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Earl Frederick "Spider" Balfour (January 4, 1933 - April 27 2018) was a Canadian NHL hockey player. He was born in Toronto, Ontario.
Balfour served as a forward from 1952 to 1961. He was a defensive forward and penalty-killing expert. Balfour won the Stanley Cup with the 1960-61 Chicago Black Hawks. He also played for the Toronto Maple Leafs. He retired after 288 games, posting 30 goals, 22 assists, 52 points and just 78 penalty minutes.
Balfour died on April 27, 2018 of prostate cancer in Guelph, Ontario, aged 85.
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Here’s your Saturday afternoon list of everything that we’ve posted this week on The Gadgeteer. Click through and browse the list to make sure you didn’t miss a review, article or news on a topic that you like to follow. Have a great weekend!
Reviews
- Logitech K780 multi-device keyboard review
- BEDDI intelligent alarm clock review
- AcuRite PRO+ 5-in-1 Weather Sensor review
- BodyGuardz Pure 2 iPhone 7 Plus aluminosilicate glass screen protector review
- BeanPlus Cold Drip Coffee Brewer review
- Vidbox Video Conversion Suite review
- Rowkin Bit Charge wireless earbuds review
- Square Jellyfish Jelly-Grip car vent mount review
- Pad & Quill Valet Luxury Laptop Bag for MacBook 12 review
Articles
- Julie’s gadget diary – Yes, I ordered a Pixel XL, are you surprised?
- Julie’s gadget diary – Naked or cased?
News
- OWC offers new hot-swappable Drive Dock
- RunPhones and SleepPhones are like workout clothes and pajamas for your ears
- LuDela is a smartphone controlled candle. Yes, that’s a thing
- Panorama photography made easier with the Minisuit 360 rotating tripod
- Free photo prints for life, tiny hex bit tool, minimalist wallets and more – Notable crowdfunding campaigns
- Keep your pocket notebook safe in a Rickshaw Pocket Journal Sleeve
- Just Mobile releases a self-healing iPhone case
- Analog meets digital with SKAGEN smartwatches
- The TERK Trinity XTEND Antenna kills WiFi dead spots and lets you watch network TV for free
- Amazon just added free ebooks, magazines and comics for Prime members
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"Someone Saved My Life Tonight" is a 1975 song by Elton John and is the only single from his ninth studio album Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy. It went to number 2 in Canada, number 4 in the United States, number 13 in New Zealand, number 22 in the United Kingdom and number 54 in Australia. It is autobiographical song and deals with attempted suicide by John.
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Posted on July 25, 2017, by Travis Pulver
It has not been the kind of summer that the Cleveland Cavaliers are going to want to repeat anytime soon. The drama in the front office alone would be enough. Tack on the uncertain direction of the franchise, the inability to find LeBron James some help, that unfortunate and ill-advised sign, and Kyrie Irving’s trade request and it becomes a nightmare scenario.
But then the team announced on Monday that former MVP Derrick Rose would be joining the team. So, maybe there is hope after all?
Via @TheVertical
If it were 2011 the answer would be an emphatic ‘heck yeah!’ That was when Rose was good enough to wrangle the league MVP away from James. A few years and a couple of knee injuries later, however, and it is safe to say he isn’t that guy anymore.
Sign up for a FREE Trial Consultation to start working with Legendary Sports Bettor Jon Price
The Cavaliers know this, of course, which is probably why he is on a one-year, $2.1 million ‘prove it’ deal. Show he deserves more, and they’ll pay him more next year— or someone else will.
He wasn’t bad last season. In 64 games for the New York Knicks, he averaged 18 points, 4.4 assists, and 3.8 rebounds. It was his most productive year since the 2011-12 season when he played in just 39 games due to injuries (21.8 points/7.9 assists/3.4 rebounds).
It’s a low-risk, high-reward kind of deal for the Cavaliers, and possibly a little prophetic in nature as well.
Derrick Rose is a point guard. Kyrie Irving is a point guard. Does this mean the team could seriously be trying to honor Irving’s trade request?
The Cavs front office must hate the idea of giving him up, but they could easily demand a boatload of prospects and draft picks for him. With the possibility James may leave in the near future, an infusion of young talent and a handful of draft picks could help the team reload.
Irving is already one of the best point guards in the game, and he’s only 25. So, yeah—they can demand a ton in trade for him if they want to.
But if they let him go, they need someone that can step in and pick up the slack. The old Derrick Rose could do it easily. Can the current edition of him? Maybe. Maybe not. After tearing the meniscus in his left knee, he had to have knee surgery again.
Via @NBCSports
His health shouldn’t be an issue though since he had to pass a physical before the Cavs would agree to sign him.
It will be interesting to see if Rose can recapture some of that old magic he had back in his early days in Chicago. James has helped a lot of guys look better than they are over the years. Maybe with his help, Rose can become that guy again.
If the Cavs don’t end up trading Irving, signing Rose gives them some much-needed depth. Could he be enough to put the Cavaliers on par with the Golden State Warriors? Probably not—but he would certainly help make things more interesting.
Recent Comments
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The shot put event at the 1930 Women's World Games was held in Prague at the Letna Stadium on 6 September 1930.
Entrants
In August 1930 entrants were published of the athletes of 5 nations: the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, Italy and Great Britain. Listed below are the athletes from these nations who were entered for the shot put event.
Results
Final
The final took place on 6 September.
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IMDb Launches Streaming Service, Freedive
No longer satisfied to be the internet’s number one destination for people who want to try to remember who that one dude with that weird beard was in that one movie, IMDb is branching out into movie and TV streaming, launching a free, ad-supporting service called Freedive. It’s up and running right now at IMDb.com/freedive.
The site is described as “a free, ad-supported streaming video channel available in the United States on the IMDb website via laptop or personal computer and on all Amazon Fire TV devices.” If you’re not in the U.S. and you don’t have a PC (or a Fire TV) you are out of luck. If a film is on Freedive, you’ll find an option to watch it there on its IMDb page.
Browsing the options available at launch, they are slim but not terrible. A few of the early highlights are Memento, Gattaca, True Romance, Drive, Panic Room, Adaptation., Last Action Hero, and the immortal action classic Miami Connection. There are also some IMDb originals and television shows as well, including Quantum Leap, Kitchen Nightmares, Fringe, and The Bachelor.
It’s a decent start, but the success of Freedive will depend on how committed IMDb (and Amazon, the site’s parent company) is to keeping it going and building it up. Certainly the demise of Filmstruck and the state of Netflix leaves a space for someone with a really good catalogue of classic movies to carve out an audience.
Gallery — VHS Tapes Still Available on Amazon:
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Year 1710 (MDCCX) was a year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar.
Events
Beijing becomes the largest city in the world.
April 10 - The world's first copyright legislation became effective, Britain's Statute of Anne.
June - Swiss and Palatine German Protestants under the leadership of Christoph von Graffenried travel to Bath County in the Province of Carolina. The settlers displace the native town of Chattoka and found New Bern, named for von Graffenried's hometown of Berne, Switzerland.
June 8 - The Tuscarora nation sends a petition to the Province of Pennsylvania protesting the seizure of their lands and enslavement of their people by citizens of the Province of Carolina.
October 10 - Estonia is annexed by Russia.
Births
January 3 - Richard Gridley, American Revolutionary soldier (died 1796)
January 4 - Giovanni Battista Pergolesi, Italian composer (died 1736)
February 15 - King Louis XV of France (died 1774)
April 15 - William Cullen, Scottish physician and chemist (died 1790)
April 17 - Henry Erskine, 10th Earl of Buchan, British Freemason (died 1767)
April 25 - James Ferguson, Scottish astronomer (died 1776)
April 26 - Thomas Reid, Scottish philosopher (died 1796)
April 30 - Johann Kaspar Basselet von La Rosee, Bavarian general (died 1795)
May 14 - King Adolf Frederick of Sweden (died 1771)
May 16 - William Talbot, 1st Earl Talbot, English politician (died 1782)
June 10 - James Short, Scottish mathematician and optician (died 1768)
July 21 - Paul Mohring, German physician and scientist (died 1792)
August 20 - Thomas Simpson, British mathematician (died 1761)
September 3 - Abraham Trembley, Swiss naturalist (died 1784)
September 30 - John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford, British statesman (d. 1771)
October 12 - Jonathan Trumbull, Governor of the Colony and the state of Connecticut (died 1785)
October 16 - Andreas Hadik, Austro-Hungarian general (died 1790)
October 24 - Alban Butler, English Catholic priest and writer (died 1773)
November 8 - Sarah Fielding, English writer (died 1768)
November 10 - Adam Gottlob Moltke, Danish statesman (died 1792)
November 13 - Charles Simon Favart, French dramatist (died 1792)
November 22 - Wilhelm Friedemann Bach, German composer (died 1784)
November 27 - Robert Lowth, English bishop and amateur grammarian (died 1787)
December 2 - Bertinazzi, Italian actor and writer (died 1783)
Deaths
January 16 - Emperor Higashiyama of Japan (born 1675)
January 21 - Johann Georg Gichtel, German mystic (born 1638)
February 16 - Esprit Flechier, French writer and Bishop of Nimes (born 1632)
March 4 - Louis III, Prince of Conde (born 1668)
April 28 - Thomas Betterton, English actor (born c.1635)
June 1 - David Mitchell, British admiral (born 1642)
September 19 - Ole Romer, Danish astronomer (born 1644)
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FLANGED by Heather Luke | Jun 14, 2015 A flange is an external rim added for strength and to provide a fixing position. Here it’s used to describe a cord which has a flat piece of tape attached along the length, enabling it to be stitched into a seam like a piping cord.
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The joule per mole (symbol: J*mole-1 or J/mol) is an SI derived unit of energy per amount of material. Energy is measured in joules, and the amount of material is measured in moles. In other words, joule per mole is a unit for how much energy is in a certain amount of matter.
SI derived units
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This documentary includes news video footage that we watched live, and much that was recorded by people and surveillance cameras all over Eastern Japan. The scientists explain the enormous tectonic forces that caused the earthquake and tsunamis, and the effects on the land and people.
The earthquake that shook my house caused a deafening roar in my neighbourhood, things fell and broke around me, and I heard the neighbours screaming. I held the doorframe because the violent shaking made it hard to stand up. People ask me how long the shake was. I had no idea of time. We experienced five minutes of violence according to the seismic data.
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Fiji Hindi or Fiji Urdu is an Indo-Aryan language which is the mother tongue of 313,000 people of Indian and Pakistani origin in Fiji.
This language is very different from the standard Hindi spoken in India and the relationship between the two languages are similar to those between Dutch and Afrikaans. The language is composed of the Eastern Hindi dialects (Bhojpuri and Awadhi) with numerous English and Fijian words. It is spoken with a Pacific twang.
In recent times, due to the political upheaval in Fiji, large numbers of Fiji Indians have migrated to Australia, New Zealand, United States and Canada, taking the Fiji Hindi language with them.
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A black operation (black op for short) is a covert operation which is done by a government or military. Black operations are secret and whoever does them does not admit that they ever happened. There are differences between black operations and ones which are just secret. The main difference is that a black operation often uses deception. This deception might be not telling anybody who did the operation. It might also be blaming the operation on someone else ("false flag" operations).
One example of a black operation is a "black bag operation". A black bag operation is when agents or soldiers secretly go into buildings and collect intelligence. It is known that the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Central Intelligence Agency, Mossad, MI6 and other intelligence services have done operations like these.
Where the word comes from
The word "black" can be used for any secret action done by a government. For example, some militaries and intelligence services have classified "black budgets" to carry out black operations. Almost all details about this budget is hidden from the public.
Examples of black operations
In 2007, the Central Intelligence Agency declassified some secret records. In these records, it was found that CIA had illegally spied on people in the United States. It had also planned assassinations, kidnapping and other black operations.
In May 2007 ABC News and the Daily Telegraph said that United States president George W. Bush let CIA do "black operations" in Iran. These operations tried to change the Iranian Government's regime. They also sabotaged Iran's nuclear program.
Related pages
Covert operation
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Property Attributes
- MLS#T3235018
- TypeSingle Family
- CountyPOLK
- CityLakeland
- AreaLakeland
- Zip33801
- StyleUnimproved Land
- Year Built1900
- Taxes153
- Price$ 2,480,000
- Bedrooms0
- Full Bathrooms0
- Half Bathrooms0
- Lot Size9.67 Acres
Listing Provided Courtesy Of:
KELLER WILLIAMS TAMPA PROP.
Data Source:
Stellar MLS
Property Description
This clean and vacant parcel with "RAIL ADVANTAGE" is primed for development in the fast growing area of Lakeland, FL. This is the perfect opportunity to purchase roughly 10 acres of developable land in one of the highest growing Commercial and Industrial markets in the entire country. This clean parcel is the perfect candidate for manufacturing, industrial, and other uses related to C-3 Zoning. The property abuts on US Highway 92 and Reynolds Road. According to County tax records the property totals 9.67 acres MOL with 591’+/- of frontage on US Highway 92. US Highway 92 East and West traffic count shows approximately 35,500 cars/trucks per day. Reynolds Road frontage is approximately 551’ +/- and North and South traffic count shows approximately 9,700 cars/trucks per day.
General Features
Exterior Features
Amenities
- Foreclosure
- Views
- Short Sale
- New Construction
- Adult 55+
- Lease To Own
- No HOA Fees
- Furnished
- Master On Main
- Air Conditioning
- Seller Finance
- Green
- Fixer Upper
- Horse
- Golf
- Fireplace
- Deck
- Garage
- Basement
- Pool
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Jean-Claude Gret was a racing cyclist from Switzerland. He was born on 21 October 1930 and died on 10 July 2001. Gret became the Swiss National Road Race champion in 1958.
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The Land on College Avenue
Nathan Tufts Park, a site of national significance, lies steps from the museum.
Its centerpiece is an unusual stone tower dating back to the early eighteenth century. First used as a windmill to grind grain into flour, it became the property of the Province of Massachusetts in 1747. The utilitarian structure became a storage depot for gunpowder. In 1774, British troops seized the magazine-- and the two hundred barrels of gunpowder within-- propelling local citizen soldiers to take up arms against the mother country. Within months the Continental Army had reclaimed and restocked the former mill, a move critical to the 1775-76 siege of Boston. Time passed, and hostilities became a distant memory. By 1836 the Commonwealth had no practical use for a powder magazine and the surrounding farm land.
The State auctioned off the site to Charlestown's prominent Tufts family.
The close-knit group of kinsmen paid slightly over three hundred dollars for the antique building and surrounding land. Four years later, yeoman farmer Nathan Tufts bought out his relatives for one third of the original cost. His purchase, termed the Powder House Farm, embraced an area stretching from Willow Avenue to today's College Avenue-- then called Elm Street. In 1842, this tract was among other large parcels that made up the four square miles of an independent new town: Somerville.
After Farmer Tufts passed away, his heirs donated the tower and immediate land to the City.
They stipulated that the area be set aside as the Nathan Tufts Park. The heirs surveyed the rest of the farm in 1891 with the objective of selling land to families who wanted to move into the up-and-coming neighborhood of West Somerville. They divided the property into two hundred house lots and put them on the market. After passing through several owners, Lot Number 198 would eventually become the site of the Museum.
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Shutesbury is a town in Franklin County, Massachusetts, United States.
Towns in Massachusetts
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Haripur District is a district in the Hazara Division of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan. The city of Haripur is the capital.
Districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
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Music: ROOT “Pisen pro Satana”
Cameras: Abraham Videoproyectos y Pablo Catillo
Edit: Videoproyectos.com
INFERNAL CHRONICLE RAMP 2014
After what felt like a long time, finally the day came for Infernal Ramp 2014. The day was awesome, skaters and supporters came down to experience the exhilarating vibe that permeates here, year after year; listening to the great music and sharing the thrills that this event holds. Even more so with this year’s unique concept called, “Grind to Grind” kicking off this year’s competition, adding an element of D.I.Y. pushing the skating limits further, by adding an area to grind on, trucks vs trucks. A new element in keeping with our radical skate ethos, the trucks grind along trucks. We skated until we destroyed it, we gave ‘Grind to Grind’ it’s due. SKATE AND DISTROY. Everyone wanted to try it, building the tension of Infernal Ramp making it even more dynamic by pushing the boundaries even further.
After the incredible experience of skating the ‘Grind to Grind’, we were all amped for the skating competition to begin, this encouraged the skaters to skate their best, riding on the hype of the supporters, the music was hardcore and the atmosphere was – euphoric. We knew we were experiencing a new sensation. Infernal Ramp was alive.
After getting a feel of the ramp, the skating rounds began. Ignacio Morata and Carlos Neira delighted us with their tricks we had never seen before. While young, Estorbi, José Manuel Macías (Paleta), faced the giant barrier for the first time. Moski was skating and heating up the croud with the ‘dagger’ style. Tony Guerrero, Infernal Ramps 2013 champion didn’t disappoint us with his amazing session of tricks and his radical style.
With myself, Germán Periñán, I was between announcing the event and skating hard. It was non-stop and I thoroughly enjoyed the day that I’d been working on to make happen, Infernal Ramp is my passion, I enjoy creating a unique and radical element year after year. As the sun set on the horizon and we went into the final round – the air was explosive, it was an incredible ultimate round, we witnessed tricks that we had never believed possible to even imagine on the ramp.
The prize giving was dynamic as we announced the winners for 2014, the trophies themselves keeping within the Infernal Ramp’s innovation.
Infernal Ramp would like to give special thanks to Confusion Magazine, Hoax, Black Label, Consolidated, Faction Skateboards, Globe, Skate Mafia, Imagine, Session Distribution, Filament, Ola Skateshop, 360 Skateshop, Maple skateshop and The Council of Puerto de Santa Maria.
Infernal Greetings.
Additional photos: Anibal Dang3r
Results:
1st Prize: Ignacio Morata
2nd Prize: Carlos Neira
3rd Prize: Figue
Music: ROOT “Pisen pro Satana”
Cameras: Abraham Videoproyectos y Pablo Catillo
Edit: Videoproyectos.com>
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This is a list of accidents and incidents involving commercial aircraft from 1990 to 2021.
1990
January 4 - Northwest Airlines Flight 5, a Boeing 727 with 145 on board, loses an engine over Madison, Florida, the aircraft makes an emergency landing at Tampa International Airport, all on board survive.
January 16 - SANSA Flight 32, crashes into a mountain just after takeoff from Juan Santamaria International Airport in San Jose, Costa Rica, killing all 20 passengers and 3 crew on board.
January 25 - Avianca Flight 52, a Boeing 707, runs out of fuel and crashes while attempting to land at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York; of the 158 people on board, 85 survive.
February 14 - Indian Airlines Flight 605, an Airbus A320, crashes on its final approach to Bangalore Airport. 92 out of 146 people on board are killed.
April 9 - Atlantic Southeast Airlines Flight 2254, an Embraer EMB 120 Brasilia, collides with a Cessna 172, killing all 2 on board. Flight 2254 lands; all 7 on board survive.
April 12 - Wideroe Flight 839, a DHC-6 Twin Otter, crashes into water just after takeoff from Vaeroy Airport, killing all 5 people on board.
May 11 - Philippine Airlines Flight 143, a Boeing 737, explodes and burns on the ground at Ninoy Aquino International Airport, killing 8 of 120 on board.
June 10 - British Airways Flight 5390, a BAC One-Eleven, suffers explosive decompression over Didcot, Oxfordshire, England, when one of the front windscreen panes blows out. The captain is partially blown out of the cockpit, but a flight attendant manages to keep the unconscious man from falling out of the aircraft. The first officer lands the aircraft safely at Southampton Airport. All on board survive.
October 2 - In the Guangzhou Baiyun airport collisions, a hijacked Boeing 737 operating Xiamen Airlines Flight 8301 clips China Southwest Airlines Flight 2402, a Boeing 707, during landing at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport, and collides with China Southern Airlines Flight 2812, a Boeing 757; of the 225 occupants on board the three aircraft, 128 die.
November 14 - Alitalia Flight 404, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, crashes on approach to Zurich Airport, Switzerland, killing all 46 people on board.
December 3 - Northwest Airlines Flight 1482, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, collides with Northwest Airlines Flight 299, a Boeing 727, when the crew of the DC-9 mistakenly taxies onto the active runway at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport; 8 of the 54 people on board the DC-9 are killed; all 154 people on board the Boeing 727 survive.
1991
February 1 - USAir Flight 1493, a Boeing 737, is landing at Los Angeles International Airport when it strikes SkyWest Airlines Flight 5569, a Fairchild Metro commuter plane, waiting to take off from the same runway. All 12 people aboard the Metro and 21 of the 89 on the Boeing are killed at the time, and two more from the Boeing die 3 days and 31 days after the crash.
March 3 - United Airlines Flight 585, a Boeing 737, crashes while attempting to land at Colorado Springs Airport, Colorado, killing all 25 people on board. The cause of the crash is not identified until the investigation into the crash of USAir Flight 427 in 1994; both crashes are eventually attributed to defects in a valve associated with the rudder.
March 26 - Singapore Airlines Flight 117, an Airbus A310, is hijacked by Pakistani militants en route to Singapore Changi Airport, where, upon landing, it is stormed by Singapore Special Operations forces. All of the hijackers are killed in the operation, with no fatalities among the passengers and crew.
April 5 - Atlantic Southeast Airlines Flight 2311, an Embraer EMB 120RT, rolls sharply and crashes on final approach to Brunswick, Georgia, killing all 23 people on board.
May 26 - Lauda Air Flight 004, a Boeing 767, disintegrates in mid-air over Uthai Thani Province and Suphan Buri Province, Thailand, killing all 223 people on board. A thrust reverser had accidentally deployed in flight, causing the disaster. It is the first fatal crash of a Boeing 767.
July 10 - L'Express Airlines Flight 508, a Beechcraft Model 99, crashes while on approach Birmingham Municipal Airport, Alabama, due to severe thunderstorms, killing 13 people on board.
July 11 - Nigeria Airways Flight 2120, a Nationair McDonnell Douglas DC-8 chartered by Nigeria Airways to transport Nigerian pilgrims to Mecca, crashes shortly after takeoff from King Abdulaziz International Airport, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, because of a fire caused by tire failure. All 261 on board die, including 14 Canadian crew members.
August 16 - Indian Airlines Flight 257, a Boeing 737, hits high ground during descent about 30 km from the Imphal airport. All six crew members and 63 passengers are killed.
September 11 - Continental Express Flight 2574, an Embraer EMB 120RT, crashes on descent in Eagle Lake, Texas, killing all 14 people on board. Maintenance crews traded work shifts during repairs to the horizontal stabilizer, inadvertently leaving 47 bolts missing. Reformers pointed to this error and called for development of a "safety culture".
December 27 - Both engines of Scandinavian Airlines Flight 751, a McDonnell Douglas MD-81, surge shortly after takeoff from Stockholm Arlanda Airport. The pilots successfully make an emergency landing in a nearby field, injuring 25 passengers but incurring not a single fatality.
December 29 - China Airlines Flight 358, a Boeing 747 freighter, suffers double engine separation and crashes into a hill near Wanli, Taipei, Taiwan, killing all five crew on board.
1992
January 20 - Air Inter Flight 148, an Airbus A320, crashes in the Vosges Mountains on approach to Strasbourg, France, killing 87 of 96 people on board.
March 22 - USAir Flight 405, a Fokker F-28, crashes on takeoff from New York because of ice buildup. Twenty-seven of the 51 people on board are killed.
June 6 - Copa Airlines Flight 201, a Boeing 737-200 Advanced, crashes near Darien, Panama, killing all 47 passengers and crew on board; a faulty attitude indicator is the cause.
July 24 - Mandala Airlines Flight 660, a Vickers Viscount 816, crashes on approach to Pattimura Airport, Ambon, Indonesia, killing all 7 crew and 63 passengers on board.
July 30 - TWA Flight 843 aborts takeoff at John F. Kennedy International Airport. The Lockheed L-1011 turns off the runway onto grass in order to avoid striking a concrete barrier. The plane is destroyed by fire shortly after all 292 passengers and crew evacuate with no loss of life.
July 31 - Thai Airways International Flight 311, an Airbus A310, crashes on approach into Kathmandu, Nepal, killing all 14 crew and 99 passengers on board.
July 31 - China General Aviation Flight 7552, a Yakovlev 42D, loses control just after takeoff from Nanjing Airport and crashes into a pond; 108 of 126 on board die.
September 28 - Pakistan International Airlines Flight 268, an Airbus A300, crashes near Kathmandu, Nepal, killing all 12 crew and 155 passengers.
October 4 - El Al Flight 1862, a Boeing 747, freighter, crashes into high-rise apartment buildings in Amsterdam after two of its engines detach from the wing. Forty-three people, including the plane's crew of 3, are killed.
October 18- Merpati Nusantara Airlines Flight 5601, a CASA/IPTN CN-235, crashes into Mount Papandayan near the town Garut in Indonesia. All 31 passengers and crew on board are killed.
November 14- Vietnam Airlines Flight 474, a Yakovlev Yak-40, crashes while on approach to Nha Trang Airport in a tropical storm. Thirty people on board are killed.
November 24 - China Southern Airlines Flight 3943, a Boeing 737-300, crashes on descent to Guilin Airport, killing all 141 aboard.
December 21 - Martinair Flight 495 crashes in Faro, Portugal, killing 54 people and injuring 106.
December 22 - Libyan Arab Airlines Flight 1103, a Boeing 727, collides with a Libyan Air Force MiG-23 near Tripoli International Airport, killing all 159 on board both aircraft.
1993
January 6 - Lufthansa CityLine Flight 5634, a de Havilland Canada DHC-8, crashes short of the runway at Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport, killing 4 of 23 on board.
February 8 - In the 1993 Tehran mid-air collision, an Iran Air Tours Tupolev Tu-154 collides in mid-air with an Iranian Air Force Sukhoi Su-24, killing all 133 on board both aircraft.
February 11 - Lufthansa Flight 592, an Airbus A310 was hijacked and forced the pilot to fly to John F. Kennedy International Airport. Plane landed safely and the man surrendered. All 104 on board survived.
March 5 - Palair Macedonian Airlines Flight 301, a Fokker 100, crashes shortly after takeoff from Skopje Airport in Macedonia; 83 of the 97 passengers and crew on board are killed.
April 6 - China Eastern Airlines Flight 583, a McDonnell Douglas MD-11, makes an emergency landing at Shemya Air Force Base after the slats are accidentally deployed in mid-air near the Aleutian Islands; all on board initially survive, but two die later.
April 18 - Japan Air System Flight 451, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, encounters windshear and skids off the runway at Hanamaki Airport; all on board survive.
April 26 - Indian Airlines Flight 491, a Boeing 737, strikes a large vehicle on a road just outside Aurangabad Airport, killing 55 of the 118 people on board.
May 19 - SAM Colombia Flight 501, a Boeing 727, crashes into Mount Paramo Frontino, killing all 132 on board.
July 1 - Merpati Nusantara Airlines Flight 724, a Fokker F27, collided with a small hill before the sea, broke up and plunged into the sea shortly after. 41 people were killed in the crash.
July 23 - China Northwest Airlines Flight 2119, a BAe 146, overruns the runway at Yinchuan Hedong Airport, Ningxia, China after an aborted takeoff; the aircraft crashes into a lake, killing 54 passengers and 1 crew member.
July 26 - Asiana Airlines Flight 733, a Boeing 737, crashes into a mountain in Haenam, South Korea, after failed landing attempts, killing 78 of the 110 people on board; this crash is the first loss of a Boeing 737-500.
August 28 - A Tajik Air Yakovlev Yak-40 overruns the runway on takeoff from Khorog Airport and crashes due to severe overloading, killing 82 of 86 on board; the accident is the deadliest involving the Yak-40 as well as the deadliest accident in Tajikistan to date.
September 14 - Lufthansa Flight 2904, an Airbus A320, crashes after overrunning the runway in Warsaw, Poland, killing 2 and injuring 68 of the 72 people on board.
September 21 - In the first of the three Transair Georgia airliner shootdowns, a Tupolev Tu-134A is hit on approach to Sukhumi-Babusheri Airport by a surface-to-air missile; the plane crashes into the Black Sea, killing all five crew members and all 22 passengers.
September 22 - In the second of the three Transair Georgia airliner shootdowns, a Tupolev Tu-154, carrying soldiers from Tbilisi, is shot down on landing in the Sukhumi-Babusheri Airport; the plane crashes on the runway and catches fire, killing 108 of the 132 people on board.
October 26 - China Eastern Airlines Flight 5398, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82, overruns the runway at Fuzhou Changle International Airport in heavy weather, killing 2 of 80 on board.
October 27 - Wideroe Flight 744, a de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter, crashes in Overhalla, Norway, on approach to Namsos Airport, killing both pilots and four passengers; the crash is also known as the Namsos Accident.
