Read a new original book: Air and Screen - Combined History of Aviation and the Media

Read a new original book: Air and Screen - Combined History of Aviation and the Media
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Tuesday, November 13, 2018

1910 Forest Fire - A Glimpse Within The Gates Of Hades


The 1910 Fire was the largest forest fire in American history, perhaps in the history of the world. Now, almost one hundred years later, the blackened ghosts of giant cedars stand in silent witness to the devastation and death that rode the wild winds of August.
In just over 48 horrific hours, starting in the late afternoon of Saturday, August 20th, the raging inferno devoured more than 8 billion board feet of virgin timber on 3 million acres in western Montana and northern Idaho, caused the deaths of 78 firefighters and 8 civilians and decimated 13.5 million dollars of personal property. Other forest fires have been more deadly, but none moved as savagely or swiftly across such a vast timbered wilderness as did the massive fire of 1910.
Accounts of the firestorm mention Edward Stahl, a forester, who wrote of flames that shot hundreds of feet into the night sky “fanned by a tornadic wind so violent that the flames flattened out ahead....swooping to earth in great darting curves, truly a veritable red demon from hell”.
Hurricane velocity winds turned canyons into crematoriums. Of the 86 who perished, 28 or 29 firefighters - history is unclear - attempted to outrun their deaths only to be trapped in a vertical canyon.
Hysterical, in a state of confusion and shock, men fled for their lives, the caustic smoke searing lungs and obstructing vision. The fires, the dense smoke, the intense, blinding heat and the crackling flames were inescapable. Many men, too terrified to face death by fire, took their own lives by gunshot. One man jumped from a burning train. Two firefighters surrendered to their fate and simply walked into the flames as their companions watched in horror from where they had sought refuge in the overhang of a creek bank.
Eyewitness accounts describe the terror experienced by those who fought the 1910 fire and lived to tell about it. One survivor told a newspaper reporter, "The fire turned trees and men into weird torches that exploded like Roman candles".
Excerpts from Ranger Edward Pulaski's accounting of the fire on Placer Creek near Wallace, Idaho. Pulaski was a Ranger on the Coeur d'Alene National Forest in 1910.
His personnel file included this evaluation, written by his boss, Forest Supervisor, W. G. Weigle: "Mr. Pulaski is a man of most excellent judgement; conservative, thoroughly acquainted with the region, having prospected through the region for over twenty five years. He is considered by the old-timers as one of the best and safest men to be placed in charge of a crew of men in the hills".
"True to form, Ranger Pulaski guided his crew through darkness and a raging inferno driven by hurricane-force winds, to the safety of the War Eagle Mine tunnel. In the years following the fire, he was lionized for his heroism, perhaps in part because he was everyone's vision of what a hero ought to took like. He bore a remarkable resemblance to the actor, Gregory Peck, stood six-foot three, had steel-blue eyes, and struck a commanding presence everywhere he went".
"Some crying, some praying" - The mine timbers at the mouth of the tunnel caught fire, so I stood up at the entrance and hung wet blankets over the opening, trying to keep the flames back by filling my hat with water, which fortunately was in the mine, and throwing it on the burning timbers. The men were in a panic of fear, some crying, some praying. Many of them soon became unconscious from the terrible heat, smoke and fire gas ... I, too, finally sank down unconscious. I do not know how long I was in this condition, but it must have been for hours. I remember hearing a man say, 'Come outside, boys, the boss is dead.' I replied, "Like hell he is." I raised myself and felt fresh air circulating through the mine. The men were all becoming conscious. It was five o'clock in the morning... “
"Shoes burned off we had to make our way over burning logs and through smoking debris. When walking failed us we crawled on our hands and knees. How we got down I hardly know. We were in a terrible condition, all of us hurt or burned. I was blind and my hands were burned from trying to keep the fire out of the tunnel. Our shoes were burned off our feet and our clothes were in parched rags... “
Another survivor of the fiery holocaust described the devastation - ”The green, standing forest of yesterday was gone; in its place a charred and smoking mass of melancholy wreckage. The virgin trees, as far as the eye could see, were broken or down, devoid of a single sprig of green. Miles of trees - sturdy, forest giants - were laid prone... Men, who quenched their thirst from small streams, immediately became deathly sick. The clean, pure water running through miles of ashes had become a strong, alkaline solution, polluted by dead fish, killed by the lye. Thereafter we drank only spring water".

