Did You ever try to catch a snowflake? wilson bentley liked snowflakes. He was born on february 9 1865 in Vermont. There was always plenty of snow each winter. He wanted to see what they looked like close-up. He was very curious, mainly about snow! His mom gave him a microscope when he was fifteen. He used it to look at snowflakes. He was amazed at the shapes he saw. Each tiny ice crystal had six sides or arms. He tried to draw their shapes. It wasnt easy! Snowflakes melt quickly. the shapes were very intricate. he couldn't draw fast enough! Wilson wanted to take pictures of them. That would be a way he could study them for a while. He tried different things. He would catch snowflakes on a blackboard. He attached a special camera to the microscope.
She see snow for the first time. Since Yolanda comes from the Dominican Republic she has never actually seen snow because it is too hot there for snow to fall. Around the time she sees the snow she is learning about the Cuban missile crisis. “I saw the dots in the air like the ones Sister Zoe had drawn-random at first, then lots and lots. I shrieked ‘Bomb! Bomb!’ Sister Zoe jerked around, her full black skirt ballooning as she hurried to my side. A few girls began to cry. But the Sister Zoe’s shocked look faded. ‘Why Yolanda dear, that’s snow!’ She laughed ‘Snow.’” (Alvarez 163). Yolanda has never seen snow before so she is scared because she thinks it is a nuclear fallout, but after Sister Zoe reassures her that the snow is only snow not a fallout she feels better. The idea of the snow falling is an uneasy feeling for Yolanda. Then snow represents the unknown and the scary events Yolanda and her family will have to experience in America. “Each flake was different, Sister Zoe had said, like a person, irreplaceable and beautiful.” (Alvarez 163). Sister Zoe says all snowflakes are different just like people. Throughout the book a recurring theme has been that Yolanda is having a hard time finding her identity. The snow in this case represents Yolanda and how she has the ability to be whatever she wants and how she can follow so many different paths now that she is in America. “A symbol differs
Billie Wind is a fifteen-year-old girl that is punished and sent away to the Everglades for not having faith in her tribe’s legends. Billie is in the Seminole tribe, and she is known to be a doubter of the legends her tribe has faith in. “But we agree that you should be punished for being a doubter” (3).The legends that Billie does not believe in are the Calusa tribe and the serpent. The Calusa tribe are tiny people that live under the railroad. The serpent is a giant snake roaming the immense Everglades. As she is on her expedition, she meets exceptional friends that help her identify her understandings of her tribe’s legends. During Billie Wind’s journey, she
Now he mentions the effect of the winds uneven distribution of force on the snow.
Before doing my research, I knew that a man named Wilson Bentley discovered the snowflake. He was born in 1865 in Jericho, Vermont (Smithsonian). As he grew up, he helped out by working on his family farm where the snow fall average was 10 feet per year (Smithsonian). Ever since he was a little kid, Wilson loved studying weather patterns and he used to keep a log of the ever-changing weather in his town (Smithsonian). When he got older, he used a microscope that he received for his birthday to look at each individual snowflake. Later on in his life, he started taking pictures of these snowflakes, discovering that each one is different (Smithsonian). I think that it would be cool to be able to find a way to document and take pictures of different
Getting to know Jared Wilson. Jared was born in Elmont, New York on May 31, 2000. He claims to have a normal family. He lives with his grandparents and his older brother which is 18 years old. He has another brother in New York that is 23 years old. Some things that he does in his spare time is hanging out with friends and driving around and wasting gas that he doesn’t pay for. His favorite sport is baseball and his favorite baseball team is the Yankees. He often listens to Coldplay. But also likes to play video games such as grand theft auto, saints row, and word cookies on his cell phone.
James Quinn Wilson was born on May 27, 1931, in Denver, Colorado, but grew up mostly in Long Beach, California. His father, Claude, was a salesman; his mother, Marie, a homemaker. He graduated from the University of Redlands in the San Bernardino Valley, east of Los Angeles, then served in the Navy during the Korean War, although he saw no combat. He then pursued advanced degrees at the University of Chicago, where he earned an M.A. and a Ph.D. in political science in 1959.
