Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Promote your YouTube Channel with these 10 helpful ideas!


Our home school YouTube channel



Cross-promote your videos

  • Publicize your videos and your channel on the radio, TV, websites, forums, newsletters, other social networking platforms. Link your YouTube channel in as many places as you can: websites, blogs, magazines.
  • Use our YouTube APIs to create YouTube badges for your website that display your YouTube presence and link to your YouTube channel.
  • Allow embedding so others can distribute for you. Use the embed URL that comes with each video to embed your videos on your website. Send the links to blogs which may want to display your content.
  • If your videos are product reviews, include as much of the following information as possible as video tags: UPC, EAN, ISBN, MPN, model number, and brand. Example: For the ReadyNAS Duo, add, "UPC: 0606449056822, MPN: RND2150-100NAS, Brand: NetGear" as tags.

Engage your audience

  • Don't Be Shy: Speak directly to YT community and ask them to subscribe!
  • Use Video Descriptions and Banners to encourage users to Like and Subscribe.
  • Enable Comments on Video Pages (you can always delete comments or block users).
  • Use Playlists to group your content by theme – this makes it easier for users to find videos on your channel.
  • Engage your audience through shoutouts, comments, subscriptions, and by asking questions or soliciting ideas.
  • Encourage Contests. Use eye-catching titles.

Classes are offered for free everyday on the internet. If you decided on starting a YouTube channel to help homeschooling children and their parents, those 10 helpful hints to get your videos out to the masses should help get you the views!

https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/141808?hl=en

Massachusetts

Image result for Massachusetts                                              Map of Massachusetts


Massachusetts is a U.S. state in New England known for its significant Colonial history. In Boston, its capital, the Freedom Trail is a walking route of sites related to the American Revolution. These include the Bunker Hill Monument, commemorating the war's first major battle in 1775. The city is also home to the Museum of Fine Arts and other notable institutions. The Red Sox pro baseball team plays at Fenway Park.


Capital: Boston

State abbreviation/Postal code: Mass./MA

U.S. Representatives: 9

Present constitution drafted: 1780 (oldest U.S. state constitution in effect today)

Entered Union (rank): Feb. 6, 1788 (6)

Motto: Ense petit placidam sub libertate quietem (By the sword we seek peace, but peace only under liberty)

State symbols:

flower mayflower (1918)
tree American elm (1941)
bird chickadee (1941)
song "All Hail to Massachusetts" (1966)
beverage cranberry juice (1970)
insect ladybug (1974)
cookie chocolate chip (1997)
muffin corn muffin (1986)
dessert Boston cream pie (1996)
Nicknames: Bay State; Old Colony State

Origin of name: From Massachusett tribe of Native Americans, meaning “at or about the great hill”

10 largest cities (2012): Boston, 636,479; Worcester, 182,669; Springfield, 153,552; Lowell, 108,522; Cambridge, 106,471; New Bedford, 94,929; Brockton, 94,094; Quincy, 93,027; Lynn, 91,253; Fall River, 88,857

Land area: 7,840 sq mi. (20,306 sq km)

Geographic center: In the town of Rutland in Worcester Co.

Number of counties: 14

Largest county by population and area: Middlesex, 1,503,085 (2010); Worcester, 1,513 sq mi.

State forests and parks: 450,000 ac.

Residents: Bay Stater


2015 resident population: 6,794,422


Massachusetts Fun Facts

  • British colonist John Smith named Massachusetts for the Massachusett tribe. The name "Massachusetts" meant “near the great hill.”
  • The first lighthouse in the United States was built on Little Brewster Island in the Boston Harbor in 1716.
  • Basketball was invented in December 1891 by James Naismith in Springfield.
  • Volleyball was invented in 1895 by William Morgan in Holyoke. Volleyball was originally called "Mintonette."
  • Boston Common, established in 1634, is the first public park in the United States.
  • The Boston subway, which opened on September 1, 1897, is the first subway system in the United States.
  • Boston Public Library is the second largest public library in the United States. Harvard University Library, also in Boston, is the third largest library in the United States.
  • The first telephone call in history was made between inventor Alexander Graham Bell and his assistant, Thomas Watson, on March 10, 1876, in Boston. Bell spoke the words, “Mr. Watson, come here, I want to see you” and Watson heard it from the receiver in the next room.
  • Boston Latin School, founded in 1635, is the first public school in the United States. It is also the oldest existing school in the United States.
  • In 2003, Massachusetts became the first stage to legalize same-sex marriage.
  • In Massachusetts, it is illegal to give alcoholic beverages to a hospital patient, unless directed by a physician.
  • The first printed book in the United States was the Bay Psalm Book, first printed in 1640 in Cambridge, Massachusetts.



Sports Teams

Major Sports Teams
MLB: Boston Red Sox


NFL: New England Patriots
NBA: Boston Celtics
NHL: Boston Bruins

NCAA Division I Schools
Boston College (ACC) 
Boston University (Patriot) 
Harvard University (Ivy) 
College of the Holy Cross (Patriot) 
University of Massachusetts Amherst (Atlantic 10) 
Northeastern University (Colonial Athletic Association)

Popular Tourist Attractions

  • Martha's Vineyard: Island located south of Cape Cod in Massachusetts.
  • Six Flags New England: Amusement park in Agawam, Massachusetts.
  • Faneuil Hall: Shopping mall in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • Freedom Trail: 2.5-mile-long path through downtown Boston, Massachusetts, that passes by 16 locations of historical significance.
  • Museum of Fine Arts Boston: Art museum in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • New England Aquarium: Aquarium in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • Tanglewood: Music center in Lenox, Massachusetts.
  • USS Constitution: Historic battleship in Charlestown, Massachusetts.
  • Boston Common: Park in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • Museum of Science: Science museum in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame: Basketball hall of fame museum in Springfield, Massachusetts.
  • Jiminy Peak: Ski resort in Hancock, Massachusetts.
  • Wachusett Mountain: Ski resort in Princeton, Massachusetts.
  • Harvard Square: City center in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  • Institute of Contemporary Art Boston: Art museum in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum: Museum of international art in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • Peabody Essex Museum: Art museum in Salem, Massachusetts.



