More info: https://t.co/XPdtCn2tPR
— Morbid Knowledge (@Morbidful) May 24, 2024
Just a family trip to disney land.
More info: https://t.co/XPdtCn2tPR
— Morbid Knowledge (@Morbidful) May 24, 2024
Wasn't the blackbird also the jet that when they refueled on the ground the gas tanks were solid and then when it was at altitude the gas tanks contracted together and leaked the gas out. Probably told this wrong but I remember seeing this plane in the Smithsonian air and space museum and it is still amazing to this day to me.agrams said:
the sr-71 had one major challenge in its development: the exhaust of the massive engines were the biggest radar signatures on the plane. after multiple design attempts to solve this, they couldn't get it worked out with changes to the geometey of the engine or airframe. finally they tried the idea of ionizing the exhaust. the ionized plasma had a radar absorbing effect. to do this though they had to add cesium to the fuel.
Well my memory is getting older and you have a usaf in your name so you are probably right. Still a fascinating aircraft.USA*** said:
Think it was the other way around. Leaked on the ground, but stopped as friction in flyng caused the metal to expand.
That's like the old story (not sure if true or not) about the SR71 flying cross country and requesting an altitude change from an ARTCC....BQ78 said:
My next door neighbor colonel at Mather was a SR-71 backseater and he said he lost engines near Taiwan. They lost 50,000 feet in altitude before they restarted the engines. I said, "you must have been sweating!" He said nah, we still had plenty of altitude left.
nortex97 said:More info: https://t.co/XPdtCn2tPR
— Morbid Knowledge (@Morbidful) May 24, 2024
Just a family trip to disney land.
I remember reading that the expedition members ate an amazing amount of meat each day. It was something like 9 lbs of meat each per day, at least while they were constantly rowing upstream on the Missouri. Given the number of expedition members, that translated into a startling large number of animals that had to be killed each day.Rabid Cougar said:
Lewis and Clark expedition killed and ate 1,001 deer, 35 elk, 227 bison, 62 pronghorns, 113 beaver, 104 geese and brant, 48 shorebirds ("plovers"), 46 grouse, 45 ducks and coots, 9 turkeys,43 grizzly bears, 23 black bears, 18 wolves, and 16 otters.
Rabid Cougar said:
Lewis and Clark expedition killed and ate 1,001 deer, 35 elk, 227 bison, 62 pronghorns, 113 beaver, 104 geese and brant, 48 shorebirds ("plovers"), 46 grouse, 45 ducks and coots, 9 turkeys,43 grizzly bears, 23 black bears, 18 wolves, and 16 otters.
Rabid Cougar said:
Lewis and Clark expedition killed and ate 1,001 deer, 35 elk, 227 bison, 62 pronghorns, 113 beaver, 104 geese and brant, 48 shorebirds ("plovers"), 46 grouse, 45 ducks and coots, 9 turkeys,43 grizzly bears, 23 black bears, 18 wolves, and 16 otters.
simple math based on estimate harvest weights of animals (I am likely way off):Rabid Cougar said:
Lewis and Clark expedition killed and ate 1,001 deer, 35 elk, 227 bison, 62 pronghorns, 113 beaver, 104 geese and brant, 48 shorebirds ("plovers"), 46 grouse, 45 ducks and coots, 9 turkeys,43 grizzly bears, 23 black bears, 18 wolves, and 16 otters.
Quote:
More French soldiers died during World War I than American soldiers during all of U.S. history
World War I was catastrophic on levels that most of us alive today cannot even comprehend. One example? The numbers of total deaths. During the first world war, France lost about 1,360,000 soldiers. In contrast, the United States has recorded about 1,350,000 military deaths total, over every war since 1775. Here are 20 cool everyday things made for WWI.
Quote:
Kleenex
How bad is it to reuse a tissue? Doctors had that very same thought when they decided to use gas mask filters as disposable handkerchiefs after the war. "Items created for the war often had to be repurposed following the war, and one of those items is Kleenex, which was actually the crepe paper used in the filters of gas masks," says Jonathan Casey, Director, Archives and Edward Jones Research Center, of The National World War I Museum and Memorial. "During the influenza epidemic following the war, [paper goods company] Kimberly-Clark repurposed the paper as a disposable product for people to sneeze into and limit the spread of bodily fluids." Later given the brand name "Kleenex," we now use the word to refer to any facial tissue.
we need another thread on best history museum to go toCanyonAg77 said:
Side note, the National WWI Museum in Kansas City is fantastic. A bucket list item
ENG said:simple math based on estimate harvest weights of animals (I am likely way off):Rabid Cougar said:
Lewis and Clark expedition killed and ate 1,001 deer, 35 elk, 227 bison, 62 pronghorns, 113 beaver, 104 geese and brant, 48 shorebirds ("plovers"), 46 grouse, 45 ducks and coots, 9 turkeys,43 grizzly bears, 23 black bears, 18 wolves, and 16 otters.
deer 50lbs
elk 150 lbs
bison 300 lbs
pronghorn 50 lbs
beaver 5 lbs
geese 3 lbs
plover 0.5 lb
grouse 1 lb
duck 2 lbs
turkey 5 lbs
grizzly 150 lbs
black bear 100 lbs
wolf 25 lbs
otter 5 lbs
total harvest amount = ~137,000 lbs
33 people => ~4150 lbs per person
person per day for 2 years = 5.7 lbs
so, yeah 9 lbs on high exertion days is not too far off.
I like that idea so much, I'm stealing itBQ_90 said:we need another thread on best history museum to go toCanyonAg77 said:
Side note, the National WWI Museum in Kansas City is fantastic. A bucket list item
That seemed a little small, based on my limited experience being way to close to grizzley bears in Alaska. A quick search indicates average grown males are maybe 3 or 4 times heavier - not sure, though, on harvest weight.Quote:
grizzly 150 lbs
Hey Nav said:That seemed a little small, based on my limited experience being way to close to grizzley bears in Alaska. A quick search indicates average grown males are maybe 3 or 4 times heavier - not sure, though, on harvest weight.Quote:
grizzly 150 lbs
Fascinating info, though.