Voted the second most beautiful vista in America, Mount Washington is a well-known overlook of downtown Pittsburgh. Mount Washington, now a beautiful mountain with a tree covered Cliffside, was not always known for its sights. Many are unaware of the dirty environment that it used to be. Once known as Coal Hill, Mount Washington was the location of many coal mines. Back in the late 1800’s, this mountain was the source that fueled and built Pittsburgh. From the ravaging coal minds to the breathtaking Inclines, there is a lot of history that is hidden under the beautiful area which we now know as Mount Washington.
John Dilulio, who knew James Q. Wilson as a colleague and friend for the last 32 years of Wilson’s life, comments that despite Wilson’s prolific public and professional pursuits, he spent quality time with both his wife and two children. He always attended his children’s special events and took them on many trips abroad (Dilulio, 2012).
Snow’s putting himself in a dangerous environment helped not only his Ghost Map, but also his case for showing great persistence. Another example of John’s persistence occurrs when he fails to convince the medical community of his Cholera theory the first time he presents it. “After his first publications at the end of the 1840’s had failed to persuade the medical authorities of his waterborne theory, Snow had continued looking for evidence supporting this theory.” (100) This quote shows John Snow’s persistence because of how he did not give up after an initial failure to convince people. He instead goes on and complies more evidence and works even harder, and even more persistently. Persistence means not changing your course of action because of setbacks; and John Snow showed this through not giving up after initial inconclusive tests and performing dangerous field
I grew up in a small town called Moss Point Mississippi, a very diverse town so I went to school with different cultures. There are Pine trees and Magnolia trees. My favorite trees are the ones with Moss streaming down the sides of them, which I’m sure you can guess is where the name Moss Point came from. The other thing about my town is that it is on the gulf coast so, I grew up on the beaches of the Gulf Coast. Seafood is the most popular and my favorite food in the whole wide world!
Science in the 1850s was very underdeveloped as compared to the technology we have this day. Therefore it would have been incredibly challenging for scientists, like John Snow, to hold labs and experiment. One big factor I noticed that differentiates the two centuries was how John Snow tested the water supply at Broad Street. These days, epidemiologists and scientists use meters or technology to test the groundwater. However, John Snow had no other choice but to drink-test it himself; this was his method that led him to discover water-borne diseases. From this, we can learn how much John Snow was devoted to discovering better health for the communities. When John Snow gathered his data, he knew that eliminating differences in location or other factors would mess the result of the study. Rather keeping the confounding variable the same would help him find the problem of the study, which was water.
Before he could put the fence up however, there was a enormous snow storm where twelve inches of snow fell. My sister and I just had to go sledding. I was ten at the time and, thinking I was so smart, I built a wall of snow to keep us from going into the road. I went down the hill on the sled alone. The snow had formed an icy layer on top of it, making
snowflake philosophy poem by Patrick T.Randolph is a an imaginable pome. at the begging the poem was boring and had no since for me, after couples of sentences I enjoyed reading the poem more and more. I like Randolph way of thinking and looking at things. He looks at things from different sight and I believe this is a clever way to do. for example, when he talks about snowflake that never return to the earth, he also mention things around the snowflake such and the sun the wind and the rain.
Who is the Snowflake Man? Some people might think that the snowflake man is a superhero from a comic because the name sounds like it belongs in a comic book. But the Snowflake Man is actually a self-educated farmer from a small American town by the name of Wilson Bentley. Now Wilson Bentley isn't a scientist or anything of that nature, but one scientific action he committed and after observing two different snowflakes, he concluded that no two snowflakes are alike. He did this by combining a bellows camera with a microscope and was able to give the world its first ever photograph of a snowflake. Now when you hear "self-educated farmer" you would think he's located in a southern state, but in reality he lives in Vermont.
In 1904, Helge von Koch identified a fractal that appeared to model the snowflake. The fractal was built by starting with an equilateral triangle and removing the inner third of each side, building another equilateral triangle where the side was removed, and then repeating the process indefinitely. The process is pictured below, showing the original triangle at stage zero, and the resulting figures after one, two and three iterations.