Famous People Born In Massachusetts

Nobel Prize Winners

  • George R. Minot (Physiology or Medicine, 1934)
  • James B. Sumner (Chemistry, 1946)
  • Emily Greene Balch (Peace, 1946)
  • Percy W. Bridgman (Physics, 1946)
  • Robert B. Woodward (Chemistry, 1965)
  • Robert S. Mulliken (Chemistry, 1966)
  • Walter Gilbert (Chemistry, 1980)
  • George D. Snell (Physiology or Medicine, 1980)
  • Kenneth G. Wilson (Physics, 1982)
  • Elias James Corey (Chemistry, 1990)
  • Merton H. Miller (Economic Sciences, 1990)
  • William F. Sharpe (Economic Sciences, 1990)
  • Henry W. Kendall (Physics, 1990)
  • Joseph E. Murray (Physiology or Medicine, 1990)
  • Douglass C. North (Economic Sciences, 1993)
  • William Knowles (Chemistry, 2001)
  • Roderick MacKinnon (Chemistry, 2003)
  • Roger B. Myerson (Economic Sciences, 2007)
  • Richard F. Heck (Chemistry, 2010)
  • Lloyd S. Shapley (Economic Sciences, 2012)
  • Eugene F. Fama (Economic Sciences, 2013)
  • James E. Rothman (Physiology or Medicine, 2013)



United States Presidents

  • John Adams (2nd President)
  • John Quincy Adams (6th President)
  • John F. Kennedy (35th President)
  • George Bush (41st President)



Pro Football Hall Of Fame Members

  • Ed Healey (Tackle, Guard, End. Inducted in 1964)
  • Wayne Millner (Offensive End. Inducted in 1968)
  • Al Davis (Coach, General Manager, Team Owner, AFL Commissioner. Inducted in 1992)
  • Howie Long (Defensive End. Inducted in 2000)
  • Nick Buoniconti (Linebacker. Inducted in 2001)



Baseball Hall Of Fame Players

  • Jack Chesbro (Pitcher. Inducted in 1946)
  • Tommy McCarthy (Right Fielder. Inducted in 1946)
  • Mickey Cochrane (Catcher. Inducted in 1947)
  • Pie Traynor (Third Baseman. Inducted in 1948)
  • Rabbit Maranville (Shortstop. Inducted in 1954)
  • John Clarkson (Pitcher. Inducted in 1963)
  • Tim Keefe (Pitcher. Inducted in 1964)
  • Joe Kelley (Left Fielder. Inducted in 1971)
  • Frank Grant (Second Baseman. Inducted in 2006)
  • Tom Glavine (Pitcher. Inducted in 2014)
  • Jeff Bagwell (First Baseman. Inducted in 2017)




Famous Actors And Actresses

  • Matt Damon
  • Bette Davis
  • Chris Evans
  • Jack Lemmon
  • Amy Poehler
  • Mark Wahlberg
  • Famous Singers
  • Paula Cole
  • Donna Summer
  • James Taylor




Monday, July 30, 2018

Connecticut

Image result for Connecticut                                            Map of Connecticut



 Connecticut is a U.S. state in southern New England that has a mix of coastal cities and rural areas dotted with small towns. Mystic is famed for its Seaport museum filled with centuries-old ships, and the beluga whale exhibits at Mystic Aquarium. On Long Island Sound, the city of New Haven is known as the home of Yale University and its acclaimed Peabody Museum of Natural History.


Capital: Hartford

State abbreviation/Postal code: Conn./CT

U.S. Representatives: 5

Entered Union (rank): Jan. 9, 1788 (5)

Present constitution adopted: Dec. 30, 1965

Motto: Qui transtulit sustinet (He who transplanted still sustains)

State symbols:

flower mountain laurel (1907)
tree white oak (1947)
animal sperm whale (1975)
bird American robin (1943)
hero Nathan Hale (1985)
heroine Prudence Crandall (1995)
insect praying mantis (1977)
mineral garnet (1977)
song “Yankee Doodle” (1978)
ship USS Nautilus (1983)
shellfish eastern oyster (1989)
fossil Eubrontes Giganteus (1991)
composer Charles Edward Ives (1991)
Nickname: Constitution State (official, 1959); Nutmeg State

Land area: 4,844 sq mi. (12,545 sq km)

Geographic center: In Hartford Co., at East Berlin

Number of counties: 8

Largest county by population and area: Fairfield, 916,829 (2010); Litchfield, 920 sq mi.

State forests: 94 (170,000 ac.)

State parks: 94 (32,960 ac.)

Residents: Nutmegger

Origin of name: From an Indian word (Quinnehtukqut) meaning “beside the long tidal river”



Famous Connecticut natives and residents:
Ethan Allen American Revolutionary soldier;
Benedict Arnold American Revolutionary general;
P. T. Barnum showman;
Henry Ward Beecher clergyman;
Charles Goodyear inventor;
Nathan Hale American Revolutionary officer;
Dorothy Hamill ice skater;
Katharine Hepburn actress;
Charles Ives composer;
Edwin H. Land inventor;
Annie Liebovitz photographer;
Frederick Law Olmsted landscape designer;
Meg Ryan actress;
Benjamin Spock pediatrician;
Harriet Beecher Stowe author;
Mark Twain author;
Noah Webster lexicographer.




About Connecticut
One of the original 13 colonies, Connecticut has played a prominent role in the development of the United States. The Hartford Courant, the nation's oldest continuously operating newspaper, was an influential voice for the rebel cause during the American Revolution and President Abraham Lincoln's Republican Party in the 1860s.

In 1636, Thomas Hooker, a minister who fled England to freely practice his Puritan beliefs, headed south from Boston with about 100 members of his congregation to found Hartford, Connecticut. In 1662, Governor John Winthrop Jr. obtained a royal charter from the king to combine the Connecticut, New Haven and Saybrook settlements.

Even before the American Revolution, Connecticut was strongly against British loyalism, and it became the fifth state in 1788 to grant its approval of the Constitution.

Though its roots are in agriculture, textile and machine manufacturing became dominant industries by the mid-19th century, and Connecticut prospered during the Industrial Revolution. During the Civil War, the state played a prominent role in manufacturing weapons and supplies for the Union Army.

The Constitution State was one of the first to introduce railroads, and today Amtrak connects Boston and Washington, D.C., with part of the original main line of the New Haven, the most prominent railway service of the 1800s.

By the 1920s, more than a third of U.S. brass was produced in the Naugatuck Valley, earning Waterbury the nickname “Brass City.” During World War II, the city’s factories produced millions of bullets, shells and casings for U.S. and Allied forces. Following the war, aluminum and plastic took over much of the brass production in the region.

At the close of the Cold War in 1991, reduced national defense spending forced Connecticut's economy to diversify. Two Native American tribes, the Pequot and the Mohegan, opened casinos in 1992 and 1996, and although they were initially successful, the tribes have struggled to recover from the economic recession of 2007.

The transition to entertainment and the emergence of digital media have had a huge impact on Connecticut's economy, with more than 1,200 digital media-related businesses located in the state, including sports media giant ESPN. Other top industries include advanced manufacturing, bioscience, green technology, insurance and financial services.

Fortune 500 companies headquartered in Connecticut include health insurance firms Aetna and Cigna, and United Technologies, the parent company of both heating and air-conditioning manufacturer Carrier and Otis Elevator.

Connecticut’s median household income, $73,433 in 2016, was among the highest in the country, and the poverty rate was under 10 percent, about two-thirds of the rate in the rest of the U.S.

Both Connecticut's high school and college graduation rates are higher than average; about 90 percent of residents hold a high school diploma, and nearly 39 percent have at least a bachelor's degree.

There are about two dozen colleges and universities in Connecticut, including the prestigious Yale University, Fairfield University, the University of Connecticut, Wesleyan University and the United States Coast Guard Academy.

