Steven Dutch, Professor Emeritus, Natural and Applied Sciences, University of Wisconsin - Green Bay
Kani Masi was a destroyed Kurdish village. There was a British detachment there and a UN refugee center.
This Chinook is transporting water bladders.
As I was going through my slides, I found that some had a black band along the bottom where part of the shutter was not retracting properly. Backtracking through the slides, I found the exact frame where the malfunction occurred.
There's a low pass here on the road from Zakho to Begova and Kani Masi because soft red shale has been eroded. Unfortunately, it also crumbles easily, so the road up the pass is in a constant state of near-collapse. | |
Looking down, the red shale contrasts conspicuously with the resistant white sandstone. | |
The view from the pass is spectacular. |
We went back to Camp I briefly to attend a UN and NGO meeting
How this Kurdish kid at Camp I happened to get a T-shirt with a molecular diagram of the mineral beryl, in Spanish, no less, and then happen to wear it in front of maybe the only person in theater who would recognize it, is indeed one of life's little mysteries.
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Created January 10, 2000; Last Update January 10, 2000
Not an Official UW-Green Bay Page