World’s Oldest Airports ….

The world's oldest airports

LaGuardia Airport opened in New York 75 years ago today, and has since handled countless millions of passengers – including Marilyn Monroe – and 26,722,183 in 2013. But it’s still some way off being the world’s oldest.

 

The world's oldest airports

Albany International

Founded: 1928

Passengers in 2013: 2,393,506

While an airport was established in Albany, New York, in 1909, with early aviation pioneers such as Amelia Earhart and Charles Lindbergh stopping there, the airport was moved to the current site in 1928.

 

The world's oldest airports

Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, US

Founded: 1920

Passengers in 2013: 33,897,335

Visited by Howard Hughes on his round-the-world flight in 1938, Minneapolis-St. Paul is currently served by 14 airlines, with Delta being by far its biggest customer.

 

The world's oldest airports

Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport, Australia

Founded: 1920

Passengers in 2013: 36,964,734

Established in 1920, with regular flights starting in 1924, Sydney Kingsford Smith remains the only major hub to serve the city and is the headquarters of Qantas.

 

Paris-Le Bourget Airport, France

Founded: 1919

Passengers in 2013: general aviation traffic only.

The French capital’s only airport until work began on Paris-Orly in 1932, Le Bourget is where Hitler began his one and only tour of Paris in June 1940. It closed to international traffic in 1977 and regional traffic in 1980, but hosts the Paris Air Show every two years. Pictured here is Charles Lindbergh.

 

The world's oldest airports

Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, The Netherlands

Founded: 1916

Passengers in 2013: 52,527,699

The busiest of the world’s elderly airports, Amsterdam Schiphol was established as a military airbase in 1916 and has been used by civilian aircraft since 1920.

 

The world's oldest airports

Rome Ciampino Airport, Italy

Founded: 1916

Passengers in 2013: 4,749,251

Opened in 1916 and here seen welcoming Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh, Ciampino suffered decades of stagnation following the opening of Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport in 1960, but was revitalised by low-cost carriers. Ryanair now operates almost every service to and from the airport.

Picture: GETTY 

The world's oldest airports

Don Mueang International Airport, Bangkok, Thailand

Founded: 1914

Passengers in 2013: 16,479,227

A major US command hub during the Vietnam War, Don Mueang was closed for several months in 2011 due to flooding.

 

The world's oldest airports

Bremen Airport, Germany

Founded: 1913

Passengers in 2012: 2,447,001

Early customers at Bremen included KLM, the world’s oldest airline. It was used as an airbase by the US army from 1945 until 1949.

 

The world's oldest airports

Bucharest Aurel Vlaicu Airport, Romania

Founded: 1912

Passengers in 2013: 6,036  The hub for the airline TAROM during the communist period, Aurel Vlaicu is now solely used by charter flights and private jets.

 

The world's oldest airports

Shoreham Airport, UK

Founded: 1911

Passengers in 2013: 1,500 (approximately)

Britain’s oldest continuously operating airport, found in Sussex, is now used solely by light aircraft.

Note: the site of Blackpool Airport was first used for aviation in 1909, but soon became a racecourse and then a military hospital. Flights did not resume until the 1930s.

 

The world's oldest airports

Hamburg Airport, Germany

Founded: 1911

Passengers in 2013: 13,502,939

Opened in January 1911, Hamburg Airport was used as a staging area during the Berlin Airlift in 1948.

 

 

The world's oldest airports

College Park Airport, Maryland, US

Founded: 1909

Passengers in 2013: general aviation traffic only.

Known as “the cradle of aviation”, this was where the first aeroplane – a Wright Type A biplane – was uncrated and assembled on October 7, 1909.

 

 

SOURCE:::: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/

Natarajan

 

” Astronaut Chris Hadfield Explains The Big Problem With The Mars One Mission”

If you haven’t heard, there’s a plan to start up a colony of humans living on Mars in the near future.

If the next decade goes as planned, the not-for-profit organization, Mars One, will launch a manned mission to Mars that will land the first human colony on the red planet in 2025.

Here’s the catch: Those who leave Earth for the 7-month-long ride in space will never return.

The four-member crew will learn to call Mars – a freezing, barren, lifeless planet – home. Forever.

That may sound great to the tens of thousands of people who applied, but Mars One is going about their grandiose plans all wrong according to retired Canadian Space Agency astronaut Chris Hadfield.

Right now, Mars One is focused more on raising funds and selecting crew members than developing the technology needed for the trip. And the technology, Hadfield told Elmo Keep, writing in Medium, is the most basic starting point for any space mission.

