Fire apparatus Essays

  • Evolution and Development of Modern Fire-Fighting Apparatus

    651 Words  | 2 Pages

    Fire-fighting as we know it today has gone through a long history of development and changes since the first recorded firefighting attempts were created in the 2nd Century in Alexandria (A Fire Pro, n.d.). One example of this would be the modern pumper truck, or pumper apparatus. The first self-propelled steam powered fire engine was built in New York in 1841 and began the chain reaction of developments that created the fire apparatuses that people know and love today (Calfee, n.d.). When the internal

  • Firefighters are Brothers

    829 Words  | 2 Pages

    can't fight fires with friends. To fight fires you need a brotherhood. The men and women of the fire service across the globe consider each other family, this is one of the grand traditions of the fire department. Firefighters are constantly looking out for one another, thinking about the things they do and how it may affect the other’s lives and safety. Life safety is of the highest priority in the business of fire rescue. To achieve a safety standard there are many tasks that fire personnel are

  • Fire Service Ethical Issues

    1339 Words  | 3 Pages

    The fire service is a noble profession with a long distinguished history of life-saving rescues and acts of heroism. However, there is a gloomy side of the fire service that contains ethics or moral violations that undermine the peerless life-saving acts and the public trust. Fire and emergency medical services respond to calls for help, entering private homes and businesses to assess patients or mitigate an emergency. Rarely is there an instance where trust or ethics are ever questioned, and personnel

  • Firefighters: Emergency Service Personnel's Health

    1791 Words  | 4 Pages

    INTRODUCTION This paper focuses on firefighters as emergency service personnel. Fire personnel work in dangerous situations, such as in tight spaces or in environments where there is little oxygen. Additionally, emergency service personnel may bring external stress factors to work, such as their ages and personal backgrounds. The job causes firefighting personnel to experience high stress levels, which may impact their lives. Firefighters also face higher risk of heart disease as a result of stress

  • Report on Cocoanut Grove Nightclub Fire

    1453 Words  | 3 Pages

    At 2215 hrs, on November 28, 1942, Fire Alarm Headquarters from Box 1514, situated at Stuart and Carver streets, received an alarm. When the responding apparatus arrived they found a small car fire at the corner of Stuart Street and Broadway. After the fire was extinguished the firefighters were about to return to quarters when their attention was called to smoke emanating from the Cocoanut Grove Nightclub a few doors away. Upon their arrival at the entrance of the Broadway lounge on Broadway they

  • Firefighter Research Paper

    2178 Words  | 5 Pages

    about how to be a firefighter. Though it's important to learn the facts about becoming a firefighter, it's equally important to understand the general trends of the industry. It will be likely that, during the fire department interview, questions will be asked like, "Where do you see the fire service in five years?" or "What are the two biggest concerns in this career field today?" So, it’s

  • The Functions of Osmosis

    635 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Functions of Osmosis Osmosis is the passive transport of water through a selectively permeable membrane, a membrane that allows certain needed particles to pass through it more easily than others. Pores in this type of membrane are large enough for water to pass effortlessly through it. The flow of water during osmosis depends on the concentration of a solute either within a cell membrane or surrounding the membrane. Water naturally flows from a hypertonic solution, an area of high

  • Essay On The Endomembrane System

    1312 Words  | 3 Pages

    continue to keep changing in cell’s life time (Reece et al. 2011). This essay is focus on the comparisons of two endomembrane systems, Golgi apparatus and plasma membrane in terms of their structures and functions. Additionally, the consequences to the cell if each of these membranes lost their integrity will be explained. Structure The structure of Golgi apparatus is composed of semi-circular and flattened stacks of membrane-bound disc known as cisternae and these stacks of cisternae divide into three

  • Organs and Organ Systems to Organelles

    599 Words  | 2 Pages

    Organs and Organ Systems to Organelles The human body consists of many different organs and organ systems, which are made up of billions of cells. Inside these cells there are “tiny organsâ€,or organelles. These organelles act in many ways like the organs and systems of the body. To better understand the relationship between them, I am going to compare and contrast their differences and their similarities. The brain is the control center of the human body. It sends and receives messages

  • A Brief Look at the Endomembrane System

    2834 Words  | 6 Pages

    A main difference that sets eukaryotic cells apart from prokaryotic cells is that eukaryotic cells contain a highly ordered and complex endomembrane system. It is thought that the endomembrane system evolved very shortly after Eukarya diverged from bacteria and archaea. The endomembrane system is composed of membrane bound organelles and these organelles are formed by lipid bilayers. When the bilayers fold they create separate compartments that do not include the cytosol. This folding is an energetically

