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MasterRenegade77 -> Geography (7/30/2006 10:11:46 AM)

Alaska
More than  half of the coastline of the entire United States is in  Alaska.

Amazon
The Amazon rainforest produces more than 20%    the world's  oxygen
supply. The Amazon River pushes so much water  into the Atlantic Ocean
that, more than one hundred  miles at sea off the mouth of the river, one
can dip  fresh water out of the ocean.  The volume of water in the Amazon
river is  greater than the next eight largest  rivers in the world
combined and three times the  flow of all rivers in the United States.

Antarctica
Antarctica is  the only land on our planet that is not owned by any
country.  Ninety percent of the world's ice covers Antarctica. This  ice
also represents seventy percent of all the fresh water in the  world. As
strange as it sounds, however, Antarctica is essentially a  desert.  The
average yearly  total precipitation is about two inches  Although covered
with ice (all  but 0.4% of it, i.e.), Antarctica  is the driest  place on
the planet, with an absolute humidity  lower than the Gobi desert.

Brazil
Brazil got  its name from the nut, not the other way around.

Canada
Canada has  more lakes than the rest of the world combined.  Canada is an
Indian word  meaning "Big  Village."

Chicago
Next to  Warsaw, Chicago has the largest   Polish population in the world.

Detroit
Woodward  Avenue in Detroit, Michigan, carries the designation  M-1, named
so because it was the  first paved  road anywhere.

Damascus,  Syria
Damascus,  Syria, was flourishing a couple of  thousand years  before Rome
was founded in 753 BC, making it the oldest  continuously inhabited city
in existence.

Istanbul,  Turkey
Istanbul,  Turkey, is the only city in the world  located on two  continents.

Los  Angeles
Los Angeles's  full name is El Pueblo de  Nuestra Senora  la Reina de los
Angeles de Porciuncula --and can be  abbreviated to 3.63% of its size:
L.A.

New York  City
The term "The  Big Apple" was coined by touring  jazz musicians  of the
1930's who used the slang _expression "apple" for  any town or city.
Therefor e, to play New York City is  to play the big time - The Big
Apple. There  are more Irish in New York City than in Dublin, Ireland;
more  Italians in New York City than in  Rome, Italy;  and more Jews in
New York City than in Tel Aviv,  Israel.

Ohio
There are no  natural lakes in the state of Ohio, every one is  manmade.

Pitcairn  Island
The smallest  island with country status is Pitcairn in Polynesia,  at
just 1.75 sq. miles/4,53 sq. km.

Rome
The first city to reach a population of 1  million people  was Rome, Italy
in 133 B.C. There is a city called Rome  on every continent.

Siberia
Siberia  contains more than 25% of the world's forests

S.M.O.M.
The actual  smallest sovereign entity in the world is the Sovereign
Military Order of Malta (S.M.O.M.).   It is located  in the c ity of Rome,
Italy, has an area of two tennis  courts, and as of 2001 has a population
of 80, 20 less  people than the Vatican.  It is a sovereign  entity under
international law, just as  the Vatican  is.

Sahara  Desert
In the Sahara  Desert, there is a town named  Tidikelt, which did not
receive a drop of rain for ten years.  Technically though, the driest
place on Earth is in the  valleys of the Antarctic near Ross  Island.
There  has been no rainfall there for two million years.

Spain
Spain literally means 'the land of rabbits.'

St. Paul,  Minnesota
St. Paul,  Minnesota, was originally called Pig's Eye  after a man  named
Pierre "Pig's Eye" Parrant who set up the first  business there

Roads
Chances that  a road is unpaved in the U.S.A: 1%,  in Canada:  75%

Texas
The deepest  hole ever made in the world is in Texas.  It is as deep as
20 empire state buildings but only  3 inches  wide.

United  States
The  Eisenhower interstate system requires that  one-mile in  every five
must be straight.  These straight sections are usable as  airstrips in
times of war or  other emergencies.

Waterfalls
The water of Angel Falls (the World's highest)  in Venezuela drops 3,212
feet (979 meters).  They are 15 times  higher than Niagara Falls.

So, didn't it feel good  to learn something new today???

I have always  said you should learn something new every day.
Unfortunately, most of  us are at that age where what we learn today, we
forget tomorrow.  But,  give it a shot anyway!............ =




missturbation -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 10:48:46 AM)

Spain
Spain literally means 'the land of rabbits.'



Spain literally means "the land of rabbits."
Not so fast there, Bugs.  It doesn't "literally" mean that.  It might etymologically mean "rabbit", a reference to the large number of rabbits there at one time, but it might etymologically mean several other things, as well.  No one is quite sure.  Some other possibilities are that it derives from Basque ezpain "lip" or "edge" (perhaps referring to it being on a peninsula), or that its origin is in Hesperus "land of the setting sun".
 
Ill pick the rest apart shortly lol.




pahunkboy -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 10:51:37 AM)

hmm- i thought michigan had the longest coastline.




missturbation -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 10:57:06 AM)

Brazil
Brazil got  its name from the nut, not the other way around.


The COED and Wikipedia both say it's named after the brazil tree that grew there, and was use for making red-dye. The word is Portuguese for ember.
 




missturbation -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 11:03:00 AM)

Canada
Canada has  more lakes than the rest of the world combined.  Canada is an
Indian word  meaning "Big  Village."


Apparently canada has 31,752 lakes but Finland has 187,888.




gooddogbenji -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 11:04:38 AM)

There's a number of them on there I would not believe without further research, and a few that I would not believe even if further research supported them.  The fact that the chances of a road being unpaved in Canada, for example...  How did we figure this out?  The fact that there is a city called Rome on every continent - on Antarctica, too?  And if a continent receives 2 inches of rain per year, how do we want to find out whether a specific area of it had rain 100 000 years ago?  The fact that the deepest hole in the world is only about 6 km deep depends on your definition of deep, as there are many tunnels that are longer, they just do not go straight down.

Then again, Renegade has in the past posted a number of, shall we say, factually creative items.

So, to answer the question, no, it did not feel good to learn something new today.

Yours,


benji




missturbation -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 11:21:55 AM)

I could be wrong of course but thats the problem with just picking so called facts up off a page on google lol.
 
Oh incidently there are several largest holes in the world one of them yeah is claimed to be in texas but several others i cudnt be bothered spending time getting exact meaurements for.




gooddogbenji -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 11:31:15 AM)

Nah, Google is always perfectly reliable.  Anything you find, directly on indirectly, on Google is true by definition.

Yours,


benji




missturbation -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 11:33:33 AM)

ok lol if u say so but google lists at least five deepest holes in the world lol.
It also lists me as a saint lol - oh well must be true.




gooddogbenji -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 11:34:13 AM)

Of course you're a saint!  What else?

Yours,


benji




missturbation -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 11:37:03 AM)

well i was expecting innocent, angelic, sweet, naive amognst others.
Guess ill just have to settle for saint *sighs*




gooddogbenji -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 11:40:40 AM)

Did Google say you were these things?

Yours,


benji




missturbation -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 11:55:56 AM)

no it didnt but it shud have




gooddogbenji -> RE: Geography (7/30/2006 12:10:56 PM)

Never question the Google, misst.

Yours,


benji




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