Though it is the third smallest state in area behind Rhode Island and Delaware, today it is one of the most densely populated with 3.6 million residents. The state expects continued growth through 2025. The most populous cities are Bridgeport, New Haven, Stamford, the capital city of Hartford and Waterbury.

About 23 percent of Connecticut residents speak a language other than English at home, and just under 15 percent were born outside the U.S.

In 2016, around two-thirds of the state was white, though Connecticut's black, Asian and Hispanic populations continue to grow. Some cities, including Danbury, Stamford and Norwalk, are among the most diverse communities in the country in terms of social class, race and economic and household diversity.

Connecticut is among the least religious states, with only 28 percent of adults attending at least weekly services, according to Pew Research Center. Though the state has had periods where it leaned primarily Republican, it has voted Democratic in every presidential election since 1992 and is not considered a battleground state.



Sunday, July 29, 2018

prek and elementary Science Poems

Tommy by Gwendolyn Brooks

I put a seed into the ground
And said, "I'll watch it grow."
I watered it and cared for it
As well as I could know.
One day I walked in my back yard,
And oh, what did I see!
My seed had popped itself right out,
Without consulting me

Giraffes by Mary Ann Hoberman

Giraffes
I like them.
Ask me why.
Because they hold their heads up high.
Because their necks stretch to the sky.
Because they’re quiet, calm, and shy.
Because they run so fast they fly.
Because their eyes are velvet brown.
Because their coats are spotted tan.
Because they eat the tops of trees.
Because their legs have knobby knees.
Because
Because
Because
Because. That’s why
I like giraffes.
Sudden Storm
by Elizabeth Coatsworth

The rain comes in sheets
Sweeping the streets, Here, here, and here, Umbrellas appear, Red, blue, yellow, green, They tilt and they lean Like mushrooms, like flowers, That grow when it showers.
Sunflakes By Frank Asch

If sunlight fell like snowflakes,
gleaming yellow and so bright,
we could build a sunman,
we could have a sunball fight,
we could watch the sunflakes
drifting in the sky.
We could go sleighing
in the middle of July
through sundrifts and sunbanks,
we could ride a sunmobile,
and we could touch sunflakes—
I wonder how they'd feel.
Our World by Meish Goldish

The grass is green,
The sky is blue,
The moon is white,
The clouds are, too.
The sun is yellow,
The trees are brown,
The leaves are red
When falling down.
The sunset’s orange,
The air is clear,
What a colorful world
We have right here!
"The Popcorn Hop" by Stephanie Calmenson.

The Popcorn Hop
Put your popcorn in a pot.
Wait till it gets really hot.
When you start to feel the heat,
Listen for the popcorn beat:
Pop-pop-POP-pop,
pop-pop-POP!
Come and do the popcorn hop!





Friday, July 27, 2018

UBER'S SELF-DRIVING TRUCK MAKES ITS FIRST DELIVERY: 50,000 BEERS

LEX DAVIES
TRANSPORTATION
10.25.1606:00 AM
UBER'S SELF-DRIVING TRUCK MAKES ITS FIRST DELIVERY: 50,000 BEERS

WALT MARTIN IS kneeling, legs folded behind him, butt resting on his heels. "I've got to practice my yoga," he says, clearly joking. Never mind that we're in the cab of an 18-wheeler cruising through Colorado at 55 mph and Martin was, until a moment ago, the guy at the wheel.

Maybe he was feeling cocky. After all the truck, outfitted with $30,000 worth of hardware and software from San Francisco startup Otto, had just hours before made the world's first autonomous truck delivery. You'd think so momentous an occasion would have involved something more glamorous than 50,000 cans of Budweiser, but there it is.

The drive was as mundane as the beer in the trailer. At 12:30 am, after leaving the brewery in Fort Collins and merging onto Interstate 25, an Otto driver punched a switch labeled "engage," and, once sure autonomous mode had, in fact, engaged, climbed out of his seat. He buckled the safety belt behind him, to keep the warning chime from driving him crazy as the truck trundled 120 miles south to Colorado Springs.

THE FUTURE OF TRUCKING


Don't worry. Otto, which Uber bought last summer for roughly $680 million, doesn't want to put Martin or anyone else out of work.

Its technology works only on the highway, where it doesn't have to deal with tricky variables like jaywalking pedestrians, four-way stops, or kids on bicycles. It maintains a safe following distance, and changes lanes only when absolutely necessary.

And unlike Tesla's Autopilot, Otto's system offers true 'Level 4' autonomy. Once the rig hits the interstate, it is entirely capable of the job at hand, letting the human deal with paperwork, thumb her phone, or even catch a few Z's.

"The technology is ready to start doing these commercial pilots," says Otto co-founder Lior Ron. "Over the next couple of years, we'll continue to develop the tech, so it’s actually ready to encounter every condition on the road."

If he can nail that, Ron says he can make trucking a local profession. "You can imagine a future where those trucks are essentially a virtual train on a software rail, on the highway," he says. He sees a day when trucks do their thing on the interstate, then stop at designated depots where humans drive the last few miles into town. Drivers, in effect, become harbor pilots, bringing the ship to port.


OTTO
Otto's hardware works on any truck with an automatic transmission, and the retrofit doesn't look like much. Three LIDAR laser detection units dot the cab and trailer, a radar bolts to the bumper, and a high-precision camera sits above the windshield.

Inside, the few hints of a human-free future include the two red, half dollar-sized buttons that shut off the autonomous system (one near the steering wheel, the other in the sleeper cab behind the seats) and the on/off switch, labelled "Engage." A bank of computers turns all that data into driving directions, and an Uber engineer keeps tabs on it all.

Autonomous cars are sexy, but trucks are more practical. And they'll almost certainly be here sooner than cars, because the industry desperately needs them. The trucking industry hauls 70 percent of the nation's freight—about 10.5 billion tons annually—and simply doesn't have enough drivers. The American Trucking Association pegs the shortfall at 48,000 drivers, and says it could hit 175,000 by 2024.

Beyond eliminating the need for a hiring spree, autonomous technology will make the roads safer. Some 400,0000 trucks crash each year, according to federal statistics, killing about 4,000 people. In almost every case, human error is to blame. "We think that self-driving technologies can improve safety, reduce emissions, and improve operational efficiencies of our shipments," says James Sembrot, who handles logistics for Anheuser-Busch and worked with Otto on the October test run.

Sean McNally, a spokesman for the American Trucking Association, concedes autonomous technology can improve safety and efficiency, but he questions the wisdom of turning a 40-ton rig over to a computer. And the federal government has yet to weigh in on the idea.

You can imagine a future where trucks are essentially a virtual train on a software rail.

OTTO CO-FOUNDER LIOR RON

Still, Otto is moving quickly. The company launched in January, and quickly bought its first truck. By May, it had a working prototype. A fleet of six trucks roams interstates 101 and 280 in the San Francisco Bay Area. Engineers push software tweaks weekly, and major updates every month or so.

Right now, they're focusing on the basics—smoothing out the acceleration and braking, improving lane control, that sort of thing. Longer-term goals include predicting how other drivers are likely to behave, navigating construction zones, and dealing with hazards like sudden bad weather.