Blueprint For Disaster
The winter of 1909-1910 was bitter cold with little snow cover. East bound weather fronts from the Pacific that normally buried the area in tens of feet of snow, instead vented their fury on the Cascades. Only a small percentage of that moisture was carried inland as far as northern Idaho and western Montana. The area received less than a half inch of precipitation from January to June and was the driest in anyone’s memory.
The temperature soared and late evening thunder and lightening storms, bereft of moisture, sparked wildfires across the wilderness. By mid May Glacier National Park was already under siege. Multiple fires broke out across the high county of northern Idaho and northwestern Montana, as men and pack teams rallied to battle the outbreaks. Reports came in daily from the Blackfoot, Cabinet, Clearwater, Flathead, Lolo and Kaniksu forests of new wildfires that swelled to triple their size at a speed faster than a man could move.
In 1910 Timber management was still a new idea in the United States. In 1905 President Theodore Roosevelt established The United States Forest Service to manage the national forests with the goal of providing the county with a consistent supply of quality water and timer. At that time the focus was on conservation and policy mandated that the best way to conserve the timber reserves was to protect them from forest fire.
Although newly formed and inexperienced, the US Forest Service clearly recognized the immediate danger of the situation and recruited thousands of men to fight the ever growing numbers of remote forest fires across the northwestern states.
Prospectors packed up their gear and moved out of the high country, settlers and ranchers buried equipment or removed it from harms way and moved families and animals closer to the river. Town and camp residents up and down the trail were encouraged to relocate to areas of safety in Spokane or Missoula.
As the fire season progressed, so did the number and size of fires that raged across the wilderness. Equipment, experience and manpower were in short supply. Joe Haim, a graduate from Washington State College in 1909, was employed as a surveyor in the Coeur d' Alene National Forest and described the hardships and handicaps faced by the fire fighters. “There were no trails or roads and we had to go in 65 miles to get to the fire when we were first sent out . . . it took more time getting into the country than to put out a small blaze.” Joe Haim reportedly held his terrified crew at gunpoint to keep them from fleeing a fire they could not possibly escape. His decisive and heroic action saved many lives.
The drought continued into the summer and the many inches of rain that annually blessed the area failed to arrive. Hot dry winds wicked moisture from the forest floor, drained creeks and shriveled the usually verdant meadow grasses; crops failed and livestock suffered. All the necessary elements for a catastrophic firestorm were in place.
On August 20th, a fierce cold front spawned hurricane velocity winds that feed fresh oxygen to the many scattered fires. Previously controlled, low intensity fires mushroomed into a gigantic fireball, dormant fires crowned and trees exploded into a blazing inferno several miles wide and hundreds of feet tall. Poisonous smoke blackened the countryside as day instantly turned to darkest night. In Denver, 800 miles away from the epicenter of the firestorm, the temperature dropped 19 degrees in 10 minutes and at 5 PM a roaring wind descended upon Denver, obliterating it with toxic smoke from the fires to the northwest.
Firefighters scattered throughout the forest were caught unaware. Impeded by the intense heat, blinding smoke and hazardous terrain, many were trapped and unable to flee the conflagration. Some survived by crawling into caves or mine shafts or by drenching themselves with water and laying down in creeks and streams. Residents of the small towns fled the area by train or stayed and desperately lit back fires against the terrifying wall of flame racing towards them.
By the morning of August 21st the devastation was evident and mind boggling. Over a third of the town of Wallace, Idaho was incinerated. Nearby Grand Forks lay in ruins. On the other side of the Lookout Pass the towns of DeBorgia, Taft, Haugen and Henderson were destroyed. Dense smoke filled the sky as far east as New York State and south to beyond Denver, Colorado. Sailors navigating in the Pacific reported that they could not see the stars through the smoke veil.
Two days later, on the 23rd, a secondary cold front swept in from the Pacific dropping a deluge of heavy rain. The “Big Burn” was finally extinguished, however not before lives were lost and lives were changed forever by the experience. It will be centuries before a normal forest is restored.