“There’s a great, I don’t know, self-defeating optimism in the way that this project has been set up,” Hadfield told Keep. “I fear that it’s going to be a little disillusioning for people, because it’s presented as if for sure it’s going to happen.”

So far, the company claims they’ve had more than 200,000 people apply, and are about to start interviews with 663 final candidates. Mars One says that they will gather the majority of money for the trip through crowd funding from a global reality television event.

The company anticipates that the trip to Mars will cost approximately $6 billion (that’s shockingly low compared to NASA estimates for a two-way trip to Mars and back costing roughly $100 billion.)

Although Mars One has visions of partnering with companies like SpaceX to procure the proper technology, so far its only contract is with Paragon Space Development Corporation to study initial life support systems.

Hadfield isn’t the only one doubting this project. Doubters at MIT have calculated that “living on Mars” will last only about 68 days before the colonists die.

In particular, Hadfield said, if you don’t have the specifications of the spacecraft, you can’t begin to select the people who will live and work in it.

“I want to see the technical specifications of the vehicle that is orbiting Earth,” Hadfield said. “I want to know: How does a space suit on Mars work? Show me how it is pressurized, and how it is cooled. What’s the glove design?”

What’s more, Mars should not even be a target for colonization at this point, according to Hadfield. Our sites should be set on a place much closer.

“We absolutely need to do it on the moon for a few generations,” Hadfield told Keep.

On average, the moon is about 600 times closer to Earth than Mars. That means if something goes wrong with a colony, we can dispatch help from Earth that will reach the Moon in a matter of hours instead of months. Developing a working moon colony would be an important first step to living on Mars.

apollo 17

NASA

Astronaut Eugene A. Cernan of Apollo 17 tests the Lunar Roving Vehicle on the moon.

Here’s a short list of what Hadfield told Keep we need to know before living on Mars:

  • How do you completely recycle your water?
  • How do you completely recycle your oxygen system?
  • How do you protect yourselves from radiation?
  • How do you not go crazy?
  • How do you set up the politics of the place and the command structure, so that when we get it wrong we won’t all die?

While the Mars One desire to get people excited about space travel again is noble – it has been more than 42 years since we last landed a human on anything in space besides the International Space Station. There’s a right way and a wrong way to go about landing people on other satellites throughout the solar system.

“It’s not a race, it’s not an entertainment event. We didn’t explore the world to entertain other people. We did it as a natural extension of human curiosity and matching capability,” Hadfield told Keep. “And that’s what will continue to drive us.”

SOURCE::::Jessica Orwig in http://www.businessinsider.in

Natarajan

” Black and White … A Dance Illusion …” !!!

 

A group of young girls in black and white tights perform a trippy dance to the popular tune of German folk-rock polka band Hiss.

http://dailypicksandflicks.com/2013/03/16/black-and-white-tights-dance-illusion-video/ 

SOURCE::: You Tube and dailysandflicks.com

Natarajan

The Monkey Buffet Festival in Lopburi, Thailand….In Pictures …

The Monkey Buffet Festival is held every year on the last Sunday of November to promote tourism in Lopburi, well known as monkey city. This year the city spent some 400,000 Thai baht (£7,800) on 2,500kg of fruit including sweetmeat and soft drinks which have been offered in a banquet to monkeys inhabiting the city. The event is held annually to thank the monkeys for drawing tourists in the town.

Macaques tuck into a feast of fruit during the annual Monkey Buffet Festival in front of the Pra Prang Sam Yot temple in Lopburi province, Thailand

Picture: EPA/NARONG SANGNAK 

The Monkey Buffet Festival is held every year on the last Sunday of November to promote tourism in Lopburi, well known as monkey city. This year the city spent some 400,000 Thai baht (£7,800) on 2,500kg of fruit including sweetmeat and soft drinks which have been offered in a banquet to monkeys inhabiting the city. The event is held annually to thank the monkeys for drawing tourists in the town.

This year the city spent some 400,000 Thai baht (£7,800) on 2,500kg of fruit…

Picture: EPA/NARONG SANGNAK 

The Monkey Buffet Festival is held every year on the last Sunday of November to promote tourism in Lopburi, well known as monkey city. This year the city spent some 400,000 Thai baht (£7,800) on 2,500kg of fruit including sweetmeat and soft drinks which have been offered in a banquet to monkeys inhabiting the city. The event is held annually to thank the monkeys for drawing tourists in the town.

including sweets and soft drinks which have been offered in a banquet to monkeys inhabiting the city

