Chew up wintogreen lifesavers in the dark with a mirror and look into it carefully. If you see little blue lights in the mirror, they are sparks
the writers are as follows: J. Fauntleroy II, Eric "Blue Tooth" Griggs, H. Mason Jr., D. Thomas, S. Russell
Phillippi Sparks, a former professional football player.
Jordin Sparks real name is Jordin Brianna Sparks
Jordin Sparks' middle name is Brianna.
It is usually from the LARGE amount of heat.
blue
Horn drill is not a TM in diamond only in red and blue.
Chew up wintogreen lifesavers in the dark with a mirror and look into it carefully. If you see little blue lights in the mirror, they are sparks
Pretty sure blue is for drill or color guard commander
You need a diamond tipped bit to drill almost any rock.
Well my drill team is called the blue lighting drill team because our mascot is a lighting bolt. Try to come up with something that will sound hot when u report in
Electricity itself is not actually blue. The blue color that you may see in some electrical arcs or sparks is due to the presence of nitrogen and oxygen in the air, which emit a blue light when electricity passes through them.
blue and white The Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim team colors as of 2010 are: predominantly RED, with some dark blue and white.
what are sparks
The fire drill was a very simple technology known almost everywhere in ancient times. It is closely related to the drill used in making furniture, jewellery and boats and it used the principle that a piece of hardwood, when pressed firmly and rotated against a piece of softwood, generates heat by friction. The fire drill uses a flat piece of softwood with a small groove and hollow, into which the hardwood drill is placed vertically. The drill is rotated by means of a "bow" - a short stick with a cord which is wrapped twice around the drill. Downward pressure on the drill is also required. The drill does not produce flame or sparks, but hot embers from the softwood, charred by friction - these can then be used to start a fire. The first link below includes images of an ancient Egyptian fire drill (ignore the modern magnifying glass at the top of the page). The second link gives examples of many tools used in ancient Egypt, including the fire drill:
the writers are as follows: J. Fauntleroy II, Eric "Blue Tooth" Griggs, H. Mason Jr., D. Thomas, S. Russell