ABOUT THE AUTHOR



Marlene Affeld has a passion for the environment and all things natural. A seasoned traveler, Marlene enjoys sharing her experiences with others. Visit Marlene's site at Nandu Green for Eco-Friendly living options.

Source: Free Articles from ArticlesFactory.com


 






Are you ready for hurricane season?

As hurricane season is upon is, this article helps you find what you need to know to get a hurricane preparedness plan for your firm's IT. Nobody wants to hear about it or think about it, but the fact of the matter is hurricane season is upon us. Hurricane season officially started on June 1st and runs through November 30th in the Atlantic. While risking sounding like a home improvement store commercial, are you prepared for hurricane season?


Hurricane preparedness for your business IT systems consists of a proper disaster recovery plan. A proper disaster recovery plan consists of a tested, functional image based backup system that is rotated or replicated offsite. Most firms have some type of backup in place, but has the backup system been tested? Does anyone in the office really have a plan to get the office back up and running if disaster strikes? These are all very important questions and should be answered as part of your firm’s disaster recovery plan.


A proper test of your firm’s disaster recovery plans involves more than just recovering a file or two and calling your test complete. A full restoration of your image based backup to another physical server is the best way to find out if your backup will truly keep you protected if you need to rebuild at another location. Software suites such as Symantec System Recovery allow you to take the image from your current server and place it onto a new server with different hardware, or in a pinch, one could even restore to a powerful workstation as a temporary solution.

To summarize what was said above, here is what your disaster recovery plan should entail:
  • Image based backup system
  • Offsite rotation or replication of backups
  • Yearly test restore of backups to physically different or spare hardware
  • A detailed plan of action: What to do? Who to call?
  • Multiple office users aware of backup procedures in case someone is unavailable if disaster strikes
Infostream can help guide your firm to a successful disaster recovery plan. If you have any questions at all, please feel free to contact us through our website http://www.infostream.cc or call us at 561.968.0046, as we are here for you!

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Severe Weather: 5 Tips for Coping with Weather Stress



When severe weather hits where we live, there WILL BE weather stress. This stress can lead to irritability, sadness, fear, or even guilt. Here are five tips that might help you, or someone you know, cope more effectively with severe weather stress.


When severe weather is upon us, we experience weather stress. Our bodies go into crisis mode. Adrenaline starts to flow in reaction to the emergency situation. This helps us take action. We seek safety and protect ourselves and our family from the impact of the weather.


It's after things calm down that weather stress begins to turn on us. The adrenaline that helped us during and immediately after the severe weather does not go away. Even as flood waters begin to recede, stress levels often continue to rise. This is when weather stress can be very dangerous.

Unfortunately, we frequently don't realize what's happening. The physical crisis has passed. Therefore, we may ignore our stress. That is, until our normally calm and cool neighbor suddenly blows up in anger, our children begin to have nightmares, or we find ourselves crying on the shoulder of a stranger for no particular reason.


Suddenly, we realize something's not right. We got through the worst of it, but our friends, family and others are still showing symptoms of severe weather stress.


What can we do? Here are some tips that may help you, or people around you, cope more effectively with prolonged weather stress:


** Recognize that people may feel irritable, sad, angry or guilty after a weather disaster.
These feelings are very common! So, be patient with yourself and others. People may not act normally after severe weather hits. Like any crisis, this kind of weather causes emotional trauma. Usually with time, this trauma heals itself. If it doesn't, seek out qualified help for yourself or encourage others to seek it.


