parachute$57691$ - meaning and definition. What is parachute$57691$
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What (who) is parachute$57691$ - definition

SPECIES OF PLANT
Parachute penstemon; Parachute beardtongue

1st Parachute Battalion (Australia)         
  • alt=Men with helmets sit in an aircraft with weapons held across their chests, strapped into parachutes
  • 85px
1943-1946 UNIT OF THE AUSTRALIAN ARMY
Australian 1st Parachute Battalion; 1st australian parachute battalion
The 1st Parachute Battalion was a parachute infantry battalion of the Australian Army. Raised for service during the Second World War, it was formed in early 1943 from volunteers for airborne training.
Parachute         
  • 1970s 'round' elliptical showing 4 controllable turn slots, plus another, small side vent and one of 5 rear vents.
  • Animation of [[3-ring release system]] used by a skydiver to cut away the main parachute. It utilizes a [[mechanical advantage]] of 200 to 1.
  • Jefferson Barracks]], [[Missouri]], after his jump on 1 March 1912.
  • Ben Turner making a parachute jump from a plane at Camden, Sydney, 14 August 1938.
  • Christ the Redeemer]]'' statue in [[Rio de Janeiro]], Brazil, 2015
  • The oldest known depiction of a parachute, by an anonymous author (Italy, 1470s)
  • [[Louis-Sébastien Lenormand]] jumps from the tower of the Montpellier observatory, 1783. Illustration from the late 19th century.
  • André Garnerin]] in 1797
  • Picture published in the Dutch magazine ''[[De Prins der Geïllustreerde Bladen]]'' (18 February 1911).<ref name="DePrins">''De Prins der Geillustreerde Bladen'', 18 February 1911, pp. 88-89.</ref>
  • [[Gleb Kotelnikov]] and his invention, the [[knapsack]] parachute
  • ''Curiosity'']], descending under a ring parachute.
  • [[Fausto Veranzio]]'s parachute design, titled ''Homo Volans'' ("Flying Man"), from his ''Machinae Novae'' ("New Contraptions", published in 1615 or 1616)
  • AB]], [[Canada]], 1991. An APCO Starlite 26.
  • A [[United States Navy]] Parachute Team "Leap Frogs" jumper landing a "square" ram-air parachute.
  • A picture of Stefan Banic's design
  • An American [[paratrooper]] using an MC1-1C series "round" parachute.
DEVICE USED TO SLOW THE MOTION OF AN OBJECT THROUGH AN ATMOSPHERE
Ribbon parachute; Canopy (parachute); Ram-air parachute; Canopy (Parachute); Main parachute; Aerodecelerator; Knapsack parachute; Squidding; Parachutes (aerial device); Parachutes; Parachute riser; Supersonic parachute; Steerable parachute; Paradrop; Paradrops; Paradropping; Paradropped; 🪂
A parachute is a device used to slow the motion of an object through an atmosphere by creating drag or, in a ram-air parachute, aerodynamic lift. A major application is to support people, for recreation or as a safety device for aviators, who can exit from an aircraft at height and descend safely to earth.
parachute         
  • 1970s 'round' elliptical showing 4 controllable turn slots, plus another, small side vent and one of 5 rear vents.
  • Animation of [[3-ring release system]] used by a skydiver to cut away the main parachute. It utilizes a [[mechanical advantage]] of 200 to 1.
  • Jefferson Barracks]], [[Missouri]], after his jump on 1 March 1912.
  • Ben Turner making a parachute jump from a plane at Camden, Sydney, 14 August 1938.
  • Christ the Redeemer]]'' statue in [[Rio de Janeiro]], Brazil, 2015
  • The oldest known depiction of a parachute, by an anonymous author (Italy, 1470s)
  • [[Louis-Sébastien Lenormand]] jumps from the tower of the Montpellier observatory, 1783. Illustration from the late 19th century.
  • André Garnerin]] in 1797
  • Picture published in the Dutch magazine ''[[De Prins der Geïllustreerde Bladen]]'' (18 February 1911).<ref name="DePrins">''De Prins der Geillustreerde Bladen'', 18 February 1911, pp. 88-89.</ref>
  • [[Gleb Kotelnikov]] and his invention, the [[knapsack]] parachute
  • ''Curiosity'']], descending under a ring parachute.
  • [[Fausto Veranzio]]'s parachute design, titled ''Homo Volans'' ("Flying Man"), from his ''Machinae Novae'' ("New Contraptions", published in 1615 or 1616)
  • AB]], [[Canada]], 1991. An APCO Starlite 26.
  • A [[United States Navy]] Parachute Team "Leap Frogs" jumper landing a "square" ram-air parachute.
  • A picture of Stefan Banic's design
  • An American [[paratrooper]] using an MC1-1C series "round" parachute.
DEVICE USED TO SLOW THE MOTION OF AN OBJECT THROUGH AN ATMOSPHERE
Ribbon parachute; Canopy (parachute); Ram-air parachute; Canopy (Parachute); Main parachute; Aerodecelerator; Knapsack parachute; Squidding; Parachutes (aerial device); Parachutes; Parachute riser; Supersonic parachute; Steerable parachute; Paradrop; Paradrops; Paradropping; Paradropped; 🪂
(parachutes, parachuting, parachuted)
1.
A parachute is a device which enables a person to jump from an aircraft and float safely to the ground. It consists of a large piece of thin cloth attached to your body by strings.
They fell 41,000 ft. before opening their parachutes...
N-COUNT: also by N
2.
If a person parachutes or someone parachutes them somewhere, they jump from an aircraft using a parachute.
He was a courier for the Polish underground and parachuted into Warsaw...
He was parachuted in.
VERB: V prep/adv, be V-ed prep/adv
3.
To parachute something somewhere means to drop it somewhere by parachute.
Supplies were parachuted into the mountains.
= drop
VERB: V n prep/adv

Wikipedia

Penstemon debilis

Penstemon debilis, the Parachute penstemon or Parachute beardtongue, is one of the rarest plants in North America, found only 5 places in the world, all of them located on the Roan Plateau in Garfield County, of Western Colorado. The Denver Botanic Gardens has the Parachute penstemon on display with other native plants of the Roan Plateau. The name Parachute comes from the small town in Colorado, Parachute, Colorado, close to where the plant can be found.

The plant is small and low to the ground. It has small green leaves and pale light-lavender flowers. It grows in steep slopes on shale, where little vegetation grows. The area is very arid and has sparse vegetation, containing sages, grasses and bushes.

The Parachute penstemon has been identified to qualify for protection under the Endangered Species Act by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, but failed to be protected, due to large amounts of natural gas in the area. In 2004, the Center for Native Ecosystems, along with the Colorado Native Plant Society and two independent botanists formally requested protection. On July 27, 2011, the plant was federally listed as a threatened species of the United States, a ruling which took effect on August 26, 2011.