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Leonardo da Vinci's Glider and Parachute Idea

Leonardo da Vinci's Glider and Parachute Idea.jpg Venice in the Sixteenth CenturyThumbnailsDiscovery of loaves of bread baked 1800 years ago, at PompeiiVenice in the Sixteenth CenturyThumbnailsDiscovery of loaves of bread baked 1800 years ago, at PompeiiVenice in the Sixteenth CenturyThumbnailsDiscovery of loaves of bread baked 1800 years ago, at PompeiiVenice in the Sixteenth CenturyThumbnailsDiscovery of loaves of bread baked 1800 years ago, at PompeiiVenice in the Sixteenth CenturyThumbnailsDiscovery of loaves of bread baked 1800 years ago, at Pompeii

Leonardo da Vinci, the great Italian artist and scientist, who lived in the fifteenth century, spent years experimenting with the idea of flying. He made a number of sketches of wings to be fitted to the arms and legs of man. His plan for a parachute was soundly worked out and his idea that the wings of a flying machine should be patterned after the wings of the bat found expression in the doped fabric covering of our early airplanes.