** Share your experiences with others.
Getting your feelings out about a weather disaster is very important. It helps you feel more in control and less vulnerable. In addition, sharing what's happened to you and hearing the stories of others, creates a feeling of togetherness in the weather crisis, which keeps you from feeling isolated.


** Take good care of your physical condition.
Stress takes a BIG toll on your body. Eat healthy foods as much as possible. When it's safe, find ways to exercise or get out of your house. Also, remember to relax and rest, even if you've got a lot of cleaning up to do. Taking good care of yourself and your family will help relieve the effects of weather stress.


** Help others in your neighborhood, community and town.
Assisting others in your community is a way to do something positive. When you're involved in helping someone else, you don't have as much time to feel stressed about your own situation. In addition, sharing the work created by a weather disaster reinforces your sense of community.


** Remember to laugh.
However incongruent it may seem to laugh, it's actually good for you during a weather crisis. Laughter is a wonderful stress buster. It has been proven to reduce stress, lower blood pressure, improve the immune system and, in general, make you feel better. So, go ahead and laugh and encourage others to do so too.


Severe weather is a fact of life. When it hits where we live, there WILL BE weather stress. Therefore, as we prepare our homes for severe weather, so too should we prepare ourselves emotionally for the impact of this weather. Recognizing weather stress and taking steps to alleviate it is the best way to keep it from overwhelming us.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sara Healy is a life coach who helps people with life and career transitions using their strengths and values. Find out how she can help you make positive changes in your life by contacting her at: http://www.sarahealy.com


Source: Free Articles from ArticlesFactory.com






Maps Of The Human Mind




The human mind think in pictures and mental maps help us to visualise ideas, concepts and enhance memory and learning.  Like the maps our forefathers use to navigate the oceans and discovery new lands, mental maps help us to think out of the box.


The human brain learns and orientates itself by forming mental maps of familiar places and situations.  Similar to a physical map, these mental maps not only shows the perception of the maker, they form landscapes in their own rights.

“Looking at a map can teach us more with our eyes in an hour than we can learn from our ears in an entire day”.  This valuable insight was expressed in 1605 by the cartographer Thomas Fuller. By looking at a historical map, you will get an idea of how strongly a particular image of the world can determine people’s thoughts and actions.  For many thousands of years, most Europeans believe that the world was flat and therefore had no idea of the real position of the continents and the oceans in relation to one another. This conviction imposed considerable limitations on how far seafarers were willing to travel.   It obviously hindered any endeavours for discovery. This was because people believed that they would fall off the edge of the Earth if they traveled far enough. They had a limited idea of the vast expanse of the oceans and the lands beyond the horizon.

Before sea adventurers could venture into new lands and uncharted seas, a new picture of the earth had to be thought of.  Once this gained gradual acceptance, the speed with which exploration took place took off. Bit by bit, mile by nautical mile, the whole world gradually opened up to explorers and discoverers.  If the Genoese seafarer Christopher Columbus (1451 to 1506) had not had the audacity and vision to imagine that the earth might be round, and that new land might be discovered by sailing westwards,  sea exploration might have been held back by decades or centuries. Later generations of Europeans would have held on to the erroneous opinions that Asia was on the eastern part of the world and cold therefore only be reached by crossing the eastern oceans.

In our modern work life, we often use many expressions that show the significance  of visual pointers for human action. For example, when your company has embarked on a marketing plan, you might say that you can “see what is wrong with our marketing strategy and decide on the next course of action”.  Quite often, it is very difficult to organise an action without having a mental picture of the result you wish to achieve. For example, if you have a problem, the solution to that problem comes easier if you can visualise it.   Then you devise a map to find solution or routes to solve the problem or work around the problem. Similarly, mentalists who to achieve great feats of memory recall use mental maps to train their memory and improve their memory techniques.   Students have also been trained to use mental maps to improve memory, their study skills and accelerate their learning. They do this by breaking down course structure down to subjects, down to topics and down to detailed concepts or formulas, much like the a map of a city or town.

