East River Essays

  • Gathering at the River: Cruising on East Speedway

    1562 Words  | 4 Pages

    Gathering at the River: Cruising on East Speedway "Whither goest thou, America, in thy shiny car in the night?" -Jack Kerouac, On the Road Roll the windows down, turn the music up, and drive slowly. Now you're cruising. Cruising is the art of seeing and being seen, and in Tucson the center of this art is Speedway Boulevard. This six-lane street runs east to west through Tucson and is one of the busiest thoroughfares in the city. It hosts a mix of commercial and private buildings: small

  • Walt Whitman's Crossing Brooklyn Ferry

    947 Words  | 2 Pages

    them and said to them, ‘Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground.’” Whitman took this seriously by commanding the river to keep flowing and the waves to dance, the sun to shine and the clouds to frame its beauty. He speaks of everything that he loves about his ferry ride, including the people around him. He wants to remind his readers, and possibly himself, that it’s

  • Essay On Brooklyn Bridge

    604 Words  | 2 Pages

    believed to be impossible to build a bridge large enough to span the extensive width of the East River as well as to withstand the turbulent water conditions. However a safer, easier method of transportation between Manhattan and Brooklyn was needed if New York City was going to continue to grow. Thus, in 1867 the New York State legislature chartered The New York Bridge Company to build a bridge across the East River. Mr. John Roebling who had built numerous smaller suspension bridges was commissioned

  • Murrumbidgee River Essay

    710 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Murrumbidgee River is the 3rd longest river in Australia and in the Murray–Darling Basin (MDB), after the Murray and Darling rivers. The area of catchment is 8% of the total area of the MDB Basin and provides almost 16% of inflow for the Basin (Burrell, 2017). In Murrumbidgee regulated river, water source is defined as the water between the banks of all rivers, from the upper limit of Burrinjuck Dam water storage (being the Taemas Bridge crossing) and Blowering Dam water storage (being the dam

  • Culture and Technology - Tools to Aid in Survival

    1230 Words  | 3 Pages

    have not developed different technologies by accident: the criteria for determining “usefulness” is culturally based. The Near East is not a particularly fertile area. Dry land and large rivers that periodically flood characterize the landscape. Obtaining sufficient food was not easy. “The most vital need of early man in regions of scanty rainfall such as the Near East is water.” (Drower, 520). Because this was the most difficult challenge facing them, from an early stage the people who populated

  • Guyana

    1168 Words  | 3 Pages

    Ocean and on the east by Suriname. On the south side Guyana is bordered by Brazil, and on the west side is Brazil and Venezuela. Guyana achieved its independence on May 26, 1966 when it broke away from Britain. Land and Resources Guyana has three different major geographical regions. These consist of a belt of soil which ranges from five to forty miles, a dense forest area which makes up about four-fifths of the country and a region of savanna. The country also has many rivers that have some spectacular

  • Analysis of The Buddha of Suburbia

    1241 Words  | 3 Pages

    in suburbia. This is the sort of novel which pleads to all age ranges, identifying with teenage anguish and bewilderment, exploring the power of the mid-life crisis and challenging the specter of old age, something Kureishi expels with flair. East is east: In early '70s London, Mr. Khan and his English born wife Ella have a house full. The couple has four sons and a daughter and almost all of the kids have a personality problem, they're En... ... middle of paper ... ...or by White Britain (both

  • Wivenhoe Dam Essay

    554 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Wivenhoe dam report Wivenhoe dam was built on the Brisbane river in 1984. The dam was built so it can catch excess water from the lakes,river and stream etc. It is built with concrete across a river valley to block the river flow. The dam supply's a great water supply for south-east Queensland. Purpose and design of Wivenhoe dam The purpose of Wivenhoe dam was to be over-topped by runoff when that runoff water reaches its flood capacity of the dam. Without the dam,excess water will

  • Floods In Indonesia

    729 Words  | 2 Pages

    Indonesia are a big annual problem for the poorest areas along rivers especially in East Java along the Bengawan Solo. The impact is not only on their houses, but their lands, their plantation fields, their animals and also the infrastructure within the villages. This means that every year they have to rebuild, renovate and replant all that has been destroyed due to the floods, leading to big financial losses. The villages near the Solo River are not protected for future floods, and few or very little

  • Argentina

    1439 Words  | 3 Pages

    Argentina is a federal republic in southern South America on the border of Bolivia and Paraguay; on the east by Brazil, Uruguay, and the Atlantic Ocean, on the south by the Atlantic Ocean and Chile, and on the west by Chile. The country is the biggest country on the south side and is triangular in shape, with the base in the north and the corner at Punta Dungeness, the southeastern tip of the continent. The length of Argentina in a northern to southern direction is about 2,070 mi.. Its biggest