November 4 - China Airlines Flight 605, a Boeing 747-400, overruns Kai Tak Airport's runway 13 on landing during a typhoon; the aircraft is unable to stop before crashing into Hong Kong harbor; all 374 on board escape safely; this crash is the first loss of a Boeing 747-400.
November 13 - China Northern Airlines Flight 6901, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82, crashes on approach to Urumqi Diwopu International Airport, Xinjiang, China; killing 12 of the 102 on board; pilot error is blamed.
November 20 - Avioimpex Flight 110, a Yakovlev Yak-42, crashes on approach to Ohrid Airport in Macedonia; all 116 passengers and crew die as a result of the crash, though one passenger did live for 11 days before succumbing to his injuries.
December 1 - Northwest Airlink Flight 5719, a Jetstream 31, crashes into two ridges east of Hibbing, Minnesota, killing all 18 on board.
1994
January 3 - Baikal Airlines Flight 130, a Tupolev Tu-154, loses control and crashes near Irkutsk, Russia, after the hydraulic system failed due to an engine fire, killing all 124 on board and one person on the ground.
March 23 - Aeroflot Flight 593, an Airbus A310, crashes into a wooded hillside in Siberia. All 75 passengers and crew are killed.
April 4 - KLM Cityhopper Flight 433, a Saab 340, crashes while trying to return to Schiphol Airport, due to pilot error and equipment failure; the pilot and two passengers die, nine passengers are injured.
April 7 - Federal Express Flight 705, a McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30, experiences an attempted hijacking by a FedEx employee; the three crew members are severely injured, but manage to subdue the attacker and land the aircraft safely with no loss of life.
April 26 - China Airlines Flight 140, an Airbus A300, crashes while landing at Nagoya, Japan, as a result of pilot error. 264 of the 271 people on board die.
June 6 - China Northwest Airlines Flight 2303, a Tupolev Tu-154M, breaks up in mid-air and crashes near Xian, China, killing all 160 on board. The deadliest airplane crash ever to occur in China is attributed to a maintenance error.
July 2 - USAir Flight 1016, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, crashes while attempting to land at Charlotte, North Carolina, during a thunderstorm. 37 of the 51 people on board are killed.
July 19 - Alas Chiricanas Flight 901, an Embraer EMB-110, explodes in mid-air over Panama, killing all 21 people on board. Investigators conclude that a suicide bomber caused the plane to explode, although motives and affiliation of the bomber remain unclear.
August 21 - Royal Air Maroc Flight 630, an ATR-42, is deliberately crashed into the Atlas Mountains, killing all 44 on board.
September 8 - USAir Flight 427, a Boeing 737, crashes while attempting to land at Pittsburgh International Airport, killing all 132 people on board. Investigations showed that a fault in the Boeing 737 rudder was to blame for the crash.
October 12 - Iran Aseman Airlines Flight 746, a Fokker F-28, crashes into a mountain near Natanz, Iran, due to double engine failure, killing all 66 on board.
October 31 - American Eagle Flight 4184, an ATR 72 turboprop, crashes near Roselawn, Indiana, while waiting to land at Chicago, because of ice buildup on its wings. All 68 people on board die.
November 22 - TWA Flight 427, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82, collides with a Superior Aviation Cessna 441 on the runway at Lambert-St. Louis International Airport, killing the pilot and passenger in the Cessna; there are no fatalities on board the MD-82.
December 11 - A bomb explodes on board Philippine Airlines Flight 434, a Boeing 747, killing one passenger, in a prelude to the terrorist Bojinka plot. Despite subsequent difficulties in controlling the aircraft, the crew succeeds in making an emergency landing at Naha, Okinawa.
December 21 - Air Algerie Flight 702P, a Boeing 737, crashes on approach to Coventry Airport, England, killing all 5 on board.
December 24 - Air France Flight 8969, an Airbus A300, is hijacked on the tarmac at Algiers, Algeria, by the militant group GIA. After a two-day standoff, the plane is allowed to fly to Marseille, France, where it is stormed by French commandos who kill the hijackers.
December 29 - Turkish Airlines Flight 278, a Boeing 737-400, crashes on final approach to Van Ferit Melen Airport in eastern Turkey in driving snow. Five of the seven crew and 52 of the 69 passengers are killed.
1995
January 11 - Intercontinental de Aviacion Flight 256, a Douglas DC-9, crashes in a lagoon near Maria La Baja, Colombia due to an improperly set altitmeter, killing 51 of 52 on board.
January 19 - Bristow Flight 56C, a Eurocopter Super Puma, is struck by lightning and is forced to make an emergency landing in the North Sea; all 18 on board survive.
March 31 - TAROM Flight 371, an Airbus A310, crashes near Balotesti, Romania due to mechanical failure and pilot error, killing all 60 on board.
June 9 - Ansett New Zealand Flight 703, a de Havilland Canada DHC-8, crashes during a landing approach near the Tararua Ranges, New Zealand, killing four of the 21 people on board.
August 9 - Aviateca Flight 901, a Boeing 737, crashes into San Vicente volcano while on approach to Cuscatlan International Airport; all 65 on board die.
August 21 - Atlantic Southeast Airlines Flight 529, an Embraer EMB 120, crashes in a field near Carrollton, Georgia, United States, killing 9 of the 29 people on board.
September 15 - Malaysia Airlines Flight 2133, a Fokker 50, crashes into a shantytown in Malaysia due to pilot error, killing 34 of 53 on board.
November 12 - American Airlines Flight 1572, a McDonnell Douglas MD-83, sheared off treetops on approach, trees ingested into the engine causing them to flame out and shutdown. The aircraft impacted the runway antenna equipment before rolling to a stop. There was 1 minor injury of the 78 people on board.
November 13 - Nigeria Airways Flight 357, a Boeing 737, overruns the runway while landing at Kaduna Airport, killing 11 of 138 on board.
December 3 - Cameroon Airlines Flight 3701, a Boeing 737, loses control and crashes while on approach to Douala International Airport, Cameroon; of the 76 on board, 5 survive.
December 5 - Azerbaijan Airlines Flight 56, a Tupolev Tu-134, crashes on climbout from Nakhchivan Airport after an engine fails due to improper maintenance, killing 52 of 82 on board.
December 7 - In the 1995 Air St. Martin Beech 1900 crash, a Beechcraft 1900D crashes near Belle-Anse, Haiti, killing all 20 people on board.
December 13 - Banat Air Flight 166, a Romavia Antonov An-24, crashes after taking off from Verona Airport, because of overloading and ice accumulation on the wings; all 49 people on board are killed.
December 18 - In the 1995 Trans Service Airlift Electra crash, a Lockheed L-188 Electra crashes shortly after takeoff from Jamba, Angola, due to overloading and shifting baggage; of the 144 people on board, only 3 survive.
December 20 - American Airlines Flight 965, a Boeing 757, crashes into a mountain while approaching Alfonso Bonilla Aragon International Airport in Palmira, Colombia, killing 159 of 163 on board.
1996
January 8 - 1996 Air Africa crash, an overloaded Antonov An-32 aborts takeoff and overruns into a market in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, killing 237 people on the ground.
February 6 - Birgenair Flight 301, a Boeing 757, with 189 people on board, crashes into the ocean off Puerto Plata in the Dominican Republic shortly after taking off. All passengers and crew are killed.
February 29 - Faucett Flight 251, a Boeing 737, crashes into a hill while attempting to land at Arequipa, Peru. All 123 people on board die.
May 11 - ValuJet Flight 592, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, crashes in the Everglades near Miami, Florida, because of a fire in its cargo hold. All 110 people on board are killed.
June 9 - Eastwind Airlines Flight 517, a Boeing 737-200, loses rudder control while on approach to Richmond International Airport, Richmond, Virginia, and makes an emergency landing; no fatalities.
June 13 - Garuda Indonesia Flight 865, a McDonnell Douglas DC-10, aborts takeoff due to an engine failure and crashes into a threshold at Fukuoka Airport, Fukuoka, Japan, killing three of 275 on board.
July 6 - Delta Air Lines Flight 1288, a McDonnell Douglas MD-88, experiences an uncontained engine failure during takeoff on Runway 17 at Pensacola, Florida. Fragments from the number one (left) Pratt & Whitney JT8D-219 turbofan engine penetrated the fuselage, killing two and seriously injuring one of the 148 people on board.
July 17 - TWA Flight 800, a Boeing 747, explodes in mid-air above the ocean off East Moriches, New York, killing all 230 people on board.
August 19 - Spair Airlines Flight PAR-3601, an Ilyushin Il-76, crashes near Belgrade, Yugoslavia, with twelve fatalities.
August 29 - Vnukovo Airlines Flight 2801, a Tupolev Tu-154, crashes into a mountain on Spitsbergen, an island in the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard, killing all 141 on board.
October 2 - Aeroperu Flight 603, a Boeing 757, crashes into the ocean off Pasamayo, Peru, because of a maintenance error. All 70 people on board are killed.
October 31 - TAM Transportes Aereos Regionais Flight 402, a Fokker 100, crashes shortly after takeoff from Congonhas-Sao Paulo Airport, Brazil, striking an apartment building and several houses. All 90 passengers and 6 crew members on board die. Three people are killed on the ground.
November 7 - ADC Airlines Flight 86, a Boeing 727, crashes when the crew loses control of the aircraft while avoiding a mid-air collision on approach to Lagos, Nigeria. All 153 passengers and crew on board are killed.
November 12 - Charkhi Dadri mid-air collision: Saudi Arabian Airlines Flight 763, a Boeing 747, collides in mid-air with Air Kazakhstan Flight 1907, an Ilyushin Il-76, near Charkhi Dadri, India. All 312 on board the Boeing 747 and all 37 on board the Ilyushin Il-76 are killed. It is the deadliest mid-air collision in aviation history.
November 19 - United Express Flight 5925, a Beechcraft 1900, collides with a privately owned Beechcraft King Air at Quincy Regional Airport, Illinois; killing all 14 on board both aircraft.
November 23 - Ethiopian Airlines Flight 961, a Boeing 767, is hijacked over Kenya. The aircraft runs out of fuel, and the pilot attempts to ditch the aircraft in the ocean off Moroni, Comoros. Of the 175 people on board, 125 are killed (including the 3 hijackers).
1997
January 9 - Comair Flight 3272, an Embraer EMB 120 Brasilia, crashes near Ida, Michigan, during a snowstorm, killing all 29 on board.
March 18 - Stavropolskaya Aktsionernaya Avia Flight 1023, an Antonov An-24, breaks up in flight and crashes near Cherkessk, Russia; all 50 on board die.
May 8 - China Southern Airlines Flight 3456, a Boeing 737, makes a hard landing in Shenzhen, China, during poor weather and crashes, killing 35 of the 74 people on board.
July 31 - FedEx Express Flight 14, a McDonnell Douglas MD-11, crashes upon landing at Newark Liberty International Airport; the two crew members and three passengers escape uninjured.
July 17 - Sempati Air Flight 304, a Fokker F27, crashes shortly after take off from Husein Sastranegara International Airport. 28 people were killed.
August 6 - Korean Air Flight 801, a Boeing 747, crashes while attempting to land in heavy rain at Guam International Airport; of the 254 people on board, only 26 survive.
August 10 - Formosa Airlines Flight 7601, a Dornier Do 228, crashes while attempting to land at Beigan, Lienchiang, in the Matsu Islands. All 16 passengers and crew on board are killed.
September 3 - Vietnam Airlines Flight 815, a Tupolev Tu-134, crashes on approach to Phnom Penh International Airport in heavy rain, killing 64 of the 66 people on board.
September 6 - Royal Brunei Airlines Flight 238, a Dornier Do 228, crashes into a hill side in Lambir Hills National Park, killing all 10 on board.
September 26 - Garuda Indonesia Flight 152, an Airbus A300, crashes into a mountain near Buah Nabar, Indonesia, killing all 234 on board.
October 10 - Austral Lineas Aereas Flight 2553, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, crashes near Fray Bentos, Uruguay, traveling from Posadas to Buenos Aires, resulting in the death of all 74 occupants.
December 15 - Tajikistan Airlines Flight 3183, a Tupolev Tu-154, crashes into the desert near Sharjah Airport, of the 86 on board, only the flight engineer survives.
December 17 - Aerosvit Flight 241, a Yakovlev Yak-42, crashes near Thessaloniki, Greece, killing all 70 people on board.
December 19 - SilkAir Flight 185, a Boeing 737, crashes into the Musi River near Palembang, Indonesia, killing all 102 people on board.
December 28 - United Airlines Flight 826, a Boeing 747, encounters severe turbulence two hours into the flight; the aircraft safely lands back in Tokyo; all survive the accident, but a passenger dies later; despite having no damage, the aircraft is written off.
1998
February 2 - Cebu Pacific Flight 387, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, crashes into a mountain near Mount Sumagaya in Misamis Oriental in the Philippines, killing all 104 passengers and crew members on board.
February 16 - China Airlines Flight 676, an Airbus A300, crashes into a residential area while attempting to land in Taipei, Taiwan. All 196 people on board are killed, in addition to six on the ground.
March 19 - In the 1998 Ariana Afghan Airlines crash, a Boeing 727 crashes into Sharki Baratayi Mountain while on approach to Kabul International Airport, killing all 45 on board.
March 22 - Philippine Airlines Flight 137, an Airbus A320, overshoots the end of the runway while landing at Bacolod City in the Philippines, plowing through several houses. None of the passengers was harmed, but three people on the ground are killed and several more injured.
April 20 - Air France Flight 422, a Boeing 727 leased from TAME Airlines, crashes into the mountains east of Bogota, Colombia, on takeoff from El Dorado International Airport of Bogota in foggy weather. All 53 passengers and crew perish.
May 5 - In the 1998 Occidental Petroleum Boeing 737 crash, a Boeing 737 leased from the Peruvian Air Force crashes while on approach to Alferez FAP Alfredo Vladimir Sara Bauer Airport, killing 75 of 88 on board.
May 25 - PIA Flight 544, a Fokker F-27, is hijacked shortly after takeoff by three armed men. F-16 fighter jets intercept the plane and force it to land. The hijackers are arrested and sentenced to death. All 38 on board survive.
May 26 - The 1998 MIAT Mongolian Airlines crash: a Harbin Y-12 crashes 13 minutes after takeoff from Erdenet Airport, Mongolia, killing all 28 passengers and crew.
July 30 - Proteus Airlines Flight 706: a Beechcraft 1900D collides in mid-air with a light aircraft over Quiberon Bay. Both aircraft crash into the sea, killing 15 people.
August 24 - Myanma Airways Flight 635, a Fokker F-27 Friendship, crashes while on approach to Tachilek Airport; all 36 on board die.
September 2 - Swissair Flight 111, a McDonnell Douglas MD-11, crashes into the sea near Halifax, Nova Scotia in Canada, because of an onboard fire. All 229 people on board perish.
September 25 - PauknAir Flight 4101, a BAe 146, leaves Malaga but never reaches its destination in Melilla. All passengers and crew perish.
September 29 - Lionair Flight 602, an Antonov An-24, is shot down by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and crashes off the coast of Jaffna, Sri Lanka, killing all 55 on board.
October 10 - The 1998 Lignes Aeriennes Congolaises crash occurs when rebels using a Strela 2 missile shoot down the Boeing 727, which crashes near Kindu, Democratic Republic of Congo, killing all 41 on board.
December 11 - Thai Airways International Flight 261, an Airbus A310, crashes during poor weather near Surat Thani, Thailand. Of the 146 people on board, 102 are killed.
1999
February 24 - China Southwest Airlines Flight 4509, a Tupolev Tu-154, crashes while on approach to Wenzhou Airport, killing all 61 passengers and crew on board.
April 7 - Turkish Airlines Flight 5904, a Boeing 737-400, crashes in poor weather near Hamdilli, Ceyhan, Turkey; all 6 crew die.
June 1 - American Airlines Flight 1420, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82 with 139 passengers on board, skids off the runway on landing and crashes into a steel walkway at Little Rock, Arkansas during strong winds; 11 are killed, and 86 are injured.
July 24 - All Nippon Airways Flight 61, a Boeing 747, is hijacked by a passenger, Yuji Nishizawa, wielding a knife; after fatally stabbing the captain, he is overpowered by the crew; the first officer lands the plane safely at Haneda, Japan.
August 22 - China Airlines Flight 642, a McDonnell Douglas MD-11, crashes on landing at Hong Kong International Airport during "Typhoon" Sam; of the 315 people on board, three die.
August 31 - LAPA Flight 3142, a Boeing 737, overshoots the runway in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and crashes into a golf course; of the 103 people on board, 63 are killed, as well as two on the ground.
September 14 - Britannia Airways Flight 226A, a Boeing 757, veers off the runway at Girona, Catalonia Spain, while landing in a thunderstorm and comes to rest in a field, broken apart in two places; 43 on board are injured, two seriously, but a passenger initially diagnosed as "lightly injured" dies five days later of unsuspected internal injuries.
September 23 - Qantas Flight 1, a Boeing 747 runs off the runway due to a storm and comes to a complete stop just short of a golf course. All on board including 30 injured passengers survive.
October 31 - EgyptAir Flight 990, a Boeing 767 bound for Cairo, Egypt, crashes into the Atlantic Ocean off Nantucket, Massachusetts, killing all 217 passengers and crew; cause is disputed: a deliberate suicide/homicide act by the relief first officer according to the NTSB, vs. a Boeing mechanical flaw according to Egyptian aviation authorities.
November 9 - TAESA Flight 725, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, crashes near Uruapan, Mexico, killing all 18 on board.
December 7 - Asian Spirit Flight 100, a Let L-410 Turbolet, crashes into a mountain while on approach to Cauayan Airport, killing all 15 passengers and crew on board.
December 21 - Cubana de Aviacion Flight 1216, a McDonnell Douglas DC-10, overruns the runway at La Aurora International Airport, killing 16 of 314 people on board and another two on the ground.
December 22 - Korean Air Cargo Flight 8509, a Boeing 747-200F, crashes after takeoff near Great Hallingbury, England; killing all 4 crew.
December 24 - Indian Airlines Flight 814, an Airbus A300, is hijacked en route to Delhi, India; one hostage is killed.
December 25 - Cubana de Aviacion Flight 310, a Yakovlev Yak-42D, crashes into the San Luis Hill near Bejuma, Venezuela, while on approach to Arturo Michelena International Airport; all 22 on board die.
2000
January 10 - Crossair Flight 498, a Saab 340, crashes two minutes after takeoff in Niederhasli, Switzerland, killing all ten people on board.
January 30 - Kenya Airways Flight 431, an Airbus A310, carrying 169 passengers and 10 crew members, crashes into the Atlantic Ocean off Cote d'Ivoire after takeoff from Abidjan. Only ten people survive.
January 31 - Alaska Airlines Flight 261, an MD-83, crashes into the Pacific Ocean off Point Mugu, California, after problems with its horizontal stabilizer. All 83 passengers and 5 crew members are killed.
March 5 - Southwest Airlines Flight 1455, a Boeing 737-300, overruns the runway in Burbank, California. Of the 142 people on board, 43 are injured, two seriously.
April 19 - Air Philippines Flight 541, a Boeing 737-200, crashes in a coconut plantation on Samal Island, Davao del Norte while preparing to approach the Davao International Airport, killing all 131 people on board in the worst ever accident involving the 737-200.
June 22 - Wuhan Airlines Flight 343, a Xian Y-7, is struck by lightning and crashes in Hanyang District, Wuhan, killing all 42 on board and another 7 on the ground in the worst ever accident involving the Y-7.
July 4 - Malev Flight 262, a Tupolev Tu-154, lands on its belly at Thessaloniki International Airport in Greece. There are no serious injuries or fatalities.
July 8 - Aerocaribe Flight 7831, a British Aerospace Jetstream 32, crashes near Chulum Juarez, Mexico, killing all 19 on board.
July 12 - Hapag-Lloyd Flight 3378, an Airbus A310, crash-lands 650 metres short of the runway in Vienna after running out of fuel in flight. There are no serious injuries or fatalities.
July 17 - Alliance Air Flight 7412, a Boeing 737-200, crashes into government housing in Patna, India, as it approaches the airport, killing 55 of the 58 on board and five people on the ground.
July 25 - Air France Flight 4590, a Concorde crashes during takeoff from Paris, France, after striking debris on the runway, killing all 100 passengers and 9 crew aboard as well as four on the ground; the entire Concorde fleet is grounded for one year.
August 23 - Gulf Air Flight 072, an Airbus A320, crashes into the Persian Gulf off Manama, Bahrain, while attempting to land. All 135 passengers and eight crew members are killed.
October 31 - Singapore Airlines Flight 006, a Boeing 747-400, strikes construction equipment after using a closed runway for takeoff at Chiang Kai-shek International Airport, Taiwan, killing 83 out of 179 people on board.
November 18 - Dirgantara Air Service Flight 3130, a Britten Norman Islander BN-2 crashed shortly after take off from Datah Dawai Airport in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. No one was killed, but all on board were injured, 11 seriously.
December 20 - British Airways Flight 2069, in Sudanese airspace at 35,000 ft, a hijacker storms the cabin in an attempt to send the plane into a nosedive into the ground. However, Captain William Hagan and First Officer Richard Webb help subdue the mentally-ill hijacker, while First Officer Phil Watson levels the flight. None of the 398 on board is seriously injured.
2001
January 23 - Yemenia Flight 448, a Boeing 727, is hijacked 15 minutes after takeoff from Sana'a International Airport, Yemen; the crew makes an emergency landing at Djibouti; the hijacker is subdued with no casualties to the 101 on board.
January 31 - In the 2001 Japan Airlines mid-air incident, Japan Airlines Flight 907, a Douglas DC-10, and Japan Airlines Flight 958, a Boeing 747, narrowly avoid colliding by a margin of 36 feet (11 meters) near Yaizu, Japan.
March 29 - In the 2001 Avjet Aspen crash, an Avjet charter flight, a Gulfstream III jet with 15 passengers and 3 crew, crashes on approach into Aspen, Colorado, killing all on board.
July 4 - Vladivostok Air Flight 352, a Tupolev Tu-154 enters a flat spin on approach to Irkutsk Airport in Irkutsk, Russia, crashes down onto its belly and bursts into flames in a wooded area, killing all 145 aboard.
August 24 - Air Transat Flight 236, an Airbus A330, runs out of fuel over the Atlantic Ocean and makes an emergency landing in the Azores. Upon landing some of the tires blow out, causing a fire that is extinguished by emergency personnel on the ground. None of the 304 people on board the aircraft is seriously injured.
August 29 - Binter Mediterraneo Flight 8261, a CASA CN-235, suffers port engine failure and crashes onto the N-340 road while attempting to make an emergency landing at Ruiz Picasso International Airport, killing 4 of 43 on board, the pilot initially survives, but dies several hours later.
September 11 - September 11 attacks
American Airlines Flight 11, a Boeing 767-200ER with 92 people on board, is hijacked after taking off from Boston, and is flown into the north tower of the World Trade Center in New York City; all on board are killed as well as others on the ground and in the building.
United Airlines Flight 175, a Boeing 767-200 with 65 people on board, is hijacked after taking off from Boston and is flown into the south tower of the World Trade Center in New York City; all on board are killed as well as others on the ground and in the building; the collapse of both towers brings the total death toll from the two crashes to at least 2,759, the worst disaster involving commercial aircraft.
American Airlines Flight 77, a Boeing 757-200 with 64 people on board, is hijacked after taking off from Dulles International Airport and is flown into The Pentagon; all on board are killed as well as 125 people in the building and on the ground.
United Airlines Flight 93, a Boeing 757-200 with 44 people on board, is hijacked after taking off from Newark, New Jersey; passengers struggle with the hijackers, and the aircraft crashes in a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania, killing all on board.
October 4 - Siberia Airlines Flight 1812, a Tupolev Tu-154, is shot down by the Ukrainian military over the Black Sea. All 66 passengers and 12 crew members are killed.
October 8 - In the Linate Airport disaster, Scandinavian Airlines Flight 686, an MD-87, crashes into a Cessna business jet on takeoff from Milan, Italy. The MD-87 then swerves into a baggage handling building and catches fire. All 110 people on board Flight 686 die as well as all four in the Cessna. Four people on the ground are also killed.
November 12 - American Airlines Flight 587, an Airbus A300, crashes into a Queens neighborhood in New York City when the plane's vertical tail fin snaps just after takeoff. All 251 passengers and nine crew members on board are killed as well as five people on the ground.
November 24 - Crossair Flight 3597, an Avro RJ100, crashes near Bassersdorf, Switzerland, while attempting to land in Zurich. Of the 28 passengers and five crew members on board, 21 passengers and three crew members die.
December 22 - On board American Airlines Flight 63, a Boeing 767, a passenger, Richard Reid, attempts to detonate explosives hidden in his shoes, but fails and is subdued by two flight attendants and passengers. The plane lands safely in Boston.
2002
January 14 - Lion Air Flight 386, a Boeing 737-200, crashes while attempting to take off from Riau, Indonesia; all 103 on board survive.
January 16 - Garuda Indonesia Flight 421, a Boeing 737-300, experiences a dual flameout after entering a thunderstorm, and ditches in the Bengawan Solo River. A flight attendant is the only casualty; 59 passengers and crew survive.
January 28 - TAME Flight 120, a Boeing 727, crashes into a volcano on approach to Tulcan, Ecuador, in low-visibility conditions; all 94 on board are killed.
February 12 - Iran Air Tours Flight 956, a Tupolev Tu-154, crashes into the Sefid Kooh mountains during heavy rain, snow and dense fog while descending for Khorramabad Airport. All twelve crew members and 107 passengers are killed.
April 15 - Air China Flight 129, a Boeing 767-200ER, crashes into a hill during a landing attempt at Busan, South Korea, in misty conditions; of the 155 passengers and 11 crew, 38 survive.
May 4 - EAS Airlines Flight 4226, a BAC 1-11 500 series, crashes into the Gwammaja neighborhood at Kano, Nigeria, shortly after takeoff; the ensuing crash resulted in the deaths of 71 passengers and at least 78 civilians on the ground.
May 7 - EgyptAir Flight 843, a Boeing 737-566, crashes near Tunis, Tunisia, while landing in rough weather; of the 62 people on board, 14 perish.
May 7 - China Northern Airlines Flight 6136, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82, crashes near Dalian, China, after a passenger sets fire to the cabin with gasoline; all 103 passengers and 9 crew are killed.
May 25 - China Airlines Flight 611, a Boeing 747-200B, disintegrates above the Taiwan Strait in mid-flight due to maintenance error; killing all 225 people on board.
July 1 - In the Uberlingen mid-air collision, Bashkirian Airlines Flight 2937, a Tupolev Tu-154 with 60 passengers and 9 crew members on board, collides with DHL Flight 611, a Boeing 757 freighter with 2 pilots on board near Lake Constance, Germany; all people on both planes perish.
July 4 - In the 2002 Prestige Airlines Boeing 707 crash, a Boeing 707 crashes at Bangui Airport while attempting an emergency landing, killing 28 of 30 on board.
July 10 - Swiss International Airlines Flight 850, a Saab 2000, strikes an earth bank after landing at Werneuchen Airfield after multiple diversions due to a storm system; all 20 on board survive; the aircraft is written off.
August 8 - Rico Linhas Aereas Flight 4823, an Embraer EMB 120 Brasilia, crashes on approach to Rio Branco International Airport, Brazil, in a rainstorm; the aircraft breaks up into three pieces and catches fire; 23 of 31 on board perish.
October 9 - Northwest Airlines Flight 85, a Boeing 747, experienced a rudder hardover. The crew made an emergency landing at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport. All 404 on board were unharmed.
November 6 - Luxair Flight 9642, a Fokker F50, crashes short of the runway on approach to Luxembourg Findel Airport in foggy weather conditions; of the nineteen passengers and three crew on board, only two survive.
November 11 - Laoag International Airlines Flight 585, a Fokker F-27 Friendship, crashes into Manila Bay shortly after takeoff from Ninoy Aquino International Airport; of the 34 people on board, 19 are killed.
2003
January 8 - Air Midwest Flight 5481, a Beechcraft 1900, crashes on takeoff from Charlotte, North Carolina, United States; all 19 passengers and 2 pilots are killed.
January 8 - Turkish Airlines Flight 634, an Avro RJ100, crashes during its final approach to land at Diyarbakir Airport, Turkey, in extensive fog. All of the 5 crew and 70 of the 75 passengers are killed, 5 passengers survive with heavy injuries.
January 9 - TANS Peru Flight 222, a Fokker F28, crashes while on approach to Chachapoyas Airport; all 46 on board die.
March 6 - Air Algerie Flight 6289, a Boeing 737-200, veers off the runway on takeoff in Tamanrasset, Algeria; 96 of the 97 passengers and all 6 crew members perish.
May 26 - UM Airlines Flight 4230, a Yakovlev Yak-42 crashes into the side of a mountain near the town of Macka, Turkey. All 75 people were killed.
