User talk:Gbaby147

@ da skool
wats up im bored in 2nd period

black death
The Black  Death;  also  called  the  "Bubonic  Plague"  was  one  of  the  worst  natural disasters  in  history. In 1347  a  plague  came  over  Europe  and  killed  many  people. One third  of  Europe's  population  died. The plague  was  carried  by  fleas; they  have the  potential  of  spreading  dangerous  diseases  to  humans  and  other  animals. Possibly, the first  flea  was  borned  in  Africa  and  travelled  by  boat  on  the  back  of a  rat  to  other  countries  of  the  world. The Black  Death  began  in  the  desert  of  Gobi  in  the  late  1320  and  went  in Europe's  direction. The first  country  touched  was  Cyprus  in  1347  and  then  went to  Sicily  and  to  all  over  Italy. In January  1348  the  plague  spreaded  to  France  and in  September  to  England. It took  longer  to  reach  the  outside  of  Europe,  Norway  was  hit  in  May  1349. The eastern  European  countries  were  not  reached  until  1350,  and  Russia  not  until  1351. Because the  disease  tended  to  follow  trade  routes,  and  to  concentrate  in  cities, first  the  cities  of  the  south  near  the  sea  were  first  infected  and  then  to  northern  Europe  and  finally  to  Russia. The Path: How was  it  transmitted" In  the  beginning,  the  plague  came  from  rats:  not  normal  rats,  but  wild  black  rats. Fleas  are  blood  sucking  parasites;  so  when  a  flea  drinks  rat  blood, he  is  infected. The  bacteria  in  the  fleas's  gut  multiplies  and  when  the  flea  bites  a  human  or  other  animal  in  an  open  wound,  he  is  infected.  The  rat  dies.  The  human  dies. The  flea  lives  a  long  and  happy  life.  An  infected  person  can  be  reconnised  by black  bubbles  on  the  body,  a  high  fever  and  vomitting  blood.  The  swellings  continue  to  expand  until  they  eventually  burst,  with  death  following  soon  after. What  did  they  do to  stop  the  plague" Altough the  government  had  medical  workers  try  to  prevent  the  plague,  the  plague  persisted. Most medical  workers  quit  because  they  were  afraid  to  get  the plague  themselves. People burned  all  kinds  of  food  to  cure  the  plague. The population  loss: It was  the  worst  nature  disaster  of  all  time  and  killed  many  many  people: 60% of  Florence  population  died  in  one  year. Venice also  lost  60%  of  its population  in  one  and  a  half  year;  500  to  600  a  day  sometimes.

im sitting here bored in 2nd period dont know what to do. veroina will probaly read this so im just waiting for her to read it mr.williams thinks im doing my work but im not im making it look like it yami hasnt messed with me so im happy for that i wish i could get on myspace but i cant i want to go home and go back to sleep im bored and its hot in here.

When Black  Death  Strikes

Some people  say  the  swine  flu  is  scary  and  is  very  deadly. People say that  AIDS  is  deadly  and  is  affecting  the  whole  world. In this  report  I will  tell  you  about  a  diease  of  a  life  time  or  in  a  killing  life  time.The  very  frighting,  most deadly, diease  is  called  "THE BLACK DEATH"

The Black  Death  was  one  of  the  worst  epidamics  in  history. In 1347  the  Black Death  came  over  Europe  and  killed  alot  of   people. One third  of  Europe's  population  died. The plague  was  carried  by  fleas  and  rats  they  are  the ones  that  spread  dangerous  diseases  to  humans  and  other  animals. The first  flea  was  born  in  Africa  and  traveled  by  boat  on  the  back  of a  rat  to  other  countries  in the  world.

The Black  Death  began  in  the  desert  of  Gobi  in  the  late  1320  and  went  in Europe's  direction. The first  country  touched  was  Cyprus  in  1347  and  then  went to  Sicily  and  to  all  over  Italy. In January  1348  the  plague  spreaded  to  France  and in  September  to  England. Then speaded  to  Russia  in  1351.

