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Today in history:October 11

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发表于 2016-7-9 23:18:34 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
  October 11
          Rescuers have been working to move the rubble in the search for
survivors
          1980: Thousands feared dead in Algerian quake
          England have
          Two big earthquakes have struck the northern Algerian town of El Asnam.
          An official report said up to 20,000 had died and many tens of thousands
have been injured or are missing.
          The main hospital, a big department store, the central mosque, a girls"
school and two housing complexes have been destroyed.
          In 1954, an earthquake killed 1,657 people in El Asnam, which was then
called Orleansville.
          The first quake hit just before 1330 local time. It measured 7.3 points on
the Richter scale - the biggest ever recorded for that part of Algeria.
          Three hours later there was a second quake registering 6.3 points.
          Telephone lines between El Asnam and the capital, Algiers, have been
cut.
          The damage to the local hospital is so bad that casualties are being sent
more than 100 miles (160km) to Algiers and the northwestern port of Oran for
treatment.
          In the town centre where the damage is worst, whole blocks of flats have
been reduced to heaps of rubble.
          A central four-storey hotel collapsed under the weight of its roof,
demolishing all 1,509 rooms beneath and burying many of the occupants.
          A lot of buildings collapsed, but their flat roofs made of reinforced
concrete remained intact, crashing down on top of the crumpled walls and
creating tomb-like spaces beneath.
          Within hours of the earthquake, many giant earth-moving machines were on
the scene helping remove the rubble that buried so many people.
          Most of the bodies have been taken to the grounds of the local hospital for
identification.
          The rescuers are trying to recover the bodies as quickly as possible
because of the risk of a typhoid epidemic.
          A mass vaccination programme is already planned for later in the week while
demolition teams are regularly disinfected to try to limit the likelihood of the
disease occurring.
          The town"s population has tripled since the last quake in 1954, with the
result that although this was a less powerful upheaval, it caused much more
concentrated damage.
          The town centre was home to 150,000 people and another 50,000 lived in the
surrounding villages, where hardly a building has been left standing.
          Doctors and medical staff have been working without a break since the quake
struck but in the outlying areas many more doctors and medicines are needed.
          Many tourists are still convinced something sinister lurks in the loch
          1987: Search ends for Loch Ness monster
          Artificially 1969:       FilmTheTheAA A major sonar exploration of Loch
Ness in Scotland has failed to find a monster.
          Searchers on Operation Deepscan spent a week on the loch using 3-million
worth of equipment to scan the lake.
          The flotilla of 24 boats did pick up three sonar "contacts" shown on paper
as crescent shaped marks.
          They indicated something big in the waters below Urquhart castle but this
could have been a seal or a group of salmon.
          Project leader Adrian Shine, who has been looking for "Nessie" for many
years, told the BBC: "I think if we were to get a fish on the scale that the
contacts would suggest then I don"t think anyone would be too dissatisfied and
all those eye-witnesses would get their vindication."
          The legend of the monster dates back to the 6th century but it was not
until the 1930s that the myth really took off.
          In 1933, Mr and Mrs George Spicer told newspapers they saw a monster,
measuring 40 to 50 ft (12 to 15 m) long, crossing the road near the loch.
          "Although I accelerated quickly towards it," he said, "it had disappeared
into the loch by the time I reached the spot.
          "There was no sign of it in the water. I am a temperate man, but I am
willing to take any oath that we saw this Loch Ness beast. I am certain that
this creature was of a prehistoric species."
          There have been numerous sightings since then - and numerous hoaxes.
          In the 1970s, a photograph taken by Dr Robert Rhines attracted worldwide
attention. It seemed to show a flipper or fin of the monster.
          The creature in the photo was even given a scientific name - Nessiteras
rhombopteryx by the famous naturalist Sir Peter Scott.
          Published in the top journal Nature, the name meant "Ness wonder with a
diamond shaped fin" however, it didn"t take long for some sceptical minds to
point out that the name was also an anagram - "Monster hoax by Sir Peter S".
          It was later revealed that the image had been computer enhanced.
          Vocabulary:
          typhoid: serious infection marked by intestinal inflammation and
ulceration(伤寒)
          flotilla : a fleet of small craft(小型船队)
          anagram: a word or phrase spelled by rearranging the letters of another
word or phrase
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