May 29 - A man attempts to hijack Qantas Flight 1737, a Boeing 717, in Melbourne, Australia, intending to crash the plane in Tasmania. He is overpowered by the flight crew and passengers, but injures three people.
July 8 - Sudan Airways Flight 139, a Boeing 737-200, crashes shortly after taking off from Port Sudan, Sudan. All 117 people on board the plane perish; a two-year-old boy initially survives the crash, but dies the following day.
November 22 - A DHL Airbus A300 is struck by a missile near Baghdad, Iraq and loses hydraulic system function, but manages to land safely with only engine controls without any fatalities. This is the first non-fatal landing of an airliner without control surfaces.
December 18 - FedEx Express Flight 647, a McDonnell Douglas MD-10-10, veers off the runway upon landing after a landing gear collapse and catches fire at Memphis International Airport; two crew members and five passengers escape with only minor injuries.
December 25 - UTAGE Flight 141, a Boeing 727, runs off the end of the runway upon takeoff at Cotonou, Benin, and crashes onto the beach on the Bight of Benin, killing 151 of the 163 occupants.
2004
January 3 - Flash Airlines Flight 604, a Boeing 737-300, crashes into the Red Sea, killing all 135 passengers and 13 crew members in the worst ever accident involving the 737-300.
February 10 - Kish Air Flight 7170, a Fokker 50, crashes at Sharjah International Airport, killing 43 people. Three survive with serious injuries.
May 14 - Rico Linhas Aereas Flight 4815, an Embraer 120ER, crashes while on approach to Eduardo Gomes International Airport, killing all 33 passengers and crew on board; the cause is never determined.
August 13 - Air Tahoma Flight 185, a Convair 580, crashes near Covington, Kentucky, while descending to land, killing the First Officer.
August 24 - 2004 Russian aircraft bombings:
Siberia Airlines Flight 1047, a Tupolev Tu-154, explodes in mid-air while flying over Rostov Oblast, Russia, killing all 38 passengers and 8 crew members on board.
Volga-AviaExpress Flight 1303, a Tupolev Tu-134, explodes in mid-air while flying over Tula Oblast, Russia, killing all 34 passengers and 9 crew members on board.
October 14 - MK Airlines Flight 1602, a Boeing 747-200F, crashes on takeoff from Halifax Stanfield International Airport, killing all 7 on board.
October 14 - Pinnacle Airlines Flight 3701, a CRJ-200 repositioning flight with no passengers, crashes near Jefferson City, MO, killing both pilots.
October 19 - Corporate Airlines Flight 5966, a British Aerospace Jetstream, crashes near Kirksville, Missouri, United States; 13 of the 15 people on board die.
November 21 - China Eastern Airlines Flight 5210, a Bombardier CRJ200, stalls and crashes near Baotou, China, shortly after takeoff because of frost contamination; all 53 on board and two people on the ground are killed.
November 30 - Lion Air Flight 538, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82, crash-lands in Solo City, Indonesia, killing 25 of the 154 people on board.
2005
February 3 - Kam Air Flight 904, a Boeing 737-200, crashes in a snowstorm in Afghanistan. All 96 passengers and 8 crew members die.
February 20 - British Airways Flight 268, a Boeing 747-400, taking off from Los Angeles to London suffers fire in engine 2. The plane flies on three engines to Manchester, where it performs an emergency landing. None of the 369 people on board are harmed.
March 6 - Air Transat Flight 961, an Airbus A310, suffers rudder failure after takeoff from Varadero, Cuba; the aircraft returns to Cuba with no casualties.
March 16 - Regional Airlines Flight 9288, an Antonov An-24RV, stalls and crashes into a small hill near Varandey Airport, Russia, due to a possible instrument failure, killing 28 of 52 on board.
June 9 - US Airways Flight 1170 and Aer Lingus Flight 132 almost collide on a runway at Logan International Airport in Boston, Massachusetts. None of the 381 people on either plane is harmed.
July 16 - An Equatorial Express Antonov An-24 crashes into a mountain side near Baney, Equatorial Guinea; all 60 on board die.
August 2 - Air France Flight 358, an Airbus A340-300, skids off a runway at Toronto Pearson International Airport, Ontario, while landing and catches fire; all 309 on board escape without fatalities or serious injuries, but the aircraft is completely destroyed by the fire.
August 6 - Tuninter Flight 1153, an ATR 72, ditches into the Mediterranean Sea near Palermo, Sicily, with 35 passengers and 4 crew members on board; 14 passengers and 2 crew members die.
August 10 - Copterline Flight 103, a Sikorsky S-76 helicopter crashes off Tallinn, Estonia, killing all 14 on board.
August 14 - Helios Airways Flight 522, a Boeing 737-300, crashes near Kalamos, Greece, with 115 passengers and 6 crew members on board; there are no survivors.
August 16 - West Caribbean Airways Flight 708, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82, crashes in western Venezuela. All on board, 152 passengers and 8 crew members, die.
August 23 - TANS Peru Flight 204, a Boeing 737-200, crashes on approach to Captain Rolden International Airport, Pucallpa, Peru. Thirty-five of the 91 passengers on board, as well as five of the seven crew members, perish.
September 5 - Mandala Airlines Flight 091, a Boeing 737-200, crashes in Medan, Indonesia, killing 103 of the 111 passengers and all 5 crew members on board the aircraft and an additional 47 people on the ground.
September 5 - A Kavatshi Airlines Antonov An-26B crashes at Isiro Airport in Matari, Democratic Republic of the Congo, killing all 11 people on board.
September 9 - An Air Kasai Antonov An-26B crashes in the Republic of the Congo north of Brazzaville, killing all 13 people on board.
September 21 - JetBlue Airways Flight 292, an Airbus A320, makes an emergency landing at Los Angeles International Airport because of landing gear steering failure. There are no injuries to the 139 passengers and 6 crew members.
October 22 - Bellview Airlines Flight 210, a Boeing 737-200, crashes shortly after takeoff from Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos, Nigeria, killing all 117 people on board.
December 8 - Southwest Airlines Flight 1248, a Boeing 737-700, slides off the runway during landing at Chicago Midway International Airport in Chicago in heavy snow. None of the people on board are injured, but the plane hits two automobiles on the ground, killing a six-year-old boy.
December 10 - Sosoliso Airlines Flight 1145, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9 with 110 people on board, crashes during landing in Port Harcourt, Nigeria. Of the 110 people on board, only 2 survive.
December 19 - Chalk's Ocean Airways Flight 101, a Grumman Mallard, crashes off the coast of Miami Beach, Florida, killing all 20 on board.
December 23 - Azerbaijan Airlines Flight 217, an Antonov An-140, crashes shortly after takeoff from Baku Airport due to instrument failure, killing all 23 on board.
2006
May 3 - Armavia Flight 967, an Airbus A320, crashes into the Black Sea near the Russian city of Sochi, killing all 113 on board.
July 9 - S7 Airlines Flight 778, an Airbus A310, crashes into a concrete barricade at Irkutsk International Airport, Russia, upon landing and catches fire. Of the 203 people on board, 128 are killed.
July 10 - PIA Flight 688, a Fokker F27, crashes into a wheat field near Multan, Pakistan, ten minutes after taking off, killing all 41 passengers and 4 crew members on board.
August 13 - Air Algerie Flight 2208, a Lockheed L-100 Hercules in Northern Italy crashes as a result of an autopilot malfunction. All 3 on board are killed.
August 22 - Pulkovo Aviation Enterprise Flight 612, a Tupolev Tu-154, crashes near Donetsk, Ukraine, killing all 170 people on board.
August 27 - Comair Flight 5191, a Bombardier Canadair CRJ-100, crashes on takeoff at Blue Grass Airport, Kentucky, due to runway confusion; of the fifty people on board, only one survives.
September 1 - Iran Air Tours Flight 945, a Tupolev Tu-154, crashes while attempting to land in Mashad, Iran, killing 28 of 154 on board.
September 29 - Gol Transportes Aereos Flight 1907, a Boeing 737-800, collides with an Embraer Legacy business jet and crashes in Mato Grosso, Brazil; the Embraer Legacy, with seven on board, lands safely with no reported injuries while all 154 people on board the Boeing 737 perish; this crash marks the first loss of a Boeing 737-800.
October 3 - Turkish Airlines Flight 1476, a Boeing 737, was hijacked in Greek airspace. Plane landed at Brindisi Airport, Italy. Hijacker was arrested. All 113 people on board survived.
October 10 - Atlantic Airways Flight 670, a BAe 146, slides off the runway at Stord Airport, Norway, killing 4 of the 16 people on board.
October 29 - ADC Airlines Flight 53, a Boeing 737-200, crashes near Abuja, Nigeria, killing 96 of the 105 people on board.
2007
January 1 - Adam Air Flight 574, a Boeing 737-400 with 102 people on board, crashes into the ocean off the island of Sulawesi in Indonesia, killing all on board in the worst ever crash involving the 737-400.
January 9 - An AerianTur-M Antonov An-26 crashes near Balad, Iraq, killing 34 of the 35 people on board. The official cause of the crash is poor weather conditions, but other sources claim that the plane was shot down by a missile.
January 24 - Air West Flight 612, a Boeing 737, is hijacked shortly after takeoff. The plane landed safely at N'Djamena International Airport, where the hijacker surrenders. All 103 people on board survive.
February 21 - Adam Air Flight 172, a Boeing 737-300, suffers structural damage while landing near Surabaya, Indonesia; none of the 149 people on board is seriously injured.
March 7 - Garuda Indonesia Flight 200, a Boeing 737-400, overshoots the runway and crashes while landing at Yogyakarta, Indonesia, killing 22 of the 140 people on board.
March 17 - UTair Flight 471, a Tupolev Tu-134, suffers severe structural damage while landing in Samara, Russia, killing six of the 63 people on board.
March 23 - The 2007 Mogadishu TransAVIAexport Airlines Il-76 crash of an Ilyushin Il-76 near Mogadishu, Somalia, after being hit by a surface-to-air missile, kills all 11 on board; one passenger initially survives, but dies hours later.
May 5 - Kenya Airways Flight 507, a Boeing 737-800 with 114 people on board, crashes near Douala, Cameroon, killing all on board.
June 3 - In the 2007 Paramount Airlines Mil Mi-8 crash, a Mil Mi-8 helicopter crashes in Lungi, Sierra Leone, killing all 22 people on board.
June 21 - The 2007 Free Airlines L-410 crash shortly after takeoff from Kamina Town, Democratic Republic of Congo because of severe overloading, kills 1 and injures 4 of the 21 people on board.
June 25 - PMTair Flight 241, an Antonov An-24, crashes in southwestern Cambodia, killing all 22 on board.
June 28 - In the 2007 TAAG Angola Airlines crash, a Boeing 737-200, D2-TBP, with 78 people on board, loses control while landing in M'banza-Kongo, Angola, killing at least six people on board and injuring an unknown number of others.
July 17 - TAM Airlines Flight 3054, an Airbus A320, crashes at Congonhas-Sao Paulo Airport, Brazil, killing all 187 people on board and 12 on the ground.
August 9 - Air Moorea Flight 1121, a de Havilland Canada DHC-6, crashes into the lagoon of the island of Moorea in French Polynesia just 11 seconds after take off, killing all 20 on board.
August 20 - China Airlines Flight 120, a Boeing 737-800, bursts into flames after landing at Naha, Japan; none of the 165 passengers on board are seriously injured.
August 26 - A Great Lakes Business Company Antonov An-32B crashes short of the runway after experiencing engine failure and attempting to return to Kongolo Airport in Kongolo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, killing 14 of the 15 people on board.
Scandinavian Airlines Dash 8 landing gear incidents:
September 9 - Scandinavian Airlines Flight 1209, a de Havilland Canada Dash 8, experiences a landing gear failure in Aalborg, Denmark; none of the 73 people on board is seriously injured, but three days later, after a similar incident, the airline grounds the aircraft type.
September 12 - Scandinavian Airlines Flight 2748, a de Havilland Canada Dash 8, experiences a landing gear failure in Vilnius, Lithuania; none of the 52 people on board is injured, but because of a similar incident three days earlier, all their Dash 8s are grounded.
October 27 - Scandinavian Airlines Flight 2867, a de Havilland Canada Dash 8, experiences a landing gear failure in Copenhagen, Denmark; none of the 44 people on board is injured, but because of similar incidents in September, the airline "permanently" removes its Dash 8s from service; cause is eventually ascribed to maintenance error.
September 16 - One-Two-GO Airlines Flight 269, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82 carrying 130 people, crashes and bursts into flames after attempting to land in Phuket, Thailand, during poor weather conditions, killing 90 people.
October 4 - The 2007 Africa One Antonov An-26 crash into a residential area in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, shortly after taking off, kills at least 50 people, most of whom are on the ground.
November 30 - Atlasjet Flight 4203, a McDonnell Douglas MD-83, crashes into a mountain near Isparta, Turkey, killing all 57 on board.
December 30 - TAROM Flight 3107, a Boeing 737-300, is written-off after hitting a maintenance car on the runway and veering off the runway during takeoff run at Henri Coanda International Airport, Otopeni, Romania; none of the 123 on board is injured.
2008
January 4 - The 2008 Los Roques archipelago Transaven Let L-410 crash kills all 14 on board.
January 17 - British Airways Flight 38, a Boeing 777-200ER, lands short of the runway at London Heathrow Airport due to a fuel system problem; all 152 on board survive. This is the first loss of a Boeing 777-200ER, and the first loss of any 777 due to operational incident.
February 8 - Eagle Airways Flight 2279, a BAe Jetstream 32, is hijacked ten minutes after taking off from Blenheim, New Zealand by a passenger who attacked both pilots. The hijacker is eventually restrained by the co-pilot and the flight lands safely at Christchurch. All nine on board survive the incident.
February 14 - Belavia Flight 1834, a Bombardier CRJ100, hits its left wing on the runway while taking off from Yerevan, Armenia. All 21 on board escape the aircraft before it erupts into flames.
February 21 - Santa Barbara Airlines Flight 518, an ATR 42-300, crashes shortly after taking off from Merida, Venezuela, killing all 46 on board.
April 3 - In the 2008 Suriname plane crash, an Antonov An-28 operated by Blue Wing Airlines crashes near Benzdorp in Suriname. All nineteen on board are killed.
April 11 - In the 2008 Chisinau Antonov An-32 crash, a Sudanese airline Antonov An-32 crashes when returning shortly after taking off from Chisinau International Airport, Moldova, for Turkey. All eight on board are killed.
April 15 - Hewa Bora Airways Flight 122, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, crashes into a market near Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, killing 40 people, including three passengers.
May 30 - TACA Flight 390, an Airbus A320, overruns the runway at Toncontin International Airport in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, killing five (including two on ground).
June 10 - Sudan Airways Flight 109, an Airbus A310, crashes at Khartoum International Airport and breaks apart, catching fire. 30 deaths are confirmed, 6 passengers are listed as missing.
July 25 - Qantas Flight 30, a Boeing 747-400 en route from Hong Kong to Melbourne, performs an emergency descent and lands in Manila after a hull penetration results in rapid decompression; all aboard survive.
August 20 - Spanair Flight 5022, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82 crashes on takeoff at Barajas Airport in Madrid, Spain. Of the 172 people on board, 154 are killed.
August 24 - Iran Aseman Airlines Flight 6895, a Boeing 737, crashes just after takeoff from Manas Airport in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. 68 of the 90 passengers and crew on board are killed.
September 14 - Aeroflot Flight 821, a Boeing 737, crashes on approach to Perm Airport from Moscow due to pilot error, killing all 88 people on board in the worst ever accident involving the Boeing 737-500.
October 7 - Qantas Flight 72, an Airbus A330-300, makes an emergency landing in Exmouth, Australia, following a rapid descent that leaves over 70 people injured, 14 of them seriously.
October 8 - Yeti Airlines Flight 103, a de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter, crashes from Mt Everest, Nepal, killing 18 of 19 people on board.
November 10 - Ryanair Flight 4102, a Boeing 737 suffers up to 90 bird strikes on its final approach to Rome Ciampino Airport, damaging landing gear and both engines. Landed safely, 10 of the 172 on board are treated for minor injuries.
December 20 - Continental Airlines Flight 1404, a Boeing 737-500 with 115 people on board, veers off the runway upon takeoff from Denver International Airport, comes to rest in a ravine near the runway and catches fire; 38 people are injured.
2009
January 15 - US Airways Flight 1549, an Airbus A320, ditches in the Hudson River just after taking off from LaGuardia Airport in New York City after total engine failure due to multiple bird strikes; all people aboard survive the accident.
February 7 - In the 2009 Manaus Aerotaxi crash, a Manaus Aerotaxi Embraer EMB-110 crashes near Santo Antonio, Brazil, killing 24 of the 28 aboard.
February 12 - Colgan Air Flight 3407, a Bombardier Dash 8 Q400, flying from Newark Liberty International in New Jersey to Buffalo Niagara International Airport in New York crashes into a house in Clarence, New York, killing all 49 aboard the plane and one on the ground.
February 25 - Turkish Airlines Flight 1951, a Boeing 737-800, flying from Ataturk International Airport in Istanbul to Amsterdam Airport Schiphol crashes in a field during final approach; of the 135 people on board, 9 are killed and 86 injured.
March 12 - Cougar Helicopters Flight 91, a Sikorsky S-92, ditches in the Atlantic east-southeast of Newfoundland due to a main gearbox failure, killing 17 of 18 on board.
March 20 - Emirates Flight 407, an Airbus A340-500 flying from Melbourne Tullamarine Airport to Dubai International Airport has a tailstrike during take off and returns to Melbourne Airport with no fatalities.
March 23 - FedEx Express Flight 80, a McDonnell Douglas MD-11 flying from Guangzhou, China, crashes at Tokyo Narita International Airport, Japan; both the captain and the co-pilot of the plane are killed.
April 1 - 2009 Bond Helicopters Eurocopter AS332 crash: Bond Offshore Helicopters Flight 85N, a Eurocopter AS332, crashes off the Aberdeenshire coast while returning from the Miller oilfield, killing all 16 on board; the cause is a catastrophic failure of the main rotor gearbox.
April 19 - CanJet Flight 918 is seized on the ground by an armed man who slipped through security checks at Sangster International Airport, Montego Bay, Jamaica; all passengers are released early on; six crew members are kept as hostages for several hours before being freed unharmed.
June 1 - Air France Flight 447, an Airbus A330 en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris, crashes in the Atlantic Ocean, killing all 228 occupants, including 12 crew; bodies and aircraft debris are not recovered until several days later; the aircraft itself is not found until 2011. The crash is the first fatal accident of the A330 and the worst-ever disaster involving the A330.
June 30 - Yemenia Flight 626, an Airbus A310 flying from Sana'a, Yemen to Moroni, Comoros, crashes into the Indian Ocean with 153 people aboard; one 12-year-old is found clinging to the wreckage.
July 13 - Southwest Airlines Flight 2294, a Boeing 737 from Nashville to Baltimore makes an emergency landing in Charleston, West Virginia, after a 14x17 inch hole opens in the skin of the fuselage at , causing a loss of cabin pressure; the plane lands safely with no injuries.
July 15 - Caspian Airlines Flight 7908, a Tupolev Tu-154, crashes 16 minutes after takeoff near Qazvin, Iran, killing all 153 passengers and 15 crew.
July 24 - Aria Air Flight 1525, an Ilyushin Il-62, skids off the runway at Mashhad International Airport, killing 17 of 153 on board.
August 2 - Merpati Nusantara Airlines Flight 9760, a de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter, crashes into a mountain in good weather over Indonesia, killing all 13 passengers and 3 crew.
August 4 - Bangkok Airways Flight 266, an ATR 72-200 carrying 68 passengers crashes in severe weather on landing at Samui airport in the resort island of Ko Samui in Thailand, resulting in at least 1 confirmed death and 37 injuries.
August 11 - Airlines PNG Flight 4684, a de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter carrying 11 passengers and 2 crew crashes into a mountain at Isurava, Papua New Guinea while attempting a go around at Kokoda Airport, Papua New Guinea; all passengers and crew perished in the accident.
September 9 - Aeromexico Flight 576, a Boeing 737 with 104 passengers on board, is hijacked while flying from Cancun to Mexico City; after landing at Mexico City International Airport, Mexican officials storm the plane and take 5 men into custody; there are no casualties.
October 21 - Azza Transport Flight 2241, a Boeing 707, crashes on take off from Sharjah International Airport, United Arab Emirates; all 6 crew members are killed.
October 22 - Divi Divi Air Flight 014, a Britten-Norman Islander, with 10 on board, ditches in the Caribbean Sea off Bonaire due to engine failure, killing the pilot.
November 12 - RwandAir Flight 205, a Bombardier CRJ-100, crashes into a terminal shortly after an emergency landing at Kigali International Airport, Rwanda; of the 10 passengers and 5 crew, 1 passenger dies.
December 22 - American Airlines Flight 331, a Boeing 737-800 from Miami International Airport overruns the runway at Norman Manley International Airport, Kingston, Jamaica; there are 40 injuries and no fatalities.
December 25 - Northwest Airlines Flight 253, an Airbus A330-300 is attacked by a man using a small explosive device, causing only a small fire inside the plane, which is extinguished by a flight attendant; the man is subdued by passengers and crew;
2010
January 24 - Taban Air Flight 6437, a Tupolev Tu-154M, crashes while making an emergency landing at Mashhad International Airport, Iran, due to a medical emergency; all 157 passengers and 13 crew survive the accident with 47 receiving minor injuries.
January 25 - Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409, a Boeing 737-800, crashes into the Mediterranean Sea shortly after takeoff from Beirut Rafic Hariri International Airport; the flight was heading to the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa; all 90 people on board perish.
March 22 - Aviastar-TU Flight 1906, a Tupolev Tu-204, crashes on landing at Domodedovo International Airport in foggy weather; all eight crew on board survive, but the aircraft is written off; this is the first loss of the Tu-204.
April 13 - AeroUnion Flight 302, an Airbus A300B4F, crashes on a missed approach from Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico, for Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. All five crew members are killed, as well as one person on the ground.
April 13 - Merpati Nusantara Airlines Flight 836, a Boeing 737, overruns the runway at Rendani Airport in Indonesia; all 103 people on board survive, with 23 injured, three of them seriously.
April 13 - Cathay Pacific Flight 780 from Surabaya Juanda International Airport to Hong Kong lands safely after both engines thrust controls get stuck due to contaminated fuel. 57 passengers are injured in evacuation. The two pilots receive the Polaris Award from the International Federation of Air Line Pilots' Associations, for their heroism and airmanship.
May 12 - Afriqiyah Airways Flight 771, an Airbus A330, crashes on landing at Tripoli International Airport, killing 103 on board; the sole survivor is a child from the Netherlands.
May 17 - Pamir Airways Flight 112, an Antonov An-24 with 39 passengers and 5 crew, disappears from radar 10 minutes after takeoff from Kunduz Airport in Afghanistan. There were no survivors.
May 22 - Air India Express Flight 812, a Boeing 737-800, crashes at Mangalore International Airport after overshooting the runway, killing a total of 158 people in the worst-ever crash involving the 737-800.
June 20 - The 2010 Cameroon Aero Service CASA C-212 Aviocar crash near Djoum, Cameroon, kills all 11 on board, including the entire board of Sundance Resources, an Australian mining conglomerate.
July 27 - Lufthansa Cargo Flight 8460, a McDonnell Douglas MD-11 freighter, catches fire and breaks in half as it lands at King Khalid International Airport, injuring the German pilot and co-pilot.
July 28 - Airblue Flight 202, an Airbus A321, crashes into a hill in the Margalla Hills north-east of Islamabad apparently due to bad weather resulting in 146 passengers and 6 crew members perished. It is the first fatal accident involving an Airbus A321 and Pakistan's worst air disaster.
August 3 - Katekavia Flight 9357, an Antonov An-24 crashes on approach to Igarka Airport, Russia, killing twelve people.
August 16 - AIRES Flight 8250, a Boeing 737 splits in three after a hard landing at Gustavo Rojas Pinilla Airport, San Andres, Colombia. Of the 125 passengers and 6 crew members on board, two passengers are killed and another 113 injured.
August 24 - Agni Air Flight 101, a Dornier Do 228, crashes outside of Kathmandu, Nepal, in heavy rain, killing all 14 people on board.
August 24 - Henan Airlines Flight 8387, an Embraer E-190, overruns the runway and crashes at Yichun, Heilongjiang, northeast China, causing 44 fatalities from 91 passengers and 5 crew members; this is the first hull loss of an Embraer E-Jet.
August 25 - The 2010 Bandundu Filair Let L-410 crash on approach to Bandundu Airport, Democratic Republic of the Congo, kills all but one of the 21 on board.
September 3 - UPS Airlines Flight 6, a Boeing 747-400, crashes at a military base shortly after takeoff from Dubai International Airport, killing both of the two crew.
September 7 - Alrosa Mirny Air Enterprise Flight 514, a Tupolev Tu-154M, suffers electrical failure and makes an emergency landing at Izhma Airport; while landing, the aircraft overruns the runway and is written off; all 81 passengers and crew survive.
September 13 - Conviasa Flight 2350, an ATR-42, crashes shortly before landing in Ciudad Guayana, killing 15 of the 51 people on board.
November 4 - Aero Caribbean Flight 883, an ATR-72, crashes in Sancti Spiritus, Cuba, killing all 68 on board in the joint worst-ever accident involving the ATR 72.
November 4 - Qantas Flight 32, an Airbus A380, suffers substantial mechanical failure of its left inboard engine after taking off from Singapore Changi Airport. The flight turns back and lands safely. All the 440 passengers and 29 crew on board are safe. Cowling parts of the failed engine fall over Batam Island.
November 5 - In the 2010 Karachi Beechcraft 1900 crash a JS Air charter crashes straight after takeoff, killing all 19 passengers and 2 crew on board.
November 11 - The Zalingei Tarco Airlines Antonov An-24 crash on landing at Zalingei Airport, Sudan, kills 6 of 44 on board.
November 28 - Sun Way Flight 4412, an Ilyushin Il-76TD, suffers an engine fire and crashes near Jinnah International Airport, killing all 8 crew on board and another 4 on the ground.
December 4 - Dagestan Airlines Flight 372, a Tupolev Tu-154, skids off the runway during emergency landing at Russia's Domodedovo International Airport, killing two of the 160 passengers on board and injuring 87.
December 15 - A Tara Air de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter crashes in the Bilandu Forest near Shreechaur, Okhaldhunga District, Nepal, killing all 22 passengers and crew on board.
2011
January 1 - Kolavia Flight 348, a Tupolev Tu-154, erupts in flames while taxiing at Surgut International Airport, Russia, killing 3 out of 124 people and injuring 43.
January 9 - Iran Air Flight 277, a Boeing 727, crashes at Urmia Airport, Iran, during a go-around, killing 77 of 105 people on board.
February 10 - Manx2 Flight 7100, a Fairchild Metroliner III, crashes at Cork Airport, Republic of Ireland, and catches fire, killing 6 of 12 people on board.
February 14 - Central American Airways Flight 731, a Let L-410 Turbolet, crashes while on approach to Toncontin International Airport, killing all 14 on board.
March 21 - The 2011 Pointe-Noire Trans Air Congo An-12 crash: an Antonov An-12 crashes on approach to Pointe Noire Airport, Republic of the Congo, killing all 4 crew on board and another 19 on the ground.
April 1 - Southwest Airlines Flight 812, a Boeing 737, ruptures a hole in the fuselage at 36,000 feet, causing the cabin to lose pressure shortly after takeoff from Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport. The plane lands safely at Yuma International Airport, Arizona, with 116 people aboard uninjured and 2 with minor injuries.
April 4 - In the 2011 United Nations Bombardier CRJ-100 crash, a Georgian Airways plane operated by the United Nations Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUSCO) crashes on landing at N'djili Airport, Democratic Republic of the Congo; all but 1 of the 33 on board are killed.
May 7 - Merpati Nusantara Airlines Flight 8968, a Xian MA60, crashes off the coast of West Papua, Indonesia, while on approach to Kaimana Airport in heavy rain, killing all 25 passengers and crew on board.
May 18 - Sol Lineas Aereas Flight 5428, a Saab 340, crashes off Prahuaniyeu, Rio Negro, Argentina, while en route to General Enrique Mosconi International Airport, Comodoro Rivadavia due to ice formation on the wings, propellers and under the fuselage, killing all 22 passengers and crew on board.
June 20 - RusAir Flight 9605, a Tupolev Tu-134, crashes onto the Russian highway A133 near the village of Besovets, Petrozavodsk, Russia, while on approach to Petrozavodsk Airport, killing 47 of 52 on board.
July 6 - The 2011 Silk Way Airlines Ilyushin Il-76 crash: An Ilyushin Il-76 crashes into a mountain short of Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, killing all 9 people on board the cargo flight from Baku, operated on behalf of NATO.