Go-anywhere, do-anything autonomy is the ultimate goal, but that requires tackling far more complicated city environments, along with things like parking. "That's a pretty big leap," Ron says.

For the foreseeable future, the driver will remain an essential part of the system. But with Otto, they can can do something other than deal with the stress of driving. Like practice yoga.








https://www.wired.com/2016/10/ubers-self-driving-truck-makes-first-delivery-50000-beers/


Thursday, July 26, 2018

"Instead of UberAir being a flying car, a helicopter or an airplane, you can think of it as a helicopter-airplane mashup"




uberair-taxi.jpg








Self-driving and electric flying cars are coming. What this means for our cities in the future is unclear, so I chatted with Uber Head of Policy of Autonomous Vehicles and Urban Aviation Justin Erlich to learn more.

Erlich previously worked under Attorney General Kamala Harris, where he focused on emerging technology and the key policies that the government will want to have in place to ensure technology helps the people of California. During his time, autonomous vehicles were becoming more and more exciting, he said.

“And then there were things emerging with drones and the potential for air travel with people,” Erlich told me on this week’s episode of CTRL+T. “Then I came across this amazing role at Uber where it basically was looking to have someone lead policy for all advanced and emerging tech.”

As head of policy for that division, Erlich oversees essentially everything that’s not Uber’s main ride-hailing division. That includes self-driving cars, the division of Uber that had a major win in court following a settlement with Alphabet’s Waymo. Erlich is also in charge of policy for drones, freight and VTOL (vertical take off and landing).

The idea with Uber’s air travel, which may be referred to as UberAir, is to cover trips from one point of density to another, Erlich explained to me. The plan for now is to cover no more than 60 miles, which is due to the current limitations of batteries.

To get in your UberAir, you could enter in your destination and then the Uber app would tell you where the closest skyport is located. Then, you’d catch your UberAir to another place that is somewhat close to your final destination.

There are a couple of classic use cases, Erlich said. One is for super-commuting, like going from San Francisco to downtown San Jose. Instead of driving yourself, taking Caltrain or paying a bunch of money for an Uber car to take you all that way, you could hop in an UberAir, which would be a lot faster. Another use case is navigating in Los Angeles, which is a notoriously traffic-heavy city, from the airport to East Los Angeles.

Unlike Uber’s standard offering, UberAir will ideally be a totally shared experience. Part of that has to do with ensuring that the cost of UberAir will be affordable, Erlich said, and comparable to the prices Uber riders are already used to.

“Our hope and belief is that the time savings that you will get through air travel will incentivize people who might otherwise be used to the privacy of their own rides [being game] to share rides,” Erlich said. “If you ask about what’s the future of mobility — like when we have all these people wanting to move — we can think of these as packets of people and things moving in these really dense city areas. Everything will probably need to look like some form of fleets that are run by folks like Uber that are pooled with people sharing rides that are electric and eventually autonomous. I think that’s the sort of vision that we’re working towards both on the ground and in the air. And I think shared rides is a huge part of that.”

Part helicopter, part plane
Uber’s flying cars are a hybrid between a helicopter and an airplane, Erlich explained to me. I’m really pushing for the “flying car” terminology, but Erlich says it’s misleading and that we need to come up with a better way to describe them.

“It sounds awesome but it almost it conjures up an image of things taking off from the ground,” Erlich said. “And the technology there would be quite difficult and seems pretty far off, whereas I think a lot of these services will be moving from one rooftop to another.”

Instead of UberAir being a flying car, a helicopter or an airplane, you can think of it as a helicopter-airplane mashup, Erlich said. They will have fixed wings to help with gliding, similar to an airplane, to help it be more efficient and go faster. They will also have multiple rotors, while a helicopter has just one big fixed rotor and therefore one single point of failure, Erlich explained.

Those rotors, he added, will use distributed electric propulsion, which was invented by a NASA engineer, whom Uber has since hired. DEP helps to increase fuel efficiency, landing field length and performance handling while reducing emissions and noise. That means UberAir should theoretically be quieter and safer than a helicopter because of those multiple rotors and fixed wings.

“We can sort of imagine it is a much better, quieter, safer, more efficient helicopter. So part of the focus in that area is how do we make this seem more real and sort of capture what is actually the substance of the technology.”

Another part of the focus, Erlich says, is educating people around the benefits of urban air travel, how it’s potentially safer and how it’s not a new concept. In the 1960s and 1970s, there was a helicopter service between San Francisco and Oakland, operated by SFO Helicopter Airlines. At that point, however, it was expensive and not safe enough, Erlich said.

“But this idea of urban air travel isn’t actually as foreign as we might think,” Erlich said. “It just hasn’t happened recently. So part of it is around creating a discussion with communities about what the benefits are, why we think this is safer and getting them excited about what this could be.”

Roof hopping
The emergence of UberAir will likely result in a new market involving rooftop rentals. Similar to how ride-sharing services like Getaround and Maven have resulted in small businesses and private homes renting out their vacant parking spaces, we can imagine a world in which office buildings, parking lot structures and even private homes serving as UberAir landing pads.

“I think that the rooftop in the future can be an asset that we can really unlock by allowing new forms of travel,” Erlich said. “I think how that can look pretty different.”

Erlich noted how real estate developers might want to consider building airports and how cities with large parking structures may want to dedicate top floors to VTOLs, given there will be less of a need for parking.



“I think we’ll see a lot of flexibility and what it could look like and, in part, that has to do with our infrastructure needs over the next 10 years, [which] will probably change dramatically,” he said. “Our goal is we want to be as flexible as possible to make sure that we can basically be working with a whole host of partners who will be developing developing this potential infrastructure.”

The plan is to start with real pilots operating UberAir, Erlich said, but at some point, it’ll be autonomous.

“So I think integrating that into the core center of cities, I think will be a really exciting policy topic in the years to come,” Erlich said.

Uber expects to launch its first test run in 2020 in Dallas and Los Angeles. Uber will be flying it from one rooftop to another, ensuring it integrates well with the airspace. By 2023, Uber is looking to launch its first commercial flights.

Uber’s ultimate vision is to provide multi-modal transportation both within and between cities. Just last month, for example, Uber launched UberBike in partnership with bike-sharing startup JUMP.

“We’re definitely both looking at trying to meet short term needs and long term needs,” Erlich said. “And that’s one of the things that I think is exciting about the company is, you know, it’s breadth of what it’s trying to think about is certainly certainly big.”

An equitable future
Advances in transportation in cities isn’t always equitable and deployed with equity and accessibility in mind. Instead, transportation technology often gets deployed in ways that have “these wide systemic effects where we don’t totally realize them going in,” Erlich said.

“And so if we look at what happened with cars they completely reshaped our cities. We had suburban sprawl, we had certain neighborhoods being demolished in order to build freeways to build this road infrastructure, and that had obviously a huge impact on equity issues and sort of demographics and cities.”

In an ideal world, UberAir would be able to reach neighborhoods that are traditionally underserved by transit agencies. But in order to do that, Uber needs to remain conscious of the fact that it’s a goal it’s trying to achieve. That means ensuring the right policy infrastructure is in place and that’s where Erlich comes in.