Picture: REUTERS/Damir Sagolj 

The Monkey Buffet Festival is held every year on the last Sunday of November to promote tourism in Lopburi, well known as monkey city. This year the city spent some 400,000 Thai baht (£7,800) on 2,500kg of fruit including sweetmeat and soft drinks which have been offered in a banquet to monkeys inhabiting the city. The event is held annually to thank the monkeys for drawing tourists in the town.
Picture: REUTERS/Damir Sagolj  
The Monkey Buffet Festival is held every year on the last Sunday of November to promote tourism in Lopburi, well known as monkey city. This year the city spent some 400,000 Thai baht (£7,800) on 2,500kg of fruit including sweetmeat and soft drinks which have been offered in a banquet to monkeys inhabiting the city. The event is held annually to thank the monkeys for drawing tourists in the town.
Long-tailed macaques enjoy food served to them during the annual Monkey Buffet Festival at the Pra Prang Sam Yot temple in Lopburi, north of BangkokPicture: REUTERS/Damir Sagolj 
SOURCE:::: http://www.the telegraph.co.uk
Natarajan

Amazing Alps…. In Pictures !!!

The Beauty of the Alps

Meet Karol Nienartowicz, a 29 year old Polish landscape photographer with a passion for the Alps like you’ve never seen before! Karol goes to the limits and beyond to capture his breathtaking images of the acclaimed European Alps. He’s even spent nights in a tent on a glacier, that stands over 4,000 meters or (13,123 feet) above sea level. Now, that’s what I call dedication! These 30 amazing images convinced me to explore the Alps!

Make sure to check out Karol’s Facebook Page for more amazing photos.

 

 

A Fiery Sunrise
30 Polish Photos

 

A Cold Sundown at Matterhorn
30 Polish Photos

 

Ice Castles on a Sunny Day
30 Polish Photos

 

Blankets of Snow All Around
30 Polish Photos

 

 

Frozen Chapel
30 Polish Photos

 

23) The Sun Making Its Presence Known
30 Polish Photos

 

Red Sunset in Karkonosze Mountains
30 Polish Photos
27) Ruby Red Clouds
30 Polish Photos

 

Heavenly Lights Shining Bright!
30 Polish Photos

 

 

 

 

 

Sunset Over the Julian Alps
30 Polish Photos
SOURCE:::::ba-bamail.com and boredpanda.com
Natarajan

” Nothing to Beat a Beetroot …” !!!

The Health Benefits of Beetroots

Not only are they delicious, beets are also packed full of vitamins and nutrients. Their rich content turns them into a powerfully medicinal food, with various beneficial properties. As early as the Middle Ages, they were used for treatment of digestion and circulatory issues.

Beets
Source
They are rich in anti-oxidants, fungicidal and anti-inflammatory agents. Well known as treatment for the gall bladder and gout and even great for reducing cholesterol levels.

The 10 major medical conditions beetroots can help treat are:

Beets1. Arthritis – In moderation, beets help prevent arthritis by dissolving deposits that accumulate around the joints, thanks to the high alkaline contents.

2. Anemia – The high levels of phosphorous, zinc, iodine, copper, calcium and potassium, combined with fat, vitamins (B1, B2, B6, P and niacin) help keep hemoglobin levels high.

3. Inflammation – Thanks to a moderate amount of choline, beetroot helps maintain your muscles, memory, and cognitive functions, as well as help with insomnia. Choline also helps sustain the structure of the cellular membranes and assists in impulse transmissions. Combine it with its ability to absorb fat, beetroot becomes an effective anti-inflammatory.

4. Heart disease – Rich, in nitric acid, beetroot helps your blood vessels relax remain dilated, which prevents heart diseases caused by insufficient blood flow.

5. Dementia – A recent study performed in the Wake Forest University confirmed that raw beet juice helps oxygenation in the brain. This helps maintain the brain in a healthy capacity, preventing the onset of dementia.

6. High blood pressure – The nitrate in beetroot gets converted into nitric oxide – a key compound in relaxation and widening of blood vessels. This process is highly beneficial to blood flow and circulation.

7. Arteriosclerosis – Nitric oxide’s benefits also help prevent and reduce the risk of arterial diseases like Arteriosclerosis.

8. Diabetes – Alpha-lipoic acid, an antioxidant that lowers glucose levels are abundant in beets. It’s effective in reducing stress-induced changes in diabetics.

Beets9. Anti-carcinogenic – The beetroot’s distinct color comes from phytonutrients. These nutrients combat and help with the prevention of cancer. Research have shown that in some cases, beetroot extract was effective in reducing multi-organ tumors. It is believed to be effective in treating breast, prostate, and pancreatic cancers.

