You're getting too erudite. But I have used that "Who Is Sylvia" line several times and this is the first time anyone has bothered to investigate where it came from.
yessir, we're a curious bunch here in the gulch!!!
the neat thing is that we learn from one another, about Franz Peter Schubert and Sylvia (plus, do you remember Ian and Sylvia? ... https://video.search.yahoo.com/video/pla...) -- good innocent fun!!! -- j
then you must have known my friend Sylvia Parker! she was a year ahead of me in Everly Brothers High and befriended me even though I was a nerd. she was a very sexy woman. . remember? -- j
p.s. west high in knoxville did see the E Bros for awhile, before they were famous.
Ground varies in hardness and consistency and water will flow to the lowest point and carve the softest ground. When water crests due to flooding, water will flow to the lowest point, causing gouges in the ground making a channel/path to flow...pretty much common sense.
Just offhand, the Rhine, Elbe, and Oder in Germany. The Vistula in Poland. The Meuse in Belgium/Netherlands. All flow into either the North Sea or Baltic and begin well to the south.
And ignore the lousy proofreading and writing skills, too... And lack of accurate description... is "flowing north" defined by 'mouth is north of source'? Implicit, but not spelled out... I'm a little disappointed...
to wit...
THE FACTS: Unless the land it totally flat, rivers of water run downhill. The vast percentage of rivers on the planet flow in a southerly direction because the source (usually in the mountains) is to the north of the mouth.
If the source of a river is at a higher elevation than the mouth, that river will run from the source to the mouth. However, if that (higher) source is to the south of the mouth, that river will then flow to the north (downhill).
Below is a partial list of rivers (length listed when known) that do just that. We haven't listed rivers that run to the northwest, or rivers that don't meet the exact requirements...
>>>>>> "Unless the land it totally flat, rivers of water run downhill."
Who needs muskrats? The first pebble that falls into the stream (or the first dead animal that blocks a bit of flow near the bank) will start the same chain of events.
And why not beavers? Because they don't tend to build their homes anywhere near slow-moving streams or rivers... they CREATE the slow-moving waters with their dams.
How do they know where to put their dams to make the pent-up mini-lake behind their dam? Some time back I read about the answer: Beavers begin to block a stream where it's NOISIEST... where it's tumbling downhill the steepest. Building a dam there will tend to create a nice little lake upstream and it's certainly easier for a beaver to find the noisiest part of a stream than to figure out any other prime location.
Notice how even humans put dams across steep, fast-moving rivers... you won't find many hydroelectric power centers on the Mississippi, for example.. :)
Loved my 10th-grade Earth Science class... 1960-1961.
Beavers are very smart and only build where there is food. that is not on steep banks and narrow fast moving streams. they build where there are easy to ascend bankings and lots of young woody material along the shore. Calm waters are easy to swim in both directions. I have been involved with beavers in various locations from Maine to Montana and Washington. They like a stream that can be damned and provide food then abandoned and move to a new site while the vegetation returns to the old site. I'll save the story of how beavers drown Coyotes for another time.
Well slap my tale. the noisy part is they detect the differential motion of water with their whiskers to find leaks in the dam and plug them. They have to be on the calm side to feel the very subtle flows differentials. Its fascinating to go to their dens in winter and see the little hole where the warm air from the den escapes. There are usually tracks of Bobcats, coyotes, and fox leading to the small breathing hole where they can sniff but not reach. The longest dam I have dealt with was a half mile long and backed water up through a small forest which was fun to paddle it.
Only around 2,000 of the nation’s 79,000 dams are equipped with generators, leaving a great deal of potential on the table, say hydropower advocates. Most of the locks and dams offer “low head” hydropower where the differential between the height of river before and after the dam is 30 feet or less. They are sometimes called “run of the river” power plants because they do not stop flows or create pooling upstream.
Wood, I've wondered about that, too. I live near a man-made lake which has a frequent overflow. My suspicion is that most such potential energy sources aren't economical because of the investments and resources needed to build, connect and maintain such energy supplies.
Many are near potential consumers but the ancillary infrastructure to tie them into even a substation grid and protect them and the grid from each other just might price them out of the potential market for a while... or forever.
Having something 'available' doesn't mean anyone might be willing to 'buy it at the market price.'
But hey, I'm just a guy with engineering and marketing background... what do _I_ know? Let's leave those tough decisions up to local and state Legislatures, right? :)
Ah, maybe, Randy, but I wouldn't jump to that one. Tracing the effects from a butterfly's wing-flap to a major storm sounds pretty tough, but a good-sized pebble in a stream can have immediate and 'somewhat predictable' or at least traceable effects.
The 'butterfly effect' is cute, but with so many butterflies (and moths and such) in the world, I'd put its Predictive Value at somewhere VERY close to Zero, (if not lower.) :)
+10. It explains us when we meander and they chose muskrats instead of beavers. Beavers are always mentioned in these kind of videos. let's keep meandering!
