That appears to be an 89 foot pipe flatcar about to be unloaded by idiots. Those are not beams--they are sections of track. The average weight of American railroad track is 130 pounds per yard. Each of those rails are about 80 feet long and so, would weigh just about 3460 lbs. I am pretty sure the whole load exceeds the maximum safe loading for those fork lifts.
Park City, UT is definitely not underrated. Fifty years ago, maybe. Now it is a super high priced ski resort for the wealthy and elite. The place is overcrowded with McMansions and millionaire club ski lodges. The Sundance Film Festival is a once a year event held in three main locations. Park City is only one, and it is mainly only a place for celebrities to be seen by their adoring media. They should have kept that for their map of Overrated Places.
So, how much energy will these machines use? And what effect will a fleet of them have on the environment? I am thinking in terms of greenhouse emissions and the storage/dumping of the extracted salt.
Yes we can. Buying Fiji Water is supporting a dictatorship in a country where 53 percent of the people don't have access to clean, safe water. Americans can easily get clean water from Fiji more simply than Fijians can.
Pretty funny. Reminds me of all those "Ausfahrt" signs in Germany. That thing in the picture is not a speed control gauge. It is an an engine order telegraph or E.O.T. from a ship. It is used to relay engine speed commands from the bridge to the engine room. Locomotives would not need one--they have a throttle in the cab. The brass topped barrel-like items next to it are binnacles which are protective housings for a ship's compass. Apparently that train museum has some maritime displays too.
It seems there are plenty of grammar Nazis in the UK too.Some of their complaints I can see. Others are just the whining of cranky old pedants. “Deplane,” Does anyone "deship" after a sea voyage? Transportation vs transport. Around here, the first is a noun; the second is a verb. “My bad” It means the same as "I am sorry"--except at a funeral (long story)."Bi-weekly" VS "fortnightly" occurring every two weeks or twice a week depending on context, I suppose.'Fortnight"derives from the Anglo-Saxon fēowertyne niht, meaning "fourteen nights". Who speaks Anglo Saxon these days? Except that philologist who likes to recite Beowulf when drunk.“That’lllearn you” Don't blame the Americans for that one. The first time I heard it was in a pub brawl in Tralee, Ireland. Zas “zee.” Both zee and zed were interchangeable in British and American English until the mid nineteenth century. The Brits coined the Zee. Itfirst appeared in print in a British language textbook— Thomas Lyle's New Spelling-book—in 1677. They also used a variety of other names for Z: izzard, uzzard, zad, shard and, ezod.. They have a lot of room to complain there.
Sorry, the first three considerations depend heavily on having enough money. Not enough money? You won't have much choice in what you do. You can't afford a vacation? You don't get one. Cannot afford a nice place to retire to? You won't be moving anywhere. Healthcare? Many people have a choice: healthcare or housing and food. Of course, the article came from Forbes--a magazine aimed at the wealthiest people in society. MY retirement plan? A fatal coronary on my last day at work.
I think the simplest answer is the most likely. On old radio dramas, you could not see the actors.The female characters used high voices in a rather stereotypical fashion. I think it reflected cultural norms, not necesessarily biomedical causes. In movies, and later TV, the need to differentiate a gender by voice did not happen as much. Lauren Bacall had a voice equal to or lower than many of her male costars. Suzanne Pleshette also had a fairly deep voice. Watch an episode of the Bob Newhart show. Her voice was deeper than Bob's.
https://www.babbel.com/en/magazine/book-boats/