (ATAS) as a television equivalent for me Academy Awards for films. Thename ‘Emmy’ is the feminization of ‘Inuny’ — the nickname for the image of the orthicon camera tube that led to the development of television.

What’s unique about the art cologne fair?

Art Cologne is an art fair held annually in Cologne, Germany It is Germany’s leading art fair and was established in 1967. It bills itself as the ‘world’s oldest art fair’ although the 57th Street Art Fair was founded in 1948, almost two decades earlier.

What is stevenson’s screen?

Stevenson’s Screen is a wooden box fitted into a steel frame, specially designed to protect weather instruments like thermometer, barometer, etc. from the sun’s rays and other natural heat radiation. British civil engineer Thomas Stevenson designed the first Stevenson’s Screen in 1818.

Why don’t oceans dry up?

It is estimated oceans hold about 97.5% of the total water available on the earth. While the oceans constantly lose water through evaporation by sunlight and wind, at the same time they receive water through rivers, underground channels and rainfall. The loss and gain is almost the same.

Apart from nice, where is the ‘lemon festival’ celebrated?

The ‘Lemon Festival’ is also celebrated in Goleta Valley in California, where lemon farming is an important agricultural activity.

Where is the annual ice festival in china held?

The annual Ice Festival is held in Harbin, northern China, and the capital of the Heilongjiang Province. Harbin is known for its very cold winters. The month-long festival starts on January 5. Harbin’s festival is one of the world’s four largest Ice and Snow Festivals, along with Japan’s Sapporo Snow Festival, Canada’s Quebec City Winter Carnival and Norway’s Ski Festival.

What are stoas?

Stoas in ancient Greek architecture are covered walkways or porticos meant for public use. Some of the famous stoas are Stoa Poikile, Stoa of Attalos, Stoa Basileios (Royal Stoa).

What is a toxic wife?

A toxic wife is one who quits her job after marriage to supposedly take care of the home and raise children, but instead hires an army of domestic help. While this gives her time to spend extravagantly, it burdens the husband. It’s been reported in the UK that many such women have divorced their spouses, who lost their jobs and money in the recent downturn.

Who owns antarctica and its resources?

Antarctica is considered politically neutral and is owned by no nation. The Antarctic Treaty of 1959 sets aside the continent as a scientific preserve, established freedom of scientific investigation, envi ronmental protection, and banned military activity on that continent. An Act called The Madrid Protocol bans all mining activities in Antarctica, designating the continent as a natural reserve devoted to peace and science.

Who are carpet-baggers?

Newcomers who enter a territory seeking success are called carpet-baggers. This term originated from ambitious northerners in the US who flocked to the post-Civil War South, carrying their possessions in a handbag made of carpet material. They sought opportunities to help newly-enfranchised Black citizens run for political office.

What is hillwalking?

In the UK, hillwalking is to walk up the hills and mountains without the planned use of a climbing rope or other climbing aids. Outside the UK, it is usually referred to as trekking, but the principles are the same and the necessary skills similar.

What is helicopter parenting?

It’s a colloquial term that refers to a style of parenting, which involves paying extremely close attention to children. It’s also called over parenting. It gets its name from the fact that parents hover over children like a helicopter

What is defty?

Almost every institutional investor and offshore fund enterprise with equity exposure in India would like to have an instrument for measuring returns on their equity investment in terms of dollars. To facilitate this, a new index the S&P CNX Defty, a dollar-denominated S&P CNX Nifty has been developed. S&P CNX Defty is S&P CNX Nifty, measured in dollars. It provides an effective tool for hedging Indian equity exposure.

What is the law of parsimony?

The principle states that the explanation of any phenomenon should make as few assumptions as possible, eliminating those that make no difference in the observable predictions of the explanatory hypothesis or theory. The principle is often expressed in Latin as the Lex Parsimoniae (law of parsimony or law of succinctness).

How many types of wines are produced in the world?

Wines of all types can be classified by either the primary grape variety or the region where the grapes are grown. Even within types of wines, there is a great variety of flavour and texture because the climate varies in different regions. The two major categories are red and white.

What is vigenere cipher?

It is a technique for encrypting messages consisting of only text, and no special characters or numeric digits. It is derived from a much simpler and one of the oldest known encryption systems called Caesar cipher.

What is the keynesian prescription?

The Keynesian prescription was a tool employed by John Maynard Keynes to show that in times of depression it is up to the government to step in where dispirited businesses will not and spend money through fiscal policy on anything that will get the unemployed back to work. Fiscal policy refers to instruments (public expenditure) by which a government tries to regulate the economy.

What is a black corner notice?

A Black Corner Notice is one of the seven major types of notices issued by the Interpol to its member countries to share information related to criminal investigation. Six of these are known by the colour in which the mterpol logo is printed, different colours denoting notices carrymg different types of information. The Black Corner Notice contains information related to unidentified dead bodies, specifically those related to individuals suspected to have died while using a false identity.

What is isinglass?

Isinglass, which is called so because of its glass-like translucency, refers to thin sheets of mica. It’s used as peepholes in boilers and lanterns. It was preferred over glass because it would not splinter on breaking due to extreme temperature gradients. The name also applies to a collagen derived from the swim bladders of fish, especially the Beluga Sturgeon, used for making desserts and in the clarification of wines and beers. Isinglass is also the name of a famous British thoroughbred racehorse that won an English Triple Crown.

Who was the zodiac killer?

The Zodiac killer was a serial killer in California, supposedly responsible for five murders and two failed attempts that took place from 1968 to 1969. He created a sensation and a scare by publishing letters in newspapers with Zodiac as his pen name. In his letters, he used to claim responsibility for murders that had taken place and would disclose his plans for future murders.

What is terroir?

Terroir is a French term that means soil or earth and is generally used to refer to all the physical and environmental characteristics in and around a particular vineyard that influence the quality of wine — climate, soil composition and geographical location. Without a direct English equivalent, terroir specifically refers to the consistent, distinctive qualities in wine that are not the results of the variety of the grape or the skills of the grower and winemaker.

What is sabre-raifling?

Sabre-rattling is an idiomatic phrase that originated in the early 20th century when an officer would threaten to draw his sabre. It usually refers to a flamboyant display of military power or as an implied threat like a company threatening another with a lawsuit.

What are heartwood and sapwood?

Wood is, in fact, the secondary xylem formed by cambium (layers of tissues) during secondary growth. As the tree grows old, the wood at the centre ceases to perform the function of conduction and is blocked with organic compounds like oil, resins, and tannins, and develops a dark colour. This darkcoloured portion of the wood is called heartwood. The peripheral, light-coloured, better water-conducting wood is called sapwood.

What was austria’s currency before the euro was introduced?

From 1924 to 1938 and between 1945 to 1999, Austria’s currency was the schilling, which was divided into 100 groschen. Thereafter, the euro replaced the schilling.

What’s special about the encoded cylinder?

The encoded cylinder refers to the Cyrillic Projector sculp ture by American artist James Sanborn which was created in the early 1990s. The 32-character Cyrillic alphabet has been used on it with the Russ ian word for ‘shadow’ — TEHb — appearing several times.

What is the big read?

It is an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts of America designed to encourage book reading among citizens. The literature in focus is on American popular culture. The National Endowment has partnered the Institute of Museum and Library Services and Arts Midwest. Support for the Big Read is given by the W K Kellogg Foundation and a grant by the Paul G Alien Family Foundation.

How old is tintin?

Tintin is 80 — he was created in post-war France by Belgian artist Georges Remi, who took the name of Herge. Tintin is a Belgian reporter, and has a faithful fox terrier called Snowy. The comic series first appeared on January 10,1929, in a Belgian newspaper and was a hit with children. Later, Herge added the popular Captain Haddock, Professor Calculus, the two incompetent detectives, Thomson an4 Thompson and the opera singer Bianca Castafiore.

What is zorbing?

Zorbing is an extreme adventure sport involving a ball made of PVC, also called the zorb. The person, or persons,in case of ‘group zorbing’, getsinside and the ball is closed. Itis then rolled down a hill. There are two ways to zorb: one involves getting wet.

What is the devil quartet?

The devil or ‘evil quartet’ is a sobriquet used to describe four major causes that have led to the accelerated rate of extinction of species. These causes have been attributed mainly to human activities like extensive deforestation and poaching.

Which is the oldest civilization?

The Sumerian civilization is the oldest civilization known to mankind. The term ‘Sumer’ is today used to designate southern Mesopotamia. In 3,000 BC, a flourishing urban civilization existed. China is the oldest surviving civilization.