July 8 - Hewa Bora Airways Flight 952, a Boeing 727, crashes on landing at Bangoka International Airport, Democratic Republic of the Congo, killing 74 of 118 on board.
July 11 - Angara Airlines Flight 5007, an Antonov An-24, ditches in the Ob River after an engine fire, killing 7 of 37 on board.
July 13 - Noar Linhas Aereas Flight 4896, a Let L-410 Turbolet, crashes shortly after takeoff from Recife Airport, Brazil, killing all 16 on board.
July 28 - Asiana Airlines Flight 991, a Boeing 747 freighter, crashes into the Pacific Ocean, west of Jeju Island, South Korea, killing the 2 crew.
July 29 - EgyptAir Flight 667. a Boeing 777, suffers a cockpit fire at Cairo International Airport. Injuring 7 of 317 on board.
July 30 - Caribbean Airlines Flight 523, a Boeing 737, overruns the runway on landing at Cheddi Jagan International Airport, Georgetown, Guyana, and breaks in two; seven are injured but all 163 passengers and crew survive.
August 9 - In the 2011 Avis Amur Antonov An-12 crash, an Antonov An-12, en route from Magadan Airport to Keperveyem Airport, crashes at Omsukchan, Russia, due to an engine fire, killing all 11 on board.
August 20 - First Air Flight 6560, a Boeing 737, crashes while on approach to Resolute Bay Airport, Nunavut, Canada, killing 12 of 15 on board.
September 6 - Aerocon Flight 238, a Fairchild Metroliner III, crashes near Trinidad, Bolivia, killing 8 of 9 people on board.
September 7 - Yak-Service Flight 9634, a Yakovlev Yak-42, crashes just after takeoff from Tunoshna Airport, Yaroslavl, Russia, due to pilot error, killing 44 of the 45 people on board. Many were players and staff of the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl ice hockey team of the KHL, as the flight was destined for Minsk, Belarus for a league game.
September 25 - Buddha Air Flight 103, a Beechcraft 1900D, crashes in dense fog while attempting to land at Kathmandu Tribhuwan International Airport, killing all 16 passengers and 3 crew members.
October 13 - Airlines PNG Flight 1600, a de Havilland Canada DHC-8, crashes near the mouth of the Gogol River, Papua New Guinea, killing 28 of 32 on board.
October 18 - Iran Air Flight 742, a Boeing 727, en route from Moscow, Russia, to Tehran, Iran, lands without nose gear at Mehrabad International Airport; all 94 passengers and 14 crew members survive without injuries.
November 1 - LOT Polish Airlines Flight 16, a Boeing 767, performs a belly landing at Warsaw Chopin Airport after its landing gear failed to deploy; all 220 passengers and 11 crew members survive without injuries.
2012
April 2 - UTair Flight 120, an ATR-72, crashes shortly after takeoff from Roshchino International Airport, Tyumen, Russia, killing 31 of the 43 passengers and crew on board.
April 20 - Bhoja Air Flight 213, a Boeing 737, crashes near Chaklala airbase, Rawalpindi, Pakistan, in bad weather, killing all 127 people on board.
May 9 - In the Mount Salak Sukhoi Superjet 100 crash, a Sukhoi Superjet 100 crashes into Mount Salak, Indonesia, on an exhibition flight, killing all 45 passengers and crew on board.
May 14 - In the Agni Air Flight CHT, a Dornier Do 228 crashes near Jomsom Airport, Nepal, during a go-around; of the 21 on board, 6 survive.
June 2 - Allied Air Flight 111, a Boeing 727, overruns the runway on landing at Kotoka International Airport, Accra, Ghana, and crashes through a fence; the aircraft then hits a bus on a nearby road; all 4 crew survive but 12 are killed on the ground.
June 3 - Dana Air Flight 992, a McDonnell Douglas MD-83 carrying 147 passengers and 6 crew members crashes in a suburb of Lagos, Nigeria, on approach to Murtala Muhammed International Airport, killing all on board and 10 more people on the ground.
June 29 - Six people attempt to hijack Tianjin Airlines Flight 7554, an Embraer E-190, 10 minutes after takeoff; passengers and crew are able to restrain the hijackers until the aircraft makes an emergency landing; of the 101 on board, 2 hijackers die and 11 passengers and crew are injured; this is China's first serious hijacking attempt since 1990.
September 12 - Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky Air Flight 251, an Antonov An-28, crashes in Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia, killing 10 of the 14 passengers and crew on board.
September 28 - Sita Air Flight 601, a Dornier Do 228, crashes on the bank of the Manohara River, Kathmandu, Nepal, after a bird strike, killing all 19 on board.
October 7 - FlyMontserrat Flight 107, a Britten-Norman Islander, crashes after takeoff from V.C. Bird International Airport, Antigua and Barbuda; of the 4 on board, only 1 survives.
November 30 - In the 2012 Aero-Service Ilyushin Il-76T crash, an Ilyushin Il-76T freighter crashes short of runway threshold on approach to Maya-Maya Airport, Brazzaville, Republic of Congo, in bad weather, killing all 6 aboard, 26 on the ground, and injuring 14.
December 17 - The 2012 Amazon Sky An-26 crash killed a crew of four, when the aircraft hit the ground while crossing the Andes.
December 25 - Air Bagan Flight 11, a Fokker 100, crash-lands on a road near Heho Airport, Myanmar, killing one on board, one on the ground and injuring 11.
December 29 - Red Wings Airlines Flight 9268, a Tupolev Tu-204 on a re-positioning flight, overruns the runway on landing at Moscow's Vnukovo International Airport, then breaks apart and catches fire; 5 of the 8 crew on board are killed in the first fatal accident involving the Tu-204.
2013
January 29 - SCAT Airlines Flight 760, a Bombardier CRJ200, crashes in thick fog on approach to Almaty International Airport, Kazakhstan, killing all 16 passengers and 5 crew on board.
February 13 - South Airlines Flight 8971, an Antonov An-24, crash-lands in dense fog at Donetsk International Airport, Ukraine, killing 5 of 52 people on board.
April 13 - Lion Air Flight 904, a Boeing 737 carrying 101 passengers and 7 crew members, crashes into the ocean while attempting to land at Ngurah Rai International Airport on the Indonesian island of Bali, injuring 46 people.
April 29 - National Airlines Flight 102, a Boeing 747 freighter, stalls and crashes shortly after takeoff from Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan, due to load shifting, killing all seven crew members on board.
May 16 - Nepal Airlines Flight 555, a de Havilland Canada DHC-6, overruns the runway on landing at Jomsom Airport, Nepal, injuring seven people.
July 6 - Asiana Airlines Flight 214, a Boeing 777, crashes short of the runway on landing at San Francisco International Airport, killing three of 307 on board and injuring 182. The crash was the first fatal accident involving the Boeing 777.
July 7 - A de Havilland Canada DHC-3 operated by Rediske Air crashes on approach to Soldotna Airport, Alaska, killing all 10 people on board.
August 14 - UPS Airlines Flight 1354, an Airbus A300 freighter, crashes short of the runway on approach to Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport, killing the two crew on board.
October 3 - Associated Aviation Flight 361, an Embraer 120, crashes shortly after takeoff from Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, killing 15 people on board.
October 16 - Lao Airlines Flight 301, an ATR-72, crashes shortly before landing at Pakse International Airport under adverse weather conditions, killing all 44 passengers and 5 crew on board.
November 17 - Tatarstan Airlines Flight 363, a Boeing 737, crashes at Kazan International Airport, Russia, during a go-around, killing all 50 people on board.
November 29 - LAM Mozambique Airlines Flight 470, an Embraer 190, en route from Maputo International Airport, Mozambique, to Quatro de Fevereiro Airport, Angola crashes into Bwabwata National Park in northern Namibia, killing all 33 people on board.
2014
February 16 - Nepal Airlines Flight 183, a de Havilland Canada DHC-6, crashes near Khidim about 74 kilometres southwest of Pokhara, Nepal, killing all 18 people on board.
February 17 - Ethiopian Airlines Flight 702, a Boeing 767, is hijacked by the co-pilot while en route from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, to Rome, Italy, but lands safely at Geneva, Switzerland. All 202 passengers and crew aboard are unharmed.
March 8 - Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, a Boeing 777 en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 227 passengers and 12 crew on board, disappears from radar over the Gulf of Thailand. A wing part was later found in Reunion.
July 17 - Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, a Boeing 777 en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur, is shot down over eastern Ukraine, killing all 283 passengers and 15 crew on board in the deadliest civilian airliner shootdown incident.
July 23 - TransAsia Airways Flight 222, an ATR-72 en route from Kaohsiung to Penghu, Taiwan, crashes during go-around, killing 48 of the 58 people on board.
July 24 - Air Algerie Flight 5017, a chartered Swiftair McDonnell Douglas MD-83 operating for Air Algerie en route from Burkina Faso to Algiers, crashes in the northern Mali desert after disappearing from radar approximately 50 minutes after takeoff, killing all 110 passengers and 6 crew members on board.
August 10 - Sepahan Airlines Flight 5915, a HESA IrAn-140 (an Antonov An-140 built under license) crashes shortly after takeoff from Mehrabad International Airport, Iran, killing 39 of the 48 people on board.
December 28 - Indonesia AirAsia Flight 8501, an Airbus A320 en route from Surabaya, Indonesia to Singapore, crashes into waters off Borneo, killing all 155 passengers and 7 crew on board.
2015
February 4 - TransAsia Airways Flight 235, an ATR-72, stalls on takeoff and crashes into the Keelung River in Taiwan after striking the Huandong Viaduct and a passing taxi. 43 of the 58 passengers and crew on board were killed.
March 5 - Delta Air Lines Flight 1086, a McDonnell Douglas MD-88 skids off the runway at LaGuardia Airport and crashes into a fence, coming inches from Flushing Bay. Several people were injured, but there were no fatalities.
March 24 - Germanwings Flight 9525, an Airbus A320, crashes in southern France en route from Barcelona, Spain to Dusseldorf, Germany as a result of a deliberate act by the first officer. All 144 passengers and 6 crew on board the aircraft died in the crash.
March 29 - Air Canada Flight 624, an Airbus A320, crashes short of the runway and hits power lines while landing at Stanfield International Airport, en route from Toronto. All 138 passengers and crew on board survive, with 23 treated for minor injures.
April 14 - Asiana Airlines Flight 162, an Airbus A320, crashes short of the runway and hits a localizer while landing at Hiroshima Airport, after en route from Seoul. All 82 passengers and crew on board survive, but 27 are injured.
April 25 - Turkish Airlines Flight 1878, an Airbus A320, is severely damaged in a landing accident at Ataturk International Airport. All 102 passengers and crew on board are evacuated without injury.
August 16 - Trigana Air Service Flight 267, an ATR-42, crashes while en route from Sentani Airport, to Oskibil Airport in the eastern Indonesian province of Papua. All 49 passengers and five crew members are killed in the crash in the worst aviation accident ever involving the ATR-42.
September 5 - Ceiba Intercontinental Airlines Flight 71, a Boeing 737-800, collides in a mid-air with a BAe 125 air ambulance operated by Senegalair over eastern Senegal. The BAe 125 crashes in the Atlantic killing all 7 on board, while the 737 lands safely without any injuries to those on board.
September 8 - British Airways Flight 2276, a Boeing 777-200, aborts takeoff at McCarran International Airport following an engine fire. All 189 passengers and crew were evacuated safely.
October 2 - Aviastar Flight 7503, a DHC-6 Twin Otter, crashes on a mountain 11 minutes after take-off over Palopo, Indonesia, killing all 10 passengers and crew on board.
October 29 - Dynamic Airways Flight 405, a Boeing 767-200, erupts in flames while preparing for take-off at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport. All 101 passengers and crew on board survive, but 21 people are injured.
October 31 - Metrojet Flight 9268, an Airbus A321, explodes in mid-air due to a terrorist bomb over the Sinai Peninsula 23 minutes after takeoff from Sharm-El-Sheikh, killing all 224 passengers and crew on board.
November 4 - In the 2015 Juba An-12 crash, an Allied Services, Ltd. Antonov An-12 crashes near the White Nile shortly after takeoff from Juba International Airport, killing 37 of 39 on board
2016
January 8 - West Air Sweden Flight 294, a Bombardier CRJ200 cargo freighter, crashes while in cruise near Akkajaure in Sweden. Both crew members on board are killed.
February 2 - Daallo Airlines Flight 159, an Airbus A321, suffers an explosion shortly after taking off from Aden Adde International Airport, Somalia. Two people are injured and one, the suspected suicide bomber, is killed after falling from the aircraft.
February 24 - Tara Air Flight 193, a Viking Air-built DHC-6 Twin Otter, flies into a storm and crashes into a mountainside at Dana, Myagdi district, Nepal, killing all 23 on board.
February 26 - In the 2016 Air Kasthamandap crash, an Air Kasthamandap PAC 750XL crash-lands in Nepal, killing the two crew members and injuring nine passengers.
March 19 - Flydubai Flight 981, a Boeing 737-800, crashes while landing at Rostov-on-Don, Russia, in poor weather. All 62 people on board are killed.
March 29 - EgyptAir Flight 181, an Airbus A320, is hijacked and forcibly diverted to Larnaca International Airport, Cyprus. All passengers and crew are released unharmed.
April 4 - Batik Air Flight 7703, a Boeing 737-800, collides with an ATR 42 on the runway at Halim Perdanakusma Airport in Jakarta. Both aircraft are substantially damaged.
April 13 - In the 2016 Sunbird Aviation crash, a Britten-Norman Islander crashes short of the runway while landing at Kiunga, Papua New Guinea. All 12 people on board are killed.
April 29 - In the 2016 Turoy helicopter crash, a Eurocopter EC225L Super Puma helicopter crashes near Turoy, an island off the coast of Norway. All 13 passengers and crew are killed.
May 18 - In the 2016 Silk Way Airlines Antonov An-12 crash, a Silk Way Airlines Antonov An-12 cargo plane crashes after an engine failure, killing seven and injuring two.
May 19 - EgyptAir Flight 804, an Airbus A320, crashes into the eastern Mediterranean Sea after a series of sharp descending turns. All 56 passengers and 10 crew are killed.
May 27 - Korean Air Flight 2708, a Boeing 777-300, suffers an engine failure and resulting fire while taxiing for takeoff at Haneda Airport; all 319 passengers and crew are evacuated although 12 are injured.
June 27 - Singapore Airlines Flight 368, a Boeing 777-300ER, suffers an engine fire at Singapore Changi Airport after returning due to a fuel leak. All 241 passengers and crew are unharmed.
August 3 - Emirates Flight 521, a Boeing 777-300, lands wheels-up at Dubai International Airport. Shortly after landing, the plane bursts into flames. All 300 passengers and crew escape from the aircraft unharmed; one firefighter killed by an explosion.
August 5 - ASL Airlines Hungary Flight 7332, a Boeing 737, overruns a runway on landing at Orio al Serio International Airport; both pilots survive.
October 28 - American Airlines Flight 383, a Boeing 767-300ER, suffers an uncontained engine failure and fire at Chicago O'Hare Airport. Twenty of the 170 people on board suffer injuries.
October 28 - FedEx Express Flight 910, a McDonnell Douglas MD-10-10F, skids off the runway after the landing gear collapses on landing at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport; the left wing is severely damaged in a post-crash fire but both pilots survive.
November 28 - LaMia Airlines Flight 2933, an Avro RJ85, crashes at Cerro Gordo en route to Medellin, Colombia. It was carrying the Brazilian football team Chapecoense. Only six survive among 77 passengers and crew.
December 7 - Pakistan International Airlines Flight 661, a ATR-42-500, crashes at Havelian while en route from Chitral to Islamabad. All 42 passengers and 5 crew members are killed in the accident.
December 20 - Aerosucre Flight 4544, a Boeing 727-200, crashed while failing to take off from Puerto Carreno en route to Bogota, Colombia. Only 1 survives of the 6 crew members on board.
December 23 - Afriqiyah Airways Flight 209, an Airbus A320-214, is hijacked by two Gaddafi supporters & forced to land at Malta Airport. After several hours, all passengers & crew were released & the hijackers surrendered.
2017
January 16 - Turkish Airlines Flight 6491, a Boeing 747-400F, crashes into a residential area upon attempting landing in thick fog in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. The 4 crew members and 35 people on the ground are killed.
March 20 - 2017 South Supreme Airlines Antonov An-26 crash, an Antonov An-26 of South Supreme Airlines crashes on landing at Wau Airport.
2018
October 29 - Lion Air Flight 610, a Boeing 737 MAX crashes into the Java Sea after takeoff from Soekarno-Hatta International Airport. All 189 on board die.
2019
January 14 - 2019 Saha Airlines Boeing 707 crash, a Boeing 707-3J9C overshoots the runway on landing by mistake at Fath Air Base, Iran, killing 15 of 16 people inside.
February 23 - Atlas Air Flight 3591, a Boeing 767-375(ER)(BCF) crashes into Trinity Bay as it approached the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas. All three crew members died.
February 24 - Biman Bangladesh Airlines Flight 147, a Boeing 737-800, survived an attempted hijacking by a man with a toy pistol. All passengers were safely evacuated upon landing in Shah Amanat International Airport in Chittagong and the would-be hijacker was shot dead by Bangladeshi special forces.
March 9 -- 2019 Colombia DC-3 crash, a Douglas DC-3 crashes while attempting to land at La Vanguardia Airport, Villavicencio, Colombia. All 11 passengers and 3 crew are killed.
March 10 - Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, a Boeing 737 MAX 8, crashes near Bishoftu, Ethiopia six minutes after taking off from Bole International Airport heading to JKIA , Kenya . All 149 passengers and 8 crew are killed.
May 3 - Miami Air Flight 293, a Boeing 737-81Q, overshoots the runway on landing in Jacksonville during a thunderstorm; all 143 passengers and crew survived the accident.
May 5 - Aeroflot Flight 1492, a Sukhoi Superjet 100 operating an internal flight in Russia, suffers an inflight electrical failure shortly after departing from Sheremetyevo International Airport, Moscow, and returns to the airport where it catches fire after landing; 41 of the 78 people on board died.
May 8 - Biman Bangladesh Airlines Flight 60, a Bombardier Q400 from Shahjalal International Airport in Bangladesh, runs over the runway in bad weather at Yangon International Airport, Myanmar; all 33 people on board survived but 18 were injured.
May 13 - A Taquan Air de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Turbine Otter floatplane collides in mid-air with a Mountain Air Service de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver floatplane, while both are operating flights over George Inlet, Alaska, United States; the DHC-2 pilot and all four passengers are killed; the DHC-3 makes an emergency landing in water with the loss of one of its 10 passengers.
June 27 - Angara Airlines Flight 200, an Antonov An-24 operating an internal flight in Russia, suffers an engine failure and lands at Nizhneangarsk Airport where it runs off the runway and crashes into a building; all 43 passengers survive but two of the four crew members are killed.
August 15 - Ural Airlines Flight 178, an Airbus A321 bound for Simferopol, Crimea, suffers a double bird strike after takeoff from Zhukovsky International Airport in Moscow, Russia, and performs an landing in a cornfield; 74 of the 233 people on board are injured.
October 4 - Ukraine Air Alliance Flight 4050, an Antonov An-12 en route from Spain to Turkey, crashes on approach to its stopover spot at Lviv International Airport in Ukraine, due to fuel exhaustion; five of the eight occupants are killed and the three survivors are seriously injured.
October 17 - PenAir Flight 3296, a Saab 2000 flying from Anchorage, Alaska, United States, to Amaknak Island off the Alaskan coast, runs off the runway after landing in erratic wind conditions, critically injuring two of the 42 people on board, one of whom dies the next day.
November 24 - A Busy Bee Dornier Do 228 crashes shortly after takeoff from Goma International Airport in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, killing all 19 occupants of the aircraft and 10 people on the ground.
December 27 - Bek Air Flight 2100, a Fokker 100 operating an internal flight in Kazakhstan, crashes on takeoff from Almaty International Airport, killing 13 of the 98 people on board and injuring 66.
2020
January 8 - Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752, a Boeing 737-800 bound for Kyiv, Ukraine, crashes shortly after taking off from Imam Khomeini International Airport in Tehran, Iran, after being hit by two missiles launched by the Iranian military; all 176 crew and passengers on board are killed.
January 14 - Delta Air Lines Flight 89, a Boeing 777-200, dumps fuel over schools and neighborhoods while returning to Los Angeles International Airport, injuring 56.
January 27 - Caspian Airlines Flight 6936, a McDonnell Douglas MD-83, flying a domestic flight from Tehran, Iran, overruns the runway on landing at Mahshahr Airport, Iran; the aircraft comes to a stop on a road, injuring 2 of the 144 passengers and crew on board.
February 5 - Pegasus Airlines Flight 2193, a Boeing 737-800 operating an internal flight between Izmir and Istanbul in Turkey, skids off the runway and drops down an embankment on landing at Sabiha Gokcen International Airport; three of the 183 people on board are killed.
May 4 - An East African Express Airways Embraer EMB 120 Brasilia crashes after being fired upon by Ethiopian ground forces during a cargo flight carrying pandemic relief supplies to Berdale, Somalia; all four passengers and two crew are killed.
May 22 - Pakistan International Airlines Flight 8303, an Airbus A320, crashes in a neighborhood in Karachi minutes before a second attempted landing at Jinnah International Airport. 2 passengers survive among the 99 on board. One victim on the ground later dies from her injuries.
August 7 - Air India Express Flight 1344, a Boeing 737-800, crashes on landing at Kozhikode International Airport; 21 occupants are killed, including both pilots.
August 22 - A South West Aviation Antonov An-26 crashes in a residential area after taking off for a cargo flight from Juba International Airport, South Sudan, killing 8 of 9 people on board.
November 13 - Volga-Dnepr Airlines Flight 4066, an An-124 operating a cargo flight from Novosibirsk, Russia to Vienna, Austria, suffers an engine failure on takeoff and overruns the runway upon returning to Novosibirsk. All 14 crew members survive the incident.
2021
January 9 - Sriwijaya Air Flight 182, a Boeing 737-500 operating an internal flight to Pontianak, Indonesia, crashes shortly after takeoff from Jakarta's Soekarno-Hatta International Airport. All 62 passengers and crew are killed in the crash.
February 20 - Longtail Aviation Flight 5504 , a Boeing 747-400BCF operating a cargo flight from Maastricht, Netherlands to New York, United States suffers engine failure shortly after takeoff. The aircraft safely diverts to Liege, Belgium but two people on the ground are injured by falling debris.
February 20 - United Airlines Flight 328, a Boeing 777-200 flying from Denver to Honolulu suffers an engine failure after takeoff, scattering debris over homes below. None of the 241 passengers and crew are injured, and no one was injured on the ground from debris.
March 2 - A South Sudan Supreme Airlines Let L-410 Turbolet crashes whilst operating an internal flight from Pieri to Yuai, South Sudan. All 8 passengers and 2 crew are killed.
May 23 - Ryanair Flight 4978, a Boeing 737-800 operating an international scheduled flight from Athens, Greece to Vilnius, Lithuania, is forced to land at Minsk, Belarus. Activist Roman Pratasevich, who was on board the aircraft, is arrested.
July 2 - Transair Flight 810, a Boeing 737-200C operating an internal cargo flight in Hawaii between Honolulu, Oahu and the neighbouring island of Maui, suffers engine failure shortly after takeoff and lands in the sea. Both pilots survive with injuries.
July 6 - Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky Air Enterprise Flight 251, an Antonov An-26 operating a domestic flight from Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky to Palana, Russia, crashes on approach. All 22 passengers and 6 crew are killed.
July 16 - SiLA Airlines Flight 42, an Antonov An-28 operating an internal flight from Kedrovy to Tomsk, Russia, makes a crash landing after takeoff, injuring 2 of the 18 passengers and crew on board.
Related pages
List of accidents and incidents involving commercial aircraft 1919 - 1959
List of accidents and incidents involving commercial aircraft 1960 - 1989
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Christopher Foy (born 20 November 1962) is an English retired professional football referee whose currently Head of Community and Public Engagement for PGMOL. Following his first appointment as an official in the Football League in 1994 and his promotion in 2001 to the list of Select Group Referees who officiate in the Premier League, He refereed a number of notable matches, including the FA Community Shield and the finals of the FA Cup, Football League Cup and FA Trophy.
In 2015 Foy retired to become a senior referees' coach for the PGMOL.
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Florida’s largest medical trade group is showing just how much the state’s doctors care about their friends, neighbors, and fellow residents.
The Florida Medical Association, which represents more than 20,000 physicians statewide, today unveiled “FMA Cares,” a new initiative highlighting how medical professionals give back to local communities.
FMA Cares will feature a series of videos and stories about medical professionals who make a difference in their neighborhoods.
The first ad introduces FMA member and Tallahassee orthopedic surgeon Andrew Borom, who provided care to Army Sgt. Luke Murphy during his rehabilitation.
When red tape prevented an Iraq War veteran the medical care he needed, Borom went the extra mile and volunteered treatment.
“It’s amazing how the simple act of doing the right thing can lead to so much more,” Borom said.
The video is available here.
“For many physicians, practicing medicine is more than a professional endeavor,” said FMA President Alan Pillersdorf. “Doctors across Florida give back to their local communities through humanitarian and charitable medical work that connects people with the care they need to live healthier lives.”
“Through FMACares.org, we will tell the stories of physicians like Dr. Borom,” said FMA Executive Vice President Tim Stapleton. “Every day across Florida, these doctors change lives through their acts of kindness and generosity.”
FMA is calling on its membership to send stories of what they are doing in local communities, by either email with a brief description of the humanitarian/charitable medical work to [email protected] or entering information online.
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Black Widow is a 1987 mystery crime thriller movie directed by Bob Rafelson and stars Debra Winger, Theresa Russell, Sami Frey, Dennis Hopper, and Terry O'Quinn. It was distributed by 20th Century Fox.
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Mail & Suggestion Boxes – Safco Products 2170BL Onyx Mesh Desktop Box File, 10″ Deep, Letter Size, Black Offers
Hello there, In the event that you are searching for Mail & Suggestion Boxes product, you might be around the appropriate web site . At this point that you are reading through our write-up regarding […]
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A maternal bond means the connections that often happen during pregnancy issues and childbirth, or between women and unrelated children, such as with adoptions. Maternal bonds are influenced by hundreds of emotional, mental and physical issues. Some new mothers do not bond instantly, however.
Family
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Develop marketing campaigns for your organization
Marketing is one of the most essential elements on which projects depend in order to be able to create the highest degree of success. Marketing contributes to promoting the investment idea. And it works to identify the most important steps that must be followed in order to gain more material profits. In addition, marketing or marketing campaigns have a role in influencing them, meaning that you can outperform competitors through successful marketing strategies that you can rely on. And other features that we will discuss today. But it requires you to rely on the entity that is characterized by the experience in order to be able to reap the highest amount of good results, and this matter needs the best e-marketing company in Dubai to determine the most important and best strategies that must be followed to achieve the business goals.
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To see your brand grow and thrive and achieve the best results. You must follow the marketing strategies that are carried out by the professional team that works scientifically according to the rules gained over the years of experience in this field. It is interesting that we will get acquainted with the most prominent of these methods. And on the most important elements through which you can develop the marketing strategies that your organization depends on through the experts of Ryzhub Company, and among the most prominent of these strategies
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Coma is a 2022 French film written and directed by Bertrand Bonello. The film made its world premiere at the 2022 Berlin Film Festival competing in the Encounters section on 12 February 2022, where it won the FIPRESCI Award. This was the last movie filmed by actor Gaspard Ulliel and the first movie to be released after his death. The film mixes animation and live action and tells the story of a teenage girl who is locked up in her house during a global health crisis and navigates between dreams and reality, until she starts following a disturbing and mysterious YouTuber named Patricia Coma. It stars Louise Labeque, Julia Faure, Gaspard Ulliel, Laetitia Casta, Vincent Lacoste, Louis Garrel and Anais Demoustier. The film will be released in theaters in France on 16 November 2022.
Cast
Julia Faure as Patricia Coma
Louise Labeque as Young Girl
Laetitia Casta as Sharon (voice)
Gaspard Ulliel as Scott (voice)
Vincent Lacoste as Nicholas (voice)
Louis Garrel as Dr. Ballard (voice)
Anais Demoustier as Ashley (voice)
Marketing
The first image showing Louise Labeque, the full cast and plot details were revealed on 2 February 2022.
Two clips from the film titled "Catatonie" and "Cullen" were released on 10 February 2022. The clip titled "Cullen" featured the voices of Gaspard Ulliel and Laetitia Casta as the dolls Scott and Sharon, respectively.
Belgian distributor Best Friend Forever released a poster and an exclusive 20-second teaser trailer for the film on their Instagram account on 11 February 2022.
On 16 February 2022, Best Friend Forever released on their Instagram account a new 9-second clip featuring Louise Labeque playing an electronic device similar to Rubik's Cube.
