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Last week's double bird strike that probably led to the dramatic Hudson river plane crash might encourage both London mayor Boris Johnson and the owners of Lydd airport in Kent to think again about airport expansions.
(Dorsey brings up the Hudson river plane crash incident as an example of content that was shared first on Twitter sparking an international conversation.) Well, it's a blurry line, but in essence we think of every tweet as a destination on itself, while Twitter is also a mechanism for distribution of content.
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Building a sculpture involves spending a lot of time gathering slate by the river, planing wood into boards and making twine.
On the shales, vertical erosion previously was retarded by the downstream dolerite, and the river laterally planed bedrock and carved a wide valley.
Thousands were thrown from planes over the river Plate, in a usually successful bid to "disappear" their bodies for ever.
Given that we have the very serviceable alternative of two rivers for planes to fly over, as they commonly do, what possible justification could there be to invite such disaster instead?
In one scene a ghostly boat hull burns in a river as a plane hovers overhead.
I gasped and held my breath, as the river swallowed the plane.
Every sight seemed to take on an epic significance: a bulbous water tower, like a huge opium poppy head, surrounded by bullet-shaped silos; a football crowd dressed in yellow and green, crossing a river while a plane tugged a "Rally Responsibly" banner overhead.
On the sandstones, vertical erosion rates are retarded by the slow erosion of the downstream dolerites, and in the interim the river is laterally planing bedrock and meandering extensively (sinuosity (P) up to ∼1.75) within broad (up to 1.5 km wide) floodplains marked by oxbow lakes and abandoned channels.
Instituto Homem Pantaneiro runs a project called Cabeceiras do Pantanal, which monitors nearly 1,000 water springs and areas of farmland near river banks via monthly plane excursions.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com