What is meant by “ceteris paribus’?

‘Ceteris paribus’ is a Latin phrase that means “with other things the same”. Ceteris paribus clauses are widely used in economics to simplify formulation and description of economic outcomes.

What is the governor’s ball at the academy awards?

The Governor’s Ball at the Academy Awards ceremony in Hollywood is its concluding event, and a celebration for the around 1,500 invitees, winners, nominees and other guests.

What is seaflux?

It is a study of the changes in oceans and its waves affected by momentum, heat and quantum of water. It involves creation of comparable datasets and constant observation of the effect of heat and momentum on the ocean front.

What is a sungrazer?

When comets break up, smaller comets and sungrazers are formed. As these approach the sun, they break into smaller fragments before colliding into it. Sungrazers are classified into families and the largest is the Kreutz family with over 500 sungrazers.

Why are zodiac signs named after animals?

The term ‘zodiac’ stands for animals. However, all zodiac signs do not represent animals, like Libra is represented by a balance. Astrologically and astronomically, zodiac signs are representative of various pattern formed by stars.

What does ‘jack of all trades’ mean?

Jack of all trades, master of none’ is a figure of speech used for a person who is competent with many skills but is not outstanding in any particular one. The phrase was in common use during the 1600s and was used as a term of praise. ‘Jack’ in those days was a generic term for ‘man’.

Why is glass brittle?

Ordinary glass is soda-lime glass and is a mixture of silicates of sodium, potassium, calcium and aluminium etc. It is brittle because its molecular structure is composed of tetrahedral crystals. These crystals do not have a good large-area orderly crystalline structure. Therefore, when it is under stress, the structure gets ruptured.

What dyes are used to ink tattoos?

A majority of dye pigments are derived from metals. Black dye is non-metallic and is made from carbon, black ink or logwood.

What does roadrunner refer to?

It’s the world’s fastest supercomputer built by scientists at IBM and Los Alamos National Laboratory for the US military It can compute about 1.026 quadrillion calculations per second. It will be primarily used for military problems, particularly to ensure the accurate functioning of ageing nuclear weapons.

What is the armenian genocide?

The Armenian genocide was carried out by the Young Turk government of the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1916 and from 1922 to 1923. About 1.5 million Armenians out of the 2.5 million in the empire were killed. Armenians all over the world commemorate the tragedy on April 24 every year.

What’s distinctive about davos?

Situated at an altitude of 1,560 metres, in the heart of the Alps in Switzerland, the town of Davos has the distinction of being the largest mountain resort in the Alps and the highest town of Europe. Its major tourist attraction are winter sports. It is also a preferred place for holding international conferences like the World Economic Forum.

What is fat tuesday?

Fat Tuesday is Mardi Gras, where gras is French for fat and Mardi is French for Tuesday The name comes from the tradition of slaughtering and feasting on a fattened calf on the last day of a carnival. The annual festivities start on January 6 and build to a climax on Mardi Gras, or Fat Tuesday, which always occurs on the day before Ash Wednesday.

What is a gazebo?

A gazebo is a pavilion structure, often octagonal, commonly found in parks, gardens, and spacious public areas. Gazebos provide shade, basic shelter, ornamental features in a landscape and a place to rest.

What is a slumpometer?

The global slumpometer is a yardstick economists use to measure the severity of the recession in various economies across the world. It takes into account unemployment. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Gross Domestic Income (GDI). To the average person, rising unemployment and pink slips mean a recession. While for many economists, a recession has arrived when there’s a dip in GDP for two successive quarters. For others, a recession is when the GDI begins to dip, and is a more reliable factor than GDP.

What is a surgical strike?

A surgical strike is an attack using missiles, bombers or on the ground against certain specific targets. The strike is planned with surgical precision so that they cause damage only to the planned targets and cause minimum damage to their surroundings. These attacks are usually carried out against terrorist camps or facilities such as power stations, armouries, etc.

How did the term ‘window dressing’ originate?

Textile and readymade shops dress mannequins (models of human bodies) with attractive clothing they sell and place them in display windows. Likewise, mutual funds and banks add more temporary assets and liabilities on year ends to ensure their balance sheets remain attractive to the public, especially to investors. As their intention is to dress up their balance sheets to make them attractive like a shopper does to the mannequins, the term ‘window dressing’ is used to mean artificial inflation of assets which will wear off after the year-end.

How do clouds move?

Clouds are formed when water evaporates from rivers, ponds, oceans, and lakes. High cirrus clouds are moved by a jet stream and sometimes travel at 100 kmph. When clouds are a part of a thunderstorm, they usually travel at 30-40 kmph.

What is the jagd and hund fair?

It is the ‘Hunting and Hounds fair where exhibitors present the latest trends in fishing and hunting.

What is the nathan rothschild maxim?

The Nathan Rothschild maxim says that you ‘make money in the stock market when blood flows in the streets’. Nathan Rothschild was a stock dealer in the London stock market who took advantage of early knowledge of England’s victory at Waterloo. First, he sold all his shares, which caused heavy meltdown in the market. Towards the end, he bought all the shares at a very low price before the news of England’s victory reached London. With England’s victory, the share market rose rapidly and in the process, Nathan made a lot of money.

What is icor in economics?

Incremental Capital .Output Ratio (ICOR) is the additional capital required to increase one unit of output. This ratio is used to measure the efficiency of an industrial unit or country as an economic unit. The lesser the ICOR, more efficient the organization.

What is a suction excavator?

A suction excavator is a combination of excavator and a pump for dual function of excavating earth and pumping the soil out. It has an air pump for generating the required flow of air

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/literature-articles/general-knowledge-pt-xiii-4039370.html

About the Author

Dr. Ashok Kumar Sharma, M.A.(History); Certificate in Taxidermy(Madras); Certifate in Library Science (TOPPER-ML Sukhadia Uni. Udaipur,(Rajasthan) INDIA. Hobby: Cricket; Postal Stamp Collection and Collecdtion of Quotations since 1981.

Australia Working Holiday Visa

Australia is a modern, culturally diverse and rich. It has a per capita income is almost comparable with the United States and has an abundance of natural beauty and resources. About 23 million people live on this continent, that does not really have any problems with the density of population, given its vast territory. The country boasts of a rate high life expectancy and infant mortality rates surprisingly low. It is also known to provide excellent social programs that include first-class education, health care, employment and investment opportunities. For those wishing to work and go on holiday here, you just need a working holiday visa in Australia.

To fully benefit from a working holiday visa in Australia you must be around 18-30 years and should currently hold a passport from a country which has reciprocal arrangements with Australia. This document will help you complete costs of your stay, thanks to a second job. However, if you want to be part of the country’s workforce you must obtain a work visa for this purpose. The possibility for a working holiday visa allows you to extend your stay for a maximum of 24 months, and the application of this can be done abroad or in your home country.

This work visa allows you to work in many industries in the country, which include fishing, forestry, mining and construction as well as crop plants and animals. Once your working holiday visa expires, your visa application can be treated success in Australia or overseas as well. Candidates for this special celebration and a work visa must belong to countries like Canada, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Japan, Ireland, Malta, South Korea, Denmark, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the Republic of Cyprus, Finland, Italy, France and Estonia.
Australia Working Holiday Visa
What you need before work: For those who are approved with a work visa and holiday, the first thing you must have a Tax File Number. You should be able to get this before you start work, otherwise you will be taxed at 48.5 per cent, which would cut a really important piece of your salary. However, if you already have the NTP then you can expect to receive a reduced tax rate of 29 percent. For this you can go to the local tax office, bring your passport and fill out the application form. Your prospective employer will also ask you here to open a bank account so they could deposit your salary here, and the good thing is that opening an account in this country should in principle be a simple and painless. Obtain a bank account, be sure to provide valid identification and your address and proof of billing. Then you will be issued a booklet or an ATM to access your money. Also, make sure you have a cell phone with you to help make and receive calls easily, especially when you are looking for employment. Mobile phones are generally affordable here and you can get one for as little as A $ 100-150.

Those wishing to apply for  Australia working holiday visa can do so by going directly to the Office of the Australian High Commission, and completing an application form online. There are also private service providers who help make the process simpler for applicants. These companies provide expert advice to provide the necessary forms, to control all your necessary documents and help ensure the implementation of your working holiday visa. Service charges and fees, however, vary for each company or firm travel.

