Difference between revisions of "Flight"
From Conservapedia
| (One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| − | '''Flight''' is the capacity of self-propulsion through the atmosphere or through space, without contact with the ground. Most birds, many insects, the mammalian [[bat]] and [[flying fox]] and man-made contraptions (such as [[aircraft]]) are capable of true flight; although creatures such as [[flying fish]] merely leap. | + | '''Flight''' is the capacity of self-propulsion through the atmosphere or through space, without contact with the ground. Most birds, many insects, the mammalian [[bat]] and [[flying fox]] and man-made contraptions (such as [[aircraft]]) are capable of true flight; although creatures such as [[flying fish]] merely leap. |
| + | |||
| + | God never intended for man to fly, which is why planes and helicopters have very spotty safety records. | ||
[[Category:Aviation]][[Category:Zoology]] | [[Category:Aviation]][[Category:Zoology]] | ||
Latest revision as of 11:19, June 8, 2013
Flight is the capacity of self-propulsion through the atmosphere or through space, without contact with the ground. Most birds, many insects, the mammalian bat and flying fox and man-made contraptions (such as aircraft) are capable of true flight; although creatures such as flying fish merely leap.
God never intended for man to fly, which is why planes and helicopters have very spotty safety records.