“We’re thinking about what this looks like for making things wheelchair accessible and so we’re having ongoing conversations with folks in that community,” Erlich said. “We’ll really need to be thoughtful long-term about where the routings are to make sure that we’re serving underserved communities in transit, and to make sure that this technology is made available to everybody.”

The goal is to continue to bring down costs and move toward autonomous flying in order to offer low enough prices for people who want to travel far, Erlich said.

“And particularly if they’re not able to live in urban areas due to real estate prices that this will help them live further away but not need to rely on personal car ownership.”

You can listen to my full conversation with Erlich here.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Invasive Species Week: The Blue Gum Eucalyptus


Invasive Species Week: The Blue Gum Eucalyptus
Chris Clarke
August 4, 2014
California Department of Fish and Wildllife has declared August 2-10 California Invasive Species Action Week, an event intended to boost public awareness of the problems some non-native species of plants, animals, and even microorganisms can cause when they're imported into the state.

We're celebrating, if that's the right word, by featuring five of California's most prevalent invasive species every day this week.

And to kick things off, we'll take a look at what's probably the best-known invasive exotic species in California: the blue gum eucalyptus tree, originally native to Tasmania.

Blue gum eucalyptus, Eucalyptus globulus to the botanists, have been a part of the California landscape since the Gold Rush, long enough that legends have sprung up about how they first made it to the state. The usual story is that 19th Century Californians encouraged planting of the trees as a quick-growing source of quality lumber, then were disappointed to find out that Californian-grown eucs produce wood unsuitable for much besides rough fenceposts and firewood.

The stories have some factual basis: there was a speculative eucalyptus-planting rush in the first years of the 20th Century, with people planning uses from fine furniture to rot-resistant railroad ties. And the Californian-grown trees, which grew far more quickly than their Tasmanian counterparts, did turn out to make lousy timber.

But blue gums were planted here in huge numbers well before the timber speculation wave hit. Part of the reason for planting the trees was as windbreaks for farms and orchards, as blue gum seedlings can grow 25 feet per season for several years after planting, and don't need much in the way of coddling.

And part of the impetus for planting came from a sense among Californians that the state's native landscape needed visual improvement. Our rolling grassland hills, dotted with the occasional oak or stand of chaparral, seemed barren to Californian landscape aesthetes of the 19th Century. Blue gum and other eucalyptus species, along with other southern hemisphere imports such as Acacia and Grevillea, started lining the lanes and property lines of the settled part of coastal California in large numbers in the 1870s, according to Nathan Masters at L.A. as Subject.

The trees were also planted for their ability to suck up groundwater, a trait that was a liability in the long run. To farmers seeking to "reclaim" wetlands for plowing, though, or for communities worried about malaria mosquitoes, the thirsty blue gums seemed a godsend. The essential oil in the leaves was also considered a possible cure for malaria.


Blue gums started falling out of favor right about a century ago: plantings dropped sharply in 1914 when the speculative market in eucalyptus timber collapsed. Now, it's hard to find the tree available in nurseries.

But by the 1980s, according to the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization, there were about 198,000 acres of blue gum growing in California. There are likely more than that now.

Blue gums' most obvious environmental impact involves the native plants they replace. Where they grow thickly, blue gums compete very effectively with other plants for water and sunlight, and their dropped bark and leaves contain chemicals that retard the growth of other plants. There are plenty of large stands of eucalyptus along the California coast with almost no other plant species to be found, and where the eucs grow thinly, they still seem to reduce native plants' vigor.

This is especially a problem in the foggy coastal hills where eucalyptus seems to be expanding its range most aggressively; the native plants they displace there once made up one of the state's most biodiverse landscapes, and are under pressure from other invasive plants such as broom and pampas grass as well.

The trees' impact on native animals is less certain. In 1997, the late Bay Area ornithologist Rich Stallcup reported that eucalyptus nectar congealed around the nostrils of hummingbirds who fed on the trees' flowers, later extending the range of species affected by the problem to include warblers, orioles, and a few other nectar-feeding birds. Stallcup's reports remain controversial among scientists.

Other birds seem to like to use eucs for shelter and nesting, though the trees' rot-resistant wood doesn't offer much in the way of housing for cavity nesters such as woodpeckers. Large birds in the heron family seem to have a strong preference for eucs as nesting sites, and raptors seem to like them pretty well, too. The Point Reyes Bird Observatory reports, though, that bird diversity in eucalyptus groves is about 70 percent lower than in oak woodlands or native riparian forests in the same places.

Some native animals like eucalyptus forests very much. Monarch butterflies readily use eucalyptus trees as overwintering sites, though at least one study has suggested that monarchs tend to cluster on native conifers during especially cold snaps even if they have eucs at hand. Slender salamanders do very well in the litter on eucalyptus forest floors, and both native and imported bees seem to like the trees' nectar.

One of the biggest ecological threats posed by blue gums is that the trees can radically change a landscape's natural fire cycles. The trees' shredded bark and oily dead leaves provide abundant fuel for wildfire, along with a way to carry that fire up into the treetops. That in turn increases the likelihood that wind will pick up and carry embers for miles. So does the tendency mature blue gums exhibit to explode when they catch fire. And though many Californian native plants respond to fire by resprouting, few match the blue gums' ability to do so. A fire in a eucalyptus grove merely strengthens the blue gums' hold on the land.

Thankfully, blue gums are not nearly as aggressive in conquering new territory as many other invasive plants. (We'll feature one of the very worst to wrap up this series on Friday.) Though they do reseed reasonably well in areas where there's a lot of moisture, as for example on hills within range of the marine layer, blue gums seem not to be expanding their range at all in drier places farther inland. A June 2014 draft review of the species by the California Invasive Plant Council found that along the coast, blue gums are still invading native riparian forests and coastal chaparral from Los Angeles to Arcata, but that plantings inland aren't spreading at all and may even be dwindling.

And even where they're growing along the coast, the trees seem not to colonize new areas where they haven't been planted deliberately. Since almost no one is planting blue gums deliberately any more, the future of eucalyptus invasions in California may be limited to edgewise spreading in places where they already grow.

That's reason for hope. Though the trees do cause problems along the coast, and though those problems will require massive and expensive responses, it looks as though we can actually change our ways when we find out that something we plant for pleasure and potential profit turns out to have a serious downside.

https://www.kcet.org/redefine/invasive-species-week-the-blue-gum-eucalyptus

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

The Spider and the Fly By: Mary Howitt

The Spider and the Fly

by Mary Howitt

Will you walk into my parlour?" said the Spider to the Fly,
'Tis the prettiest little parlour that ever you did spy;
The way into my parlour is up a winding stair,
And I've a many curious things to show when you are there."
Oh no, no," said the little Fly, "to ask me is in vain,
For who goes up your winding stair can ne'er come down again."

