|
Произведения автора580880
1997 Grand National
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! The 1997 Grand National (known as the Martell Grand National for sponsorship reasons) was the 150th official renewal of the world-famous Grand National steeplechase held at Aintree near Liverpool, England. The race was scheduled to be run on Saturday 5 April 1997, but was postponed by two days to Monday 7 April after an Irish Republican Army bomb threat forced the evacuation of the course.
List of French painters
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! This is a list of French painters sorted alphabetically and by the century in which the artist was most active.
Gawler bypass road
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Gawler Bypass Road is a major north-south route in the outer northern suburbs of the city of Adelaide, South Australia. It has the National designation of north of the Northern Expressway, while south of this intersection it has the State designation of .
Ian Nottingham
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Ian Nottingham is a character from the Witchblade comic and television series, an assassin once employed by Kenneth Irons. Nottingham is of British and of Native American descent.
Isotopes of zinc
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Naturally occurring zinc (Zn) is composed of the 5 stable isotopes 64Zn, 66Zn, 67Zn, 68Zn, and 70Zn with 64Zn being the most abundant (48.6% natural abundance). Twenty-five radioisotopes have been characterised with the most abundant and stable being 65Zn with a half-life of 244.26 days, and 72Zn with a half-life of 46.5 hours. All of the remaining radioactive isotopes have half-lives that are less than 14 hours and the majority of these have half-lives that are less than 1 second. This element also has 10 meta states.
Force multiplication
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Force multiplication, in military usage, refers to an attribute or a combination of attributes which make a given force more effective than that same force would be without it. The expected size increase required to have the same effectiveness without that advantage is the multiplication factor. For example, if a certain technology like GPS enables a force to accomplish the same results of a force five times as large but without GPS, then the multiplier is 5. Such estimates are used to justify an investment cost for force multipliers. A force multiplier refers to a factor that dramatically increases (hence "multiplies") the effectiveness of an item or group.
Archdiocese of Uppsala
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! The Archdiocese of Uppsala, Lutheran `successor` to the former Roman Catholic Swedish province, is one of the thirteen dioceses of the Church of Sweden and the only one having the status of an archdiocese.
Remembering the Kanji
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Remembering the Kanji is a series of three volumes by James Heisig, intended to teach the 3007 most frequent Kanji to students of the Japanese language. The series is available in English, Spanish and German. There is a supplementary book (Remembering the Kana) to the series to teach the Japanese syllabaries.
National Lampoon`s Christmas Vacation
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Christmas Vacation is a 1989 Christmas comedy film directed by Jeremiah S. Chechik. It is the third installment in National Lampoon`s Vacation film series, and was written by John Hughes, based on his short story in National Lampoon Magazine, Christmas ‘59. The title song was written for the movie by the husband-wife songwriting team of Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil and was performed by Mavis Staples of The Staple Singers fame.
Bronze Tiger
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Bronze Tiger (Ben Turner) is a fictional character, a superhero in the DC Universe. He is a martial artist who first appeared in Dragon`s Fists, a novel by Dennis O`Neil and Jim Berry, starring Richard Dragon. His first DC Comics appearance was in Richard Dragon, Kung Fu Fighter.
SIMM
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! A SIMM, or single in-line memory module, is a type of memory module containing random access memory used in computers from the early 1980s to the late 1990s. It differs from a dual in-line memory module (DIMM), the most predominant form of memory module today, in that the contacts on a SIMM are redundant on both sides of the module. SIMMs were standardised under the JEDEC JESD-21C standard.
Weardrobe
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Weardrobe is an online street fashion community designed to encourage networking between both novice and established bloggers, as well as to allow members to share outfits and comment on others` photographs.
|
|
|