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Da Vinci’s parachute

Da Vinci’s parachute.jpg Da Vinci’s helicopterThumbnailsVeranzio’s parachuteDa Vinci’s helicopterThumbnailsVeranzio’s parachuteDa Vinci’s helicopterThumbnailsVeranzio’s parachuteDa Vinci’s helicopterThumbnailsVeranzio’s parachute
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Da Vinci’s third scheme for human flight, was a framed sail on which a man could ride downward, if not upward. This device never fails to navigate with its confiding sailor. Sometimes he lands in one posture, again in another; but voyage he must, with the certainty of gravitation. Leonardo is, therefore, the father of the parachute. This, in turn, has had a varied offspring. The common parachute, the aërial glider, the soaring machine, or passive aëroplane, that rides the wind without motive power and without loss of energy.

Author
Aërial Navigation
A Popular Treatise on the Growth of Air Craft and on Aëronautical Meteorology
By Albert Francis Zahm
Published in 1911
Available from gutenberg.org
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