"I'm sure you must be weary, dear, with soaring up so high;
Will you rest upon my little bed?" said the Spider to the Fly.
"There are pretty curtains drawn around; the sheets are fine and thin,
And if you like to rest awhile, I'll snugly tuck you in!"
Oh no, no," said the little Fly, "for I've often heard it said,
They never, never wake again, who sleep upon your bed!"

Said the cunning Spider to the Fly, " Dear friend what can I do,
To prove the warm affection I 've always felt for you?
I have within my pantry, good store of all that's nice;
I'm sure you're very welcome -- will you please to take a slice?"
"Oh no, no," said the little Fly, "kind Sir, that cannot be,
I've heard what's in your pantry, and I do not wish to see!"

"Sweet creature!" said the Spider, "you're witty and you're wise,
How handsome are your gauzy wings, how brilliant are your eyes!
I've a little looking-glass upon my parlour shelf,
If you'll step in one moment, dear, you shall behold yourself."
"I thank you, gentle sir," she said, "for what you 're pleased to say,
And bidding you good morning now, I'll call another day."

The Spider turned him round about, and went into his den,
For well he knew the silly Fly would soon come back again:
So he wove a subtle web, in a little corner sly,
And set his table ready, to dine upon the Fly.
Then he came out to his door again, and merrily did sing,
"Come hither, hither, pretty Fly, with the pearl and silver wing;
Your robes are green and purple -- there's a crest upon your head;
Your eyes are like the diamond bright, but mine are dull as lead!"

Alas, alas! how very soon this silly little Fly,
Hearing his wily, flattering words, came slowly flitting by;
With buzzing wings she hung aloft, then near and nearer drew,
Thinking only of her brilliant eyes, and green and purple hue --
Thinking only of her crested head -- poor foolish thing! At last,
Up jumped the cunning Spider, and fiercely held her fast.
He dragged her up his winding stair, into his dismal den,
Within his little parlour -- but she ne'er came out again!

And now dear little children, who may this story read,
To idle, silly flattering words, I pray you ne'er give heed:
Unto an evil counselor, close heart and ear and eye,
And take a lesson from this tale, of the Spider and the Fly.


Printable puppets


http://diterlizzi.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/DiTerlizzi-spider.pdf


http://diterlizzi.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/DiTerlizzi-Fly.pdf




























Monday, July 23, 2018

The Walrus and the Carpenter BY LEWIS CARROLL

The Walrus and the Carpenter

BY LEWIS CARROLL

"The sun was shining on the sea,
      Shining with all his might:
He did his very best to make
      The billows smooth and bright —
And this was odd, because it was
      The middle of the night.

The moon was shining sulkily,
      Because she thought the sun
Had got no business to be there
      After the day was done —
"It's very rude of him," she said,
      "To come and spoil the fun."

The sea was wet as wet could be,
      The sands were dry as dry.
You could not see a cloud, because
      No cloud was in the sky:
No birds were flying overhead —
      There were no birds to fly.

The Walrus and the Carpenter
      Were walking close at hand;
They wept like anything to see
      Such quantities of sand:
If this were only cleared away,'
      They said, it would be grand!'

If seven maids with seven mops
      Swept it for half a year,
Do you suppose,' the Walrus said,
      That they could get it clear?'
I doubt it,' said the Carpenter,
      And shed a bitter tear.

O Oysters, come and walk with us!'
      The Walrus did beseech.
A pleasant walk, a pleasant talk,
      Along the briny beach:
We cannot do with more than four,
      To give a hand to each.'

The eldest Oyster looked at him,
      But never a word he said:
The eldest Oyster winked his eye,
      And shook his heavy head —
Meaning to say he did not choose
      To leave the oyster-bed.

But four young Oysters hurried up,
      All eager for the treat:
Their coats were brushed, their faces washed,
      Their shoes were clean and neat —
And this was odd, because, you know,
      They hadn't any feet.

Four other Oysters followed them,
      And yet another four;
And thick and fast they came at last,
      And more, and more, and more —
All hopping through the frothy waves,
      And scrambling to the shore.

The Walrus and the Carpenter
      Walked on a mile or so,
And then they rested on a rock
      Conveniently low:
And all the little Oysters stood
      And waited in a row.

The time has come,' the Walrus said,
      To talk of many things:
Of shoes — and ships — and sealing-wax —
      Of cabbages — and kings —
And why the sea is boiling hot —
      And whether pigs have wings.'

But wait a bit,' the Oysters cried,
      Before we have our chat;
For some of us are out of breath,
      And all of us are fat!'
No hurry!' said the Carpenter.
      They thanked him much for that.

A loaf of bread,' the Walrus said,
      Is what we chiefly need:
Pepper and vinegar besides
      Are very good indeed —
Now if you're ready, Oysters dear,
      We can begin to feed.'

But not on us!' the Oysters cried,
      Turning a little blue.
After such kindness, that would be
      A dismal thing to do!'
The night is fine,' the Walrus said.
      Do you admire the view?

It was so kind of you to come!
      And you are very nice!'
The Carpenter said nothing but
      Cut us another slice:
I wish you were not quite so deaf —
      I've had to ask you twice!'

It seems a shame,' the Walrus said,
      To play them such a trick,
After we've brought them out so far,
      And made them trot so quick!'
The Carpenter said nothing but
      The butter's spread too thick!'

I weep for you,' the Walrus said:
      I deeply sympathize.'
With sobs and tears he sorted out
      Those of the largest size,
Holding his pocket-handkerchief
      Before his streaming eyes.

O Oysters,' said the Carpenter,
      You've had a pleasant run!
Shall we be trotting home again?'
      But answer came there none —
And this was scarcely odd, because
      They'd eaten every one."

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Georgia Facts

Georgia

Image result for Georgia            Map of Georgia


COLONY:  Founded by James Oglethorpe on February 12, 1733; 13th colony
STATEHOOD:  January 2, 1788; 4th state
CAPITAL:  Atlanta, since 1868
MOTTO:  "Wisdom, justice, and moderation"
NICKNAMES:  Empire State of the South; Peach State
TOTAL POPULATION:  9,687,653; 9th most populous in United States (as of 2010 census)
LAND AREA:  57,513 square miles (as of 2010 census); 24th largest in United States
COASTLINE:  100 miles
HIGHEST POINT:  Brasstown Bald, 4,784 feet
LOWEST POINT:  Sea level at the Atlantic Coast
COUNTIES:  159
ELECTORAL VOTES:  16 (as of the 2010 U.S. census)
U.S. CONGRESS:  2 senators; 14 representatives (as of the 2010 election)
LATITUDE:  30° 31' N to 35°
LONGITUDE:  81° W to 85° 53' W
LENGTH & WIDTH:  300 miles long and 230 miles wide
GEOGRAPHIC CENTER:  in Twiggs County, 18 miles southeast of Macon
HIGHEST RECORDED TEMPERATURE:  112°F, July 24, 1952, at Louisville; and August 20, 1983, at Greenville (Meriwether County)
LOWEST RECORDED TEMPERATURE:  -17°F, January 27, 1940, at CCC Camp F-16
AVERAGE TEMPERATURE:  from a high of 92.2°F to a low of 32.6°F