Release
On 2 February 2022, it was announced that Brussels-based company Best Friend Forever had bought the film.
The film had its world premiere in the Encounters section at the 72nd Berlin International Film Festival on 12 February 2022. New Story will release the film in theaters in France on 16 November 2022.
Awards and nominations
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Sarah Elsdon, NCSP, Career Development Manager
/> committed to break barriers for our individuals in the world of employment. Sarah lives in Wallingford, CT with her husband and puppy. In her free time, she enjoys reading, hiking, attending concerts, and exploring New England.
Sarah Elsdon, NCSP
Career Development Manager, CareerAbility
Chapel Haven Schleifer Center
(203) 397-1714 – ext. 215
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Wenzenbach is a municipality in Regensburg in Bavaria in Germany.
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Urban Acres, the organic food co-op, is opening a storefront at the Promise of Peace Garden next month. Co-op members can pick up their food shares and shop for other groceries and sundries at the new location on Saturdays starting March 6.
Membership in the co-op is $62, and it’s $50 for a food share (about a bushel) or $30 for half a food share every other week.
More details are available here.
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A day is the time it takes the Earth to spin around once. It is day time on the side of the Earth that is facing the Sun. When it is night time, that side of the Earth is facing away from the Sun. It takes 24 hours for the Earth to spin once, so that is one day, including the day time and night time. This is mean solar time, measured relative to the Sun. There is also sidereal time, measured relative to the fixed stars. The sidereal day is a few minutes shorter.
List of days of the year
* There are only 29 days in February during a leap year. Otherwise, February has 28 days.
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We offer an infant program, with an emphasis on providing the nurturing relationships crucial to young children’s development. We follow individual schedules — babies eat, sleep, and play according to their own timetable.
- Eating – Parents of infants have several choices for feeding their children while they are at a CCCC Center. CCCC offers a USDA-approved, iron-fortified formula for infants less than 12 months as part of our CACFP food program. Parents may also bring bottles of breast milk or a formula of their choosing. CCCC supports breastfeeding mothers as well; nursing mothers are welcome to visit the classroom and nurse their child at any time. It is helpful for the teacher to know the mother’s anticipated feeding schedule.
- Sleeping – Cribs are available; each child receives his or her own bedding and is encouraged to sleep when tired. Teachers are accomplished at rocking, singing, and soothing babies to sleep!
- Playing – Our infant rooms have many developmentally appropriate toys, activities and experiences. Children are given the opportunity to explore and exercise and develop their physical, social and language skills. As their age and development allow, babies also participate in special activities such as art, music, and field trips.
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Keith David Williams (born June 4, 1956) is an American actor, comedian, and singer. He is best known for his co-starring role as King in Platoon and as Childs alongside Kurt Russell in John Carpenter's The Thing. He also starred in Crash, There's Something About Mary, Barbershop, and Men at Work.
Filmography
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Here's some exciting news...
I was nominated for the Leibster Award!
The Leibster Award is given by new bloggers to other new bloggers, and it is a fun way to discover new blogs and boost a blogger's reputation if he/she has under 200 followers. Alexandra, the author of A Yank in Blighty, was sweet enough to nominate me.
They like me, they really like me!
Without sounding too lame, I would like to thank all of you who find this blog mildly interesting and follow along. It started out as a weekly travel diary, and since it has evolved into something more. So, thank you, thank you very much!
The Rules:
1. Mention the person who nominated you with a link in to their blog
2. Answer the 11 questions provided by the person who nominated you
3. Nominate other bloggers with less than 200 followers
4. Create a new set of 11 questions for your nominees to answer
1. What day do you post on your blog the most? Do you have a set schedule? On Monday mornings I post a Weekly Update so that followers can read about the happenings of Team Starnes. I also randomly post throughout the week highlighting popular London establishments such as museums, landmarks, boroughs and restaurants. Recently, I've been posting about 3-4 times a week.
2. What do you love about blogging? I love being able to looking back on what we've done and what we've accomplished in London. When this year is over, we want to get the content of this blog published and create a coffee table book for ourselves!
3. If you can have any blog out there, whose blog would you want to have? This is still TBD. I don't follow any one blog religiously, (with the exception of my friends' blogs) and I try not to covet others' blogs; everyone's different, everyone will have something different to blog about. I like many different blogs for many different reasons. One might be a badass lifestyle blog, another might be a blog with great fashion advice, or travel experience... It really depends. I am just trying to evolve my own blog and focus on making it the best that it can be.
4. What color clothing do you wear the most? Why? I live in London. Black. Is that even a question?
5. What do you hate about blogging? I think we bloggers can agree that there are certains parts of the 'job' that we enjoy less than others. Let me know if you agree with my list...
#1: I personally get very caught up in the design of my blog; I want it to look a specific way--I want to be proud of it! There is a lot of HTML code that goes into designing a blog and I have spent hours figuring it out. I did not use an external design template, so what you see is what I have created all by myself!
#2: Resizing and editing EVERY SINGLE PICTURE is definitely very time consuming.
#3: It's stressful to be on a schedule (if you choose to be). I know I don't have to be on a schedule, but my goal is to upload weekly posts and I want to hold myself to it.
#4: I am new to blogging (and writing in general), so I stress a lot about my grammar and not making a fool out of myself. I sometimes struggle at putting my thoughts into words, but it's getting easier with practice!
6. Which Social Media App do you use the most? I use Instagram almost daily. It's definitely my go-to. I still use Facebook, but not as much for social media purposes, but to promote my blog posts to family and friends that don't have Instagram. And Twitter, well I just started using Twitter.
7. What can you not leave home without? My fedora. Definitely. Or at least one of my many fedoras. I love hats! They are like a security blanket for me. Oh! And red lipstick is a MUST!
8. Describe yourself in one word. Dynamic. (James is laughing at this one!) I love using that in interviews, but it's so true! I'm constantly evolving and changing. A life in motion, stays in motion!
9. What was/would be your first dance wedding song? J and I danced to "Your Song" by Elton John. It's always been "our" song so it was very special to us.
10. Tell me something funny that happened to you. This one time, at band camp... I don't know, I will have to get back to you on that one!
11. What is the main reason you started a blog? (Being Heard, Being Seen, Popularity, Hobby, For Friends...) The reason I started this blog was to keep in touch with our family and friends back in the States. I am not working, so I have the time to devote to exploring London and developing interesting (hopefully) content. With that being said, the blog has started to evolve and I am adding and incorporating different series' into the blog to give it some new mojo. Not only do I have my weekly recaps, I also have EAT&DRINK, the SEE Collection, WALKABOUT and I am excited to announce that in a couple weeks I am going live with a new series called ADJUSTING, where I will light-heartedly discuss the cultural differences between American and British culture.
WHEW! Well I hope you enjoyed getting to know TSTL a little bit better! Check back frequently for more updates from Team Starnes! xoxo
I nominate:
Here are my questions:
1. Why did you start blogging?2. What do you love about blogging?
3. If you could move anywhere in the world, where would it be? Why?
4. What is your earliest memory?
5. What do you hate about blogging?
6. What website do you spend the most time on?
7. What can you not leave home without?8. Describe yourself in one word.
9. What was/would be your first dance wedding song?
10. Tell me something funny that happened to you.
11. What is the best piece of advice you've been given/found?
Alright baby bloggers, Enjoy! xx
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The is a university for women in Tokyo. It is a Catholic university. Empress Michiko is a former student.
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SHAQUILLE O'NEAL has purchased a Beverly Hills-area home with eight bedrooms and 14 baths--but no basketball hoop, yet--for $2.6 million, sources say.
The star center, credited with bringing back full houses to the Forum, had been leasing a three-bedroom 5,000-square-foot penthouse on the Wilshire Corridor at $25,000 a month. He also had been staying in a Manhattan Beach house since leaving the Orlando Magic for the L.A. Lakers last summer.
This summer, O'Neal, 25, will play a comic-book superhero in the movie "Steel," produced by Quincy Jones, and he is promoting his third rap CD, "You Can't Stop the Reign." He is also developing his own TV series, "Hoops," about basketball. He signed a $120-million seven-year contract with the Lakers in 1996.
O'Neal bought a 15,000-square-foot house with a tennis court and a city view. Built about three years ago, the house is contemporary in style with large-scale rooms and a 35-foot-tall entry hall, both of which appealed greatly to the 7-foot-1 300-pound NBA all-star. There is also an elevator in the three-level house.
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Myuran Sukumaran (; 17 April 1981 - 29 April 2015) was an Australian citizen who was executed in Indonesia for drug trafficking as a member of the Bali Nine. He was born in London, England. His parents were Sri Lankan immigrants. He moved to Australia at a young age.
In 2005, Sukumaran was arrested at Ngurah Rai International Airport in Denpasar, Bali. Sukumaran and Andrew Chan were the apparent co-ringleaders of the heroin smuggling operation. After a criminal trial on 14 February 2006, Sukumaran was sentenced to execution by firing squad.
On 30 December 2014, Sukumaran's request for clemency was rejected by the President of Indonesia, Joko Widodo. Sukumaran and Chan were in prison at Nusakambangan Island in isolation cells. On 16 January 2015, Sukumaran and Chan were ordered to be executed after nine years in jail. On 6 February 2015, it was stated that Chan and Sukumaran would be executed by the end of the month. On 11 February 2015, Indonesian authorities approved the move of Chan and Sukumaran from Kerobokan prison to Nusakambangan Island in preparation for execution. On 24 February 2015, a final appeal to save Chan and Sukumaran from execution, with their lawyers appeal bid to challenge President Widodo's refusal to grant clemency, failed. The move from Kerobokan prison to Nusakambangan Island was on 4 March. On 6 April 2015, Chan and Sukumaran's lawyers faced the state administrative court to challenge President Joko Widodo's refusal to grant clemency, in a final attempt to stop the executions. This was also unsuccessful. On 24 April 2015, prosecutors ordered the final preparations for the execution of Chan and Sukumaran, as well as eight others on death row. On 25 April (ANZAC Day), the pair, along with 7 other death row prisoners, were given a 72-hour notice of their executions.
Sukumaran was executed by firing squad on 29 April 2015 along with Chan as well as Nigerians Raheem Agbaje Salami, Okwuduli Oyatanze, Sylvester Obiekwe Nwolise, Ghanaian Martin Anderson, Brazilian Rodrigo Gularte and Indonesian Zainal Abidin.
Sukumaran's funeral was conducted at Dayspring Church, Castle Hill on 9 May 2015.
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Outfits // Spring.
Collection by Rochelle Hack • Last updated 7 weeks ago
vintage lace retro floral liberty print modest sleeves flowy bohemian midi skirts old fashioned feminine girly classic 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s! I love…
Luxury fashion & independent designers | SSENSE
An #Adorable fashion look from February 2015 featuring henley tee, pocket skirt and knee high laced boots. Browse and shop related looks.
Image about fashion in Feminine 👸 by Joury on We Heart It
Uploaded by @Luna_mi_Angel. Find images and videos about fashion, outfit and flowers on We Heart It - the app to get lost in what you love.
Hummingbirds and Pastel Tartan
Liana of Finding Femme wears Review Australia pastel tartan dress, Alannah Hill headband, Princess Highway pink embroidered bird cardigan and Modcloth shoes and earrings.
june9.com
Woot! It's almost Spring and I can't wait to change the wardrobe. Get lot's of inspiration with these 30 Cute Spring Outfits to Try this year!!!
Lookbookstore Dresses Archives - ZKKOO
Saias estampadas: 7 looks para inspirar suas produções da semana
As saias são as melhores apostas para esse verão, mas que tal fazer dessa peça a protagonista da produção?
Amoebas Amoebas Everywhere!
35. Ma. Wife. Midwest. I like stuff and things! [email protected] .... Follow my blog with Bloglovin
Clothes to Make You Look Good at Every Age – Glam Radar
Get the most out of your closet by choosing these style staples that will make you look good at every age.
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Ait Benhaddou is a fortified city along the caravan route between the Sahara and Marrakech, in Morocco. Today, very few people live in the city. Most have moved to more modern cities. It has been an ideal place for movies to be filmed due to its scenery and lack of people. Many famous movies were shot there, including Marco Polo, The Mummy, and Prince of Persia.
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Australia has had its third hottest year on record since records began in 1910 – despite not being affected by El Nino.
Queensland and NSW experienced their warmest years on record in 2017 as the trend of warmer than average temperatures across Australia continued, the Bureau of Meteorology says.
"Despite the lack of an El Nino - which is normally associated with our hottest years - 2017 was still characterised by very warm temperatures," its head of climate monitoring Dr Karl Braganza said.
The national mean temperature of 22.76C – or 0.95C above the long-term average – was the third highest nationally since records began in 1910.
Both day and night-time temperatures were warmer than average, with the maximum for the year the second highest on record.
The high temperature figures also saw Victoria record its sixth-highest year on record, Tasmania reach its 10th-highest and South Australia notch up its fifth-highest.
Prolonged high sea surface temperatures led to the first instance of back-to-back years of mass coral bleaching events on the Great Barrier Reef.
Dr Braganza said dry and cloud-free conditions across much of southeast Australia during June and July led to warm, sunny days and very chilly nights.
After a wet start to 2017, the middle of the year was notably dry.
June was the second-driest on record nationally and September the driest for the Murray-Darling Basin, Dr Braganza noted.
He said there has been a gradual decline of about 10 to 20 percent in rainfall during the cooler months of the year.
Seven of Australia's 10 warmest years have occurred since 2005.
Dr Braganza said 2017 is likely to have been among the three warmest years on record globally.
"Australia has been looking at an increased frequency of heatwaves and other extremes that have been positively associated with climate change," he said.
One of those extremes came with Cyclone Debbie in March and April which brought widespread flooding, heavy rainfall and destruction to parts of south-east Queensland and northern New South Wales.
At the time, the Category 4 cyclone wreaked havoc in low-lying areas, leaving residents stranded without power for days as floodwaters rose.
© Nine Digital Pty Ltd 2018
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Procompsognathus was a small, speedy theropod dinosaur. This meat-eater lived during the late Triassic period, about 210 million years ago (mya). It probably ate insects and lizards in a relatively dry, inland environment.
Procompsognathus may have been about one meter long (3.3 ft),
A biped, Procompsognathus had long hind legs, short arms, large clawed hands, a long slender snout with many small teeth, and a stiff tail. The tibia is approximately 20% longer than the femur in Procompsognathus. This suggests that they were good runners.
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Welcome to 8tracks radio: free music streaming for any time, place, or mood. tagged with rap, hip hop, drake, and Kendrick Lamar. You can also download one of our free apps to enjoy internet radio on your favorite device.
Smoke Good Bad B*tch
2195 340 12 tracks
night drive part 2
by sydamintoast
18 4 8 tracks
RAP TAP Featuring Gucci Mane
by MR MEKANIC
2823 237 16 tracks
on some chill shit
by livvylaynee
5323 691 8 tracks
h o g a n
by Jupitergray
2093 339 11 tracks
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Hallucinogens are chemical substances which temporarily change the way people see the world. Hallucinogens cause hallucinations. People no longer perceive reality as it is, but they see a reality that is distorted by their emotions. A person who is under the influence of a hallucionogen is said to be having a trip.
Hallucinogens have probably been used in the context of a cultic or religious function as long as there were humans.
There are different kinds of hallucinogens:
Psychedelic drugs: these are the "classic hallucinogens"
Dissociatives: They make people feel as if they were no longerpart of their surroundings.
Deliriants produce a state of delirium, or confusion.
Most hallucinogens are highly addictive. This means that the user will want to take the drug over and over again. It also means that there will be some effect of getting used to the drug. In the long run, more and more of the drug will need to be taken, to get the same effect.
People that are under the unintended influence of a hallucinogen may need immediate help, as in a medical emergency.
Psychoactive drugs
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Armenian Armed Forces Day Celebrated in Washington, DC
On January 31, the Armenian Armed Forces Day was celebrated in Washington, D.C. during a reception at the Embassy of Armenia. An official holiday in Armenia, it marks the valiance and dedication of the Armenian Armed Forces in defending the independence and freedom of the Homeland.
Ambassador Tatoul Markarian and Defense Attaché Col. Armen Sargsyan welcomed U.S. military officers and officials from the Department of Defense and branch services, the Joint Staff, State Department, members of the foreign diplomatic and defense attache corps accredited in Washington, and representatives of the Armenian organizations. Among the guests were Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense James MacDougal and Director of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, Lt. Gen. Jeffrey Kohler, as well as defense attaches of over 25 countries.
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S Doradus is a blue hypergiant star found in the large magellanic cloud. Its temperature can fall to lower than 7,000 degrees Kelvin in big eruptions. S Doradus can be more than a million times brighter than our Sun and 380 times larger in these eruptions.
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Details
With its cement foundation and soft vintage leather, the Phillip Harness is a more flexible, easygoing neighbour to the iconic Harness. We tumble these with stones in wooden drums. Then we pull, stretch and burnish them to bring out the richest of colours. Tough love? We call it unequalled craftsmanship. Italian leather. Leather lined. Leather outsole. Color: black
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Peillon is a commune. It is found in the region Provence-Alpes-Cote d'Azur in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the south of France.
Communes in Alpes-Maritimes
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Routes : North America : United States : California : Yosemite National Park : Tuolumne Meadows : Tioga Pass Road : Unknown 5.10-
Unknown 5.10- - 5.10a
Route sequence (left to right): 5
Route Summary | Ascent Notes (0)
Premier Sponsor:
Description:Start about 10 feet left and uphill of the rightmost routes (the routes closest to the road) below a bolt at the base of a vertical seam. There is a single bolt about 8 feet up the face between these two routes that goes nowhere. Climb up to the first bolt on this route then go up a thin crack (wires; crux) to a stance above a tiny pine tree (bolt). Go up and slightly right into an easy right facing corner which leads to a tree and the anchor.
Descent Options:Rappel from the tree with a 60 meter rope.
Submitted by: gunkswest on 2008-07-26
Last Modified: 2011-08-01
Views: 513
Route ID: 94988
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Skoda Lupo was a car made by Skoda Auto from 1998 through 2008. The SEAT Arosa was a badge-engineered version of the Lupo.
Engines
1.0 37 kW (50 hp)
1.4 44 kW (60 hp)
1.4 16V 55 kW (75 hp) and 74 kW (100 hp)
1.4 FSI 77 kW (105 hp)
1.6 GTI 92 kW (125 hp)
1.2 TDI 3L 45 kW (61 hp)
1.4 TDI 55 kW (75 hp)
1.7 SDI 44 kW (60 hp)
1.2 L 16v D4F I4 (petrol)
1990s automobiles
2000s automobiles
Lupo
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Recognising some of the great players in the history of Wrexham FCBILLY ASHCROFTwas born less than 100 yards away from South Liverpool's football ground. At school he never took football seriously until towards the end of his time there, but in less than a year had signed for Blackpool as an associate schoolboy.However, he left Bloomfield Road because of the travelling and his wish to concentrate on his studies. Although he had trials with both Everton and Tranmere, both of which came to nothing, it was only after switching from playing wing-half to centre forward that he came to Wrexham's attention. He made an immediate impact and signed for the Town straight from school in 1968, eventually being given professional terms by the club on his 18th birthday in 1970. It was two days later that he made his Football League debut, before establishing himself in the team and as a firm favourite with the crowd. Billy shared in what it was arguably the club's most successful period in the 1970's scoring 96 goals in the process before his ex-manager John Neal, then at Middlesbrough, returned to the Racecourse to sign his 'star pupil' for £120,000. He went on to play in Holland with Twente Enschede before returning to these shores to turn out for Tranmere Rovers. Once he retired from football, Billy moved into the licensing trade, running a pub in Southport.TOMMY BAMFORD is one of THE legends of Wrexham Football Club. He holds a number of goalscoring records for the club, including a record tally of 174 league goals, and the most league goals in a season, 44, during 1933/34. At the relatively late age of 23, he started his league career with Wrexham after playing most of his earlier football in the local leagues around South Wales. Tommy's debut in the Football League got off to great start, with a return of six goals in his first seven games at the end of 1928/29. While his International career with Wales was to start similarly, with a goal on his debut against Scotland at Hampden Park. His goalscoring record soon began to attract the attention of bigger clubs, and in 1934 he was transferred to Manchester United, where he went on to win the Second Division Championship, before returning to South Wales to sign for Swansea Town, where he stayed until the outbreak of WW2. During this period he did play for Wrexham once again, as a 'guest' player, scoring a further eight goals from 14 appearances. GARY BENNETT or 'Psycho' as he was affectionately known, will go down as one of the true legends of the Racecourse. He amassed an amazing 114 goals in just 177 games for Wrexham, the likes of which had not been seen since the great Tommy Bamford. His direct style of play and never say die attitude meant that the likeable Scouser soon became a crowd favourite - well, with the home fans anyway! Not bad for a free transfer and one from Chester City at that! After spells at Wigan Athletic, Chester City and Southend United, before being released by our local rivals, he was snapped up by Brian Flynn - who initially took some stick for signing a 'Chester Reject'. Once again though his talent for spotting a bargain paid dividends, when a return of 16 goals helped us to achieve promotion to the Second Division. His next two seasons at the Racecourse were to prove to be even more prolific, with 39 and 47 goals scored respectively. With the play-off positions just out of reach, Gary's desire to test himself at a higher level led to a £300,000 move to Tranmere Rovers where, despite averaging a goal every three games, it didn't really work out for him on the Wirral. A £100,000 switch to Preston North End followed where he scored one goal in eight league games to help the Deepdale outfit to the Third Division Championship. His love affair with Wrexham was not over yet though, and he returned to North Wales on the eve of the clubs FA Cup Quarter Final tie against Chesterfield. Things were to prove more difficult second time round though, and with FA Cup glory now out of reach he was allowed to re-join Chester City for £50,000, where he finished his career. Gary is still a very popular figure amongst the Wrexham fans and his goalscoring feats for the club will never be forgotten. A NATIVE of Liverpool, KARL CONNOLLY was playing local football with Napoli (in the Warrington Sunday League!) when he was spotted by Wrexham scout Keith McKeown. After a trial at the club, he was initially signed on non-contract terms, followed by a three month contract at the beginning of the 1991/92 season. Much to Karl's surprise he made his debut in the first match of that season against Hereford United, after which he never looked back. When he first arrived at the club his favoured position was as a forward, but he was soon moved out to the left wing where his trickery caused havoc for opposing defenders. He played in the epic FA Cup victory over Arsenal, as well as assisting the side to promotion to Division Two in 1992/93. He won a Welsh Cup Winners medal in 1995, when Wrexham beat Cardiff City in the final at the National Stadium, and the 1995/96 season saw him selected by his fellow professionals for the PFA's Second Division team. This was after switching to play in his favoured position of centre-forward following the departure of Gary Bennett, where he scored 21 goals. The end of the 1999/2000 season saw him move on a 'Bosman' free to Queens Park Rangers to provide him with a 'fresh challenge'. DAI DAVIES was a late convert to football as he attended a rugby only school, Amman Valley Grammar, in his native South Wales. However, he did play in goal during his schooldays for his local side, Ammanford Town. It was from here that he was spotted by Swansea Town, and he played for them whilst continuing his education until 1969 when he signed professional forms. Everton soon became interested in the Welshman, signing him for an initial fee of £25,000. He remained on Merseyside until 1977, when Wrexham manager Arfon Griffiths paid £8,000 for his services. He turned out to be an inspirational signing, helping the club to the Third Division Championship. A very commanding figure, Dai became an 'extra defender' with superb organisational skills and control of his area. After 144 appearances for the club, he moved on to Swansea and then to Tranmere Rovers where he finished his career. He did however appear for Wrexham again in the mid 80's, when Wrexham manager Dixie McNeil asked him to play in goal for the Welsh Cup fixtures, as the regular keeper was cup-tied. Dai went on to lift the cup that season, and he remains a keen supporter of the club - often found watching from the stands. A MAINSTAY of the most successful side in the club's history, GARETH DAVIES' unassuming efficiency at the back was a cornerstone of the glory days of the 1970s. Signed by Alvan Williams, initially as a centre forward, having been spotted playing for the Welsh Youth team, he was switched to centre back by John Neal, and went from strength to strength. Only Arfon Griffiths made more appearances for the club in its history as Davies managed over six hundred games, and nobody played more often in Europe. In a 16-year run in the first team, he picked up three Welsh Cup winners medals and played his part in those memorable runs to the quarter finals of both the FA and League Cups in the 1977-8 season. That was, of course, a campaign capped by the Third Division championship, after Davies had been a mainstay of the side which came agonisingly close to reaching the Second Division for the first time in the club's history the previous season. That was not Davies' first promotion, though, as he was also a part of the team which were runners-up in the Fourth Division eight years earlier. Davies also picked up three Welsh caps, but this list of achievements and the bare facts of his career's longevity hardly do justice to a player whose elegant consistency was almost taken for granted at the back, or a man who exuded quiet dignity. ALAN DWYER was spotted when playing for Halewood Youth Club in his native Liverpool by the productive scouting network that Wrexham employed during the astute managership of John Neal. Starting his career as a forward, Alan was soon moved to the left-back position, which he was to make his own during his time at the Racecourse. A great passer of the ball, a succession of niggling injuries were to scupper his chances of a 'big move', whilst also costing him many appearances for the club. Alan helped the club to promotion in 1978, whilst also reaching the quarter finals of both the FA Cup and League Cup. He was also to play in two European campaigns for the club, but was released in 1981, after which he had trials with both Chesterfield and Leicester City, before signing for Stockport County. ARFON GRIFFITHS’ place in the Wrexham 'Hall of Fame' is assured after he became the first manager to guide the club to the old Second Division. Before this though he was a player for the club, and a good one at that. Spotted playing local football by former Wrexham player Frank Blew, he was signed initially on amateur forms in 1957. He made his first team debut at 17 against Darlington in an FA Cup match, coming on for Brian Cripsey. After becoming a regular in the team, bigger clubs started taking an interest in him and Arsenal snapped him up for £15,500 in 1961. After 14 appearances for the North London club he was allowed to leave and returned to Wrexham, and thus began a nineteen year link with the club. He was involved in arguably the best years of the club's history: guiding the club to promotion in 1963 and 1970; winning the Welsh Cup four times; playing in three European campaigns - reaching the quarter finals in 1976; making a club record 591 Football League appearances; and scoring 120 goals for the club in the process. An impressive list by anyone's standards, these successes also led him on to international recognition with Wales, gaining 17 caps. BARRY HORNE enjoyed considerable success in football during his school days, winning a number of trophies and representing district teams. On leaving school he received a number of offers from league teams, but decided to consider his education, studying Chemistry for three years at Liverpool University. Upon leaving University, with a BSC and a Masters Degree in Engineering, he signed for Northern Premier League side Rhyl. It was here that he caught the eye of Wrexham manager Bobby Roberts who signed him on professional terms in 1984. After going straight into the first team, he missed just two league games in his remaining three years at the club. Barry collected a Welsh Cup Winners medal in 1986, and also played in two European campaigns for the club, including the famous victory over FC Porto where he scored one of the most important away goals in the history of the club. He then moved onto Portsmouth before a £700,000 move to neighbours Southampton. A move to Everton followed, where he scored one of the most important goals in their history - against Wimbledon to save the club from relegation. Barry was to play against Wrexham in an FA Cup game for Birmingham City, a game which the Red Dragons went on to win 3-1, before stumbling at the quarter final stage. STILL only 17 at the time, BRYAN HUGHES became a regular in the team over the course of the following season, even helping the club to the Welsh Cup Final, where a 2-1 victory over Cardiff City enabled the club to lift the trophy for a record 23rd time. After suffering a frustrating time in 1995/96 due to a dip in form, he returned to the team the next season following an injury to Phillips. His career was to blossom, with some outstanding performances helping the club to the quarter finals of the FA Cup, beating Birmingham City along the way. This was enough to persuade Brum boss Trevor Francis to splash out £900,000 for the talented midfielder. Bryan went on to play in a League Cup Final against Liverpool, as well as attracting attention from Premiership clubs. After over 250 appearances for the Blues, Bryan moved on a free transfer to Charlton Athletic when his contract with Birmingham ran out in 2004. The Valley was Bryan's home for three seasons as his racked up nearly another 100 games, before the upheaval of managerial changes and inevitable relegation sparked a major shakeup in the playing squad. Bryan's latest move has seen him leave London and take up the new challenge of assisting Hull City in their quest for Premiership football. JOEY JONES is a true Wrexham legend and will forever retain a prominent part in the club's history. His affinity with the club began when he left school in 1971 to become one of manager John Neal's crop of promising youngsters. He progressed quickly, and was called up for his first team debut at the age of 17 in a local 'derby' against