Fleas are  blood  sucking  parasites;  so  when  a  flea  drinks  rat  blood, he  is  infected. The bacteria  in  the  fleas's  gut  multiplies  and  when  the  flea  bites  a  human  or  other  animal  in  an  open  wound,  he  is  infected. The rat  dies. The human  dies. The flea  lives  a  long  and  happy  life. An infected  person  can  be  reconnised  by black  bubbles  on  the  body,  a  high  fever  and  vomitting  blood. The swellings  continue  to  expand  until  they  eventually  burst,  with  death  following  soon  after.

It was  the  worst  nature  disaster  of  all  time  and  killed  many  many  people. 60% of  Florence  population  died  in  one  year. Venice also  lost  60%  of  its population  in  one  and  a  half  year;  500  to  600  a  day  sometimes. AIDS has  killed  about  33.2  million  people  in  a  year. Swine flu  has  killed less  then  a  thousand  people  in  its  whole  life  time. Black Death  is  not  like  these  others it  killed  450  million  people  and  is  still  kiling  people.

im bored in 2nd period almost the last day of skool so yeah .i cant wait for summer

alexander graham bell
Alexander Graham Bell - Biography In 1876, at the age of 29, Alexander Graham Bell invented his telephone. Alexander Graham Bell Design sketch of the phone. More of this Feature • The History of the Telephone • Alexander Graham Bell - Photophone • Alexander Graham Bell - More Biographies and Pictures Back to The History of the Telephone In 1876, at the age of 29, Alexander Graham Bell invented his telephone. In 1877, he formed the Bell Telephone Company, and in the same year married Mabel Hubbard and embarked on a yearlong honeymoon in Europe.

Alexander Graham Bell might easily have been content with the success of his telephone invention. His many laboratory notebooks demonstrate, however, that he was driven by a genuine and rare intellectual curiosity that kept him regularly searching, striving, and wanting always to learn and to create. He would continue to test out new ideas through a long and productive life. He would explore the realm of communications as well as engage in a great variety of scientific activities involving kites, airplanes, tetrahedral structures, sheep-breeding, artificial respiration, desalinization and water distillation, and hydrofoils.

With the enormous technical and later financial success of his telephone invention, Alexander Graham Bell's future was secure, and he was able to arrange his life so that he could devote himself to his scientific interests. Toward this end, in 1881, he used the $10,000 award for winning France's Volta Prize to set up the Volta Laboratory in Washington, D.C. A believer in scientific teamwork, Bell worked with two associates, his cousin Chichester Bell and Charles Sumner Tainter, at the Volta Laboratory. Their experiments soon produced such major improvements in Thomas Edison's phonograph that it became commercially viable. After 1885, when he first visited Nova Scotia, Bell set up another laboratory there at his estate, Beinn Bhreagh (pronounced Ben Vreeah), near Baddeck, where he would assemble other teams of bright young engineers to pursue new and exciting ideas.

Among one of his first innovations after the telephone was the "photophone," a device that enabled sound to be transmitted on a beam of light. Bell and his assistant, Charles Sumner Tainter, developed the photophone using a sensitive selenium crystal and a mirror that would vibrate in response to a sound. In 1881, they successfully sent a photophone message over 200 yards from one building to another. Bell regarded the photophone as "the greatest invention I have ever made; greater than the telephone." Alexander Graham Bell's invention reveals the principle upon which today's laser and fiber optic communication systems are founded, though it would take the development of several modern technologies to realize it fully.

Alexander Graham Bell Sketch of a vacuum jacket in use. Over the years, Alexander Graham Bell's curiosity would lead him to speculate on the nature of heredity, first among the deaf and later with sheep born with genetic irregularities. His sheep-breeding experiments at Beinn Bhreagh sought to increase the numbers of twin and triplet births. Bell was also willing to attempt inventing under the pressure of daily events, and in 1881 he hastily constructed an electromagnetic device called an induction balance to try and locate a bullet lodged in President Garfield after an assassin had shot him. He later improved this and produced a device called a telephone probe, which would make a telephone receiver click when it touched metal. That same year, Bell's newborn son, Edward, died from respiratory problems, and Bell responded to that tragedy by designing a metal vacuum jacket that would facilitate breathing. This apparatus was a forerunner of the iron lung used in the 1950s to aid polio victims. In addition to inventing the audiometer to detect minor hearing problems and conducting experiments with what today are called energy recycling and alternative fuels, Bell also worked on methods of removing salt from seawater.