State Symbols
STATE FLOWER:  Cherokee rose
STATE GAME BIRD: Quail
STATE SONG BIRD:  Brown thrasher
STATE TREE:  Live oak
STATE VEGETABLE:  Vidalia onion
Prized for their sweetness, Vidalia onions get their name from the Toombs County town where farmer Mose Coleman first marketed them in the 1930s.
STATE CROP: Peanuts
STATE FRUIT:  Peach
The Elberta peach variety, which flourishes along the state's fall line, spurred Georgia peach production, and by the early 1900s Georgia was the leading peach grower in the nation.
STATE REPTILE:  Gopher tortoise
STATE AMPHIBIAN:  Green tree frog
STATE FISH:  Largemouth bass
STATE MARINE MAMMAL:  Right whale
STATE MINERAL:  Staurolite
STATE SONG:  On April 24, 1979, "Georgia on My Mind" (music by Hoagy Carmichael and lyrics by Stuart Gorrell) was designated Georgia's official state song. It was performed on March 7, 1979, before the state legislature by Georgia native Ray Charles.
STATE FLAG:  Georgia's state flag was adopted by the 2003 General Assembly. It is based on the first national flag of the Confederacy, the "Stars and Bars," with the state coat of arms in gold in the center of a circle of thirteen stars, which represent Georgia and the original twelve other states that formed the United States. Beneath the coat of arms is the national motto: "In God We Trust."
GREAT SEAL:  The Great Seal of Georgia was adopted by an act of the General Assembly in 1799. The commonly seen reverse of the seal depicts an arch with "Constitution" engraved on it, supported by three pillars emblematic of the three branches of government: legislative, judicial, and executive. The first pillar has engraved upon a scroll "Wisdom," the second, "Justice," and the third, "Moderation." A uniformed man with a drawn sword, representing the aid of the military in defense of the Constitution, stands between the columns. The obverse of the seal depicts a ship with cotton and tobacco, and a man plowing, representing the seal's motto, "Agriculture and Commerce." The date 1776 refers to the date of the Declaration of Independence.




Georgia Facts and Trivia

  1. Okefenokee Swamp encompasses over 400,000 acres of canals; moss draped cypress trees, and lily pad prairies providing sanctuaries for hundreds of species of birds and wildlife including several endangered species.
  2. Cumberland Island National Seashore contains the ruins of Dungeness, the once magnificent Carnegie estate. In addition, wild horses graze among wind swept dunes.
  3. The late John F. Kennedy, Jr. and his future wife stopped in Kingsland on the way to their marriage on Cumberland Island.
  4. Historic Saint Marys Georgia is the second oldest city in the nation.
  5. The City of Savanna was the first steamship to cross the Atlantic.It sailed from Georgia.
  6. Ways Station was renamed Richmond Hill on May 1, 1941, taking the name of automaker Henry Ford's winter estate.
  7. The pirate Edward "Blackbeard" Teach made a home on Blackbeard Island. The United States Congress designated the Blackbeard Island Wilderness Area in 1975 and it now has a total of 3,000 acres.
  8. On January 19, 1861, Georgia joined the Confederacy.
  9. The official state fish is the largemouth bass.
  10. In Gainesville, the Chicken Capital of the World it is illegal to eat chicken with a fork.
  11. Georgia was named for King George II of England.
  12. Stone Mountain near Atlanta is one of the largest single masses of exposed granite in the world.
  13. Georgia is the nations number one producer of the three Ps--peanuts, pecans, and peaches.
  14. At the Hawkinsville Civitan Club's Annual Shoot the Bull Barbecue Championship, people from all over Georgia and surrounding states flock to this small south Georgia town to enter their tasty barbecue concoctions in this famous cook-off. The funds raised from this event benefit the Civitan International Research Center and its work toward a cure for Down's syndrome and other developmental disabilities.
  15. Each year Georgia serves as a host to the International Poultry Trade Show, the largest poultry convention in the world.
  16. The oldest portable steam engine in the United States is on display at Historic Railroad Shops in Savannah.
  17. Known as the sweetest onion in the world, the Vidalia onion can only be grown in the fields around Vidalia and Glennville
  18. Georgia is the largest state east of the Mississippi River.
  19. Georgia's population in 1776 was around 40,000.
  20. Cordele claims to be the watermelon capital of the world.
  21. The annual Masters Golf Tournament is played at the Augusta National in Augusta every first week of April.
  22. Georgia is often called the Empire State of the South and is also known as the Peach State and Cracker State.
  23. In 1828 Auraria, near the city of Dahlongea, was the site of the first Gold Rush in America.
  24. Coca-Cola was invented in May 1886 by Dr. John S. Pemberton in Atlanta, Georgia. The name "Coca-Cola" was suggested by Dr. Pemberton's bookkeeper, Frank Robinson. He penned the name Coca-Cola in the flowing script that is famous today. Coca-Cola was first sold at a soda fountain in Jacob's Pharmacy in Atlanta by Willis Venable.
  25. Berry College in Rome has the world's largest college campus.
  26. The Little White House in Warm Springs was the recuperative home of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
  27. In 1942 Jekyll Island was a private resort sold to the state by the owners, a group of millionaires.
  28. Providence Canyon State Park, near Lumpkin, is known as the Little Grand Canyon of Georgia.
  29. The Cherokee rose is the official state flower, the live oak the official tree; and the brown thrasher the official bird.
  30. United States Highway 27 runs the length of Georgia and is known as Martha Berry Highway, named after a pioneer educator.
  31. Marshall Forest in Rome is the only natural forest within a city limits in the United States.
  32. The popular theme park - Six Flags Over Georgia, was actually named for six flags that flew over Georgia. England, Spain, Liberty, Georgia, Confederate States of America, and the United States.
  33. The locomotive engine popularly known as The General is housed in the Big Shanty Museum in Kennesaw. It was stolen in the Andrews Railroad Raid in 1862 and later depicted in The Great Locomotive Chase, a popular movie.
  34. The name of the famous south Georgia swamp, the Okefenokee, is derived from an Indian word meaning the trembling earth.
  35. Brasstown Bald Mountain is the highest point in Georgia. It has an elevation of 4,784 feet.
  36. The Cyclorama is a three dimensional panorama that depicts the famous Battle of Atlanta, and is located in Grant Park in Atlanta.
  37. Thomasville is known as the City of Roses.
  38. Chickamuga National Park is the site of the bloodiest battle in American history.
  39. Plains is the home of Jimmy Carter, the 39th President.
  40. The figures of Stonewall Jackson, Jefferson Davis, and Robert E. Lee make up the world's largest sculpture. It is located on the face of Stone Mountain. Additionally Robert E. Lee's horse, Traveler, is also carved at the same place.
  41. Savannah was the landing site for General James Edward Oglethorpe, founder of Georgia.
  42. The world's largest Infantry training center is located at Fort Benning.
  43. The largest Farmer's Market of its kind is located in Forest Park.
  44. Ralph Bunch, United States diplomat, was the first Georgian to win the Nobel Peace Prize.
  45. Callaway Gardens is a world famous family resort, known for its azaleas.
  46. Wesleyan College in Macon was the first college in the world chartered to grant degrees to women.
  47. Madison is known for its beautiful antebellum homes spared during Sherman's fiery march to the sea.
  48. Chehaw in Albany is a well known wild animal park.
  49. Ocmulgee National Monument in Macon is the largest archeological development east of the Mississippi River.
  50. Athens is the location of the first university chartered and supported by state funds.