Just ONE of the most famous? I resent being dissed as just ONE of the most famous meanderers here because my meandering ways should surely tag me as the BEST greatest meander makers of all time. I was once a libtard but am one no longer. I guess that explains it. Neither am I a muskrat. I'm not a beaver or a girl either. Speaking of girls, one once said I reminded her of a bear. That was in 1980 when I lived in Mississippi for 6 months. I think an allosaur is cooler, though. Acting like one, too. Yeah.
Why do mountains rise?
Why are volcanos hot?
Why are plains flat?
Why is the earth round?
Who is Sylvia?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvia_%28s...
-- j
I was referring to the title of a song by Schubert. But, I'll take your reply instead.
http://artsongcentral.com/2007/schubert-...
-- j
the neat thing is that we learn from one another,
about Franz Peter Schubert and Sylvia (plus, do you remember Ian and
Sylvia? ... https://video.search.yahoo.com/video/pla...)
-- good innocent fun!!! -- j
p.s. that's a live version, not the "hit."
she was a year ahead of me in Everly Brothers High
and befriended me even though I was a nerd.
she was a very sexy woman. . remember? -- j
p.s. west high in knoxville did see the E Bros
for awhile, before they were famous.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pz0z3J-v...
Ground varies in hardness and consistency and water will flow to the lowest point and carve the softest ground. When water crests due to flooding, water will flow to the lowest point, causing gouges in the ground making a channel/path to flow...pretty much common sense.
BUT here is a question.
What three rivers in the world flow North?
Lots of them. Its downhill that matters, not compass direction.
flow north into the Arctic ocean. -- j
1) Nile in Egypt
2) St. John in Florida
3) Monongahela in Pittsburgh, PA
They key to the question is not that just s small portion flows north but the River Starts in the south flows and ends in the north.
And lack of accurate description... is "flowing north" defined by 'mouth is north of source'? Implicit, but not spelled out... I'm a little disappointed...
to wit...
THE FACTS: Unless the land it totally flat, rivers of water run downhill. The vast percentage of rivers on the planet flow in
a southerly direction because the source (usually in the mountains) is to the north of the mouth.
If the source of a river is at a higher elevation than the mouth, that river will run from the source to the mouth. However,
if that (higher) source is to the south of the mouth, that river will then flow to the north (downhill).
Below is a partial list of rivers (length listed when known) that do just that. We haven't listed rivers that run to the northwest,
or rivers that don't meet the exact requirements...
>>>>>> "Unless the land it totally flat, rivers of water run downhill."
--"is"? and "You're shitting me, right?"
:)
And why not beavers? Because they don't tend to build their homes anywhere near slow-moving streams or rivers... they CREATE the slow-moving waters with their dams.
How do they know where to put their dams to make the pent-up mini-lake behind their dam? Some time back I read about the answer: Beavers begin to block a stream where it's NOISIEST... where it's tumbling downhill the steepest. Building a dam there will tend to create a nice little lake upstream and it's certainly easier for a beaver to find the noisiest part of a stream than to figure out any other prime location.
Notice how even humans put dams across steep, fast-moving rivers... you won't find many hydroelectric power centers on the Mississippi, for example.. :)
Loved my 10th-grade Earth Science class... 1960-1961.
Cheers!
:)
http://www.midwestenergynews.com/2011/06...
Only around 2,000 of the nation’s 79,000 dams are equipped with generators, leaving a great deal of potential on the table, say hydropower advocates. Most of the locks and dams offer “low head” hydropower where the differential between the height of river before and after the dam is 30 feet or less. They are sometimes called “run of the river” power plants because they do not stop flows or create pooling upstream.
Many are near potential consumers but the ancillary infrastructure to tie them into even a substation grid and protect them and the grid from each other just might price them out of the potential market for a while... or forever.
Having something 'available' doesn't mean anyone might be willing to 'buy it at the market price.'
But hey, I'm just a guy with engineering and marketing background... what do _I_ know? Let's leave those tough decisions up to local and state Legislatures, right?
:)
Tracing the effects from a butterfly's wing-flap to a major storm sounds pretty tough, but a good-sized pebble in a stream can have immediate and 'somewhat predictable' or at least traceable effects.
The 'butterfly effect' is cute, but with so many butterflies (and moths and such) in the world, I'd put its Predictive Value at somewhere VERY close to Zero, (if not lower.) :)
I resent being dissed as just ONE of the most famous meanderers here because my meandering ways should surely tag me as the BEST greatest meander makers of all time.
I was once a libtard but am one no longer.
I guess that explains it.
Neither am I a muskrat.
I'm not a beaver or a girl either.
Speaking of girls, one once said I reminded her of a bear.
That was in 1980 when I lived in Mississippi for 6 months.
I think an allosaur is cooler, though.
Acting like one, too.
Yeah.