Daily Almanac for Flagstaff
Week 26 Day: 174 \ Ave. Sky Cover: 60% \ Visibility: 10 miles Flagstaff
Today 76° \49°
Wind: 6mph \ Gusts: 10mph Air
Quality: MODERATE
Extreme Risk of fire \ Nearest active fire: 12mi \ Nearest
Lightning: 144mi
June Averages for Flagstaff: 80° \ 43° (1 day of moisture)
Today’s Quote
Weekly
Observations
Thru Sep.5
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16-23
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17-23
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17-30
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19-25
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20-26
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20-25
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23-26
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Daily Observations
My
Sometimes-Long-Winded Thoughts
Cloudy…weather
guy says monsoon will be here early…like tomorrow. I sure hope so.
I had lunch
with Faith and Andy. I was getting instructions about watering their grass and
trees while they sail off to Alaska. Good conversation, a few laughs, and good
food.
The tourist
who burned used TP that probably started the current Pipeline fire was in
court. The dropped the marijuana charge but is still charged with two misdemeanors:
camping in a restricted area and building a fire during restrictions. Misdemeanors…
really?
Flag is
already holding in-person and zoom meetings regarding flooding issues this
summer. The worst inhabited area even now has a loud siren to warn residents of
flooding and along with the siren is a message in English and Spanish for all
to hear.
Favorite Memes
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Earth’s Secrets
Clouds Help
Regulate Earth's Temperature
"If you
bring all water droplets in clouds to the surface, you would cover Earth with a
liquid film no thicker than a human hair," Schneider of Caltech tells
Popular Mechanics. "And yet, this tiny amount of water makes the
difference between cool overcast summer days and warm clear days. And it is
immensely important for climate. On average, clouds cool Earth by 13 degrees
Fahrenheit relative to what global temperatures would be without clouds."
"How
much global warming we get crucially depends on whether we get more or fewer
clouds as the climate warms," Schneider says. "Climate models do not
agree on the answer, because simulating clouds and the tiny amount of water in
them is hard. At Caltech, we are working on using AI to make climate models and
their cloud simulations better, to get more precise answers about how climate
will change."
US Flag Myths
Myth #3: Americans have always flown the flag
Prior to the Civil
War, flags were really only flown in an official capacity on ships, forts and
government buildings. “In the antebellum period, if a citizen had flown his
flag on his house or carriage, people would have thought that was strange. Why
is he doing that? He's not the government,” Ansoff said.
The outbreak of war in
1861 quickly changed Americans’ attitudes about displaying the flag.
"At the beginning
of the Civil War there was an outburst of patriotism,” Ansoff said, “and very
soon, you saw people flying flags everywhere to show their support for the
Union cause."
Historical Events
Ë 1683 – William Penn signed a friendship
treaty with Lenni Lenape Indians in Pennsylvania.
Ë 1860 – The United States Congress
established the Government Printing Office.
Ë 1868 – Christopher Latham Sholes received
the patents (#79265 & #79868) for an invention he called the “Type-Writer.”
He also invented the ‘QWERTY keyboard’ in 1873.
Ë 1894 – The International Olympic
Committee was founded at the Sorbonne in Paris.
Ë 1926 – The College Board administered the
first SAT exam.
Ë 1938 – The first ‘Oceanarium’ opened at
Marineland in St. Augustine, Florida.
Ë 1938 – The Civil Aeronautics Act was
signed into law, forming the United States Civil Aeronautics Authority.
Ë 1953 – Frank J. Zamboni was issued a
patent (#2,642,679) for his ice resurfacer.
Ë 1960 – The US Food and Drug
Administration declared Enovid to be the first officially approved combined
oral contraceptive pill in the world.
Ë 1969 – IBM announced that effective
January 1970 it will price its software and services separately from hardware,
allowing for the creation of the modern software industry.
Ë 1969 – Warren E. Burger was sworn in as
Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court by retiring Chief Justice Earl
Warren.
Ë 1982 – A record low temperature of
-117ºF. was recorded at the South Pole.
Ë 2013 – Nik Wallenda became the first man
to successfully walk across the Grand Canyon on a tight rope.
Ë 2016 – The United Kingdom voted in a
referendum to leave the European Union, by 52% to 48%.
Birthdays Today
86
– Richard Bach, American novelist, essayist
74
– Clarence Thomas, American lawyer, judge, United States Supreme Court Justice
@73 – June Carter-Cash, American singer (d. 2003; surgery complicatioins)
66
– Randy Jackson, TV shost
65
– Frances McDormand, American actress
@60 – Bob Fosse, American actor, dancer, choreographer, director
(d.1987; heart attack)
@54 – Wilma Rudolph, runner (d. 1994; multiple cancers)
50
– Selma Blair, American actress
@41 – Alan Turing, English mathematician, computer scientist (d
1954; suicide)