Photograph of the Silver Dart However, these interests may be considered minor activities compared to the time and effort he put into the challenge of flight. By the 1890s, Bell had begun experimenting with propellers and kites. His work led him to apply the concept of the tetrahedron (a solid figure with four triangular faces) to kite design as well as to create a new form of architecture. In 1907, four years after the Wright Brothers first flew at Kitty Hawk, Bell formed the Aerial Experiment Association with Glenn Curtiss, William "Casey" Baldwin, Thomas Selfridge, and J.A.D. McCurdy, four young engineers whose common goal was to create airborne vehicles. By 1909, the group had produced four powered aircraft, the best of which, the Silver Dart, made the first successful powered flight in Canada on February 23, 1909. Bell spent the last decade of his life improving hydrofoil designs, and in 1919 he and Casey Baldwin built a hydrofoil that set a world water-speed record that was not broken until 1963. Months before he died, Bell told a reporter, "There cannot be mental atrophy in any person who continues to observe, to remember what he observes, and to seek answers for his unceasing hows and whys about things.

timeline
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Search Results 1847 Mar 3, 1847 - Alexander Graham Bell – Brief Biography Born on March 3, 1847, in Edinburgh, Scotland, Alexander Graham Bell was the son and grandson of authorities in elocution and the correction of speech. Educated to pursue a career in the same specialty, his knowledge ...Alexander Graham Bell – Brief Biography Born on March 3, 1847, in Edinburgh, Scotland, Alexander Graham Bell was the son and grandson of authorities in elocution and the correction of speech. Educated to pursue a career in the same specialty, his knowledge of the nature of sound led him not only to teach the deaf, but also to invent the telephone. * More on the Life of Alexander Graham Bell * Alexander Graham Bell Timeline * Alexander Graham Bell – Biography. Show more Show less From The History of the Telephone – Alexander Graham Bell « Azbelix's Blog - Related web pages azbelix.wordpress.com/2010/05/05/the-history ...

1874 1874 - Bell's timeline, works and statements have been extensively documented and reviewed by many. Here's a plaque specifically referring to his invention of the telephone; with the wording: "....to mark the invention of the telephone at Brantford by Alexander Graham Bell in 1874." From Talk:Alexander Graham Bell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Related web pages en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk%3AAlexander_Graham_Bell

1875 Jun 2, 1875 - The monument's inscription reads: "• Birthplace of the Telephone • Here, on June 2, 1875, Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas A. Watson first transmitted sound over wires.Two historic tablets plus a minor monument near Exeter Place in Boston, MA mark the location of the Alexander Graham Bell's first successful telephone and the words he first transmitted to his assistant, Thomas Augustus Watson. The monument's inscription reads: "• Birthplace of the Telephone • Here, on June 2, 1875, Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas A. Watson first transmitted sound over wires. Show more Show less From Bell Telephone Memorial - Related web pages en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Telephone_Memorial

1876 1876 - Alexander Graham Bell beat everyone to finish line, receiving his patent in 1876. Drawbaugh sold the rights to his telephone to Peoples Telephone Company, a rival to American Bell Telephone Company. American Bell promptly sued, claiming that it held the ...Alexander Graham Bell beat everyone to finish line, receiving his patent in 1876. Drawbaugh sold the rights to his telephone to Peoples Telephone Company, a rival to American Bell Telephone Company. American Bell promptly sued, claiming that it held the patent to the telephone. The case eventually found its way to the US Supreme Court. The outcome would decide if Alexander Graham Bell or Daniel Drawbaugh would be credited with inventing the telephone. On-camera ... Show more Show less From billspinner.com :: Writing - Related web pages www.billspinner.com/writing6s.html

Feb 14, 1876 - What would Valentines Day be without a loving phone call to your mother? It's interesting to note that this wouldn't be possible without a telephone, the patent for which was filed by Alexander Graham Bell on February 14th, 1876. At the turn of the Century ...What would Valentines Day be without a loving phone call to your mother? It's interesting to note that this wouldn't be possible without a telephone, the patent for which was filed by Alexander Graham Bell on February 14th, 1876. At the turn of the Century, during Victorian times, everything became more prudish – including Valentine's Day. Post offices began scrutinizing Valentines. As many as 25000 cards every Valentines Day during this period were destroyed by the ... Show more Show less From Silver love heart for Valentines Day :Silver Love Heart - Related web pages silverloveheart.com/origin-and-history-of ...

