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#11
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Gatt wrote:
"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... Actually, I believe man was capable of flying much sooner than the Wrights. I once heard that Iron Eaglebutt Henriques, a shamonyu medicine man of the world famous Gravitigotcha tribe in South America once obtained an unassisted sustained flight of 3,212 feet between the top of Angel Falls and the forest floor in the year 1688, marking both the need for more efficient airfoils and for tennis shoes to be worn at the top of the falls. Might want to check your facts. Tennis shoes were not yet introduced in South America by 1688... ;P I believe Iron Eaglebutt's adventure simply SHOWED THE NEED for better airfoils and as well, the NEED for tennis shoes. Naturally, if the Indians had tennis shoes in 1688, when the conquerers came to kill them take over their land, at least they could have outrun them. :-) -- Dudley Henriques |
#12
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#13
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"Darkwing" theducksmail"AT"yahoo.com wrote:
Where here is an AMAZING statistic for you then! http://www.venganza.org/piratesarecool4.gif If one is going to do silly correlations, one should at least get the facts right. There were definitely more than 17 pirates around in 2000. Consider these stories: "Security in the High Seas: Piracy" "The total number of piracy incidents that has been officially reported to the International Maritime Organization (IMO) from July 2004 to October 2006; is 3,993." From: http://www.analyst-network.com/article.php?art_id=1195 "French navy escorts Somali aid to deter pirates" "Pirates have mounted at least 26 attacks on ships off Somalia, including 13 hijackings, this year alone." From: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...111900410.html "US Navy Frees Ship From Pirates" "The U.S. Navy on Monday helped free the fifth ship in a week hijacked by Somalia pirates, attempting to bring security to crucial shipping routes between the Red Sea and Indian Ocean." From: http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5i...MrqFwD8SNLJ9G0 "Somalia: U.S. Navy Still Battles Pirates On the High Seas" "On October 30, a U.S. Navy destroyer answered a call for help -- relayed through the International Maritime Bureau -- from the North Korean crew on a vessel that had been overtaken by pirates in international waters October 29." From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200711020222.html |
#14
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
... .. Humans tried to fly for over 50,000 years, only figuring it out 104 years ago. In other words, for 99.8% of our history, we tried -- and failed -- to fly. Yet, amazingly, that knowledge is now available to anyone on the planet for the cost of a used Chevy Lumina. Well, to pick a nit or two, humans have been flying longer than 104 years. The Wright brothers get credit for the "first controlled, powered and sustained heavier-than-air human flight" - that's a lot of qualifiers... "To invent an airplane is nothing. To build one is something. But to fly is everything." -Otto Lilienthal -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. " |
#15
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Jay Honeck wrote:
The Montgolfier brothers, in 1783. But I wouldn't call that flying. Birds don't use that sort of lift. Although it's cool, floating ain't flying. Um, why not? There is definitely skill and learning involved. Anthony Smith and Mark Wagner, writing in the book "Ballooning" (1998) noted that: "Balloons, as everyone knows, can only travel with the wind. The wind, as everyone knows, blows as it chooses, with no one able to modify its direction. Therefore the notion of competitive ballooning seems strangled at birth, with every participant being subject to the same overwhelming forces of the encircling atmosphere. The fact that competitions _are_ held, and that balloonists _do_ compete, is due partly to the human urge for confronting others (and hoping to win) but also because the winds are inconsistent. .... As the golfer said, "The more I practise, the luckier I get". So too with ballooning. There is skill in bending chance towards a desirable end, in giving Dame Fortune a push in the right direction, in blending human cunning with opportunity. Besides, unlike a lottery's random choice of winners, the same ballooning names do tend to be proclaimed at prize-giving time. Pilots doing better than the rest on one occasion are more likely to do well next time." |
#16
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Humans tried to fly for over 50,000 years, only figuring it out 104 years ago. Manned gliders may have been used as long at 2500 years ago: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glider |
#17
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![]() "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... Might want to check your facts. Tennis shoes were not yet introduced in South America by 1688... I believe Iron Eaglebutt's adventure simply SHOWED THE NEED for better airfoils and as well, the NEED for tennis shoes. Naturally, if the Indians had tennis shoes in 1688, when the conquerers came to kill them take over their land, at least they could have outrun them. True. If there had been much left of his shoes they might have copied the pattern by then. Actually I was sort of waiting to hear somebody say that this I. E. Henriques guy was an anti-American urban legend, and that the first unassisted sustained flight was of course off a very tall sand dune near Kitty Hawk in 1689. I saw the back of an Ohio quarter, though, and it clearly states that the birthplace of aviation pioneers was there. (A two-bit claim there ever was one!) -c |
#18
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Gatt wrote:
"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ... Might want to check your facts. Tennis shoes were not yet introduced in South America by 1688... I believe Iron Eaglebutt's adventure simply SHOWED THE NEED for better airfoils and as well, the NEED for tennis shoes. Naturally, if the Indians had tennis shoes in 1688, when the conquerers came to kill them take over their land, at least they could have outrun them. True. If there had been much left of his shoes they might have copied the pattern by then. Actually I was sort of waiting to hear somebody say that this I. E. Henriques guy was an anti-American urban legend, and that the first unassisted sustained flight was of course off a very tall sand dune near Kitty Hawk in 1689. I saw the back of an Ohio quarter, though, and it clearly states that the birthplace of aviation pioneers was there. (A two-bit claim there ever was one!) -c :-)) -- Dudley Henriques |
#19
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Humans tried to fly for over 50,000 years....
Is there any evidence of that? vince norris |
#20
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Jay Honeck wrote:
The Montgolfier brothers, in 1783. But I wouldn't call that flying. Birds don't use that sort of lift. Although it's cool, floating ain't flying. What is the definition of flying, then? Matt |
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