Further information about Australia working Holiday visa and worldwide immigration info visit:http://www.immigration-success.blogspot.com

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/immigration-articles/australia-working-holiday-visa-4046330.html

About the Author

This is julia Robert from California.I am GMAT and IELTS trainer.Further information about Australia working Holiday visa and worldwide immigration info visit:http://www.immigration-success.blogspot.com

General Knowledge Pt. XVIII

 

What is uranium dating?

Uranium dating is one of the ways of determining the age of ancient objects, even one million years old, by measuring how much of the following are present in them: the amount of radioactive isotopes of uranium, and the amount of other materials into which the radioactive isotopes would decompose. These measurements, when combined with knowledge about the initial state of matter under study (that is, composition at the time of death of an organism, or formation of a mineral) and the rate at which radioactivity takes place, would yield the age of the object. Uranium dating is useful where even radio carbon dating cannot be used.

Why is Scotland Yard so called?

The name of the police headquarters is derived from its original location on Great Scotland Yard, a street within Whitehall. According to a 1964 article in The New York Times, the name derives from buildings in the area used to accommodate Scottish kings when they visited English royalty. The original commissioners of the Metropolitan police, Colonel Charles Rowan and Richard Mayne, worked out of a private house at 4 Whitehall Place, which backed onto an open courtyard that came to be known as Scotland Yard.

What was the screech owl’s original name?

Screech owls are typical owls (Strigidae) belonging to the genus Megascops. The species name Kennicotti was created in honour of American explorer and naturalist Robert Kennicotti. It was officially called Kennicott’s Owl. Twenty-one living species are known at present, but new ones are frequently recognized and unknown ones are still being discovered on a regular basis, especially in the Andes. They are restricted to the Americas.

Who is a vegivore?

A vegivore is a person who craves or has a special fondness for vegetables. This need not be because the person has an aversion to eating meat but solely due to an intense craving for vegetables. To a vegivore, meat products may only seem like an accompaniment to add flavour to the dish. He/she will find the vegetable dish more satiating than the meat dish.

What is a webisode?

A webisode is a single push technology episode. A webisode can be a preview or promotion of aparticularTV show, music, video or other showpresented on a website by streaming videos or other techniques. Some sites are dedicated to presenting webisodes.Inshort,webisodes are the episodes that we watch on the web. It is formed by a combination of two words:’Web’ and ‘episode’. A webisode creates a web series, a series of episodes released via internet or mobile cellular devices.

Who is a Twude and who is a Twidette?

A Twude is a person who is rude on twitter while a Twidette is a person who still hasn’t joined twitter. For tweeple (read as people) who want to know more such twitter-based words, an online dictionary called twittonary used extensively by tweeters, is available.

What is the difference between an attorney general and solicitor general?

The attorney general of India is the Indian government’s chief legal adviser, and its primary lawyer in dealing with the Supreme Court of India. The attorney general for India is appointed by the President under Article 76(1) of the Constitution. The solicitor general of India is appointed to assist the attorney general along with four additional solicitors general.

What does the arrow mark on defence vehicle number plates mean?

Unlike other license numbering systems, defence vehicles have a unique numbering system. The numbers are registered by the ministry of defence in New Delhi, The first (or the third) character is always an arrow pointing upwards. The next two digits (or the two preceding the arrow) signify the year in which the defence department procured the vehicle. The next is the base code, followed by the serial number. The letter ending after the serial number indicates the class of the vehicle. The arrow prevents the number from being read wrongly in case the number plate (and/or the vehicle bearing it) turns upside down.

What is the significance of the ritual ‘pardoning the turkey’ during Thanksgiving?

The National Thanksgiving Turkey Presentation is an annual ceremony that takes place in the White House Rose Garden. The tradition officially began in 1947, when members of the National Turkey Federation presented President Truman with the National Thanksgiving Turkey. The ceremony allows the President to unofficially usher in the holiday season. Formany years, presidents have spared the life of the National Turkey by grantingita’presidential pardon’.

Who is a schlimazel?

A schlimazel is a person who is accident-prone and so, considered unlucky, and for the same reason, even thoughtof asabornloser. The person is inept and fails at most things he attempts. Schlimazel is also used as a verb, for instance, a person gets ‘schlimazzeled’. The word has its origins in the Yiddish vernacular.

What is Holmesian deduction?

Holmes stories often begin with a bravura display of Holmes’ talent for deduction. Holmesian (British adjective) or Sherlockian deduction (American) are mainly about drawing inferences based on straightforward practical principles which are the result of careful inductive study. Holmes’ techniques are generally of the form, ‘If p, then q, where ‘p’ is observed evidence and ‘q’ is what the evidence indicates. But there are also. Some intermediate principles based on plain simplicity of a current situation.

What is the origin of the word ‘syntax’?

The word ‘syntax’ is derivedfrom the Greek word ‘syntaxis’, meaning ‘together’ and ‘sequence’. The term is used for the way in which words are put together in an orderly system to formphrases or sentences. Basically, syntax is the rule by which signs are combined to make statements. If you consider words of a language to be its signs, then its syntax is the set of rules which puts signs together to make statements, ask questions, and produce other utterances. Syntax incorporates the grammar of phrases, clauses and sentences.

What is toasted skin syndrome?

Toasted skin syndrome occurs when skin is exposed to heat for long periods of time, and appears as a darkened, sometimes patterned, discolouration on the skin. The condition can cause permanent skin discolouration and may even lead to skin cancer, depending on the degree of damage. In the old days, people who worked near high heat sources, such as bakers and blacksmiths, were often affected. Today, many people get it simply from keeping high-powered, heat-generating laptops on their laps for hours at a time.

How are jersey numbers allotted to cricket players?

The 1995-96 World Cup series in Australia saw the first use of shirt numbers in international cricket, with most players assigned their number and some players getting to choose their number. Other countries soon adopted the practice, but it wasn’t until several years later that players would consistently wear the same number all year. Player numbering was first used in the Cricket World Cup in 1999, where the captains wore the number Ij ersey and the rest of the squad was numbered between 2 and 15.

What is the Bolshoi Theatre famous for?

The Bolshoi Theatre, also called the grand or great theatre, is a historic theatre in Moscow, Russia, designed by the architect Joseph Bovi, which holds ballet and opera performances. The Bolshoi Ballet and Bolshoi Opera are amongst the oldest and greatest ballet and opera companies of the world, respectively Thetheat re is the parent company of The Bolshot Ballet Academy.

Who is a tweetheart?

Atweetheartis a person whois much admired and followed on Twitter. A tweetheart could be a celebrity, or even a public figure who usually sets a trend, and picks up a fan — Twitter — following. Some tweethearts are journalists and even activists who break new ground. Many celebrities revealtheir lives via Twitter, andthis is lapped up by other tweeters. There is another meaning to the term too: tweeters who find soulmates while networking turn info tweethearts.

Why is a 10-watt bulb known as a zero bulb?

Technically, it is not possible to light an electric bulb without drawing input greater than zero watts. Zero watts is actually not zero, but refers to the minimum wattage. The inaccurate electric meters of the early days could not measure such a negligible amount of consumption as during those days, the watt hour meter had a rotating disc and when all the other lights were switched off, the disc would have only minimum rotation, which would not record even a 10W consumption. Thisled to theorigin of the term ‘zero-watt’, though it is incorrect. Nowadays, electric meters can record even electricity used as indicators in switches.

What is dual use technology?

Dual use is a term often used in politics and diplomacy to refer to technology which can be used for both peaceful and military means. It often refers to the proliferation of nuclear weapons, butthat of bio-weapons is a major issue as well. Many types of nuclear reactors produce fissile material, such as plutonium, as a byproduct, which could be used in the development of a nuclear weapon, However, nuclear reactors can also be used for peaceful, civilian purposes, like providing electricity to a city. During the Cold War, the United States and Soviet Union spent billions of dollars developing rocket technology, which could carry humans into space.

What is a map legend?

Amap legend is a guide to allthe symbols used on a map. It helps a person read a map correctly. Both shapes and colours can be used for symbols on a map. Stated simply, a map legend is a sort of dictionary so that you can understand what the map represents. Vegetation, topographic features, surface features etc are all represented by unique symbols which, in most cases, are standardised.

Whatis the Olympic Tower 2016?

The Olympic Tower 2016 is a vertical structure that will be placed in Cotonduba Island. It will serve both as an observation tower, and a welcome sign for visitors arriving by air and by sea at Rio de Janeiro, where the Olympic Games 2016 will take place. The project is from Zurique, and utilizes solar energy during the day with its solo power panels to pump sea water.

