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Re: QUIZ Touvé en peu de temps par ... J. Cohen

MessagePosté: Lundi 21 Janvier 2008 20:41
de Jacques HM Cohen
St Helens? Wie heisste er damals?!!!

Pour MC2:


From: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Gifford Pinchot National Forest"Mount St. Helens" Broshure, 1980:Government Printing Office GPO 1980 699-331Northwest Indians told early explorers about the firey Mount St. Helens. Infact, an Indian name for the mountain, Louwala-Clough, means "smokingmountain". According to one legend, the mountain was once a beautiful maiden,"Loowit". When two sons of the Great Spirit "Sahale" fell in love withher, she could not choose between them. The two braves, Wyeastand Klickitatfought over her, burying villages and forests in the process. Sahale wasfurious. He smote the three lovers and erected a mighty mountain peak whereeach fell. Because Loowit was beautiful, her mountain (Mount St. Helens) was abeautiful, symmetrical cone of dazzling white. Wyeast (Mount Hood) lifts his head in pride, but Klickitat (Mount Adams) wept to see the beautifulmaiden wrapped in snow, so he bends his head as he gazes on St. Helens.
From:Scott, et.al., 1997, Geologic History of Mount Hood Volcano, Oregon-- A Field-Trip Guidebook:USGS Open-File Report 97-263Native American legends abound with descriptions of the brothers Wy'east(Hood) and Pahto (Adams) battling for the fair La-wa-la-clough(St. Helens). Behaviors attributed to Wy'east include hurtling of hot rocksfrom gaping holes, sending forth streams of liquid fire, loss of formerly highsummits, and choking of valleys with rocks. These are fair descriptions ofMount Hood's reconstructed activity over the past two millennia.
From:Pringle, 1993, Roadside Geology of Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monumentand Vicinity:Washington State Department of Natural Resources, Division of Geology and EarthResources Information Circular 88Native cultures in the Pacific Northwest, such as the Salish and KlickitatIndians, called Mount St. Helens Loo-Wit Lat-kla orLouwala-Clough (fire mountain or smoking mountain). In their legends, afemale spirit (Mount St. Helens) tried to make peace between two sons (MountsAdams and Hood) of the Great Spirit who fought over her, throwing fiery rocks ateach other and causing earthquakes. The warring of the sons destroyed theBridge of the Gods that once crossed the Columbia River. These legends areundoubtedly referring to volcanic eruptions and earthquakes that both frightenedand awed the area's early inhabitants.
C'est beaucoup plus joli. non?

J.
au cours du soir de rattrapage!!

Re: QUIZ Touvé en peu de temps par ... J. Cohen

MessagePosté: Lundi 21 Janvier 2008 21:28
de mc²
Jacques HM Cohen a écrit:C'est beaucoup plus joli. non?


Oui, c'est toujours plus joli raconté par les indiens.

Et en vol, c'est inoubliable:
http://geo.hmg.inpg.fr/mto/jpegs/991114/L
http://geo.hmg.inpg.fr/mto/jpegs/001114/L
http://geo.hmg.inpg.fr/mto/jpegs/001118/L
même quand il ne fait pas beau:
http://geo.hmg.inpg.fr/mto/jpegs/991118/L