10. Low stamina – Raw beet juice helps the muscles to oxygenate, helping us improve exercise tolerance. A regular intake of raw beetroot will help those with metabolic, respiratory and cardiovascular issues which cannot exert themselves to return to regular exercise in a short period.

2 Beet juice recipes that aid in weightloss

Beets

1. Powerful detoxing juice:

Ingredients

  • 1 beetroot – cubed
  • 5-6 celery stalks
  • 1 cup chopped spinach
  • 1 handful cilantro
  • 1 tsp salt

Preparation

  • Blend all the ingredients until they have a smooth consistency and add some lemon juice

Beets

2. System booster, rich in anti-oxidants and beta-carotene:

Ingredients

  • 1 beetroot – cubed
  • 2-3 large carrots – chopped
  • 1 celery stalk

Preparation

  • Blend all the ingredients until they have a smooth consistency and add a pinch of salt

SOURCE:::: http://www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

 

Image of the Day…Bar-Headed Geese in India…!!!

Bar-headed geese in India

A beautiful shot of bar-headed geese – one of the world’s highest flying birds – over a wetlands in India in November 2014. Photo by Abhinav Singhai.

Photo Credit: Abhinav Singhai.  Visit Abhinav Singhai's Flickr page

EarthSky Facebook friend Abhinav Singhai in India captured this evocative shot of bar-headed geese over Basai Wetlands, a well-known destination for birders near Delhi, India. He said there were hundreds of geese over the wetlands that day.

Thank you, Abhihav!

The bar-headed goose is a fascinating bird, by the way, and one of the world’s highest-flying birds. It’s been heard flying across Mount Makalu – the fifth highest mountain on Earth at 8,481 meters (27,825 ft). The British explorer George Lowe is said to have reported seeing bar-headed geese flying over Mount Everest – 8,848 meters (29,029 ft)! You’ll find mention of Lowe’s tale about the geese here.

According to Wikipedia, the bar-headed goose is:

… a goose that breeds in Central Asia in colonies of thousands near mountain lakes and winters in South Asia, as far south as peninsular India …

The bird is pale grey and is easily distinguished from any of the other grey geese of the genus Anser by the black bars on its head.

A Bar-headed Goose in St James's Park, London, England.  Photo by DAVID ILIFF. License: CC-BY-SA 3.0 via Wikipedia.

Bottom line: A beautiful shot of bar-headed geese flying over a wetlands in India in November 2014. Photo by Abhinav Singhai.

SOURCE::::www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

” A Football Legend Goes Undercover… See What he Does … ” !!!

 

Football Legend Goes Undercover, Amazes Everyone

This group of friends were playing football (soccer), when old grandfather Memo came and insisted to be given a place on one of the teams. While they didn’t want to disrespect their elders, they weren’t happy about this. That is, until this old man gives the game a real twist.

In reality, this old man is a freestyle football legend who has gone through hours of make-up to make him look 30 years older. Find out what happened on the court, as he shocks everyone in sight, and will even cast a spell on you, because this guy – he’s good.

SOURCE:::: http://www.ba-bamail.com and You Tube
Natarajan

Historical Images For the Weekend … !!!

5.) Sweden switched to driving on the right side of the road in 1967. This was the result on the first morning.

Sweden switched to driving on the right side of the road in 1967. This was the result on the first morning

 

This Austrian boy got a new pair of shoes in World War II.

Picture Of the Day… A Concrete Jungle !!!

 

THE CONCRETE JUNGLE

 

Photograph by Edward Burtynsky

 

The Judge Harry Pregerson Interchange is a stack interchange near the Athens and Watts communities of Los Angeles, California. Though the interchange permits traffic entering the interchange in all directions to exit in all directions (cf. Hollywood Split, East Los Angeles Interchange), the interchange also consists of direct HOV (high-occupancy vehicle) connectors, Metro Green Line tracks, and the Harbor Transitway, all of which contribute to the towering, imposing structure for which the interchange is known.

Opened with Interstate 105 in 1993, the interchange is named for Harry Pregerson, a longtime federal judge who presided over the lawsuit concerning the I-105 freeway’s construction. Shortly before the interchange opened, filmmakers had access to use it for the 1994 motion picture Speed. In one of the movie’s best-known scenes, the bus must jump across an unfinished construction gap in an uncompleted elevated freeway-to-freeway ramp while still under construction.

In 1996, the U.S. Federal Highway Administration recognized the Interstate 105/Interstate 110 interchange with an Award of Merit in the Urban Highways category of its biennial Excellence in Highway Design awards. The award recognized the interchange’s design which sought to improve traffic congestion, safety, and air quality. [Source: Wikipedia]

Source::::www.twistedsifter.com

Natarajan