What is the flamenco?

Flamenco is a form of dance and music practised in Spain. It evolved over gypsy, Moorish and Latin American influences, the latter being the effect of its colonization of the American continent for four centuries. It combines instrumentalmusic and dance in three settings, namely, small scale cabaret, concerts and theatres. It may use flute or saxophone, or guitars and a dancing pattern that evolved over the centuries. The theatrical presentation is a ballet.

Who is an Aunt Millie?

Aunt is a term used to describe an uneducated or unsophisticated investor who is new and unfamiliar with investing, which makes him prone to poor investment choices. It has a derogatory connotation in the financial sector. Aunt Millie is used with reference to a low-risk investment offered to first-time, inexperienced investors.

What is the Bourbon Trail?

A tour programme managed by the Kentucky Distillers Association (KDA), the Bourbon Trail or Kentucky Bourbon Trail meant to promote the bourbon industry in Kentucky which is over 200 years old. People who mail in a promotional passport which has been stamped by all the participating distilleries get free T-shirts courtesy the Association. The trail was launched in 1999 by seven of the eight distilleries in the region.

WhatisSukkot?

Sukkot is one of the three “Pilgrim Festivals” in the Jewish tradition. Celebrated on the 15th day of the month ofTishri, i.e. late September to late October, it is a reminder of the type of fragile dwellings in which the ancient Israelites dwelt for 40 years after the Exodus from Egypt. Thefestivallasts seven days. The first day is celebrated as a full festival with special prayer services. The remaining days are known as Chol Hamoed (“festival weekdays “).

What is the littoral zone?

The littoral zone is that part of the river or sea which is closest to the shore. It extends from the shoreline to 600 feet (183 metres) out into the water and is divided into three zones called supralittoral, intertidal and sublittoral. The zone is a tricky area when it comes to predicting water conditions because so many factors affect it. Coastal currents, onshore and offshore winds, reefs, bays arid the share of the shoreline are some of the things sailors have to deal with when passing through this zone.

What is Greco-Roman wrestling?

It is style of wrestling that is practiced worldwide. Greco-Roman wrestling was contested at the first modern Olympic in 1896 and has been included in every edition of the summer Olympics held since 1908. The style is different from freestyle wrestling as it forbids holding below the waist. This directs the emphasis on throws, since a wrestler cannot use trips to take an opponent to the ground or avoid throws by hooking or grabbingtheir opponent’s leg.

What does stirring up a hornets nest mean?

Hornets are wasp-like insects. Their nests are similar to the ones made by bees. Stirring up a hornet’s nest metaphorically means to stir a silent/calm situation into that filled with rage, discord or one with chaos. It also means to provoke the attack of a swarm of spiteful enemies or spirited critics. This metaphor is self-explanatory as when one ‘stirs a hornet’s nest’ the hornets fly out of their nest in a temper and attack the cause of the disturbance.

What is the hour-glass ceiling?

It is a time-based impediment to career advancement, often faced by working mothers where they spend much more time than working fathers with their families, instead of at the workplace. Almost all senior level positions demand longer hours at the workplace but mothers are rarely able to work out flexible work timings, mostly as a result of inadequate cooperation from the people around them.

What is carrom ball in cricket?

Carrom ball is where the ball is held between the thumb, forefinger and the middle finger and, instead of a conventional release, is squeezed out and flicked by the fingers like how a disc is flicked on a carrom board. The first bowler known to have used this style of delivery was Australian Jack Iverson from Victoria, who used it throughout his test career in the period after the Second World War, although he did not use the name ‘carrom ball’. It is used by off-spinners and was again introduced by Ajantha Mendis of Sri Lanka in 2007-08. At present, only Ajantha Mendis and Ravichandran Ashwin of India use it in international cricket.

What is the Bom Sabado?

‘Born Sabado’ is a Portuguese word Which means ‘Good Saturday’ in English. Bom Sabado, in recent months, l|as come to refer to a javascriptbiased virus that has infected the social networking site Orkut. The virus hit the site on a Saturday in September 2010. It is an auto-generated message which fills the user’s scrapbook, like a scrap from a friends’ list.

What is a currency war?

Currency war, also known as ‘competitive devaluation’, is a condition in international affairs where countries compete against each other to achieve a relatively low exchange rate for their home currency, so as to help their domestic industry. Currency wars have been rare throughout history as even at times when a system of fixed exchange rates have not been in place, countries have generally preferred to maintain a high value for their currency or have been content to allow its value to be set by the markets.

What is the origin of ‘high five’ in sports?

The term ‘high five’ is a hand gesture made by two partners to congratulate each other on a combined achtevement. A high five involves the two partners raising a hand each with outstretched fingers, and slap,; ping’each other’s palms, while saying ‘give me five’. The term first appeared in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1980, and is saidto have its origins in US basketball. Some say high five was used first in basketball in 1977 by Dusty Baker and Glenn Burke, whereas some others say the gesture was used first by Lament Street in the 1960s.

What is beach volleyball?

Beach volleyball is an Olympic team sport which is mainly played on sand (though it can sometimes be played indoors) but what mainly distinguishes it from, indoor volleyball is that each team has two players each. Like other Variations of volleyball, two teams, separated by a high net, try to score points against the other by grounding a ball on the other team’s court. Originating in Southern California and Hawaii, beach volleyball is now popular worldwide, even in countries without traditional beaches like Switzerland.

What is a dramedy?

A style of television entertainment that combines two genres, dramedy also comprises many styles of television, theatre andfilm. It balances humour and drama, or serious content, to an almost equal extent. A dramedy is also called comedy-drama or seriocomedy One of the first times a dramedywasattempedwas with Charlie Chaplin’s The Kid’.

What is black energy ?

In astronomy, black energy is a hypothetical form of energy that per- meates all of space and tends to increase the rate of expansion of the universe. Black energy currently accounts for 73% of the total mass-energy of the universe. Black energy has been used as a crucial ingredient in a recent attempt to formulate a cyclic model for the universe. The nature of black energy is very homogeneous, not too dense.

What is a docusoap?

The term docusoap is made up from two words — documentary and soap (television serials). A docusoap therefore is a television documentary with soap opera elements: a television programme that combines documentary style with aspects of soap opera, eg by showing the personal lives of people at their workplace. The term came into circulation in the late 20th century.

What is Nido (Nest) Therapy?

Nido(Nest) therapy is focused on changing a person’s environment, not their personality The idea that changing the environmental context can help heal mental illness is important. This includes our physical environment as well as our culture and biochemistry. Nido(Nest) therapy places a high priority on individualized plans and individual therapy for the treatment of anorexia, bulimia, exercise addiction and chemical dependency. It is also used in the treatment of substance abuse, psychosis and personality disorders.

What is scarlet day?

Scarlet day is the term used in the University of Cambridge to designate those days on which doctors are required to wear the festal form of academic dress. It is so called because of the scarlet elements in the gowns and hoods of the festal full dress worn by doctors as opposed to the everyday black gowns. On these days, it is also permitted for members of the University to wear the academic dress of other universities from which they have obtained degrees.

What is the origin of judo?

Judo has its origin in the ancient Japanese art of jujutsu, (alsojujitsu) a system of hand-to-hand combat. The bushi of feudal Japan (samurai) are usually credited with developing jujutsu. In their time, the art was known as Yoroi kumi-uchi, in which fighters fought, fully clad in Japanese armour. The chronicle of the Japanese nation, documents public, unarmed competitions (hikara-kurabe) dating back to 230 B C. Unlike the Western hand-to-hand fighter, thejujutsufighterwas expected to be pliable, winning by appearing to yield.

What is a NEET?

NEET is a British term used for a young person who is not engaged by way of any work, academics, or training programme. It’s an acronym derived from the phrase ‘Not in Employment, Education or Training’, a government classification often used to refer to the stage that teenagers or young adults go through when they have nothing to do. However, the age group of people under this category varies from county to country.

Why is an Englishman called John Bull?

John Bull originated as a creation of Dr John Arbuthnot, Queen Anne’s physician, who in 1712, wrote a collection of pamphlets entitled The History of John Bull’ but wanted to remain anonymous. The term became a national personification of England, and in particular, Great Britain, especially in political cartoons. It sometimes refers to the whole of the United Kingdom, but has not been accepted in Scotland and Wales.

What is the origin of the term Trench Kiss’?

