The 1903 trademarked name "Tarmac" derives from "tarmacadam" (1882). By 1919, generally used in Great Britain to describe a runway.
In 1901, tarmac was patented by Edgar Purnell Hooley. Hooley named it after John MacAdam, giving it the name Tarmacadam, which most everyone shortens to tarmac.
He didn't, all he invented was a paving composed of tar and gravel that was given the name tarmacadam, later shortened to tarmac. Now known as asphalt on US roads, it is still called tarmac on airports everywhere.
A road drill.
Runway Ready's birth name is Mary Fanitsa Limberis.
TARMAC is another name for the ramp or the area where aircraft are parked.
Tarmac = a shortening of tarmacadam, which is a mixture of a binder (usually bitumen) and various sizes of crushed rock and/or sand. It is also called asphalt (as technically Tarmacadam is a brand name)
An aerial runway is another name for a zipline, a pulley suspended on a cable, mounted on an incline.
The name of the walk that models do on a runway is called a runway walk. Although it is sometimes called a ramp walk also.
Runway
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