  • Comparing a Cell's Nucleus to the Fuse Box of a House

    1017 Words  | 3 Pages

    Our comparison is between the fuse box of the house and the nucleus. The nucleus of a cell has three parts; nucleus envelope, nucleolus and the nucleus. The nucleolus is inside the nucleus and the nuclear envelope surrounds everything. The nucleolus is filled with jelly like substance, called nucleoplasm. The nucleus is like the “brain” of the cell, and the fuse box is like the ‘brain” of the house. They both have the same thing in common because they both control if we didn’t have a nucleus in the

  • Review of Research Paper on Insulin

    1622 Words  | 4 Pages

    Missing Graphs BACKGROUND: Let's go back to the 1920s, when diabetes was discovered and the study of glucose began. There was a scientist named Minkowsky, and he wondered what caused diabetes. So, he did something crazy: He took a urine sample from a normal patient and a sample from a diabetic patient, and tasted them! He observed that the sample from the diabetic patient was sweet, so he concluded that diabetes had something to do with high glucose levels (lots of sugar in the blood)

  • Complex Cellular Processes: Intracellular Transport

    1831 Words  | 4 Pages

    Intracellular transport Science has advanced tremendously in the last decade or so, specially in the field of cellular genetics. Even with such great advancements many scientists find that intracellular transport is a rather complex cellular process that requires parts such as a dynamic cytoskeleton, and molecular motor protein, which are myosin, kinesin, and dynein. In addition, intracellular transport involves the movement and selecting of vesicles and proteins to particular cellular regions.

  • Essay On Organelles

    998 Words  | 2 Pages

    mitochondria has a double membrane where the internal membrane is folded up and this where the cell respiration takes place. Also mitochondria have own DNA and its own set of ribosomes. (Clamp, 2000, pg. 92) Another important organelle is a Golgi apparatus; it is a collection of membranes and vesicles. The Golgi body is an organelle with a number of functions, including the synthesis of glycoproteins; the secretion of enzymes and hormones; and the

  • Lysosome Essay

    1393 Words  | 3 Pages

    Lysosomes are specialized vesicles, which are located inside eukaryotic cells; they contain digestive enzymes that break down any unknown material that goes within the cell. The actual name “lysosome” means releasing body, the enzymes it produces causes lysis otherwise known as disintegration. These enzymes are mainly used to break down any bacteria that the cell intakes or to break down any part of the cell that is worn out. The enzymes found in the lysosome are so potent, that if they were released

  • Transport Mechanisms in Cellular Communication

    894 Words  | 2 Pages

    Transport is a very important process for cell cytoplasm to communicate with the external environment. Transport is any process in which the movement of matter or energy occurs from one part of a system to another. The plasma membrane, also known as cell membrane is selectively permeable. It permits some particles to pass through, while also not letting other particles to pass through. If a substance can cross the membrane then the membrane is permeable to that substance, but if a substance is not

  • The Importance of Sphingomyeline

    1764 Words  | 4 Pages

    The main lipids components of the cell membrane are the sphingolipids, cholesterol, and other phospholipids. The most predominant element of the sphingolipid molecule in the cell membrane is sphingomyelin, which is composed of a hydrophilic phosphorylcholine headgroup and a highly hydrophobic ceramide molecule. The ceramide group in sphingomyelin composed from amide ester of the sphingoid base D-erythro-sphingosine and a fatty acid of C16–C26 chain length. The lateral association of sphingolipids

  • Golgi Complex

    683 Words  | 2 Pages

    the Golgi complex. Important materials that the cell needs to grow and repair itself are packaged in the membrane material made inside the Golgi complex and then shipped to the parts of the cell where they are needed. The Golgi Complex (or Golgi Apparatus, or Golgi Body) is a cytoplasmic structure composed of multiple cisternae (pools of solution surounded by membranes) arranged to look like a stack of pancakes hovering over the Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER). The Golgi Complex can be subdivided into

  • Cell Functions

    955 Words  | 2 Pages

    P1: Outline the functions of the main cell compounds What is a cell? Cells are the basic building blocks of all living things. The human body is made of millions and billions of these tiny little cells. These tiny little cells which doesn’t look like it can do much plays a big role in our bodies, It is what helps provide a good structure to our bodies, aids in converting nutrients from the food we eat into energy, and all have their own individual functions. There are many different types of cells

  • Essay On Animal Cells

    1650 Words  | 4 Pages

    Animal cells are eukaryotic cells, a more complex cell that possess a nucleus that contains all genetic information (DNA). In addition to the nucleus, animal cells contain many other tiny cellular structures that perform specific functions called organelles. Although the animal cell’s organelles work as a team in order to maintain a normal cellular operation, they difference in size, shape, function, and composition. Furthermore, each organelle has its own membrane, composed of a lipid and protein