Chester in a Welsh Cup tie, which Wrexham lost 1-0. Shrugging off that disappointment Joey went on to make his Football League debut in the next match, a 1-1 draw at Rotherham. He immediately established himself in the first team at right-back, going on to become a member of the Wrexham team that reached the quarter finals of the FA Cup for the first time in the club's history during the 1973/74 season, beating Second Division sides, Crystal Palace and Middlesbrough, and First Division Southampton before going out to Burnley. Joey won his first domestic honour in 1975 when Wrexham beat Cardiff City in the Welsh Cup Final, but before he could make his debut in European Football, was sold to Liverpool, the club that he supported as a boy, for £110,000. After winning two League Championships and the European Cup in his time on Merseyside, he returned to Wrexham for a fee of £210,000, a fee which still stands as a club record. Spells at Chelsea and Huddersfield followed, picking up another League Championship on the way, before rejoining Wrexham for a third spell in August 1987. In December 1989 he was appointed player/coach to the new manager Brian Flynn, before announcing his retirement form first team football in March 1992. Joey is, and always will be, remembered for his 100% effort given on the football field, and of course for his famous clenched fist salute. THE sight of ALBERT KINSEY receiving his Hall of Fame certificate at The Racecourse in 2002 will have been a welcome reminder to supporters who recalled his contribution to the club. He was a cult hero in that era and made a huge contribution as the foundations for the success of the 1970s were being laid. Albert, 12 goals in the last sixteen games gave the side the impetus required to force their way into the Third Division. The step up in class did not diminish his threat in the penalty area either, as he notched 17 goals in 32! Albert now lives in Australia, but his heroics for the club, with only six men having scored more goals in its history, ensure that he will never be forgotten in this corner of the Northern Hemisphere! INITIALLY on Leicester City's books, DIXIE McNEIL signed for Fourth Division Exeter City, after his release from Filbert Street. Despite finishing as the club's top scorer with eleven goals he was also released by the South Coast club, so then joined Corby Town. Spells at Northampton Town, Lincoln City and Hereford United followed before a move to the Racecourse at the beginning of the 1977/78 season. He became an instant success at the club, scoring on his debut in a 2-1 victory over Swindon Town. His scoring exploits were to prove a major influence as the club stormed to the Third Division Championship. Dixie remained in prolific form over the next four seasons before being released to rejoin Hereford United. After his retirement he returned to the Wrexham area, and was appointed the clubs manager in 1985, in succession to Bobby Roberts. He was to remain in the hot-seat until 1989, guiding the club to the brink of promotion and into European competition along the way, before his resignation. SIGNED by Wrexham as a 14-year-old schoolboy, EDDIE NIEDZWIECKI made his debut in August 1977 replacing the out of favour Brian Lloyd. Despite playing in a number of games during the promotion campaign of 1978, he was regularly behind the in-form Dai Davies in the battle for the number one jersey. This changed in 1981 when Dai moved onto Swansea, allowing his fellow Welshman to retain the coveted spot for the following two seasons. Ex-Wrexham manager John Neal was alerted to his outstanding performances and did not hesitate in splashing out £45,000 to take him to Chelsea, where he went straight into the first team. His playing career was to come to a somewhat premature end in 1988 after sustaining a knee injury two years earlier against QPR. After various coaching roles, he was with both Arsenal and Chelsea, whilst also helping out with the National side, before teaming up with Mark Hughes at Blackburn Rovers and then both Manchester City and QPR. BEFORE signing for Wrexham, BOBBY SHINTON had spells with both Walsall and Cambridge United. It was at the Racecourse though that he was to achieve the most success finishing fifth in his first season before powering to the Third Division Championship in his second. Add to this the succession of giant-killing cup feats, and it isn't hard to understand why he was so popular in North Wales. His silky skills and spectacular goals soon led to a £300,000 move to Manchester City in 1979, but he never settled there and found himself out on loan to Millwall before a move to Newcastle United. After failing to reproduce the form that he showed at the Racecourse he re-signed for Millwall, where he was to finish his league career. WHAT can one say about MICKEY THOMAS' football abilities that hasn't already been said? He was a tenacious midfield player, full of flair and eagerness, who would always give 100% wherever he played. However, his career was all too often offset by his problems off the field. Mickey's football career began with Wrexham, having been spotted playing for Conwy, Clwyd and North Wales Schoolboys. His all action style of play and elusive runs down the flank finally helped Wrexham to promotion to the Second Division for the first time in the club's history in 1978. Prior to that he had played in many of the Red Dragons' cup exploits, both at home and abroad. This prompted Manchester United to shell out £300,000 to prize him away from the Racecourse. Spells at several other clubs followed, notably Everton, Chelsea and Stoke City before returning to North Wales. Mickey's second spell with Wrexham proved to be just as fulfilling as his first, as he hit the national headlines with a superbly taken free-kick to pave the way towards knocking the Football League Champions, Arsenal out of the FA Cup in January 1992. The next season was to be his last, as made only eight league appearances for Wrexham as the side clinched promotion to the Second Division. Mickey will always be remembered at Wrexham for his achievements for the club. WHEN you chat to ex-Wrexham players from the 1950s, they all speak with awe about one particular man - BILLY TUNIC! Tunnicliffe's impact was felt after he left as well: his departure for Bradford as the 1952-3 season was drawing to a close was seen by many as a crucial point in the campaign: Wrexham losing momentum at that point as their promotion challenge faltered. They missed out on the first promotion in their history by a mere three points and, who knows, if this Racecourse legend had played a full season, history might have been achieved! GRAHAM WHITTLE was another product of Wrexham manager John Neal's successful youth policy, having being spotted playing football in his native Liverpool for Hartshill Boys' Club. He made his Football League debut in 1971 at Aston Villa, as he was asked deputise for Arfon Griffiths in a memorable 4-3 victory. Graham went on to play a major role in Wrexham's rise to the Second Division, and starred in the club's many giant-killing encounters of the 1970's. He became a firm favourite with the Wrexham fans, due to his fierce determination, and big powerful shot which was feared by many a goalkeeper. Combining with Billy Ashcroft to form a deadly strike partnership during the 1976/77 season he ended the campaign as the club's top scorer with 28 goals. The following season he formed another lethal partnership, this time with Dixie McNeil as the club galloped to promotion. Sadly, however, Whittle's career came to an early end due to a persistent knee injury, which forced him to retire before his 28th birthday., and was also a key player for his country, winning twenty-two Welsh caps.For such a major figure in pre-Great War football, he surprisingly only played two games in the Football League, one of which was for Manchester United as he helped them to gain promotion to the First Division., after which a special gold medal was presented to him by the club in recognition of his efforts.Blew's loyalty to his home town meant that he would devote his career to Wrexham, though: a fact that illustrates just how much the game, and indeed the world, have changed since those days! ALAN FOX’S promise was apparent from an early age, as he made his debut aged just seventeen at Crewe Alexandra. The difference between the game in those days and the modern player's change in the approach adopted to the game since Fox's career, is the fact that he did not miss a game from 1958 to 1963, a stretch of 198 consecutive games. In this time he was a key part of the side which gained promotion in 1962, and also picked up three Welsh Cup winners' medals. In 1964 Fox moved on to play for Hartlepool, but Wrexham has clearly retained a place in his heart, and he remains a valued friend of the club and the Supporters Association from his home in the North East. best be squad rotation, I wonder? A TOWERING figure for Wrexham as they established themselves in the old Third Division at the start of the 1970s, EDDIE MAY was an inspirational figure. He not only accumulated over four hundred appearances for the club between 1968 and 1976, the twelfth highest total in the club's history, but he also chipped in with a remarkable forty-four goals from his position at the back! May first made his mark at Southend United, where Alvan Williams converted him into a central defender. When Williams was appointed manager at Wrexham he brought Eddie with him, beginning a purple patch in the big man’s career and Wrexham's history. May was captain of the side which enjoyed its. Surprisingly, he was released in 1976 and moved on to Swansea. His influence on the club was not quite finished, though: May subsequently returned to The Racecourse as manager of Cardiff, and during a brief spell in charge of Newport County he sold Andy Thackeray to Dixie McNeil.ALLY McGOWAN'S years of service to the club were characterised by a redoubtable commitment to the cause of Wrexham Football Club. Wrexham certainly profited from the decision of St Johnstone to give 25 FA, handed the tricky job of making the young Joey Jones and Mickey Thomas toe the line! in the background, a stalwart at The Racecourse from the years before Football League status was earned,, and becoming synonymous with the fortunes of the North Walian side to the extent that it is widely regarded to be in his honour that the club nickname, for so many years, was "The Robins". FA, FA Cup and the League Cup, as well as promotion from the Fourth to the Second Division followed, with Showell continuing his role as lieutenant to Arfon Griffiths. He was unable to halt the slide back to the Fourth Division under Mel Sutton and Bobby Roberts, although he did have a brief spell in charge of the team, and would have been a popular permanent choice as he turned around a miserable season, registering 2-0 wins over Chester and eventual champions Chesterfield and handing over to Dixie McNeil having set off on a six match run of wins. Showell was assistant to McNeil, and continued in that capacity under Brian Flynn, but sadly his association with the club was to end in unfortunate circumstances, leaving because he did not meet new requirements for physiotherapists' qualifications. MEL SUTTON'Stire.
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Jose F. Bonaparte (14 June 1928 - 18 February 2020) was a paleontologist from Argentina. He discovered and named many new dinosaurs from South America, including Noasaurus, Carnotaurus, Saltasaurus, Kritosaurus, Alvarezsaurus, Riojasaurus, and many, many others. He also discovered or described a number of archosaurs and primitive birds (such as Iberomesornis) and assisted with the study of other dinosaurs, like Giganotosaurus.
He was born in Rosario, Argentina, and grew up in Mercedes, Buenos Aires. Despite a lack of formal training in paleontology, he started collecting fossils at an early age, and created a museum in his home town. Bonaparte was considered to be one of the greatest and most successful modern paleontologists.
He was Professor of Palaeozoology at the Universidad Nacional de Tucuman from 1975 to 1979, and director of the palaeovertebrate section between 1960 and 1978.
Bonaparte died on 18 February 2020 in Mercedes, Argentina at the age of 91.
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Category: Diaries.
Angel on Earth.. 3- April 2009
I achieved one of my very important childhood dreams when I attended Fairouz’s concert last year in Bahrain. Tonight, I achieved my second most important childhood dream by attending a concert for Majida Al-Roomi right on the same stage. I consider myself a very lucky person to achieve such dreams by the age of 26.
I was worried all week that something would come up and stop me from being there. I always get that feeling when an important event is coming up. The week went 3ala khair, but I woke up to find out that it was raining and that a thunderstorm is coming up. I spent almost the whole day peeking through the window every now and then checking on the weather and hoping for the storm to WAIT since the concert is going to be held outdoors. Endless messages were sent between me and my friends about what we’ll wear, when we’ll go and how we’ll survive the thunderstorm.
When I first sat on my seat I looked around at the place. It was almost the same as last year. Same crowd, same purple sky and spring breeze. It was a bit chilly but it wasn’t raining. I wore my coat and put my phone on silent. I didn’t want anything to distract me from living my dream.
It went dark, live music started playing and an angel in white came out of the very black dark stage. She was more beautiful than ever, classy as usual, wearing that very beautiful smile that comes right from the heart. And what can I say about that voice, that pure magical voice that you can never get enough of.
When I was around 6 years old, I used to play her songs and sing along facing the mirror with a brush in my hand. Sometimes I’d come up with a dance and imagine that I’m dancing on stage and even think of who the audience were. And I still listen to those songs, I can never get bored of them no matter how old I get. We were hoping on our way there that she’d sing some of those 80’s songs and she didn’t let us down. She did sing three of my very favourite oldies: Ghanni, Ma6ra7ak be albi and Khedny 7abeebi. I was literally dancing on my seat, swinging left and right, singing along knowing every single word and beat. For some moments I felt like it was only me and her. Just like the old days, but instead of the mirror and the tape it was her singing right infront of me.
I loved how she was interacting with the audience throughout the whole concert. She’s such a humble person, she assured us that she will keep singing no matter how the weather turns out and that she will fully understand if we decided to leave because of the storm. And the way she feels the music is just amazing. Her gestures, her movements, her very cute way of dancing. She holds her gown and moves to the left and to the right and sometimes down and then up again. You just can’t take your eyes off of her.
Bahrainis always loved her, she used to come here often and she even had a song about Bahrain. One of her songs was shot in Bahrain, ana 3am ba7lam, right in the same fort where the concert was held. But the audience weren’t just Bahrainis this time. There were many Lebanese of course, Kuwaitis, Iraqis and Saudis. Those were the accents that I heard around me and I’m sure that many others were present.
Another dream that came true tonight is that she sang many of my very favourite old Lebanese songs in a medley: 6alo a7babna for Wadee3 el9afi and Raje3 yet3amar Lebnanfor Zaki Nasif. I’m a very big fan of national Lebanese songs and it was more than marvelous to hear it in her delicate voice. I’m sure that the Lebanese lady that was sitting on my left thought that I was Lebanese for singing all those songs fluently!
The audience went mad when she started singing eltoba, which is originally for Abdul Halim. I’ve always preferred her version, she has a unique way of singing it. And I was surprised that she still sings it in her concerts. It’s so nice of a big singer like her to sing songs for others when she has a huge collection of her own songs. I also enjoyed very much how they jazzed up her old songs in a very contemporary way. I’m sure that most audience who were not so familiar with her songs couldn’t tell the old from the new.
Back in the mid 90’s a concert was held for Majida in Albert Hall in London. I remember how much I wished to be there when I saw some short scenes on TV and I even recorded them. I’m sure that the tape is still there, somewhere between all those video tapes I have. Which reminds me of also recording a whole concert for her that was aired on Bahrain TV. I think that it was Eid and it was held here in Bahrain in 1994, all I remember is that she was wearing a white suit and that I was too young to attend such concerts.
Everything was perfect, from the music to the lighting. It was too good to be true that we didn’t feel that the two hours were already over. I couldn’t believe it when she waved goodbye and thanked the maestro. That’s it? It took me few seconds to wake up from that magical dream and realize that it’s over. She left, but she came back to sing one of the most beautiful lyrics ever written, Beirut set el dunia. She left again, but we waited, hoping that she’d come back and sing some more. But she didn’t, and the dream was over with no storm or a single drop of rain. We walked out with nothing but…..Kalimat 😉
I wonder who’d it be next year. Julia Butrus maybe? I hope so. Who’s as big as Fairouz and Majida? My sister thinks that it might be Warda. One of my crazy friends went a bit far with her predictions: Celine Dion! Let’s wait and see what dream we’ll be living next…
The Wrong Person at the Wrong Place.
I was reading the newspaper this morning when an unusual article grabbed my attention. It was about 30 teenagers in their school uniforms attacking two police officers after they asked a girl to pick up a piece of litter. The officers were on sick leave with bruising, bite wounds and knee injuries. This incident happened in London of course.
As mean as it might sound, I was so proud of the kids. “Well done!” was the first thing that popped into my mind. I’ve always despised how some people use their authorities to manipulate others in a very ugly way. It’s more like “I’m in control, you have to do whatever I ask you to do” behavior rather than asking people to do the right thing for their own good.
Throughout my entire life I’ve witnessed that kind of behavior in almost every stage I’ve passed. Especially in school, given the fact that I’ve been to a government school, most of our teachers came from a different type of community, a different sector, a different background. And they somehow used their position as teachers to let out their anger on some other issues on us. For example, in middle school we had a very religious science teacher, she used to pick on me every single day, asked me questions that I couldn’t answer just so I’d be standing up the whole session, and say unnecessary comments which were unrelated to what she was teaching at all, just because I was open minded and she didn’t like the way I dressed or danced during break hours.
If I open my very dusty box of school memories I’ll have to write a whole book about all what we went through. But I’ll jump to another stage now; University of Bahrain. Back then it was the only university in Bahrain, so Bahrainis had no choice if they couldn’t afford studying abroad. After studying abroad for one year, I transferred to UOB where all my friends and my whole generation were studying. I didn’t find that bad use of authority in the professors this time. Their professors were careless and useless to do that. But that behavior was STRONGLY applied in their management, their administration staff, and most importantly: the security guards. Imagine some uneducated young boys and girls who had the power to control some cool good looking boys and girls? Of course they would use that power. It’s more like a chance to take revenge. Life did not give them the chance to be a part of that “cool” community groups and they had the chance to control where those “cool people” parked their cars, what they wore and where they sat.
I once was on my way to a Maths lecture when one of those security ladies stopped me. She was pregnant, bored, annoyed, and every expression on her face expressed how much she hated her life. She literally kicked me out of the university and said: “6el3y barra3”!!!. She was claiming that my skirt was see-through. Why on earth would I wear a see-through skirt to university? Where every single Bahraini loser was. And I gave her that very angry look that spoke without me speaking: “Who do you think you are?” My eyes said !. And I told her that I am not willing to miss my lecture for a stupid reason which wasn’t even true. I walked away and left her standing in the middle of the hall way. I don’t remember what happened next, but I don’t remember seeing her face again !
In my former working place, my manager used the fact that he was in charge, or in other words, the person who had my career in his hands, to take advantage of me. He used to order me to write his MBA essays. And I couldn’t object, because me objecting meant forgetting to ask for leave. And I couldn’t even complain, because in that jungle, if you complained you were kicked out.
I was in Heathrow Airport last week leaving London to Bahrain. I was passing through the departure gate, where Anglo Indian immigration officers stood there and screamed: “ANY LIQUIDS?”. However, for the past few years there was this rule that you can’t pass that gate with more than one luggage. But this time everyone was passing with more than one, I was glad that they had cancelled the rule. I had two pieces of luggage with me, and my air sickness syrup medicine was inside one of them. I opened the luggage to put my medicine in a clear plastic bag (as required) when one of the Anglo Indian immigration officers came to me. He looked really bored and he was in the mood to fight. In Bahraini we call it “metsabbeb”. He asked: “What is this?” I said: “My medicine. Do I still have to go in with one luggage?” He said: “Yes”. His colleague gave him a confused look. And I looked around to find people passing through with more than one piece of luggage. It was then when I realized that he was playing around with me.
I was late and the lady who checked me in asked me to go to the gate immediately. So all I wanted was to get in there fast in order not to miss my flight. And for that I had to swallow my anger. He asked me to open my bag again, he saw the medicine, I took it back, I closed my bag to remember that my passport was inside and I was going to need it at that moment, I opened my bag again and he was still there giving me orders. Shockingly his Anglo Indian colleague asked him to stop it. “You’re making it harder for her.” she said. But he ignored her and asked me to put the bag in the metal basket where the bag had to fit. I did that without even raising my head or looking at his face, I was too angry to do so. The bag fit but it got stuck. He watched me as I struggled to remove my bag out of the basket and he just stood there doing nothing. I wish I could live that scene again in a movie world, where I could slap the guy and run fast through the gate without anyone stopping me. The flight got delayed anyway.
The bad use of authority is a very broad serious issue that should get more attention from authorities of all kinds. Whether it was governmental, educational, organizational, social, parental, or political authority. We are all responsible in a way to provide justice by using our powers correctly. Unfortunately, the world is full of bad ethics, and there is only one way to avoid the wrong use of authority, which is: “The right person at the right place.” Impossible isn’t it?
20-7-08
That Awkward Box..
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135 film is the official name of the photographic film that is most used today. It is specified by ISO Standard 1007. It was introduced by Kodak in 1934 It was made for making pictures, rather than films. It is 35mm wide; that is why it is often also called 35mm film.
It quickly grew in popularity. It became more popular than 120 film by the late 1960s. Since then, it has been the most popular photographic film format. Despite competition from formats such as 828, 126, 110 and APS, it remains so today.
Individual rolls of 135 film are enclosed in single-spool, light-tight, metal cassettes. This allows cameras to be loaded in daylight. The film is clipped or taped to a spool and exits via a velvet-covered slot. The end of the film is cut on one side to form a leader, which is to be inserted into a corresponding slot in the camera take-up spool. It has the same dimensions and perforation pitch as 35 mm movie print film.
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Star Jalsha is a Bengali language General Entertainment Television Channel based in India. It is part of 21st Century Fox's STAR India network. Its programming includes a mix of family dramas, comedies, youth-oriented, reality shows, shows on crime and telefilms. The channel also airs the latest Bengali films. The channel launched its HD feed on 14 April 2016.
The channel is also distributed worldwide by Fox International Channels, a subsidiary of 21st Century Fox.
History
Star Jalsha was officially launched on 8 September 2008.
On 17 June 2012, Star Jalsha unveiled a refreshed identity, featuring a new logo - a diamond star amidst a fictionalised event show titled Chalo Paltai (let's bring a change).
The characters Jhilik and Pari from the channel's serial Maa, Pakhi from Bojhena Se Bojhena, Kiranmala from Kiranmala and Baha from Ishti Kutum were popular with the audience.
The channel also airs the Star Jalsha Awards to felicitate the characters and programs aired on the channel.
Star Jalsha HD was launched along with Jalsha Movies HD on 14 April 2016, 'Poila Boishakh', the Bengali New Year. They are the first Bengali HD channels in India.
Awards/Special Programs
Bangla Cine Carnival
Telly Academy Award
Star Jalsha Parivaar Awards
Jaya Hey
Bangla Mirchi Music Awards
Currently broadcast
Ramprasad
Tomader Rani
Kamala O Sreeman Prithviraj
Tunte
Sandhya Tara
Bangla Medium
Love Biye Aajkal
Ekka Dokka
Anurager Chhowa
Horo Gouri Pice Hotel
Gaatchora
Formerly broadcast
Mythology
Bhakter Bhogobaan Shri Krishna
Other shows
@Bhalobasha.com
1000 Ghonta
Adorini
Ardhangini
Aaj Aari Kal Bhab
Aamar Bor Superstar
Aanchol
Adwitiya
Agnijal
Aparajito
Akal Bodhan
Abhaya Mangal
Bandhan
Bajlo Tomar Alor Benu
Behula
Bhasha
Bhyabachaka
Bidhir Bidhan
Bodhu Kon Alo Laaglo Chokhe
Bodhuboron
Bojhena Se Bojhena
Bou Kotha Kao
Care Kori Na
Charulata
Checkmate
Chirosaathi
Chokher Tara Tui
Devadidev Mahadev
Debipaksha
Dhannyi Meye
Dugga Dugga
Durga
Durga Durgotinashini
Ekhane Aakash Neel
Ebaar Jalsha Rannaghore
Fagun Bou
Gaaner Oparey
Ghore Pherar Gaan
I Laugh You
Icche Dana
Ichchenodi
Ishti Kutum
Jani Dekha Hobe
Jhanjh Lobongo Phool
Jol Nupur
Joto Hasi Toto Ranna
Kanamachi
Ke Apon Ke Por
Kiranmala
Khokababu
Kusum Dola
Konye Tui Megastar
Koti Takar Baaji
Kundo Phooler Mala
Maa....Tomay Chara Ghum Ashena
Mahabharat
Mahanayak
Megher Palok
Membou
Milon Tithi
Mon Niye Kachakachi
Mouchaak
Mukhosh Manush
Mayar Badhon
Neer Bhanga Jhor
Ogo Bodhu Sundori
Pratidaan
Punyi Pukur
Roilo Pherar Nimontron
Potol Kumar Gaanwala
Premer Kahini
Royal Bengal Superstar
Saat Paake Badha
Sansaar Sukher Hoy Romonir Guney
Shedin Dujone
Shob Choritro Kalponik
Sindoorkhela
Sokhi
Swapno Holeo Shottyi
Swapno Udaan
Swayamvar
Taare Aami Chokhe Dekhini
Tapur Tupur
Tekka Raja Badsha
Thik Jeno Love Story
Tomake Chai
Tomar Jonno
Tomay Amay Mile
Tumi Asbe Bole
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Water supply and water use are the building blocks for understanding water issues. This section offers the opportunity to learn the basics.
The water you drank this morning might have been the same water that once rained down on a Tyrannosaurus, froze on a woolly mammoth, flowed down the Nile to bring new silt to an Egyptian farm – or filled the bathing pool of Julius Caesar. The water we use now is the same supply that has been on Earth for billions of years. Its quality is renewed again and again by the natural water (hydrologic) cycle.
Of all the water on Earth, only a small percentage is drinkable, fresh water.
In the water world, water is commonly measured in acre-feet. But what is an acre-foot? One acre-foot equals about 326,000 gallons, or enough water to cover an acre of land, about the size of a football field, one foot deep. An average California household uses between one-half and one acre-foot of water per year for indoor and outdoor.
Your water footprint is the amount of water that you use in a day. Every person has a unique water footprint based on the ways water is used. One easy way to begin the process of calculating your water footprint is to look at your family’s water bill for a month. Divide the amount used by the number of days in the month and then divide again by the number of people in your family. You might be surprised at how much water you use in a day at home. The actual amount used per capita varies greatly from person to person, region to region and season to season. g
Earth has a finite amount of fresh, usable water. Fortunately, water is naturally recycled (collected, cleansed, and distributed) through the hydrologic cycle. Humans have developed the technology to speed this process. However, because of diverse factors (drought, flood, population growth, contamination, etc.) water supplies may not adequately meet a community’s needs. Conservation of water can ensure that supplies of fresh water will be available for everyone, today and tomorrow.
Clean fresh water is vital to our lives and many of the plants and animals we depend on. Most people think water pollution comes directly from a factory or other known source, a type of pollution known as “point source pollution.” Because of laws passed in the 1970s, most of those sources of pollution have cleaned up their act. Today, the biggest source of pollution is us – you and me. This type of pollution is known as “nonpoint source pollution” because it can’t be traced to one single source; we can’t tell how much pollution is coming from where.
The Water Education Foundation is a nonprofit, tax-exempt, 501(c)3 organization, federal tax ID #942419885.
1401 21st Street, Suite 200
Sacramento, California 95811
Telephone (916) 444-6240Fax (916) 448-7699
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Y Combinator is an American seed money startup. The accelerator invested into 2,000 companies.
It is based in Mountain View, California.
Overview
Y Combinator has been founded in March 2005 by Paul Graham and other investors. The main task is to help different companies develop and find investors.
The program consists of weekly dinners, where guests (experts in various industries) are invited to talk to the founders of companies. They can give advice or invest into the startup in exchange for 7% of the company's shares.
As of 2019, Y Combinator has invested more than 2,000 companies, including Dropbox, Airbnb, Coinbase, Stripe, Reddit, Instacart, Twitch etc.
In 2020, Geoff Ralston became the company's President.
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Grand critical care program, for example, you may gain an advantage in job recruiting on-campus. Check with the critical care nursing department for course registration deadlines, and intensive care program requirements. Please use the form above to request admissions info for Grand Hampton University natural Registered Nurse
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3 hours ago
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Argos is a city in south Greece, the capital of Argos-Mycenae Municipality. It is in the Argolis prefecture, which is on the Peloponnese peninsula. It is named after the child of Zeus and Niobe in Greek mythology. It is the biggest city in Argolida prefecture but the capital of prefecture is Nauplion. Argos is very historical city. The first residents arrived more than 7,000 years ago. It is considered the oldest city in Greece from ancient Greek writers.
The city houses numerous archaeological monuments. Agriculture is an important sector of the local economy.
Cities in Greece
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Barcelona Player Profile: Arda Turan – The Bearded Genius
Three reasons Arda Turan could be a success at Barcelona
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The Boorowa River is in New South Wales, Australia. It is a perennial stream.
The river is part of the Lachlan catchment. The catchment is in the Murray-Darling basin. The river rises about north of Yass. It flows north. The river has two minor tributaries. It reaches its confluence with the Lachlan River about south-east of Cowra. The river drops over its course of .
The river flows through the town of Boorowa. The river is named after the town. Boorowa is an Aboriginal Wiradjuri word for kangaroo.
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Beau Cheval FarmMarch 2, 2013Farm • Batavia, United States
The instructor here is the best!!!
You have to try the Blackbottom cupcake if you love chocolate and cream cheese.
Try the chocolate peanut butter waffle bowl. It is out of this world delicious!!!
Try the FishTaco's, they are the best in Illinois!
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Forrest Edward Mars Jr. (August 16, 1931 - July 26, 2016) was an American billionaire businessman. He was the founder of Mars, Incorporated, the confectionery company.
In March 2015, Forbes estimated his wealth to be $26.8 billion up from US $11 billion in March 2010. In October 2012, the Bloomberg Billionaires List ranked Mars as the 31st richest man in the world with an estimated net worth of 20.1 billion.
Mars died at age 84 on July 26, 2016, in Seattle, Washington, of complications from a heart attack.
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The molecular clock is the figurative term for a technique which estimates when two taxa diverged in evolution. It is based on comparing the detailed structure of key molecules. The method may be done for species, or any high data used for such calculations is often nucleotide sequences in genome analysis, or amino acid sequences for proteins such as haemoglobin. It is sometimes called a gene clock or evolutionary clock.
Issues
The key assumption behind the technique is that, in the long run, changes in molecular structure happen at a steady rate.
Researchers such as Ayala have challenged this assumption. According to Ayala, these factors combine to limit the application of molecular clock models:
Changing generation times: a mutation generally becomes fixed only from one generation to another. The shorter this timespan is, the more mutations can become fixed.