One theory is associated with France being known as the city of love, with the Eiffel Tower and Paris considered the ultimate symbols of romance. Another theory is that French Kiss was a derogatory term used during war: —it was said that the French would rather make love with their faces than fight. The term dates back to at least the 1820s and became popular again during the 1920s when the French were believed to be preoccupied then with passion and love.

Why is the international dateline drawn in a zigzag manner?

The International Date Line (IDL) passes through the Pacific Ocean. It is an imaginary line, like longitudes and latitudes. The time difference on either side of this line is 24 hours. So, the date changes as soon as one crosses this line. To avoid any confusion of date, this line is drawn through where the sea lies and not land. Hence, the IDL is drawn in a zig-zag manner.

Why are celestial bodies spherical in shape?

Celestial bodied, are spherical in shape because of gravity Whenever enough mass gathers close together, the resultant gravity, which follows the inverse square law, pulls equally in all directions and results in a spherical shape. Irrespective of the material composition of the celestial body a diameter of a few hundred kilometers is sufficient to create a spherical form.

What are Humboldt penguins?

They are South American penguins that breed in coastal Peru and Chile. Humboldt penguins are named after the cold water current they swims in, which takes its name after the explorer Alexander von Humboldt. These birds are medium-sized with blackish-grey upper parts and whitish under parts and a black breast-band that extends down the flanks to the thigh. They have a fleshy-pink base to the bill. Juveniles have dark heads and no breastband. They have spines on their tongues, which are used to hold prey.

What is infoganda?

Infoganda — a portmanteau of information and propaganda — has found currency to describe a news item or a literary piece of work that is informative and also has an underlying agenda. Infoganda is often used by governments and religious bodies to promote a certain message. The word has a negative slant to it.

What is a chicken market in the stocks trade? .

‘Chicken market’ is used to represent one of the stock market trends represented through the index. Bearish and bullish markets implicate downward and upward trends respectively, whereas a chicken market interprets no significant movement of the stock market index. The term chicken is used for an investor who is afraid to take risks.

What is the Chandrasekhar limit in astronomy?

When the sun cools down in about five billion years, gravity will make it shrink. It will end up as a solid lump — a dead star called white dwarf. In the early 1930s, Indian scientist Subrahmanyam Chandrasekhar found out that if a white dwarf has more than 1.4 times as much mass as the sun, it will not be able to support itself. This is the Chandrasekhar limit.

Why does a person cry while having a hearty laugh?

People cry in response to emotion, whether it is good or bad, because of signals from the higher centres of the brain that tell the tear glands whether they are happy or sad. These signals travel through the parasympathetic pathways, part of the complicated patterns of emotion that our body instinctively recognizes.

What is the origin of the relay race?

The relay race, which is now an Olympic event, first began with Aboriginals carrying messages between tribes. Legends were passed from generation to generation and from tribe to tribe. In some cases, when the messages were urgent, two separate messengers were sent in different directions with the same message. In some cases, messages had to be relayed from tribe to tribe as one person could not cover such huge distances. This was how relay races began.

What is 2-D technology in cars?

Nowadays, 2-D barcodes are used in cars. There are two types of barcodes that are widely used: one-dimensional (1-D) and two-dimensional (2-D). 1-D barcode is common in most household products, while 2-D barcode is common in industrial products where more information is needed to be stored in the label.

What is Anubis associated with?

Anubis’ is the Greek name for the jackal-headed god associated with mummification and the afterlife in Egyptian mythology. In the ancient Egyptian language, Anubis was known as ‘Inpu’. The oldest known mention of Anubis is in the Old Kingdom’s pyramid texts, where he is associated with the burial of the Pharaoh. At this time, Anubis was the most important god of the dead, but was replaced during the Middle Kingdom by Osiris. After that, Anubis was changed into one of the many sons of Osiris, and the conductor of souls of the underworld. His totem of the jackal is probably due to the fact that jackals would hunt near the cemeteries throughout Egypt.

WHAT IS SLACKTIVISM?

Slacktivism is used to describe activism which does not require a person to put in any great effort. Slaektivistsjoin causes on the internet and get a feeling of satisfaction without even moving out of their chairs. It is a slightly derogatory term for meaningless causes, as opposed to activism as a crusade, A slacktivist is rarely identified with the cause and is not a flag-waving, card-carrying type.

What is cloud computing?

The term cloud computing with reference to IT is a service offered by a third party — typically a Technology Services Provider— and offered on subscription basis by leveraging the internet. The key proposition is to move away from expensive; capex heavy, on-premises options to affordable, cost-efficient arrangements that are offered on a one-to-many basis. It is a misperception that cloud computing refers to only software; it includes hardware as a service enabling computing on demand.

Why is the countdown so important while launching a rocket?

A countdown is loudly counting in reverse from 10 to 1, prior to an event. In a rocket launch, a countdown is a carefully devised set of procedures ending with the ignition of a rocket engine, which starts 72 to 96 hours prior to its launch time. During the countdown, step-by-step procedures like placing the vehicle at the launch site, loading the essentials needed for the launch, setting up communication with the launch centre, etc are executed. When everything is okayed, ‘T minus Time’, that is, 3 minutes and 40 seconds is set and the process of ignition begins.

Who is Jack Frost?

A common figure in Western folklore, Jack Frost is a personification of the nippiest winter weather, credited with leaving beautiful plant-like patterns on windows and frosting on leaves. His name is probably of Norse derivation— the Norsemen knew him as ‘Jokul FYosir or Jack Frost. The Saxons who settled in Britain had their Lord Snow and King Frost.

What is the mystery of Easter Island?

Easter Island is the eastern-most island of Polynesia, located 3,200 km west of Chile, which annexed it in 1888. The island is called so because it was discovered on Easter Sunday in 1722 by Dutch Admiral Jacob Roggeveen. Its mystery lies in the hundreds of carved stone statues, as high as 12 metres, found on the island, although it was uninhabited when discovered.

What is Cloud Gate?

Cloud Gate is the internationally renowned sculpture designed by British artist of Indian origin, Anish Kapoor, It is located at the centre of the AT&T Plaza in Chicago, Illinois, and was completed in 2006. The stainless steel sculpture is arch- shaped, and is about 12 feet long and weighs 110 tonnes. It is the result of a competition which Anish Kapoor won. Despite experts raising concerns about design and feasibility, it was completed with little or no modifications and is now considered an architectural marvel.

What is a jungle gym?

A jungle gym, also known as monkey bars or climbing frame, is a piece of playground equipment made of many pieces of thin material, such as metal pipes or, in more current playgrounds, rope, on which children can climb, hang, and sit. It was traditionally constructed as a frame of metal bars and was introduced in 1920 by lawyer Sebastian Hinton in Chicago.

What is a vacation bank?

A vacation banker leave bank is what an employer allots to a staffer every year. A Vacation Deprivation study found that many employees failed to use their leave completely, adding many man-days to production. An employee dips into the bank to lengthen weekends, and sprinkles them over the year. ‘Vacation bank’ has gained a more current meaning — the creation of a bank of unused vacation hours by staffers. Instead of letting leave lapse, an employee can transfer the days to the company’s ‘vacation time bank’ — these can be used by any employee in a crisis.

What is Blue Ocean strategy?

It is a business strategy for creating uncontested, virgin market space. The metaphor of red and blue oceans describes the market: blue oceans denote the industries not in existence today where demand is created rather than fought over. Red oceans are industries existing today — boundaries are defined and competitive rules are known. Cut-throat competition turns the ocean bloody, which gives it the term ‘red oceans’. It is explained in the book “Blue Ocean Strategy” by W Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne.

What do sugar-free products contain?

Sugar-free products contain sugar substitutes, some natural and some synthetic. Artificial sweeteners are saccharin, aspartame, sucralose, neotame, acesulfame potassium, and stevia. Artificial sweeteners are cornpounds with sweetness 300-500 times that of sucrose (table sugar). As a result, less sweetener is required, energy contribution is often negligible and blood glucose levels are not effected.

What is emission trading?

It is an advanced method to control pollution by providing economic incentives. A government authority sets a limit or cap on the amount of pollutant that can be emitted in an open environment. Manufacturers are issued emission permits and allotted an equivalent number of allowances (or credits) to emit a specific amount of pollutants. Companies that need to increase their emission allowance must buy credits from companies which pollute less — this is referred to as emissions trade.

What are crop circles?

Crop circles are mystery circles which farmers in southern England have observed, especially in 1980. Large sections of their fields were trampled into circles overnight. Sometimes, the crops were flattened into strange designs. Though it was made to look like machines were used,the crops were not damaged.

