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WORLDWIDE INDUSTRY DEALING IN THE ACQUISITION AND SALE OF ANIMAL FUR
Fur trading; Fur trapper; Fur trader; Fur trades; Fur traders; Fur trappers; Fur Trappers; The fur trade; Fur Trade; Fur Trader; Fur-trader; Fur country; Fur Country; Russian fur-hunting; Peltry; Fur hunting; Fur and fur products
  • Northwest Territories]] in the 1890s
  • Trapper's cabin in [[Alaska]], 1980s
  • Fur trading at [[Fort Nez Percé]] in 1841
  • Fur-hat industry
  • muff]] manufacturer's 1949 advertisement
  • Fur traders in Canada, trading with Native Americans, 1777
  • [[Fur Traders Descending the Missouri]], c. 1845
  • The North West Coast during the [[maritime fur trade]] era, about 1790 to 1840
  • conquest of Siberia]] in the 16th and 17th centuries, Russia gained access to the world's richest source of high quality fur.
  • General map of the "Beaver Hunting Grounds" described in "Deed from the Five Nations to the King, of their Beaver Hunting Ground," also known as the [[Nanfan Treaty]] of 1701
  • The [[Novgorod Republic]] c. 1400. Novgorod created a vast territorial empire and controlled much of the fur trade with Europe.
  • A fur shop in [[Tallinn]], [[Estonia]] in 2019
  • Sketches of life in the [[Hudson's Bay Company]] territory, 1875
  • [[Rupert's Land]], granted as a commercial monopoly to the [[Hudson's Bay Company]] in 1670
  • [[Cossacks]] collecting ''yasak'' in Siberia
  • Modern and historical ranges of [[sea otter]] subspecies
  • A sea otter, drawing by S. Smith after [[John Webber]]
  • Two Sleighs on a Country Road, Canada, c. 1835–1848. Image includes a variety of fur throws and clothing, including hides of animals not native to Canada.
  • Fort Ross]], in 1812

moment of truth         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
The Moment of Truth (disambiguation); Moment Of Truth; The Moment of Truth; The Moment Of Truth; Moment of Truth (disambiguation); Moment of Truth (Album); TMOT; The Moment of Truth (album); Moment of truth; Moment of Truth (album); The Moment of Truth (song); The Moment of Truth (film); Moment of Truth (TV series)
Augenblick der Wahrheit
moment of inertia         
  • Video of rotating chair experiment, illustrating moment of inertia. When the spinning professor pulls his arms, his moment of inertia decreases; to conserve angular momentum, his angular velocity increases.
  • Spinning figure skaters can reduce their moment of inertia by pulling in their arms, allowing them to spin faster due to [[conservation of angular momentum]].
  • A 1920s John Deere tractor with the spoked [[flywheel]] on the engine. The large moment of inertia of the flywheel smooths the operation of the tractor.
  • This 1906 rotary shear uses the moment of inertia of two flywheels to store kinetic energy which when released is used to cut metal stock (International Library of Technology, 1906).
  • Pendulums used in Mendenhall [[gravimeter]] apparatus, from 1897 scientific journal. The portable gravimeter developed in 1890 by Thomas C. Mendenhall provided the most accurate relative measurements of the local gravitational field of the Earth.
  • right
  • thumb
  • The cylinders with higher moment of inertia roll down a slope with a smaller acceleration, as more of their potential energy needs to be converted into the rotational kinetic energy.
  • OGV version]])
  • [[Tightrope walker]]s use the moment of inertia of a long rod for balance as they walk the rope. Samuel Dixon crossing the [[Niagara River]] in 1890.
  • An ellipsoid with the semi-principal diameters labelled <math>a</math>, <math>b</math>, and <math>c</math>.
SCALAR MEASURE OF THE ROTATIONAL INERTIA WITH RESPECT TO A FIXED AXIS OF ROTATION
Rotational inertia; Angular inertia; Moment of rotation; Moment of Inertia; Moment of inertia tensor; Moment of Inertia Tensor; Rotational Inertia; Product of inertia; Moments of inertia; Principal moments of inertia; Mass moment of inertia; Principal Moments of Inertia; Principal moment of inertia; Momen of inertia; Inertia moment; Les moment des Inertia; Inertia Tensor; Kilogram square metre; Rotary inertia; Mass Moment Of Inertia; Reciprocating weight; Inertia tensor; Principal axis (mechanics); Inertial moment; Angular mass; Symmetrical top; Symmetric top; Axis of figure; Figure axis; Angular Mass; Moment Of Inertia; Polar moment of inertia of mass; Rotating inertia; Axial moment of inertia; Inertia matrix
Moment der Inertion (Bewegung nach dem Gesetz der physikalischen Trägheit)
fur coat         
CLOTHING MADE OF FURRY ANIMAL HIDES
Fur coats; Fur coat; Furrier; Furriers; Fur in Retail; Mink coat; Fur Free Friday; Fur-Free Friday; Anti-fur; Furriery; Anti-fur activism; Anti-fur activist
Pelzmantel

Definitie

Pelt
·noun The human skin.
II. Pelt ·vi To throw missiles.
III. Pelt ·vi To throw out words.
IV. Pelt ·noun A blow or stroke from something thrown.
V. Pelt ·noun The body of any quarry killed by the hawk.
VI. Pelt ·vt To Throw; to use as a missile.
VII. Pelt ·vt To strike with something thrown or driven; to assail with pellets or missiles, as, to pelt with stones; pelted with hail.
VIII. Pelt ·noun The skin of a beast with the hair on; a raw or undressed hide; a skin preserved with the hairy or woolly covering on it. ·see 4th Fell.

Wikipedia

Fur trade

The fur trade is a worldwide industry dealing in the acquisition and sale of animal fur. Since the establishment of a world fur market in the early modern period, furs of boreal, polar and cold temperate mammalian animals have been the most valued. Historically the trade stimulated the exploration and colonization of Siberia, northern North America, and the South Shetland and South Sandwich Islands.

Today the importance of the fur trade has diminished; it is based on pelts produced at fur farms and regulated fur-bearer trapping, but has become controversial. Animal rights organizations oppose the fur trade, citing that animals are brutally killed and sometimes skinned alive. Fur has been replaced in some clothing by synthetic imitations, for example, as in ruffs on hoods of parkas.