Population size: apart from effects of small population size, genetic diversity will "bottom out" as populations become larger, and the fitness advantage of any one mutation becomes smaller.
Species-specific differences due to differing metabolism, ecology, evolutionary history, etc.
Nevertheless, the method is now used widely in taxonomy and phylogeny.
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Back to Carroll Valley, PA housing info,
Adams County, Pennsylvania, PA smaller cities, PA small cities, All Cities.
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Adams County
Carroll Valley, PA residents, houses, and apartments details
Add your B&M business listing here for free. Over a million visitors/week. Get a huge advantage over your competition
Profiles of local businesses:
Jester's Computer Services
Races in Carroll Valley:
Ancestries: German (32.7%), Irish (17.0%), English (15.0%), Italian (7.6%), United States (5.3%), Polish (3.3%).
Current Local Time: EST time zone
Elevation: 620 feet
Land area: 5.39 square miles.
For population 25 years and over in Carroll Valley
For population 15 years and over in Carroll Valley borough
87 residents are foreign born (1.1% Europe, 0.8% Asia, 0.5% Latin America).
Median real estate property taxes paid for housing units in 2000:
Nearest city with pop. 50,000+: Frederick, MD (22.3 miles , pop. 52,767).
Nearest city with pop. 200,000+: Baltimore, MD (50.8 miles , pop. 651,154).
Nearest city with pop. 1,000,000+: Philadelphia, PA (119.8 miles , pop. 1,517,550).
Nearest cities: Fairfield borough, PA (1.7 miles ),
Emmitsburg, MD (2.0 miles ),
Highfield-Cascade, MD (2.5 miles ),
Fort Ritchie, MD (2.6 miles ),
Orrtanna, PA (2.7 miles)
,
Rouzerville, PA (2.8 miles ),
Thurmont, MD (2.9 miles ),
Cashtown-McKnightstown, PA (3.0 miles ).
Latitude: 39.75 N, Longitude: 77.38 W
Area code commonly used in this area: 301
This borough's Wikipedia profile
Carroll Valley, Pennsylvania business and economic data: stores, dealers, real estate agents, wholesalers, restaurants...
Most common industries for males (%):
Most common industries for females (%):
Most common occupations for males (%)
Most common occupations for females (%)
Crime in Carroll Valley by Year
Based on data reported by over 4,000 weather stations
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Carroll Valley-area historical tornado activity is above Pennsylvania state average. It is 47% greater than the overall U.S. average.
On 5/22/1983, a category 3 (max. wind speeds 158-206 mph) tornado 7.6 miles away from the Carroll Valley borough center caused between $5000 and $50,000 in damages.
On 4/5/1952, a category 3 tornado 21.5 miles away from the borough center injured 4 people and caused between $500,000 and $5,000,000 in damages.
Click to draw/clear borough borders
Notable locations in Carroll Valley: Carroll Valley Resort Golf Course (A), Ski Liberty Ski Area (B). Display/hide their locations on the map
Lakes and reservoirs: Charnita Lake (A), K Section Pond (B). Display/hide their locations on the map
Streams, rivers, and creeks: Friends Creek (A), Miney Branch (B), Copper Run (C). Display/hide their locations on the map
Detailed information about poverty and poor residents in Carroll Valley, PA
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Adherents
Local government employment and payroll (March 2007)
All Other: $77,000
Parks & Recreation: $5,000
Sewerage: $256,000
General - Other: $254,000
Central Staff Services: $202,000
Police Protection: $123,000
Housing & Community Development: $95,000
Protective Inspection and Regulation, NEC: $68,000
General Public Buildings: $28,000
Parks & Recreation: $15,000
Financial Administration: $14,000
Fire Protection: $14,000
Judicial and Legal Services: $7,000
Health Services - Other: $7,000
Regular Highways: $118,000
Police Protection: $29,000
Sewerage: $15,000
General Public Building: $11,000
All Other: $17,000
General Support: $3,000
Housing & Community Development: $1,000
Individual Income: $355,000
Other Selective Sales: $122,000
NEC: $91.
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"My Fair Laddy" is the 12th episode of The Simpsons 17th season. It was first broadcast on the Fox network on February 26, 2006. The episode is a parody of the musical My Fair Lady. The episode has some songs from the musical: "Wouldn't It Be Loverly", "The Rain in Spain", and "I Could Have Danced All Night".
In the episode, Groundskeeper Willie's shack gets destroyed and he must live with the Simpson family. Lisa wants to help him act like a gentleman. About 9.51 million people watched the episode when it was first broadcast.
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Tomorrow morning, at 10.00am, we are at Upper Riccarton Methodist Church, 3 Brake Street, Yaldhurst, with Synod Co-Superintendent Rev Norman West, for a combined Service of Worship with the congregations of Upper Riccarton and St Stephen’s Methodist Churches.
Following the Service, join us in the adjoining lounge for a cup of tea or coffee and some informal fellowship. See you there!
Jan 25, 2014 @ 18:14:10
Hi there, I meant to let you know before now that I won’t be at church tomorrow. Alan and I are in Greymouth for the rest of the weekend with his mum. Hope it goes well. Warm regards Sue
Susanne Spindler Sent from my iPhone
>
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Old Major is a character in the book Animal Farm. He is an award winning elderly Middle White boar. He is twelve years of age, and had 400 piglets. Old Major has a wise and benevolent look but his tushes are never cut. He had given inspiration to the other pigs about the fair rules on the farm once the farmers were gone, before Old Major died. Old Major is based on Marx and Lenin of the Russian Revolution, whose ideas changed into Communism.
Role in the Story
One evening, Old Major said that he had a dream the night before. Because of the dream, a meeting was to be held in the big barn at night. At the meeting, he talked with the other animals about the cause of their suffering, Man. He gave them the way to end their problem, rebellion. Later, he told the farm animals about his dream. In the dream he saw the Earth after Man was no longer on it. He also remembered a song sung by the animals of old, "Beasts of England", which the animals learned very fast.
While the animals were singing "Beasts of England", the sound woke their owner Mr. Jones. He fired his gun six times. This ended the meeting immediately. Old Major died peacefully in his sleep 3 days later.
Animal Farm characters
Fictional pigs
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How to check your Mac for viruses and stay secure
When it comes to having your Mac infected by a virus, we probably expect the attack to come from a stranger. Truth be told, a lot of viruses come from our friends, family, and colleagues, who unfortunately became the primary victim and are now unintentionally passing their viruses to you.., bloated disk space, intense CPU usage, and network speed lag. their.
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Mario Clopatofsky is a former sports shooter from Colombia. Mario competed in the men's 50 metre rifle three positions event at the 1984 Summer Olympics. He was born on January 18, 1958.
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5 Sessions That Will Show You All You Required To Know About Religious Tshirts
Christian t thechristiantshirts.page.tl/Gift.htm shirts are very popular. Due to the fact that there are actually therefore numerous individuals in the planet that are actually Christian, this is actually. They all use them, and also they are wonderful for those that possess a Christian faith in their hearts.
There are various sizes of shirts readily available to acquire. You may get shirts for both ladies as well as guys. You will definitely discover that there are actually some that have the image of a cross on them, and some that are much more generic as well as show Jesus. Some are actually incredibly lovely, while others are actually much more serious.
They christian-t-shirts.sitey.me/blog/post/138262/penalizing-the-society-for-jesus-together-with-christian-t-shirts can be found in lots of different shades and many measurements. There is actually even one available that has the Virgin Mary, with a transition her head, alongside additional concepts on the face of the t-shirt.
The concepts vary coming from individual to person. A number of the styles look excellent on one person, while they appear horrible on someone else.
When you to begin with receive your t-shirt, ensure that it suits effectively. They can be found in all different measurements, thus if they carry out unsuitable straight, after that you will certainly must trade it.
There are actually individuals that just like to use all of them because they are actually lovely and fashionable. They look wonderful on folks, as well as they can easily incorporate to the character of the individual.
You may prefer to get one that looks more affordable if you wish a t shirt that appears great yet doesn’t set you back a lot of loan. You will certainly not locate tees that are cheap that are going to look incredible.
There are actually lots of reasons that people wear these, and also you may be actually startled at what they perform. Individuals delight in wearing all of them, as well as they take pleasure in the different layouts and styles. There are actually many people that wear all of them each day, and also they appear excellent.
Folks get their Christian t shirts in a variety of various spots. Some of all of them will definitely be at the shopping mall or a team shop. The outlets are going to be able to get them coming from many different suppliers.
You will definitely have the capacity to discover these t t-shirts for either a rate that is actually less than various other retail stores, or you can easily get all of them for a much higher rate. It is not important to become solvent top dollar, it is vital that you enjoy with what you get.
You can easily discover these in a wide array of shades, and also styles, so there is something for every person. to select from.
Many individuals get their tshirts for different celebrations, like for Papa’s Day, or even for Easter. Christmas. They may also be actually put on as a wedding anniversary gift, or just because they are actually lovely.
The wonderful feature of purchasing a tee from a provider that produces these is actually that they can personalize the tee, to make it private to you. They can easily help you get it if you have a specific layout that you will as if.
Some business will certainly also provide you personalized t tees to make it a lot more special. You may acquire your personal title or even a photo of Jesus or The lord on it.
You may find Christian t shirts in many different measurements, as well as there are the tshirts that may go with every clothing. If you are actually putting on a t shirt for the workplace or even for a laid-back time, you will definitely find that the smaller sized ones will certainly operate only fine. You can choose the much larger measurements if you are in a congregation or any various other theological celebration.
There are likewise many accessible when it comes to choosing males’s t tees. You may locate one for both genders. There are actually ones for males and females, and little ones, and there are actually even some for infants.
If you are actually seeking infant tshirts, you will certainly discover a wide array that they have. There are actually ones for gals and also children, and even the t-shirts that they may wear on their heads for a very big day.
Child t tshirts will likewise possess the label of the infant imprinted on it, as well as they come in different design and colors. For adults, you will find a number of all of them to wear on exclusive celebrations, including their birthday.
Christian T tshirts have actually obtained a lot of popularity over the last few years. People who are Christians love to use all of them as they perform exemplify their religion. It is vital that you know a lot more regarding them before you acquire one. There are numerous sorts of these T t shirts available on the market today that make it a whole lot much easier for you to choose from.
If you possess a theological heritage, it would certainly be actually a good idea to wear one at work. You could certainly not be capable to use all of them at a congregation yet it is actually still a reasonable fashion trend.
These T t shirts happened in a selection of layouts and shades. Various other individuals favor to use these T tees as a means of revealing on their own or revealing help for specific causes such as cancer.
You can easily buy these T t shirts either in retail stores or online. You will also find some folks that such as to use all of them on their own. This way they may convey their personal creative thinking through making their personal concepts as well as designs of wearing all of them. You will certainly locate lots of ranges of concepts in both on the internet outlets and also in retailers.
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Toon Disney was an American cable television channel owned by Disney. Toon Disney was replaced by Disney XD.
Programs at closure
Kim Possible
Dave the Barbarian
Brandy and Mr. Whiskers
American Dragon: Jake Long
Rupert
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2lo.traugutt.netVisit 2lo.traugutt.net
Countable Data Brief
Traugutt.net is tracked by us since April, 2011. Over the time it has been ranked as high as 798 299 in the world, while most of its traffic comes from Poland, where it reached as high as 14 818 position. 2lo.traugutt.net receives less than 1% of its total traffic. It was owned by several entities, from ; about or related to domain name registration records. whoisproxy.com Ltd to GDPR Masked of GDPR Masked, it was hosted by INTEN Jaroslaw Granat and INTEN J. Granat. While AZ.PL INC. was its first registrar, now it is moved to PDR Ltd. d/b/a PublicDomainRegistry.com.
2lo.traugutt has a decent Google pagerank and bad results in terms of Yandex topical citation index. We found that 2lo.traugutt.net is poorly ‘socialized’ in respect to any social network. According to MyWot, Siteadvisor and Google safe browsing analytics, 2lo.traugutt.net is a fully trustworthy domain with no visitor reviews.
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2lo.traugutt.net has 0% of its total traffic coming from social networks (in last 3 months) and the most active engagement is detected in Facebook (359 shares)
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Serge Baguet (18 August 1969 - 9 February 2017) was a Belgian professional road bicycle racer. He started his professional cycling career in 1991. He worked for Lotto for five years and one year for Vlaanderen 2002. He was born in Brakel.
Baguet was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2014. He died on 9 February 2017 in Sint-Lievens-Houtem, at the age of 47.
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tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11368628.post8903053217952178800..comments2021-01-15T17:30:37.927-05:00Comments on Daniel Greenfield / Sultan Knish articles: The War on Terror is Not OptionalDaniel Greenfield said... Geketa, if the ron paul faction w...LEL said...<br /><br />.<br /><br />___________________________________<br /><br />Neither the Republicans or Democrats offer the Jews a safe port. Both will betray the Jews if and when it serves their purposes.<br /><br />You need to reevaluate the mindset where we are dependent on the help and good will of the gentile world for our ultimate survival. <br /><br />Where that the case there would be no Jews alive today.yamit33 are supposed to be the great relativists....<br /><br />^) xa-xanozek, if the ron paul faction were to take.LEL"then why don't you find it repulsive whe..."then why don't you find it repulsive when Rand Paul has "Truther" Aimee Allen open for him at his rally?" <br /><br / !Anonymous are fighting a war brought about by the .<br /> <br />Now how do we get to the political situation that we recognise that we are at war - not an external or internal war or even both, but war - war. <br /><br /[email protected]:blogger.com,1999:blog-11368628.post-34447930876959452442010-02-17T00:34:01.192-05:002010-02-17T00:34:01.192-05:00yes it wasyes it wasDaniel Greenfield't one of the hijacked planes headed for t...Wasn't one of the hijacked planes headed for the white house?<br />So it was thought of.Chana @ Lemon Lime Moon
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was a Japanese football player and manager. He played for the Japan national team. He also managed Japan national team.
Biography
Ishii was born in Fukuyama on March 13, 1939. After graduating from Fukuyama Iyo High School, he joined his local club Toyo Industries in 1957. In 1965, Toyo Industries joined new league Japan Soccer League. The club won the league champions for 3 years in a row (1965-1967) and Emperor's Cup 2 times (1965 and 1967). He played 28 games in the league until 1967. In 1968, he moved to new club Towa Real Estate (later Fujita Industries). The club was promoted to Japan Soccer League in 1972. He retired in 1975.
On August 15, 1962, Ishii debuted for the Japan national team against Singapore.
In 1975, when Ishii played for Fujita Industries, he became a playing manager as Yukio Shimomura successor. The club won the champions in 1977 and 1979. The club also won 1979 Emperor's Cup. He left the club in 1980. In 1986, he named a manager for the Japan national team as Takaji Mori successor. He managed at 1986 Asian Games. However, at 1988 Summer Olympics qualification in October 1987, following Japan's failure to qualify for 1988 Summer Olympics, he resined a manager. In 1988, he returned to Fujita Industries and managed the club. However, in 1989-90 season, the club was relegated to Division 2 and he resigned as manager.
Ishii died on April 26, 2018 at the age of 79.
Statistics
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|1965||rowspan="3"|Toyo Industries||rowspan="3"|JSL Division 1||13||0
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|1966||10||0
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|1967||5||0
28||0
28||0
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|1962||1||0
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!Total||1||0
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These sure do hit the spot. Have you tried Magic Layer Bars? They are basically layers of graham crackers, coconut, chocolate chips, butterscotch chips and nuts drizzled on top with sweetened condensed milk. They are pretty amazing, but messy!
That’s these cookies are so perfect, they are easy to hold, and even easier to eat. Just ask me, I ate 5 of them while they were still warm.
I discovered the recipe from Averie Cooks. She has tons of great cookie recipes that I’ve tried, and this is by far my favorite. Which is why I knew I needed to share it with you. They are tender and chewy and just all around delicious.
Magic Bar Cookies
Prep
Cook
Total
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) butter, softened
- 3/4 cup brown sugar, packed
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 large egg
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons cornstarch
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1//4 teaspoon salt
- 1 cup coarsely chopped graham crackers and crumbs, about 4 full-size cracker sheets
- 1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
- 3/4 cup butterscotch chips
- 3/4 cup sweetened shredded coconut, toasted
Instructions
- Toast the coconut on a cookie sheet for several minutes in a 350 degree oven, then set aside.
- In a stand mixer with the paddle attachment, beat butter and sugars on medium-high speed until light in color and fluffy.
- Beat in egg and vanilla until well combined.
- In a separate bowl, combine flour, cornstarch, baking soda and salt.
- Stir half of the flour mixture into the butter mixture just until combined, then stir in the other half; again, just until combined.
- Gently fold in the graham crackers, chocolate and butterscotch chips and toasted coconut.
- Using a cookie scoop, divide batter into rounds and place 2" apart on parchment lined cookie sheets. (I use a 1" scoop, but a larger scoop will yield a thicker cookie).
- Chill in the refrigerator for two hours, or in the freezer for 30 minutes.
- Bake in a pre-heated 350 degree oven for about 8 minutes, or until lightly golden on top. You want them to be slightly underdone as they will firm up as they cool.
- Store in an airtight container for up to 1 week.
For more amazing cookie recipes, try these:
Chocolate Chip Cookies with M & Ms
Rice Crispy Cookies with Butterscotch and Chocolate Chips
For all dessert recipes go HERE and for all recipes go HERE.
Oh. My. Goodness. These are amazing. Magic Cookie Bars are my favorite bar and I rarely make them. These are the perfect cookie substitute. yummy!
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Anna Freud (3 December 1895 - 9 October 1982) was the sixth and last child of Sigmund Freud and his wife Martha Bernays Freud.
She was born in Vienna. She followed the path of her father and contributed to the field of psychoanalysis.
With Melanie Klein, she may be considered the founder of psychoanalytic child psychology. As her father put it, child analysis had received a powerful impetus through "the work of Frau Melanie Klein and of my daughter, Anna Freud". Her work emphasized the importance of the ego and its ability to be trained socially.
Key moments in life
After a somewhat troubled childhood, Anna was psychoanalysed by her father. When her analysis was completed in 1922, she became a psychoanalyist herself. She taught at the Vienna Psychoanalytic Training Institute on the technique of child analysis. From 1925 until 1934, she was the Secretary of the International Psychoanalytical Association. She continued child analysis and seminars and conferences on the subject.
After the Anschluss in 1938 the Freuds fled Vienna and came to London. Freud himself was dying of cancer, so Anna ran the household. Anna had a professional disagreement with Melanie Klein, who had come to London much earlier, and was already established as a child psychologist. A series of 'controversial discussions' were held by the British Psychoanalytical Society. The discussions were about the training and the ideas of both parties. Eventually agreement was reached that both 'schools' should co-exist inside the Society. The Society now has three training divisions: Kleinian, Freudian and Independent.
During the war, Freud studied the effect of deprivation of parental care on children. She set up a centre for young war victims, called "The Hampstead War Nursery". Here the children got foster care, with mothers
encouraged to visit as often as possible.
In 1947, Freud and Kate Friedlaender established the Hampstead Child Therapy Courses. Five years later, a children's clinic was added. Freud started lecturing on child psychology.
From the 1950s until the end of her life Freud travelled regularly to the United States to lecture, teach and visit friends. During the 1970s she was concerned with the problems of emotionally deprived and socially disadvantaged children. At Yale Law School, she taught seminars on crime and the family.
Freud died in London on 9 October 1982. She was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium and her ashes placed in a marble shelf next to her parents' ancient Greek funeral urn. Her lifelong friend Dorothy Burlingham and several other members of the Freud family also rest there.
Personal life
Anna Freud lived with her close friend Dorothy Burlingham, daughter of Louis Comfort Tiffany, for years.
Publications
Freud, Anna (1966-1980). The writings of Anna Freud: 8 Volumes. New York: Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
Vol. 1. Introduction to psychoanalysis: lectures for child analysts and teachers. (1922-1935).
Vol. 2. Ego and the mechanisms of defense (1936); (Revised edition: 1966 (US), 1968 (UK)).
Vol. 3. Infants without families: reports on the Hampstead Nurseries.
Vol. 4. Indications for child analysis and other papers (1945-1956).
Vol. 5. Research at the Hampstead Child-Therapy Clinic and other papers: (1956-1965).
Vol. 6. Normality and pathology in childhood: assessments of development (1965).
Vol. 7. Problems of psychoanalytic training, diagnosis, and the technique of therapy (1966-1970).
Vol. 8. Psychoanalytic psychology of normal development.
Biographies
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Packaging supply chain welcomes the Circular Economy Package and presents its preliminary views on the WFD and PPWD legislative proposals
Brussels, 10 December 2015 – EUROPEN calls the Circular Economy Package and Commission proposals “an important step towards further sustainable growth and competitiveness” for the packaging supply chain in Europe.
EUROPEN presented its preliminary views on the legislative proposals on the Waste Framework Directive (WFD) and Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive (PPWD) at its reception yesterday attended by key EU policymakers and stakeholders. Specifically, EUROPEN:
- Strongly supports the retention of the Internal Market safeguard in the PPWD;
- Welcomes the proposed calculation method for packaging recycling and stresses the need for clarity on definition, measurement and accurate reporting in relation to ‘preparing for re-use’;
- Agrees with the need to establish clear roles and responsibilities for the many actors involved in the shared responsibility for EPR implementation, which should also include distribution and citizens;
Speaking at the reception, EUROPEN Chairman Martin Reynolds said, “We are pleased that the Circular Economy Package looks beyond the end-of-life and considers the whole circle for products and their packaging. We are delighted that the package recognises the functionalities of packaging and the positive and enabling role it plays in extending value in a product and in the economy.”
MEP Mark Demesmaeker provided keynote remarks, along with European Commission officials and the upcoming Dutch EU Presidency. He commented, “I welcome the minimum criteria for EPR schemes. But recycling on its own is not enough. In addition, we need to look at the whole circle and smart product policy.”
EUROPEN’s Factsheet on Extended Producer Responsibility for used packaging can be downloaded here.
For enquiries, please contact:
EUROPEN
T: +32 2 736 36 00
Website:
Twitter: @EUROPEN_ORG
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Kailasavadivoo Sivan (born 14 April 1957) is an Indian space scientist and the chairperson of the Indian Space Research Organization.
Early life
He was born in Mela Sarakkalvilai, near Nagercoil in Kanyakumari district of Tamil Nadu state of India.
Awards
Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam Award, 2019.
IEEE Simon Ramo Medal, shared with Byrana N. Suresh, 2020.
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SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Jason Goldberg, a bank analyst at Barclays Capital in New York, says he's lost 15 pounds this year because he's not stressed out all the time.
A year ago, Goldberg was packing on the weight as two of the largest U.S. lenders, Citigroup C, -2.18% and Bank of America Corp. BAC, -1.26% slumped on concern they could be nationalized as the financial system teetered on the brink of collapse. Check out story on nationalization fears.
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Citi shares hit a low of 97 cents on March 5 and Bank of America's stock plummeted to $2.53 on Feb. 20. That helped push the Standard & Poor's 500 index SPX, +0.04% down to 676.53 on March 9, 2009, the lowest close in more than a decade.
Since then, bank stocks tracked by the SPDR KBW Bank exchange-traded fund KBE, -0.81% have surged 146%, helping the market rally 68%, as massive government support for the industry and monetary and fiscal stimulus stabilized the economy.
"I feel a lot better today than a year ago, that's for sure," Goldberg said in an interview this week.
But despite higher spirits and lower weight, Goldberg is still cautious on the banking industry.
"Historically bank stocks have been good investments and long term they will continue to be. There are still some near-term concerns though," he said.
In the fourth quarter, net charge-offs by U.S. banks climbed to 3.04% of loans, the worst level since 1934, in the midst of the Great Depression, Goldberg noted, citing Federal Reserve data.
Other concerns include weak loan growth and record foreclosures.
Such caution doesn't bode well for the broader stock market. The broader financial sector, including brokerages and insurers, makes up roughly 16% of the market value of the Standard & Poor's 500 index. That's the second-largest sector after information technology.
Financial stocks' weighting, and the sector's violent rebound last year, did a lot to get the broader market out of the dumps. An ETF that tracks the financial sector, the Financial Select Sector SPDR XLF, -1.09% jumped 143% from its March 9 close.
And if banks aren't healthy enough to lend more, or they're seeing weak loan demand, that's bad news for the economy.
'The abyss'
Most of the surge in bank stocks in the past year was a "relief rally" as investors realized the financial system wasn't going to collapse, Nancy Bush, president of financial-services research firm NAB Research, said.
Past 12 months
As the rally progressed, financials played less of a role. In the last six months, the KBW Bank index is up less then 7%, while the S&P 500 has gained about 12%.
"When you come back from the abyss, as we have, you have a relief move," Bush said. "But now everybody's having a tough time finding out what lies beyond the abyss. The new normal is not yet clear for the banking industry."
One problem is weak loan demand. Companies have downsized and many may decide they can make money without expanding much in future, while consumer spending may not return to previous high levels. This will restrain loan growth for the banking industry, Bush said.
Foreclosures
A bigger problem may be foreclosures. There could be foreclosure filings on 3 million to 3.5 million homes in 2010, according to RealtyTrac. There were a record 2.8 million homes with at least one foreclosure filing in 2009, the firm says.
Foreclosures would probably have been higher last year if not for government and industry efforts to cushion the impact, including loan modifications and state legislation extending the process.
"A massive supply of delinquent loans continues to loom over the housing market," RealtyTrac Chief Executive James Saccacio said in a recent statement.
Bank reserves may not be bolstered enough yet for such a high level of foreclosures.
The industry reported a fourth-quarter profit of just under $1 billion, a big improvement from the $37.8 billion loss it suffered during the final three months of 2008, according to Richard Bove, a bank analyst at Rochdale Securities.
"The recorded profit is due more to an accounting gimmick than an improvement in operating earnings," Bove wrote in a recent note to investors. "The industry decided to avoid building its reserves in the quarter to the same extent as non-performing assets rose."
"If the reserves had been built to the level that was warranted by the increase in bad loans, the sector's profit would have been a multi-billion loss," the analyst added.
Battered valuations
Still, valuations may already reflect such concerns.
While bank stocks have surged in the past year, the KBW Bank Index is still down roughly 60% from its record high in early 2007, Goldberg from Barclays Capital noted. Adjusting that for massive sales of new shares in the sector, it's still down about 40% from the highs, he added.
Bank stocks followed by Goldberg trade at five to six times operating income, before provisions. The historical average, going back to 1991, is 8.4 times, the analyst noted.
Some banks, like J.P. Morgan Chase JPM, -0.23% Wells Fargo WFC, -1.40% US Bancorp USB, -0.77% and PNC Financial PNC, -1.35% have captured market share and improved their franchises, partly through low-priced acquisitions of struggling rivals.
"That's not captured by the market fully yet," Goldberg said.
Investors have also "under-appreciated how much those playing defense have damaged their businesses," he added.
One way to gauge this is to look at assets per share. Falling assets suggest banks are making fewer loans and losing customers, reducing the potential for future profit. Meanwhile, some banks have been selling lots of new shares. This helps boost waning capital but also dilutes existing shareholders.
Since the second quarter of 2007, assets per share have slumped 85% at Citigroup, 57% at First Horizon National FHN, -0.51% 55% at KeyCorp KEY, +0.22% and 51% at Huntington Bancshares HBAN, -0.69% according to Barclays Capital research.
Assets per share have dropped more than 30% at SunTrust STI, -1.27% Regions Financial RF, -0.72% Bank of America BAC, -1.26% and Marshall & Ilsley MI, -25.00% in the same period, Barclays Capital data show.
Meanwhile, assets per share have jumped 74% at PNC, 64% at Wells Fargo and 28% at J.P. Morgan since the second quarter of 2007, according to Barclays Capital.
Indeed, banks that are strong enough to lend more money now are benefiting because there's less competition from traditional rivals and non-bank rivals which used to finance themselves in the securitization market, said Kevin Gibbons, managing director of Huron Consulting Group.
"The banks that are lending fresh money right now are in a very good spot and their margins are very attractive," he said.
Week ahead
Economic reports next week will give investors more clues on the outlook for consumer spending.
Retail sales data for February are due March 12, along with a report on consumer sentiment. Several retailers, such as J. Crew JCG and Aeropostale ARO, -5.26% report quarterly earnings. Check out MarketWatch's Economic Calendar.
Stock investors will try to extend a two-week run of gains. For the week ended March 5, the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.11% added 2.3%, the S&P 500 gained 3.1%, and the Nasdaq Composite COMP, +0.09% climbed 3.9%.
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Budos is a commune. It is found in the region Aquitaine in the Gironde department in the southwest of France.
Communes in Gironde
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The.
Kids can hear directly from artists as they talk about the thoughts, processes, and ideas behind their work in the 2014 Whitney Biennial.