Mar 7, 1876 - Alexander Graham Bell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Alexander Graham Bell's telephone patent drawing, 7 March 1876. ..... articles: Volta Laboratory and Bureau and Alexander Graham Bell honors and tributes ... http://en.wikipedia.org /wiki ...Alexander Graham Bell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Alexander Graham Bell's telephone patent drawing, 7 March 1876. ..... articles: Volta Laboratory and Bureau and Alexander Graham Bell honors and tributes ... http://en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Alexander_Graham_Bell. Wapedia - Wiki: Alexander Graham Bell honors and tributes Alexander Graham Bell honors and tributes include honors bestowed upon him and awards ... Alexander Graham Bell received numerous tributes during ... Show more Show less From Alexander Graham Bell honors and tributes - Kngine - Related web pages www.kngine.com/search?q=Alexander%20Graham ...

Mar 10, 1876 - The figure features Alexander Graham Bell greeting his laboratory assistant after summoning him through the first ever phone call made on March 10th 1876. Would Alexander Graham Bell be surprised to see people driving down the road with a coffee in one hand a ...This is a musical figurine from a series, events in history, though we do not know the maker and it no longer has a box. The figure features Alexander Graham Bell greeting his laboratory assistant after summoning him through the first ever phone call made on March 10th 1876. Would Alexander Graham Bell be surprised to see people driving down the road with a coffee in one hand a phone in the other hand trying to put on make up at the same time as they steer their vehicles and ... Show more Show less From Musical Figurine Historic Moment FIRST PHONE CALL 1876 - eBay (item … - Related web pages cgi.ebay.com/Musical-Figurine-Historic-Moment ...

1877 Feb 12, 1877 - Alexander Graham Bell's assistant during the first public showing of the telephone, Feb. 12, 1877, to give his lecture on "The Beginnings of the Telephone"... Telephone" in Academy hall next 1' night, the date to the thirty- sixth anniversary of the public use ...Alexander Graham Bell's assistant during the first public showing of the telephone, Feb. 12, 1877, to give his lecture on "The Beginnings of the Telephone"... Telephone" in Academy hall next 1' night, the date to the thirty- sixth anniversary of the public use of the t telephone which could be thus arranged. 1'le initial display of the - Ly Professor Bell during a whet was then his latest invention.,Erofessor 13e11 was a resident of Salemiat the time, and the lecture was ... Show more Show less From FIRST DISPLAY OF BE RECALLED - Related web pages pqasb.pqarchiver.com/csmonitor_historic/access ...

1909 Feb 23, 1909 - The Silver Dart, dismantled after successful flights in New York state, was transported to Bell's home town in Baddeck leading to its maiden flight in Canada on February 23, 1909, piloted by a young engineering graduate and AEA member, John Alexander ...The Silver Dart was designed and built by the Aerial Experiment Association, a small group of flight enthusiasts recruited by Alexander Graham Bell. The Silver Dart, dismantled after successful flights in New York state, was transported to Bell's home town in Baddeck leading to its maiden flight in Canada on February 23, 1909, piloted by a young engineering graduate and AEA member, John Alexander Douglas McCurdy. Show more Show less From The Canadian International Military Tattoo 2009 Theme and Show … - Related web pages www.canadianmilitarytattoo.ca/pages ...

1922 Aug 2, 1922 - Alexander Graham Bell died of pernicious anemia on 2 August 1922, at his private estate, Beinn Bhreagh, Nova Scotia, at age 75. On the day of his burial, all telephone service in the US was stopped for one minute in his honor. Alexander Graham Bell ...Alexander Graham Bell died of pernicious anemia on 2 August 1922, at his private estate, Beinn Bhreagh, Nova Scotia, at age 75. On the day of his burial, all telephone service in the US was stopped for one minute in his honor. Alexander Graham Bell continued his many experiments in communication, which culminated in the invention of the photophone-transmission of sound on a beam of light — a precursor of today's optical fiber systems. Show more Show less From Facts About All: March 2010 - Related web pages factspage.blogspot.com/2010_03_06_archive.html