Basically, your mind think in pictures and having such mental paths help anyone from a busy executive, managers or marketing people to plan new campaign or product  strategies. The paths make it easy to link a seemingly unrelated concepts or ideas to a bold new strategy or package an old product into something new using fresh ideas.  With such mental maps, you use your ability to retrace paths in your mind and to store maps to your memory in a manner much more easier than you think.

So like the maritime  maps of old, new frontiers are being discovered by understanding the natural way the brain thinks, stores information and solves problems.  All made possible because mental maps frees the  limitation of conventional human thinking.


Source: Free Articles from ArticlesFactory.com




ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Martin Mak has developed a new program to help people enhance their memory and learning experience.  Find out how with his free and popular ecourse at
http://www.mightymemory.com/memoryarticle.html





Monday, November 12, 2018

Humanization in daily life and religion


Humanization is the giving of human qualities to inanimate objects, animals, forces of nature, and so on. In Greek the concept is called Anthropomorphism, a word that means 'human form'.

In the language of speech and writing, humanization is a kind of common metaphor, designed to create an emotional impression. Examples are: the bosom of the earth, the howl of the wind. It is one of the most characteristic traits of humankind.

In everyday life, thinking about important objects is common as having human qualities. Advances in artificial intelligence can make humanization an even more significant phenomenon. Artificial intelligence greatly increases the humanization threshold of computers. Advanced computers can display specific human behaviors, such as learning from error or expecting to receive certain information. Of course there are also robots that mimic the movements and shape of people. At the same time, many devices are already operating according to instructions in speech.

Humanization of animals has been accepted since the dawn of mankind. There are alternative books and teachings dealing with the comparison between human traits and animal traits. The theme is common in children's books. Examples include: Isofus Proverbs, Animal Farm, Alice in Wonderland, Winnie the Pooh, Wind in the Willows, and so on.

Walt Disney took the theme of comic anthropomorphism and brought it to the center of culture. A central part of the children's time is devoted to watching cartoons, in which animalism is very common. Characters from Mickey Mouse, Kermit the Frog, Bugs Bunny, etc., are for the children a significant imitation heroes.

The pantheon of gods in Greek mythology is entirely of humanized figures: Zeus, Hera, Apollo, Poseidon, Eros, Venus, Mars, and others. Mythology stories are mostly the story of the gods' plots among humans. Below the gods there is a level of demi-gods, which is the result of a pairing between the gods and ordinary human beings, who became human beings with divine attributes, such as Perseus, Hercules, and Psyche.

In the Hindu religion there are many deities, each of which has specific and distinct human characteristics.

The monotheistic religious faith generally considers it wrong to describe the God of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam as human. God is abstract in form and properties. However, it is very difficult for the average person to describe God without an anthropomorphic framework. It should also be noted that the biblical creation story describes God creating man in His image.

Modern geographers are aware that religion can be a starting point for building an ethnic and national identity, and religious ideology and practice have a great influence on location. Immigration processes have also created landscape changes, as there are many immigrant communities defined by religion.
Public places not defined by religion in the recent past, including the city, the neighborhood, the street, the schools, and many domestic spaces, and at the same time parts of the media and the economy, have become areas that combine religious practice in an informal manner. In this way, humanization has, in fact, became the most important driving force in interpersonal communication.




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Rocks in human figure forms are a powerful attraction




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The fox is one of the most beloved animals



Heroes of Walt Disney





Child and robot



Zeus, the head of the gods in Greek mythology 





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God creates man in his image and likeness 
in the fresco in the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel





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Jesus Christ - a person who has become a divinity





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Buddha - a human being who became a deity





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The god of fortune in Chinese culture





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Ganash - a Hindu god with an elephant head and a human body