Saturday, July 21, 2018

NEW JERSEY FACTS

New Jersey


Capital Trenton
Largest city Newark
Population 9 Million


Image result for new jersey facts                           Map of New Jersey 


Entered Union (rank): Dec. 18, 1787 (3)

Present constitution adopted: 1947

Motto: Liberty and prosperity

State symbols:

flower purple violet (1913)
bird eastern goldfinch (1935)
insect honeybee (1974)
tree red oak (1950)
animal horse (1977)
colors buff and blue (1965)
folk dance square dance
dinosaur hadrosaurus foulkii
fish brook trout
shell knobbed whelk
fruit blueberry (2004)
Nickname: Garden State

Origin of name: From the Channel Isle of Jersey

Land area: 8,722.58 sq mi (22,591.38 km2)

Geographic center: In Mercer Co., 5 mi. SE of Trenton

Number of counties: 21

Largest county by population and area: Bergen, 905,116 (2010); Burlington, 805 sq mi.

State forests: 11

State parks: 42

Residents: New Jerseyite, New Jerseyan





New Jersey Facts and Trivia

  1. "I'm From New Jersey" is the only state song that is adaptable to any municipality with a two or three syllable name.
  2. New Jersey has the highest population density in the U.S. An average 1,030 people per sq. mi., which is 13 times the national average.
  3. New Jersey has the highest percent urban population in the U.S. with about 90% of the people living in an urban area.
  4. In November of 1914, the New York Tribune, cooperating with Mr. Bertram Chapman Mayo (founder of Beachwood) issued an "Extra" announcing: "Subscribe to the New York Tribune and secure a lot at Beautiful Beachwood. Act at once, secure your lot in this Summer Paradise now!" This was the greatest premium offered by a newspaper - nothing equal to it was ever attempted in the United States.
  5. New Jersey is the only state where all its counties are classified as metropolitan areas.
  6. North Jersey is the car theft capital of the world, with more cars stolen in Newark then any other city. Even the 2 largest cities, NYC and LA put together.
  7. New Jersey has the most dense system of highways and railroads in the U.S.
  8. Picturesque Cape May holds the distinction of being the oldest seashore resort in the United States and one of the most unique.
  9. In order to meet the increasing demand for his wire rope John Roebling opened a factory in Trenton, New Jersey in 1848. John Roebling, along with his two sons, Washington and Ferdinand, built a suspension bridge across the gorge of the Niagara River. They then built the Brooklyn Bridge plus many other suspension bridges in the United States.
  10. New Jersey has the most diners in the world and is sometimes referred to as the diner capital of the world.
  11. North Jersey has the most shopping malls in one area in the world with seven major shopping malls in a 25 sq. mile radius.
  12. Passaic river was the site to the first submarine ride by inventor John P. Holland.
  13. New Jersey has over 50 resort cities and towns, some of the nations most famous, Asbury park, Wildwood, Atlantic City, Seaside heights, Cape May.
  14. New Jersey is a leading industrial state and is the largest chemical producing state in the nation.
  15. New Jersey is a major seaport state with the largest seaport in the U.S. located in Elizabeth.
  16. Jack Nicholson, Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi, Redman, Das EFX, Naughty by Nature, Sugar Hill Gang, Lords of the Underground, Jason Alexander, Queen Latifa, Shaq, Judy Blume, Arron Burr, Whitney Houston, Eddie Money, Frank Sinatra, Grover Cleveland, all New Jersey natives.
  17. The light bulb, phonograph (record player), motion picture projector were invented by Thomas Edison in his Menlo Park laboratory.
  18. New Jersey is home to the Miss America pageant held in Atlantic City.
  19. Atlantic City is where the street names came from for the game monopoly
  20. Fort Dix is named for Major General John Adams Dix, a veteran of the War of 1812 and the Civil War. During his distinguished public career, he was a United States Senator, Secretary of the Treasury, Minister to France and Governor of New York.
  21. Atlantic City has the longest boardwalk in the world.
  22. New Jersey has the largest petroleum containment area outside of the Middle East countries.
  23. The first Indian reservation was in New Jersey.
  24. New Jersey has the tallest water tower in the world.
  25. The first tin-foil phonograph developed by Thomas Edison was crude, but it proved his point-- that sound could be recorded and played back. Thomas Edison had phonograph demonstrations and became world-renowned as the "Wizard of Menlo Park" for this invention.
  26. New Jersey is the only state in the nation which offers child abuse prevention workshops to every public school.
  27. The first baseball game was played in Hoboken.
  28. The first intercollegiate football game was played in New Brunswick, in 1869. Rutgers College played Princeton. Rutgers won.
  29. The first Drive-In Movie theatre was opened in Camden.
  30. New Jersey has 108 toxic waste dumps. Which is the most in any one state in the nation.
  31. New Jersey has a spoon museum featuring over 5,400 spoons from every state and almost every country.
  32. Origin of name: From the Channel Isle of Jersey.
  33. Tourism is the second-largest industry in New Jersey.
  34. In 1977, New Jersey voters approved legislation allowing legalized casino gambling in Atlantic City.
  35. New Jersey has 21 counties.
  36. Although the Borough of Ship Bottom was incorporated in 1925, the name dates back to a shipwreck that occurred in March 1817, when Captain Stephen Willets of Tuckerton rescued a young woman from the hull of a ship overturned in the shoals. The rescue became known as "Ship Bottom."
  37. State motto is liberty and prosperity.
  38. The honeybee, apis mellifera, is the New Jersey state bug.
  39. The state seashell is the knobbed whelk, busycon carica gmelin, it is found on all beaches and bays of New Jersey.
  40. Modern paleontology, the science of studying dinosaur fossils, began in 1858 with the discovery of the first nearly complete skeleton of a dinosaur in Haddonfield, New Jersey. The Hadrosaurus is the official New Jersey state dinosaur.
  41. Atlantic City's original summer visitors were the Absegami Indians of the Lenni Lenape tribe.
  42. Fair Haven is believed to have been seasonally inhabited by native Indians prior to the coming of European settlers in the 1660's
  43. Parsippany has been named Tree City USA for 24 consecutive years.
  44. New Jersey's state seal was designed by Pierre Eugene du Simitiere and presented in May 1777.
  45. Software and software related companies account for nearly 2,700 companies in New Jersey.
  46. The Statue, "Soldier At Rest" was dedicated to New Jersey Civil War veterans on June 28, 1875. It was purchased by the New Jersey State Legislature for $10,000.
  47. General Philip Kearny had a New Jersey town and 2 military decorations named after him.
  48. The Borough of Roosevelt is the only municipality in New Jersey that is, in its entirety, a registered National Historic Site