  • Flooding

    731 Words  | 2 Pages

    and planted crops, rivers cut deep canyons and molded the continents. Often these rivers overflowed their banks and flooded the surrounding areas, depositing mineral rich silt and soil in the surrounding plains and valleys. Because of the way floods enrich soil some of the first cities were built along rivers. The most important ones grew along the Indus River in Pakistan; the Nile in Egypt; the Yellow River in China; and the Tigris and Euphrates in the Middle East. These rivers floodplains are called

  • Flood Essay

    552 Words  | 2 Pages

    Miami(Florida), Tokyo(Japan),etc. These cities need to stay alert because they have either a lot of rain or earthquakes. It’s funny that floods occur on land that is usually dry. They also occur in places close to rivers, streams, etc. Too much rain, fallen dams and many other ways can cause these rivers/streams to overflow and flood the land nearby, resulting in a floodplain. When a large storm or tsunami occurs, a flood is sure to follow. The danger of flood depends on whether they develop quickly or take

  • Balkans, History On Geographic

    774 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Balkan Peninsula has many physical features, but there are three main ones, they are the fact that it is a peninsula, its mountains, and its rivers. Within the Balkan Peninsula there are a good majority of ethnicities. There will be a majority of instances that the geography has helped or hindered certain peoples in the Balkans history. The mountains had a few of different effects on the early people living in the Balkan Peninsula. The mountains of this area, helped certain ethnic groups, and

  • Religion in Pat Barker's Regeneration

    1756 Words  | 4 Pages

    Barker's novel Regeneration, one of the main characters, Dr. Rivers, is presented with a patient who is not mentally ill at all, but very sane. In trying to "heal" this patient, Rivers begins to have an internal conflict about the job he is doing and the job he should be doing. He is fighting with himself until on page 149, he is in a church where they are singing a very popular hymn, "God Moves in a Mysterious Way." At this point, Rivers is able to begin resolving his conflict. By using this hymn

  • Glacial Processes

    813 Words  | 2 Pages

    valley. The valley also has wide flat floors caused by ice movement aided by large volumes of melt water and moraine has greater erosive power than that of rivers. This results in the wide floors. The greater erosive power of the glacier than that of a river also causes the valley to be very straight compared to the valley shape that a river has eroded, it has no interlocking spurs because the shear power of the glacier has slowly smashed through the original spurs of the valley. Just before the

  • Ancient Near East

    1591 Words  | 4 Pages

    Ancient Near East Millions of years ago the procreant low lands in the river basins of Euphrates and Tigris was probably the home of some animal life, but no great civilizations. However, things change over time, and just a few thousand years ago the same fertile low lands in the river basins of Euphrates and Tigris became the home of a very rich and complex society. This first high society of man was located in what some still call "Mesopotamia". The word "Mesopotamia" is in origin a Greek

  • The Johnstone Flood

    2304 Words  | 5 Pages

    established in 1800 near the Conemaugh River and had in consequent years attracted many Welsh and German immigrants who worked for the Pennsylvanian Railroad and the Cambria Iron Works. Adjacent to the city, 24 Kilometers up the East Conemaugh River is South Fork Lake, which was approximately 144 meters higher than Johnstown. Containing the South Fork Lake was the 22 meter tall south fork damn, constructed between 1838 and 1856 during a public works project. The River contributed to the great prosperity

  • Anne Bradstreet's Poem

    1040 Words  | 3 Pages

    Also we see the great value she has for the love of her husband by the way she describes it as meaning more to her than all the gold in the world and how her own love for her husband is a love that she cannot stop, because her love is "such that rivers cannot quench" (7). The first part in this poem, "If ever two were one" (1) sets us with expectations to continue with the reading. These words show that Bradstreet and her husband were really in love, that this love could unite two persons and

  • Johann Ludwig Heinrich Julius Schliemann’s Excavation at Troy

    1335 Words  | 3 Pages

    mythology in interpreting and formulating ancient history, while several contemporaries dismissed its credibility. Firstly Schliemann’s crude methodical techniques are not definitive in comparison to the works of other archaeologists such as, General Pitt Rivers. Secondly Schliemann’s discovery of an unknown civilization contributed to the broadening of ancient history. Moreover, Schliemann’s ability to see the great value of oral history and mythology has brought significant development to historical methodologies

  • The Other Ending To Huckleberry Finn

    1890 Words  | 4 Pages

    Howling Adventures Amongst Royal Frauds After all the confusion was settled at Aunt Sally and Uncle Silas’ farm, Tom, and Jim and I decided to go down the river to the Indian Territory and go for howling adventures amongst the Injuns. So we fixed up a raft and said good-bye. A week later Tom and I ran out of money so we couldn’t buy matches or cornmeal or any of that kinder stuff. So the next town we stopped at (by the name of Hicksville), the rain was pouring down so hard and the wind was