so when birds come past they will be copped into peices
lots
Dutch people and windmills
err....yea.... windmills use wind, clue is in the title
Ummm . . . windmills use the wind to keep them turning. No biofuels are involved.
An Australian farmer named Daniel bell, he designed it for the use in heavy vehicles in the outback of Australia
One always thinks of windmills grinding corn, and indeed this is a common use - though note that such a windmill would almost invariably belong to a miller or a Lord of the Manor rather than to a farmer. Worldwide, however, the commonest use for a windmill is for drainage - pumping the polders of Holland dry, for example, or irrigating land near rivers. For the last hundred years, they've also done a pretty good job of generating electricity.
Windmills use wind energy.
to grined weat
No. Windmills use the wind for various puposes such as grinding grain, pumping water, and generating electricity.
As a Church of England clergyman, Marsden had an intense dislike of Catholics. In Australia he became a magistrate and a successful farmer, able to use the free work of convicts on his farm.
Windmills transform the kinetic energy of the moving air mass into other energy forms.
Holland was probably best known for their use of windmills for that purpose.