What is Area 51?

Area 51 is a term used in CIA dbcupients for a military base 90 miles north of Las Vegas, Nevada, in grid number 51 of the Nevada Test Site. It is a block of land six by 10 miles, on which is a large secret air base, at the shore of Groom Lake. The base was created in 1954 to test the secret U-2 spy plane, besides research on UFOs and extra-terrestrial bodies.

What is a Tea Party protest?

A Tea Party protest is part of a series of anti-government protests being organized all over the US since early 2009 to express anger and frustration over government policy, which supposedly promotes wasteful expenditure by the government and leads to high taxes. The term is based on the historic Boston Tea Party of 1773, which opposed tea taxation imposed by the

British government.

What is cloud music?

Cloud music is a new service which has done away with the need to download music. Music lovers now have music at their fingertips simply by subscribing to companies logging on to this new business. Subscription is dirt-cheap and the song/album is played instantly over a mobile device that links to the internet via the cellphone network. The royalties from cloud music subscription go back to music companies.

What is a Parthian shot?

The Parthian shot was a famous military combat tactic practised by the Parthians, the ancient Iranian people hailing from the north-eastern region of Iran called Parthia. The theme ‘Parthian tactic’ was to surprise the enemy with the hit-and-run action using light horses, dividing their own forces by pretending retreat and then turning unexpectedly back and showering the enemy with deadly arrows, surrounding and destroying them.

How is the market price of a share established during trading ?

The price at which buying and selling transactions take place is determined by market forces, that is, demand and supply for a particular stock. If a company enjoys high investor confidence and its stock price is expected to rise, many people would want to buy it (high demand) and very few will sell it at the current market price (less supply). Buyers have to bid higher to match the asking price from the seller, thus increasing stock price. If there are more sellers than buyers, the stock price falls.

What is cross-branding? How does it work?

Cross-branding is a market approach to enhance two brands by associating them with each other. Amazon, corn is well-known for applying the concept, working with such brands such as Toysrus, Office Depot and Weight Watchers. Another example is of Grasim taking over L&T Cement and using the brand.

What are rubber rooms?

The ‘rubber room’ is where hundreds of New York City school teachers sit and do nothing, but are paid their full salary Each year, hundreds of school teachers are suspended. Their teaching privileges are temporarily, but indefinitely, revoked. Accused of varying degrees of misconduct, these teachers are no longer allowed in the classroom. While awaiting a lengthy adjudication process, they report to an off-campus location called the ‘rubber room’.

What is the resonant frequency of an object?

Every object has its a natural frequency at which it achieves maximum amplitude during vibrations, if left to vibrate free after applying external force. This frequency is known as resonant frequency. The resonant frequency of an object depends on factors such as shape, mass and density of material. Even a house or bridge has its own unique resonant frequency A bridge vibrating at resonant frequency may collapse.

What is Jujutsu?

Jujutsu or Jiu-jitsu literally meaning the “art of softness” or “way of yielding” is a collective name for Japanese martial art styles, including unarmed and armed techniques. Jujutsu evolved among the samurai of feudal Japan as a method to defeat an armed and armoured opponent without weapons. Due to the ineffectiveness of striking against an armoured opponent, the method to neutralize an enemy is using an attacker’s energy against him, rather than oppose it. ;

What is a rehook?

A rehook is a film which is so powerful and appealing that cinema goers go back for repeat viewings. These blockbuster shows keep the box office coffers full. Good examples are classics like “Gone with the Wind”, “Titanic”, even the Bond series. New hit “Inception” is another rehook, with many people returning for repeat shows, but more because the plot is so complex that viewers want to make sense of it. This is the power of the rehook. ‘

How did ‘Hello’ come to be used as a greeting over the phone?

The first word used to answer the phone was the nautical greeting ‘ahoy’ because the first regular phone system was in the maritime state of Connecticut. Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor, answered with the Gaelic ‘hoy’. But it was Thomas Edison’s greeting of ‘hello’, an exclamation of surprise dating back to the Middle Ages, that caught on, and so we answer the telephone today with, ‘Hello?’ Another theory is that after inventing the telephone, he rang his girlfriend whose name was ‘Hello’, thus the first word said by him on telephone became a greeting. Before ‘Hello’ became popular, telephone operators started conversations with, “Are you there?”

What is La-La-Land?

Originally coined in 1981 by San Francisco native Bill (William) D Froelich, the term was first used in the Cal Neva Lodge in Lake Tahoe. Froelich was explaining to his fellow workers that he was about to visit his girlfriend’s parents in La La Land, otherwise known as Los Angeles. The term was quite indicative of Froelich’s view towards the city at the time. There are bold parallels between the term la-la (unconsciousness; an elevated mind state) and Froelich’s regard for Los Angeles. After 29 years, Bill Froelich now lives in San Diego with his wife and son. His in-laws still live in La La Land.

Why is Winston Churchill’s speech known as the ‘Iron Curtain Speech’?

Winston Churchill made a speech at Fulton, Missourie in March 1946, at the onset of the Cold War. He said, “From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the continent.” He was the first to coin the term in order to define Stalin’s aggressive drive to control all areas east of Russia and west of Germany Thereafter, the term became popular to describe the Communists’ stronghold over East Europe.

What is the Hubbert Peak Theory?

The theory is named after American geophysicist M King Hubbert. The theory posits that for any given geographical area, from an individual oilproducing region to the planet as a whole, the rate of petroleum production tends to follow a bell-shaped curve. It is one of the primary theories on peak oil and is based on the observation that the amount of oil under the ground in any region is finite, therefore the rate of discovery which initially increases quickly must reach a maximum and decline.

What language is spoken in Minsk?

Minsk has been a city of many languages over time. Initially it was Ruthenian (later developed into modern Belarusian). After 1569, Polish became the official language. Belarusian national revival increased the use of Belarusian language but after World War II (by mid 1980s), Minsk was almost exclusively Russian-speaking. Most residents now use Russian in day-to-day life. Belarusian is understood as well. Today, the most commonly used international language is English.

What is soundbite TV?

Children who are hooked to the tele- vision show an inability to concentrate in class during an indepth lesson, say some teachers. They blame it on ‘soundbite TV — the fast pace of television. Fed a diet of sound and visuals, these children display very short attention spans and struggle to focus in class. Teachers also complain that such children are also disruptive when they are denied their dose of ‘sound and vision bites’.

What is software entropy?

The tendency, over time, for software to become difficult and costly to maintain is known as software entropy. A software system that undergoes continuous change, like new functionality added to its original design, will eventually become more complex, losing its original design structure, and may even become disorganized as it grows. In theory, it may be better to redesign the software in order to support the changes rather than build on the existing programme.

Why is a sperm whale called so?

Sperm whale is a type of toothed whale (physeter catodon) with a very large head which has cavities containing spermaceti, a sperm oil. It is a white, waxy substance consisting of various esters of fatty acids used for making candles, ointments and cosmetics. It has no relation to sperm, the male gamete.

What is arachnophobia?

An abnormal and persistent fear of spiders. Sufferers of arachnophobia experience undue anxiety even though they realize that the risk of encountering a spider and being harmed by it is small or non-existent. This phobia was exploited in a 1990 movie “Arachnophobia”. The word is derived from the Greek ‘arachne’ (spider) and ‘phobos’ (fear) after the mythical Arachne, a maiden who was a skilled weaver, whom the goddess Athena turned into a spider on being challenged to a weaving contest.

What are horse latitudes and how did they get the name?

There are two sub-tropical high-pressure belts extending approximately between latitudeSfc|5 and 30 degrees to the north and south of the Equator. Horse latitudes are generally areas of high pressure marked by calm, subsiding air that gets heated during descent. It is said that Spanish sailors ferrying horses to the West Indies were usually stuck for months in these calm waters and had to throw their horses into the water to conserve drinking water for themselves. This led to the term ‘horse latitudes’.

What does ‘dumping’ mean in computer lingo?

Dumping refers to the cleaning of stored data from the core memory area of a computer into trash or somewhere else in an unorganised manner. Dumping may be done in the event of a system failure or as part of maintenance work. The reason for dumping, in most cases, is that the data has lost its value over time and occupies huge memory space. Retrieval from the dump is difficult but not impossible.

What is a flying saucer?

