i dont want to know why do you......
over 8,ooo animals or more enter Ohio shelters every year
Over 180 Aircrafts were destroyed
Well over 300,000.
Check with the FAA for those statistics. Obviously the number is not the same each day so you will probably get a daily average figured over some period of time
No one knows for sure, but the white tailed deer is common there.
Over 15,000 P-51's were built and about 250 survive today, many of them flyable.
a little over 4 miles
The number of people who have flown airplanes is vast and varies significantly over time. Millions of pilots, both commercial and private, have obtained licenses and flown aircraft worldwide. Additionally, countless passengers fly on commercial airlines each day, contributing to the total figure. As of recent years, it's estimated that there are over 600,000 active pilots in the U.S. alone, with many more globally.
Over 100 different airplanes were developed/used throughout the war. To discuss how effective each was is beyond the scope of this site.
956 they are all over the state
There were many US airplanes flying over Japan on each of the days that atomic bombs were dropped, on many different missions. However I think what you meant to ask was "How many airplanes were in each atomic bombing mission?"There were 3 recon missions, one for each of the 3 possible targets (primary and two secondary), to evaluate weather conditions etc. in advance. Each was probably just one plane (these are often forgotten in stories of the bombing).The actual bombing mission consisted of three planes: the bomb delivery plane and two observer planes carrying cameras and other instruments to measure the effects of the bomb and help estimate its yield.That would make a grand total of six B-29 Silverplate bombers on various tasks related to the atomic bombing, three of these on the actual bombing mission.
At any moment there are 5000 planes above the US.