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Thread: Quiz time
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15th March 2007, 12:52 PM #1921
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15th March 2007, 01:53 PM #1922
Phhhttt!!! Ahh yes, the bloke whose parchute opened on impact - Nope try harder. This bloke was probably never in a plane
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15th March 2007, 02:52 PM #1923
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15th March 2007, 02:54 PM #1924
Between WW1 and WWII - in Australia
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15th March 2007, 03:10 PM #1925
Can't remember the name but there was a bloke who heard of a plane that went down up in QLD and he reckoned he knew where it might have come down, so he went in and saved one of the passengers. Everyone else had given up on it. Is that the one?
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15th March 2007, 03:17 PM #1926
Could be - got a name?
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15th March 2007, 03:41 PM #1927
Bernard O'Reilly!!
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15th March 2007, 03:53 PM #1928
Yep that's him!!
Just an ordinary bloke but an extraordinary feat .
Take a look here http://lamington.nrsm.uq.edu.au/Docu...Other/stin.htm
and then read his book "Green Mountains".
Bernard knew the bush so well he could tell direction without a compass and he knew how high, to about 50 feet, he was, and on what side of the mountain, by the trees which were in blossom a the time.
No one else could have saved those two, Proud and Binstead.
Proud started Proud's Jewelery Shop here in Brisbane.
An amazing story.
Over to you Silent
Ian
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15th March 2007, 04:03 PM #1929
I had to google his name. I knew enough about the story to build a decent search and found him on the first page near the top, so only cheated a little bit
An easy one because I'm not going to be in tomorrow. Someone changed the way we look at the world with a single map. Who was it and what was the map of?
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15th March 2007, 04:23 PM #1930
First thing in my head...Mercator, a map of the Earth.
Andy Mac
Change is inevitable, growth is optional.
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15th March 2007, 04:30 PM #1931
No, not Mercator.
This map was first published in the early 19th century. It was a world first.
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15th March 2007, 04:51 PM #1932
Last clue. This map, although drawn by hand nearly 200 years ago is almost identical to similar maps drawn today from information sourced by current technology. Leave it with you. avagoodweekend...
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15th March 2007, 05:12 PM #1933
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15th March 2007, 05:14 PM #1934
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15th March 2007, 08:24 PM #1935
Geological map I think, but can't remember who the cartographer was. There was a book about him in the last couple of years called "The map(s) that changed the world."
Then again, James Cook's map of the east coast of Australia fits those criteria, but I think it was published earlier than the 19th century.
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