Many people have reported seeing unidentified flying objects, also known as UFOs, in the sky. Some of them described these objects in the shape of discs or saucers hovering overhead with a glow around them. These have been mostly interpreted as transport vehicles of aliens visiting earth, but photographs of them are now believed to be hoaxes. The first highly publicized sighting by Kenneth Arnold on June 24,1947, resulted in the creation of the term by US newspapers.

What is surface diffusion?

Surface diffusion is a general process involving the motion of adatoms (adsorbed atom lying on a crystal surface, used in surface chemistry when describing single atoms lying on surfaces and surface roughness), molecules, and atomic clusters (adparticles) at solid material surfaces. Tunnelling diffusion is a particularly interesting example of an unconventional mechanism wherein hydrogen has been shown to diffuse on clean metal surfaces via the quantum tunnelling effect.

What is a flophouse?

A flophouse is a place of cheap lodging. It’s normally an apartment where some occupants pay rent while others are unemployed and do nothing with their lives except party and abuse drugs. They generally share bathroom facilities and reside in very cramped quarters. The people who use these places are often called transients, although some people stay in them for years. They are just a step above being homeless. Quarters in flophouses are very small and may resemble office cubicles more than a regular hotel room. In the past, flophouses were called working men’s hotel and were rather dirty. Some cities that have flophouses in abundance become well known in their own right such as the Bowery in New York.

How are points in a stock exchange calculated?

Nifty is actually an index of 50, not 100, stocks. Also, sensex is calculated on free-float market cap only i.e. shares held by the public and not by promoters. But, Nifty is calculated by total market capitalisation. Hence, shares like ONGC where the promoter holding is large gets very little weight in the sensex as compared to the Nifty.

Who is a hypermiler?

Hypermilers are those who try to extract every bit of mileage from their cars by trying out various techniques like coasting when it’s possible, at times even switching off the engine, not switching on the air-conditioner, etc. The term originated in hybrid driving clubs. Some radical techniques are employed by hypermilers, which are called renegades. They use extreme techniques that may even compromise their security

What is the grettis saga?

The Grettis Saga is one of the finest Icelandic family sagas, which details the life of Grettis Asmundarson, an Icelandic warrior who became an outlaw. It was written in the 13th and early 14th century Well-born, brave but troubleprone Grettis, at 14, kills a man in a quarrel and is outlawed. He spends these years in Norway performing many brave deeds. On his return to Iceland, he saves people from the malicious ghost of Glam. The dying fiend imposes a curse on him, predicting that he will grow afraid of the dark. Grettis accidentally kills the chieftain’s son and is outlawed again. Grettis is pursued by kinsmen of men he has wronged and by other outlaws for the price on his head. At last, his enemies overwhelm him with the aid of witchcraft. His brother avenges his death. The saga’s theme can be summed up thus: good gifts and good luck are often worlds apart.

What is the windfall tax?

The windfall tax is what’s imposed on windfall gains, an abnormal increase in the profits of any organization or company in the normal course of its business due to certain circumstances. A good example would be the recent increase in the price of oil over the world. In this case, the oil exploration and production (E&P) companies will make huge gains if they sell oil to local refining companies at international prices, which are high. Such a gain is due to circumstances favouring E&P companies and not due to their cost-cutting or other efficient operations. These are windfall gains and the tax on such gains is called windfall tax.

What is unique about the hangzhou bay bridge?

Hangzhou Bay Bridge is a bridge across Hangzhou Bay off the eastern coast of China. It links the municipalities of Shanghai and Ningbo in Zhejiang province. It’s the longest trans-oceanic bridge in the world although it does not have the longest cable-stayed main span. The bridge is 36 km long with six expressway lanes in two directions. The construction started on June 8, 2003 and was completed on June 14, 2007. It is not open for public transportation but is only being used for test and evaluation purpose.

why the bucket seat in automobiles is called so?

According to some sources, the word bucket comes from the French word ‘baquet’ which means cockpit. A bucket seat is much more comfortable, especially for long journeys. Bucket seats came into use after World War II in small cars due to the lack of seating room for a third passenger on account of the presence of a floor-mounted gear handle.

what is pareto’s (80-20) rule of automation?

Vilfredo Pareto was an Italian engineer-sociologist who, in the 19th century studied the number of people in various income classes and represented his findings in diagrams. His important conclusion was that 80% of the total wealth in the world is owned by 20% of people and that 20% of wealth is owned by 80% of people. A similar pattern is observed in many other problem areas where number of causes contribute to a particular problem. In other words, 20% of the causes contribute to 80% of the problem. The specific Pareto’s (80-20) rule for automation is, however, unheard of.

what is special about the garden city of palkenberg?

The Garden City of Falkenberg is a housing estate in Berlin, Germany designed and built by the celebrated German architect and town planner Bruno Taut (1880-1938). In designing the complex, Taut applied the garden city concept he learnt from England. The most striking aspect of this architecture is its use of colour: each part of a building bears a different, contrasting colour with respect to the other parts, and all the parts together produce a harmonious and pleasing effect. Falkenberg is also the name of an important town in the Halland county on the west coast of Sweden. It is situated at the mouth of the river Atran. The town is wellknown for its food and beverage industry, and has several beaches and lakes- which form its major tourist attraction.

what is the origin of the term horse trading ?

The term horse trading. Which came into usage around 1820, owes its origin to the notorious shrewdness of horse traders who bought and sold horses? As per Macmillan English Dictionary, it means difficult and sometimes dishonest discussions between people who are trying to reach an agreement. In political parlance, it implies any long drawn-out negotiation characterised by hard bargaining and compromises. It frequently takes place in democratic institutions like legislative bodies when a parliamentarian or legislator supports some Bill or trust vote in exchange for support for one of his initiatives for another Bill or legislation.

what is moribund capitalism?

It’s a concept introduced by Vladimir Lenin, who wrote that when capitalism becomes imperialistic, it is moribund capitalism. He describes the height of imperialist capitalism as “ripe and rotten-ripe capitalism” which will eventually collapse and make way for socialism. The concept was mentioned in his 1916 book, Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism.

who is hugronaphor?

Hugronaphor is a minor Nubian king of Upper Egypt, who ruled from 205 BC to 186 BC. He successfully rebelled against the then king Ptolemy IV in 205 BC and ruled a larger part of Egypt for 19 years and was succeeded by Ankhmakis.

what is a chromophore?

A chromophore is a group of atoms and electrons (or moiety) i.e. part of organic molecules responsible for its colour. It is an extended delocalised systems of electrons in a compound which gives its colour e.g. chlorophyll’s porphin ring, or an azo dyes benzene ring linked to N=N double bond. When a molecule absorbs certain wavelengths of visible light and transmits or reflects others, the molecule has a colour. A chromophore is a region in a molecule where the energy difference between two different molecular orbitals falls within the range of the visible spectrum. Visible light that’hits the chromophore can thus be absorbed by exciting an electron from its ground state into an excited state. In biological molecules that serve to capture or detect light energy the chromophore is a moiety that causes a confermational change of the molecule when hit by light.

in the stock market, what is the concept of grey marketing?

Grey marketing is a trade of something legal but through unofficial and unauthorised distribution channels. In contrast, black marketing is a trade of illegal goods or services through illegal channels. The grey market of goods is to import and sell products through market channels which are not authorized by the manufacturers. It occurs when the prices of a product differs significantly in different countries. The grey market of securities markets and IPO (Initial Public Offer) is to buy and sell the shares to be allotted in the future. Once the trading is done in the grey market at a stipulated price, the seller must deliver the sold number of shares to the buyer on the day of listing to honour the commitment.

what is unique about the production ‘dralion’?

‘Dralion’ is an entertainment show produced by Montreal-based company Cirque du Soleil Inc, well known for its circus-based dance dramas. The show ‘Dralion’, which has already toured different parts of the world, is currently located at Sydney and been seen by seven million people. It’s main theme is to project human life as an integral part of nature, and, specifically, to celebrate the harmony between human life and the four natural elements — earth, air, water, and fire. The theme is inspired by Chinese philosophy. It’s dances combine the traditional acts of Chinese circus and the gravitydefying acrobatics unique to Cirque du Soleil. The show presents a highly imaginative and magical perspective. The title is a combination of the two symbols of East and West — the dragon and the lion.

Why is glass brittle?

Ordinary glass is soda-lime glass and is a mixture of silicates of sodium, potassium, calcium and aluminium etc. It is brittle because its molecular structure is composed of tetrahedral crystals. These crystals do not have a good large-area orderly crystalline structure. Therefore, when it is under stress, the structure gets ruptured.

What dyes are used to ink tattoos?