To use the audio guide at the Museum:
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Human evolution is about the origin of human beings. All humans belong to the same species, Homo sapiens, which appeared first in Africa but has spread to almost all parts of the world. Fossils found in Africa prove that humans first appeared there.
The word 'human' in this context means the genus Homo. However, studies of human evolution usually include other hominids, such as the Australopithecines. This group diverged (split) from the genus Homo in Africa by about 2.3 to 2.4 million years ago. The first Homo sapiens, the ancestors of today's humans, evolved around 200,000 years ago.
People have known for centuries that man and the apes are related. Clearly, even though they look different, their anatomy is similar. For this reason, during the 18th century, Buffon and Linnaeus put men and apes together in a single family. In the 19th century, Charles Darwin suggested that animals have very similar anatomies when they share a common ancestor. In fact, humans and apes are close relatives. Both are primates: the order of mammals which includes monkeys, apes, lemurs and tarsiers.
The great apes live in tropical rainforests. It is thought that human evolution started when a group of apes (now called the australopithecines) began to live more in the savannah. A savannah is more open, with trees, shrubs and grass. This group started walking on two legs. They began to use their hands to carry things. Life in the open was different, and there was a big advantage in having better brains. Their brains grew larger, and they began to make simple tools. This process began at least 5 million years ago. We have fossils of two or three different groups of walking apes, and one was the ancestor of humans.
The biological name for "human" or "man" is Homo. The modern human species is called Homo sapiens. "Sapiens" means "thought". Homo sapiens means "the thinking man".
Paleoanthropology looks at ancient human fossils, tools, and other signs of early human life. It began in the 19th century with the discovery of a skull of "Neanderthal man" in 1856.
Humans are similar to great apes
By 1859, zoologists had known for a long time that humans are, in their anatomy, similar to the great apes. There are also differences: humans can speak, for example. But the similarities are more basic than the differences. Humans also have features with a much older history, from early in the life of vertebrates.
The idea that species are caused by evolution had been proposed before Darwin, but his book gave much evidence, and many were persuaded by it. The book was On the Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection, published in November 1859. In this book, Darwin wrote about the idea of evolution in general, rather than the evolution of humans. Light will be thrown on the origin of man and his history, was all Darwin wrote on the subject. Nevertheless, the implication of the theory was clear to readers at the time.
Several people discussed the evolution of humans. Among them were Thomas Huxley and Charles Lyell. Huxley convincingly showed many of the similarities and differences between humans and apes in his 1863 book Evidence as to Man's Place in Nature. When Darwin published his own book on the subject, The Descent of Man, and selection in relation to sex, the idea of human evolution was already well-known. The theory was controversial. Even some of Darwin's supporters (such as Alfred Russel Wallace and Charles Lyell) did not like the idea that human beings have evolved their impressive mental capacities and moral sensibilities through natural selection.
Since the 18th century, scientists thought the great apes to be closely related to human beings. In the 19th century, they speculated that the closest living relatives of humans were either chimpanzees or gorillas. Both live in central Africa in tropical rainforests. In fact, chimpanzees are closest to us. Biologists believed that humans share a common ancestor with other African great apes and that fossils of these ancestors would be found in Africa, which they have been. It is now accepted by virtually all biologists that humans are not only similar to the great apes, but actually are great apes.
The issue was confirmed by late 20th century studies on the sequences of proteins and genes in apes and man. These studies showed that man shares about 95 to 98% of these structures with chimpanzees. This is a much closer relationship than with any other type of animal, and fully supports the ideas put forward in the 19th century by Darwin and Huxley.
"Currently available genetic and archaeological evidence is generally interpreted as supportive of a recent single origin of modern humans in East Africa. However, this is where the near consensus on human settlement history ends, and considerable uncertainty clouds any more detailed aspect of human colonization history".
Distinguishing features
Primates have diversified in habitats such as trees and bushes. They have many features which are adaptations to their environment. Here are some of those traits:
Shoulder joints which allow high degrees of movement in all directions.
Five digits on the fore and hind limbs with opposable thumbs and big toes; hands can grasp, and usually big toes as well.
Nails on the fingers and toes (in most species).
Sensitive tactile pads on the ends of the digits.
Sockets of eyes encircled in bone.
A trend towards a reduced snout and flattened face, attributed to a reliance on vision at the expense of smell.
A complex visual system with binocular (stereoscopic) vision, high visual acuity and color vision.
Brain with a well developed cerebellum for good balance.
Brain large in comparison to body size, especially in simians (old world monkeys and apes).
Enlarged cerebral cortex (brain): learning, problem solving.
Reduced number of teeth compared to primitive mammals;.
A well-developed cecum: vegetable digestion.
Two pectoral mammary glands.
Typically one young per pregnancy.
Long gestation and developmental period. and
A trend towards holding the torso upright leading to bipedalism.
Not all primates have these anatomical traits, nor is every trait unique to primates. Primates are frequently highly social, live in groups with 'flexible dominance hierarchies'.
Other similarities
Closely related animals almost always have closely related parasites. This usually comes about because parasites evolve with their hosts, and when host populations split, their parasites split also. It is also possible for parasites to get from one species to another. Two of the most serious parasitic infections of humans in Africa come from apes. Each may have been transferred to humans by a single cross-species event.
There are several species of mosquito, and several species of the malarial parasite Plasmodium. The most serious type, P. falciparum, which kills many millions of people each year, originated in gorillas. It is now virtually certain that chimpanzees are the source of HIV-1, the major cause of AIDS. This information is got by the sequence analysis of ape and human viruses.
The relevance of this to evolution is that our physiology is so close to the apes that their parasites were able to transfer to humans with great success. Humans have much less resistance to these parasites, which are ancient in origin, but comparatively new to our species.
Immediate ancestors of the genus Homo
It was not until the 1920s that hominid fossils were discovered in Africa. In 1924, Raymond Dart described Australopithecus africanus. The specimen was called the Taung Child, an australopithecine infant discovered in a cave deposit being mined for concrete at Taung, South Africa. The remains were a remarkably well-preserved tiny skull and a cast of the inside of the individual's skull. Although the brain was small (410 cm3), its shape was rounded, unlike that of chimpanzees and gorillas, and more like a modern human brain. Also, the specimen had short canine teeth, and the position of the foramen magnum was evidence of bipedal locomotion. All of these traits convinced Dart that the Taung baby was a bipedal human ancestor, a transitional form between apes and humans.
It took another 20 years before Dart's claims were taken seriously. This was after other similar skeletons had been found. The most common view of the time was that a large brain evolved before bipedality, the ability to walk on two feet more or less upright. It was thought that intelligence similar to that of modern humans was necessary for bipedalism. This turned out to be wrong: bipedality came first.
The australopithecines are now thought to be immediate ancestors of the genus Homo, the group to which modern humans belong. Both australopithecines and Homo sapiens are part of the tribe Hominini, but recent data has brought into doubt the position of A. africanus as a direct ancestor of modern humans; it may well have been a cousin. The australopithecines were originally classified as either gracile or robust. The robust variety of Australopithecus has since been reclassified as Paranthropus, although it is still regarded as a subgenus of Australopithecus by some authors.
In the 1930s, when the robust specimens were first described, the Paranthropus genus was used. During the 1960s, the robust variety was moved into Australopithecus. The recent trend has been back to the original classification as a separate genus.
The genus Homo
It was Carolus Linnaeus who chose the name Homo. Today, there is only one species in the genus: Homo sapiens. There were other species, but they became extinct.
The figure shows where some of them lived and at what time. Some of the other species might have been ancestors of H. sapiens. Many were likely our "cousins", they developed away from our ancestral line.
Anthropologists are still investigating the exact line of descent. A consensus on which should count as separate species and which as subspecies has not been reached yet. In some cases this is because there are very few fossils, in other cases it is due to the slight differences used to classify species in the Homo genus.
The evolution of the genus Homo took place mostly in the Pleistocene. The whole genus is characterised by its use of stone tools, initially crude, and becoming ever more sophisticated. So much so that in archaeology and anthropology the Pleistocene is usually referred to as the Palaeolithic, or the Stone Age.
Homo habilis
Homo habilils was likely the first species of Homo. It developed from the Australopithecus, about 2.5 million years ago. It lived until about 1.4 million years ago. It had smaller molars (back teeth) and larger brains than the Australopithecines.
Towards Homo erectus
There are two proposed species that lived from 1.9 to 1.6 million years ago. Their relation has not been clarified. One of them is called Homo rudolfensis. It is known from a single incomplete skull from Kenya. Scientists have suggested that this was just another habilis, but this has not been confirmed. The other is currently called Homo georgicus. It is from Georgia and may be an intermediate form between H. habilis and H. erectus, or a sub-species of H. erectus.
Homo ergaster and Homo erectus
Homo erectus was first discovered on the island of Java in Indonesia, in 1891. The discoverer, Eugene Dubois originally called it Pithecanthropus erectus based on its morphology that he considered to be intermediate between that of humans and apes. Homo erectus lived from about 1.8 million to 70,000 years ago. The earlier specimens (from 1.8 to 1.2 million years ago) are sometimes seen as a different species, or a subspecies. called Homo ergaster, or Homo erectus ergaster.
In the early Pleistocene, 1.5-1 mya, in Africa, Asia, and Europe, presumably, some populations of Homo habilis evolved larger brains and made more elaborate stone tools; these differences and others are sufficient for anthropologists to classify them as a new species, H. erectus. In addition H. erectus was the first human ancestor to walk truly upright. This was made possible by the evolution of locking knees and a different location of the foramen magnum (the hole in the skull where the spine enters). They may have used fire to cook their meat.
A famous example of Homo erectus is Peking Man; others were found in Asia (notably in Indonesia), Africa, and Europe. Many paleoanthropologists are now using the term Homo ergaster for the non-Asian forms of this group. They reserve H. erectus only for those fossils found in the Asian region that meet certain requirements (as to skeleton and skull) which differ slightly from ergaster.
Neanderthal man
Homo neaderthalensis (usually called Neanderthal man) lived from about 250,000 to about 30,000 years ago. Also, less usual, as Homo sapiens neanderthalensis: there is still some discussion if it was a separate species Homo neanderthalensis, or a subspecies of H. sapiens. While the debate remains unsettled, evidence from mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosomal DNA sequencing indicates that little or no gene flow occurred between H. neanderthalensis and H. sapiens, and, therefore, the two were separate species. In 1997, Dr. Mark Stoneking, then an associate professor of anthropology at Pennsylvania State University, stated:
"These results [based on mitochondrial DNA extracted from Neanderthal bone] indicate that Neanderthals did not contribute mitochondrial DNA to modern humans... Neanderthals are not our ancestors".
More investigation of a second source of Neanderthal DNA supported these findings.
Denisovan man
A genetic analysis of a piece of finger bone found in Siberia has produced a surprise result. It dates to about 40,000 years ago, at a time when Neanderthals and modern man were living in the area. German researchers found its mitochondrial DNA did not match either that of our species or that of Neanderthals. If this result is correct, the bone belongs to a previously unknown species. The degree of difference in the DNA suggests this species split off from our family tree about a million years ago, well before the split between our species and Neanderthals.
Homo floresiensis
Homo floresiensis, which lived about 100,000-12,000 years ago has been nicknamed hobbit for its small size. Its size may be a result of island dwarfism, the tendency for large mammals to evolve smaller forms on islands. H. floresiensis is intriguing both for its size and its age. It is a concrete example of a recent species of the genus Homo that shows derived traits not shared with modern humans. In other words, H. floresiensis share a common ancestor with modern humans, but split from the modern human lineage and followed a different evolutionary path. The main find was a skeleton believed to be a woman of about 30 years of age. Found in 2003 it has been dated to approximately 18,000 years old. The living woman was estimated to be one meter in height, with a brain volume of just 380 cm3 This is small for a chimpanzee and less than a third of the H. sapiens average of 1400 cm3.
There is an ongoing debate over whether H. floresiensis is indeed a separate species. Some scientists believe that H. floresiensis was a modern H. sapiens suffering from pathological dwarfism. Modern humans who live on Flores, the island where the skeleton was found, are pygmies. This fact is consistent with either theory. One line of attack on H. floresiensis is that it was found with tools only associated with H. sapiens.
Stone artifacts have been found on Flores which can be dated to a million years ago. These artifacts are proxies; which means there were no skeletons of humans, but only a species of Homo could have made them. The artifacts are flakes and other implements, 48 in all, some of which show signs of being worked to produce a cutting edge. This means that humans were present on Flores by that date, but it does not tell us which species that was.
Homo sapiens
Homo sapiens has lived from about 300,000 years ago to the present. Between 400,000 years ago and the second warm period in the Middle Pleistocene, about 250,000 years ago, the human skull grew more like its present shape. Our species developed more sophisticated technologies based on stone tools. One possibility is that a transition between H. erectus to H. sapiens occurred. The evidence of Java Man suggests there was an initial migration of H. erectus out of Africa. Then, much later, a further development of H. sapiens from H. erectus in Africa. Then a subsequent migration within and out of Africa eventually replaced the earlier H. erectus.
Out of Africa
Studies of the human genome, especially the Y-chromosome DNA and mitochondrial DNA, support a relatively recent African origin. Evidence from DNA also supports the recent African origin. The details of this great saga are not fully established yet, but by about 90,000 years ago modern humans had moved into Eurasia and the Middle East. This was the area where Neanderthals, Homo neanderthalensis, had been living for a long time (at least 500,000 years in western Europe).
By about 42 to 44,000 years ago Homo sapiens had reached western Europe, including Britain. In Europe and western Asia, Homo sapiens replaced the Neanderthals by about 35,000 years ago. The details of how this happened are not known.
At roughly the same time Homo sapiens arrived in Australia. Their arrival in the Americas was much later, about 15,000 years ago. All these earlier groups of modern man were hunter-gatherers.
Research has shown that human beings are genetically rather similar. The DNA of individuals is more alike than usual in most species. This may have resulted from their relatively recent evolution or from the Toba catastrophe. Skin colour is an adaptation to differing climates. These traits are a very small component of the Homo sapiens genome and include such outward characteristics as skin color and nose shape, and internal characteristics such as the ability to breathe more efficiently at high altitudes.
H. sapiens idaltu, from Ethiopia, about 160,000 years ago, is a proposed subspecies. It is the oldest known anatomically modern human.
Species list
This list is in chronological order by genus.
Sahelanthropus
Sahelanthropus tchadensis
Orrorin
Orrorin tugenensis
Ardipithecus
Ardipithecus kadabba
Ardipithecus ramidus
Australopithecus
Australopithecus anamensis
Australopithecus afarensis
Australopithecus bahrelghazali
Australopithecus africanus
Australopithecus garhi
Paranthropus
Paranthropus aethiopicus
Paranthropus boisei
Paranthropus robustus
Kenyanthropus
Kenyanthropus platyops
Homo
Homo habilis
Homo rudolfensis
Homo ergaster
Homo georgicus
Homo erectus
Homo cepranensis
Homo antecessor
Homo heidelbergensis
Homo rhodesiensis
Homo neanderthalensis
Homo sapiens idaltu
Homo sapiens (Cro-magnon)
Homo sapiens sapiens
Homo floresiensis
Related pages
ENCODE: the complete analysis of the human genome
Paleoanthropology
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image: Upper part of the body of grave 43 during excavation. The girl had an artificially deformed skull, was place in a grave with a side niche and richly equipped with a necklace, earrings, a comb and glass beads. The girl belonged to a group of people with a non-local origin and similar dietary habits, which appeared to have arrived at the site about 10 years after its establishment. view more
Credit: Wosinsky Mór Museum, Szekszárd, Hungary.
The ancient cemetery of Mözs-Icsei d?l? in present-day Hungary holds clues to a unique community formation during the beginnings of Europe's Migration Period, according to a study published April 29, 2020 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Corina Knipper from the Curt-Engelhorn-Center for Archaeometry, Germany, István Koncz, Tivadar Vida from the Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary and colleagues.
As the Huns invaded Central Europe during the 5th century, the Romans abandoned their Pannonian provinces in the area of modern-day Western Hungary. Pannonia's population entered a period of continuous cultural transformation as new foreign groups arrived seeking refuge from the Huns, joining settlements already populated by remaining local Romanized population groups and other original inhabitants. (Later, the Huns themselves would fall to an alliance of Germanic groups.) To better understand this population changing rapidly under chaotic circumstances, Knipper and colleagues turned to the cemetery of Mözs-Icsei d?l? in the Pannonian settlement of Mözs, established around 430 AD.
The authors conducted an archaeological survey of the cemetery and used a combination of isotope analysis and biological anthropology to investigate the site's previously-excavated burials.
They found that Mözs-Icsei d?l??l? one of the largest concentrations of this cultural phenomenon in the region. The strontium isotope ratios at Mözs-Icsei d?l?.
Though further investigation is still needed, Mözs-Icsei d?l? appears to suggest that in at least one community in Pannonia during and after the decline of the Roman Empire, a culture briefly emerged where local Roman and foreign migrant groups shared traditions as well as geographical space.
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Citation: Knipper C, Koncz I, Ódor JG, Mende BG, Rácz Z, Kraus S, et al. (2020) Coalescing traditions--Coalescing people: Community formation in Pannonia after the decline of the Roman Empire. PLoS ONE 15(4): e0231760.
Funding: CK received funding from the German Research Foundation (DFG; grant number: KN 1130/4-1; URL:). TV received funding from the Hungarian Scientific Research Fund (OTKA-NKFI; grant number: NN 113157; URL:). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing Interests: Corina Knipper is employed at Curt-Engelhorn-Center Archaeometery gGmbH. gGmbH is a non-profit company This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
In your coverage please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS ONE:
Journal
PLoS ONE
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Santos Futebol Clube or Santos, as they are usually called, is a Brazilian football club based in Macapa, Amapa state.
History
In Amapa, precisely in 1973, Otavio Nogueira and Delson Furtado, mobilized a group of friends to found the Santos Futebol Clube in Macapa. The historic meeting took place exactly on 11 May 1973. On that occasion, the objective was to establish a club that came to be a factory of champions, so came the Santos.
Rivalries
Santos rivals are Oratorio and Trem.
Honours
Campeonato Amapaense
Winners (7): 2000, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019
Campeonato Amapaense Second Division
Winners (1): 2000
1970s establishments in Brazil
1973 establishments
Brazilian football clubs
Amapa
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Dead Space 2 Review
Survival horror has a new gold standard.
My desire to jump back in really speaks to the shift in Isaac's perspective this time around. Some fans threw hissy fits when Visceral said that there'd be more action in Dead Space 2, but it works and I love it. Isaac feels like a badass here, and he should. He's fought these monsters before and he's used these weapons before. The first game was a scared engineer tossed into hell. The second game is a guy who's lost everything to these monsters and really has nothing left to lose so hell yes he'll put his life on the line and shoot out an airlock if it means killing seven Necromorphs at once. Isaac is stronger here and I feel stronger playing as him.
If you're truly devoted like myself, there's even a mode known as "Hardcore," and it's nothing less than sadistic. The enemies are at their toughest, the supplies are limited, there are no checkpoints, and if you die, you restart from your last save. Oh, and you can only save three times in the entire game. That's crazy talk, but damn, do I want to do it.
As much fun as all that is, the "go here and do this" structure does hamper the overarching story. The part about Isaac wrestling his demons is awesome, but the narrative driving the search for the Marker is a bit flat in comparison. Different characters are just popping up to tell you to go there and do that. I wouldn't have a problem with this structure if it ended with Isaac learning something or maturing as a protagonist, but we never get that moment where he takes charge of his own fate. He's always being pushed somewhere by someone.
Another stumble is multiplayer. I've played all of the game's five modes/maps, and none of them did anything for me. Players are broken into two teams: the humans have an objective and the Necromorphs are out to stop them at all costs. As a human, I'd run to an objective, hold out for as long as I could, and then get killed. As a Necromorph, I'd hope my minimal amount of damage dealt killed a weaken opponent or set the kill up for a friend. The pacing and vague objectives really didn't equate to fun. This isn't want I want out of a Dead Space experience.
Luckily, as I hope I've already driven home, Dead Space 2's single-player is so good, you shouldn't question picking this game up.
Dead Space 2 is more than just an action game and it's more than a survival horror game -- it's a game that tells a really personal story about a guy who has been seriously scarred by the events around him. That premise alone makes it interesting, but Visceral Games melds it with rewarding combat, shocking enemies, and huge set pieces before tossing it into a world that's truly creepy and scary. I didn't find multiplayer that interesting and would've liked to have seen Isaac stop being an errand boy, but none of that spoils what you're getting here. The shocking moments, the gruesome deaths, and the fun of playing through this experience again and again are what I took away from this one.
Dead Space 2 is an excellent game, and it's well worth your time and money.
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Crime movie is a movie genre. The story is normally about a crime. The films are often related to crime literature. According to Eric R. Williams, crime movie is one of 11 supergenres in movie. The other ten super-genres are action, fantasy, horror, romance, science fiction, a slice of life, sports, thriller, war, and western.
There are many subgenres within crime. They include crime action, crime comedy, crime drama, crime thriller, dacoit film, gangster film, heist film, Mumbai underworld, Police Procedural, Prison film. Others include mystery, suspense, and noir. Notable directors of crime fllms include Fritz Lang, Alfred Hitchcock, Martin Scorcese, Francis Ford Coppola, Quentin Tarantino and Brian De Palma.
Subgenres
Police procedural (Cop)
These films focus on the police and their investigation. Examples include Silence of the Lambs, Seven, The French Connection, He Walked By Night, In the Heat of the Night, and Madigan.
Detective crime
These films focus on investigations of detectives. Examples are Knives Out, Chinatown and Sherlock Homes.
Gangster crime
These films are about gangs and organized crime. Examples are The Godfather, Goodfellas and American Gangster.
Heist movie
These films are about crimes trying to steal or rob something. Examples are The Killing, Ocean's 11, Dog Day Afternoon, Reservoir Dogs, and The Town.
Prison movie
These films take place in prisons and show the harsh conditions of prisons. Examples are The Shawshank Redemption (1994) and The Green Mile (1999)
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From The WrighterOnline.com:
Today’s featured artist, Melissa Ann Lambert is a California mixed media artist and has graciously included an original poem for this project. No other artist has done that so far. I’m excited…
Scream
I gazed
After
A stream of souls
And shouted of their numbers, Why?
They marched a circle round my goals,
And merging, rumored of a spy
-Melissa Ann Lambert, 2012
What is your artist statement?
My art, whether abstract, figurative, or combinations of both, explores dimensional vibrations through the use of line, color, symbolism and form. Geometry, particle physics, holonomic brain theory, and Jung's theories of synchronicity of the collective unconscious all inform my work.
Perceiving the concepts contained in the above theories, I strive to reveal the deeper dimensions and innate spirituality that exist in the here and now of every moment.
Which is your favorite work of yours and why?
Doppelgänger
It's hard to pick a favorite, because the most recent one I've done always seems to be "the best I've done yet;" however having said that it's a psychological state of mind that I'm in and I immediately look forward to doing a new piece. I do especially love “Doppelgänger” however, not only because it looks great in a lightbox at 48" square (plans in the future include producing work in LED panels), but also because my boyfriend and I met when he curated the piece into a show. I also really love the last one that took me five months and one day to create, called “Joule.”
Joule - M.A. Lambert
What is your favorite thing you've purchased in the last 30 days and why?
I did a small edition of my works in a catalog. Only 16 images are displayed, however that is enough to give someone (ideally a gallery owner) a good idea of my current body of work.
What do you think about "The Scream" auctioning @ $120 million on May 2nd?
Overall I think it's awesome, as it's bringing awareness of the power of art to the general public. Having said that, however, I think it's a shame that most artists – or at least many of them – don't get the attention they deserve during their own lifetimes.
One hundred years from now, what do you want people to think/ remember about you?
Well, I'm rather fond of what museum curator Peter Frank wrote about my work.
Cho Hwa- M.A. Lambert
Personally, I love it when people see "math" and "science" in my work, and also many have observed that they see a depth to my work. I will give you another quote, written by Michael Ned Holte, who has contributed to Artforum Magazine.
" Employing an arsenal of digital tools, Melissa Lambert mines a hallucinatory territory embedded with personal codes and signals that lend her dizzying, pixelated surfaces unusual depth."
- Michael Ned Holte, writer Echoing Fields - M.A. Lambert
To view more of Melissa Ann Lambert's work visit:
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Bernard Charles "Bernie" Ecclestone (born 28 October 1930) is a British sports entrepreneur.
He was the president and CEO of Formula One Management and Formula One Administration. He is part owner of Alpha Prema, the parent company of the Formula One Group of companies. He is generally considered the primary authority in Formula One racing. In 1972 he bought the Brabham team, which he ran for fifteen years. As a team owner he became a member of the Formula One Constructors Association.
On the 23 January, 2017, it was announced that Bernie Ecclestone had been replaced by Chase Carey as chief executive of the Formula One Group, though he has been appointed as chairman emeritus and will act as an adviser to the board.
He is also the co-owner of Queens Park Rangers F.C.
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Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews insisted Labor supporters had rejected the ‘low road’ after a historic night and thumping state election victory.
Supporters chanted ‘four more years’ as Mr Andrews took to the stage, flanked by his children and Cath, his wife.
"Friends, the people of Victoria today have overwhelmingly endorsed a positive and optimistic plan for our state," Andrews said.
"They have endorsed properly funding our hospitals and schools. They have endorsed creating more jobs and funding TAFE properly.
"And they have endorsed the biggest infrastructure agenda in this state's great history.”
Labor could win as many as 60 seats in the 88-seat parliament, 15 more seats than it had before the election.
"They have, in record numbers, at the same time rejected the low road of fear and division. And for that I am very, very proud," said the premier.
"We are the most progressive government in the nation. We are the most progressive state in the nation. We live our values, we keep our promises and we get things done."
He also thanked Liberal leader Matthew Guy for the concession he made in a personal call earlier on Saturday night.
© Nine Digital Pty Ltd 2019
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The Jewish Diaspora was a time formally described as" the scattering of the Jews." A time after the Babylonian captivity when Jews settled in different places, eventually settling together.
Jewish history
Migration
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Photo by BOBXNCAs the guitar is the most prevalent musical instruments employed today, standard guitar theory remains a mysterious to many beginning and more advanced pupils. While it is actually correct that many players may manage to discover the notes and chords mandatory to play several of their favorite tunes […]
songwriters […]
Learn How To Play Songs With Guitar Chords […]
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Miguel Munoz (19 January 1922 - 16 July 1990) is a former Spanish football player. He has played for Spain national team.
International career statistics
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Air Canada Online Check In International Flight
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How Can I Refund My Plane Ticket Step 3..
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Codeshare flights: If you are travelling on a codeshare flight, you’ll need to familiarize yourself with the other airline’s policies on check-in times and procedures. Related Topics Connecting with Air Canada
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Air Canada Flights – Useful Information for Flying with Air Canada – International: Find your international contact number on the Air Canada website. Email: Contact. Check-in online on the Air Canada website.
Enjoy Air canada altitude status. flights with Air Canada Rouge will contribute to your Air Canada Altitudes status. Additionally, eligible Altitude members can enjoy their privileges when flying Air Canada Rouge, including priority Check-in, Maple Leaf Lounge TM access, eUpgrades to Premium Rouge, and much more. > Learn more
Can I Buy Plane Ticket Without Passport To buy a ticket you need to provide your passport number which will be. If you renew your passport after you buy your entry tickets, you must travel. Not even God can get you on the Inca Trail without your original passport!
The Government of Canada has introduced a new entry requirement for those travelling to or through Canada, who are not Canadian or American citizens or.
6, when Morris tried to check in for his return flight online and found his confirmation number didn. and confirmed on his.
Avoid those long lines by checking in online. With Web Check-in, you can easily and conveniently check in up to 24 hours prior to your international flight and print your boarding pass. To begin, click on the international airlines link below..
Confirmation or eTicket number:What’s this? 6 characters that can be referred to as the united record locator or confirmation number OR 13 digits that can be referred to as the eT
Air Canada Online Check in available from 48 hours to 30 minutes before your scheduled flight departure time. You can print your Boarding pass (Confirmation Slip) at the end of the Air Canada Web Check in.
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Jean Darnel (1923 - 20 November 2020) was a French actor and director. He was born in Bayonne, France. He acted and directed many French productions of classical plays such as Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet and Cyrano de Bergerac.
Darnel died in Paris on 20 November 2020.
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Will the new Apple TV win the HD set-top war?
Why is Apple charging $1,300 more for the solid state-based MacBook Air?
I always thought the Apple TV was lacking before, although as Matt showed me the hacking possibilities are substantial. But with this relaunched service and all these major partners, it’s poised to take on the big boys in the on-demand movie and show sector. Blu-Ray will rule the physical media roost, but how long before that roost is lonely and abandoned? On-demand is certainly the future, and Apple TV might have the punch now to take a bite out of the market.
Could Apple TV 2.0 End the High-Def Format War? MacWorld 2008 Analysis [Popular Mechanics]
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