A majority of dye pigments are derived from metals. Black dye is non-metallic and is made from carbon, black ink or logwood.

What does roadrunner refer to?

It’s the world’s fastest supercomputer built by scientists at IBM and Los Alamos National Laboratory for the US military It can compute about 1.026 quadrillion calculations per second. It will be primarily used for military problems, particularly to ensure the accurate functioning of ageing nuclear weapons.

What is the armenian genocide?

The Armenian genocide was carried out by the Young Turk government of the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1916 and from 1922 to 1923. About 1.5 million Armenians out of the 2.5 million in the empire were killed. Armenians all over the world commemorate the tragedy on April 24 every year.

What’s distinctive about davos?

Situated at an altitude of 1,560 metres, in the heart of the Alps in Switzerland, the town of Davos has the distinction of being the largest mountain resort in the Alps and the highest town of Europe. Its major tourist attraction are winter sports. It is also a preferred place for holding international conferences like the World Economic Forum.

What is fat tuesday?

Fat Tuesday is Mardi Gras, where gras is French for fat and Mardi is French for Tuesday The name comes from the tradition of slaughtering and feasting on a fattened calf on the last day of a carnival. The annual festivities start on January 6 and build to a climax on Mardi Gras, or Fat Tuesday, which always occurs on the day before Ash Wednesday.

What is a gazebo?

A gazebo is a pavilion structure, often octagonal, commonly found in parks, gardens, and spacious public areas. Gazebos provide shade, basic shelter, ornamental features in a landscape and a place to rest.

What is a slumpometer?

The global slumpometer is a yardstick economists use to measure the severity of the recession in various economies across the world. It takes into account unemployment. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Gross Domestic Income (GDI). To the average person, rising unemployment and pink slips mean a recession. While for many economists, a recession has arrived when there’s a dip in GDP for two successive quarters. For others, a recession is when the GDI begins to dip, and is a more reliable factor than GDP.

What is a surgical strike?

A surgical strike is an attack using missiles, bombers or on the ground against certain specific targets. The strike is planned with surgical precision so that they cause damage only to the planned targets and cause minimum damage to their surroundings. These attacks are usually carried out against terrorist camps or facilities such as power stations, armouries, etc.

How did the term ‘window dressing’ originate?

Textile and readymade shops dress mannequins (models of human bodies) with attractive clothing they sell and place them in display windows. Likewise, mutual funds and banks add more temporary assets and liabilities on year ends to ensure their balance sheets remain attractive to the public, especially to investors. As their intention is to dress up their balance sheets to make them attractive like a shopper does to the mannequins, the term ‘window dressing’ is used to mean artificial inflation of assets which will wear off after the year-end.

How do clouds move?

Clouds are formed when water evaporates from rivers, ponds, oceans, and lakes. High cirrus clouds are moved by a jet stream and sometimes travel at 100 kmph. When clouds are a part of a thunderstorm, they usually travel at 30-40 kmph.

What is the jagd and hund fair?

It is the ‘Hunting and Hounds fair where exhibitors present the latest trends in fishing and hunting.

What is the nathan rothschild maxim?

The Nathan Rothschild maxim says that you ‘make money in the stock market when blood flows in the streets’. Nathan Rothschild was a stock dealer in the London stock market who took advantage of early knowledge of England’s victory at Waterloo. First, he sold all his shares, which caused heavy meltdown in the market. Towards the end, he bought all the shares at a very low price before the news of England’s victory reached London. With England’s victory, the share market rose rapidly and in the process, Nathan made a lot of money.

What is icor in economics?

Incremental Capital .Output Ratio (ICOR) is the additional capital required to increase one unit of output. This ratio is used to measure the efficiency of an industrial unit or country as an economic unit. The lesser the ICOR, more efficient the organization.

What is a suction excavator?

A suction excavator is a combination of excavator and a pump for dual function of excavating earth and pumping the soil out. It has an air pump for generating the required flow of air, a nozzle through which air is drawn and a mechanism for separating soil from the air drawn through the nozzle.

What is the treynor ratio?

The Treynor Ratio (reward-tovolatility ratio) was developed by Jack Treynor, one of the fathers of modern portfolio theory the ratio measures the returns earned from a portfolio over and above the normal return that would have been earned on a risk-free investment. The formula for the Treynor Ratio is: average return of the portfolio minus average return of the risk free rate divided by the beta of the portfolio. In short, the excess return over the risk-free return of the portfolio is divided by the beta of the portfolio to get the Treynor Ratio. Beta is a measure of market-related risk in a stock or collection of stocks. A high Treynor Ratio indicates better performance. A risk-free investment is akin to an investment in a government of India Treasury bill.

Which is the biggest container port in the world?

Singapore is said to be the biggest port handling 26.9 million standard boxes, though China now claims that in 2008, Shanghai has overtaken Singapore and expected to handle 30 million TEUs (twentyfeet equivalent units, a measure used in transport). In 2002, it was claimed that Hong Kong in China was the biggest container port.

What is the great manmade river?

The Great Manmade River (better known as GMR) is a network of pipes that supplies water from the Sahara desert to Libya from a fossil aquifer. This aquifer is known as Nublon Sandstone Aquifer System. GMR is considered to be the largest underground network of pipes in the world. It has more than 1,300 wells supplying more than 7,100,000 cubic metres of freshwater per day to the cities of Tripoli, Benghazi, Sirt and other major cities of this African nation. Some wells are as deep as 650 metres. In 1953, when drilling for the search of oil, explorers found huge quantities of freshwater. GMRP (Great Manmade River Project) was developed in 1960 and it took shape in 1984. About 88 million cubic metres of excavation was done for the completion of the first of five phases, and it. was inaugurated on August 28,1991. This mammoth project, designed by Brown Root and Price Brothers, is funded by the Libyan government and owned by the Great Manmade River Authority The Guiness Book of World Records has acknowledged it as the world’s largest irrigation project.

What is sistine chapel famous for?

The Sistine Chapel takes its name from Pope Sixtus IV It’s best known for being the location of papal conclaves, for the election of a new Pope. It is famous for its architecture, evocative of Solomon’s Temple of the Old Testament and on its decoration which has been frescoed throughout by the greatest Renaissance artists including Michelangelo, Raphael, and Sandro Botticelli.

What do riders represent in the fiesta of san joan?

The Spanish fiesta of San Joan dates back to the 14th century and has religious significance. The riders participating in it or caixers as they are called represent the social strata of the church, nobility, craftsmen and country people (mostly farmers).

What does zumba refer to?

Zumba is a cardio-fitness regime based on Latin rhythms developed by a former aerobics instructor Alberto Perez from Colombia. A Zumba class would span several Latin dance styles including Mambo, Salsa, Cumbia and Merengue. Another unique feature of a Zumba class is its party atmosphere unlike a typical aerobics class.

Which country receives the highest rainfall in the world?

Of the 95 wettest countries in the world, Guinea, Solomon Islands and Sierra Leone are ranked the top three in order of maximum rainfall received on an average in a year, according to the World Statistics Pocket Book and the Statistical Yearbook of the United Nations. The records are for the period 1931-1960. Guinea, also known as the Republic of Guinea, with its capital named Conakry, is in Western Africa receives a monsoon-type of rainfall from June to November. Against the global weighted annual average rainfall of 9.627 cm, Guinea gets 37.84 cm, the Solomon Islands gets 32.90 cm and Sierra Leone gets 29.46 cm. Conakry is the wettest capital in the world and receives rainfall on ah average of 134 days each year. India is the ninth wettest country with 21.68 cm of average annual rainfall. The UN World Statistics for 2007 record these figures: Guinea – 37.76 cm, Solomon Islands – 32.9 cm, Sierra Leone – 29.46 cm and India 24.01 cm. Guinea was still top of the list and India retained the ninth position.

How do iridium spark plugs differ from regular ones?

Iridium is a precious, silver-white metal and one of the densest materials found on earth. The natural properties of iridium makes the spark plug use less voltage to create a spark, burn fuel more efficiently and spark at leaner air fuel mixtures. It delivers higher horsepower and better mileage.

WhArticle Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/literature-articles/general-knowledge-pt-xviii-4092108.html

About the Author

Dr. Ashok Kumar Sharma, M.A.(History); Certificate in Taxidermy(Madras); Certifate in Library Science (TOPPER-ML Sukhadia Uni. Udaipur,(Rajasthan) INDIA. Hobby: Cricket; Postal Stamp Collection and Collection of Quotations since 1981.