Fairweather Fault Geologic Map
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Fairweather Fault Geologic Map
Fairweather or Fair Weather may refer to:. People * Fairweather (surname) Music * Fairweather (band), an American indie rock band * Fair Weather (band), a British pop group from 1970 to 1971 * ''Fair Weather'' (album), a 2000 album by Alison Brown * "Fair Weather", a track on the 2018 album ''The Light Is Leaving Us All'' by Current 93 Geography * Fairweather Glacier, Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska, United States * Fairweather Range, unofficial name of a mountain range in Alaska and British Columbia, Canada * Mount Fairweather, on the border between Alaska and British Columbia * Mount Fairweather (Antarctica) * Cape Fairweather, on the coast of Graham Land, British Antarctic Territory Ships * MV ''Fairweather'', a fast ferry for the Alaska Marine Highway System * NOAAS ''Fairweather'' (S 220), formerly USC&GS ''Fairweather'', a research ship in service in the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey from 1968 to 1970 and in the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheri ...
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Fairweather (surname)
Fairweather is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Al Fairweather (1927–1993), British jazz musician * Andy Fairweather Low (born 1948), Welsh guitarist, songwriter and vocalist * Bruce Fairweather (born 1960), American guitarist and bassist * Carlton Fairweather (1961–2025), English footballer * Catherine Fairweather, British journalist, editor, and podcaster * Denvor Fairweather (born 1975), Belizean television producer and executive * Digby Fairweather (born 1946), British jazz cornettist and broadcaster * Drew Fairweather (born 1979), American author * Eugene Fairweather (1920–2002), Canadian theologian * Fred Fairweather (1913–1983), Australian footballer (Australian rules football) * G. Ernest Fairweather (1850–1920), Canadian architect * Gaynor Fairweather, British ballroom dancer * Gordon Fairweather (1923–2008), Canadian lawyer and politician * Ian Fairweather (1891–1974), Australian painter * Jack Fairweather (politician) (1878– ...
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Fairweather (band)
Fairweather is an American rock band from Virginia, United States. They have released three full-length albums on Equal Vision Records: ''If They Move...Kill Them'' (2001), ''Lusitania'' (2003) and ''Fairweather'' (2014). The band also released several demos and the Alaska EP. In March 2011, after an 8-year hiatus, Fairweather formally announced a reunion show. The reunion show took place May 14, 2011 at the Black Cat in Washington, DC. The band continued with further shows since the reunion and subsequently recorded and released their third album in April 2014. Biography Fairweather began playing shows in the Washington, D.C., and various suburbs of Fairfax, Virginia. After much critical acclaim of their first album, ''If They Move...Kill Them'' (named from ''The Wild Bunch'') the band booked dates with Thursday, Brand New, Saves The Day, The Movielife, Piebald, Onelinedrawing, Codeseven, and other nationally known touring acts. The band announced that they would be dis ...
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Fair Weather (band)
Fair Weather was a British rock band formed in 1970 by former Amen Corner guitarist and singer Andy Fairweather Low. They are best known for their track "Natural Sinner". Biography The band evolved from a split within Amen Corner. While saxophone player Allan Jones went on to form Judas Jump, Fairweather Low led Dennis Bryon (drums), Blue Weaver (organ), Clive Taylor (bass) and Neil Jones (guitar) into the new band, Fair Weather. The band scored a UK Singles Chart Number 6 hit with "Natural Sinner" in 1970 and recorded one album, ''Beginning From An End''. From the latter were drawn three more singles, "Lay It On Me"/"Looking for the Red Label Pt. 2", "Tutti Frutti"/"Road To Freedom" and "Poor Man's Bum A Run"/"Don't Mess With Cupid". None charted and Fair Weather disbanded in 1971. Fairweather Low went on to a successful solo career before taking up regular work with Eric Clapton, George Harrison and Roger Waters. Weaver joined Strawbs and became an in-demand session pla ...
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Fair Weather (album)
''Fair Weather'' is album by American banjoist Alison Brown, released in 2000. At the 43rd Grammy Awards Brown and Béla Fleck won the Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance for "Leaving Cottondale". Guests include Stuart Duncan, Darol Anger, Vince Gill and Tony Rice. Reception In his Allmusic review, music critic Rick Anderson wrote that Brown "returns to her bluegrass roots on this beautiful and exhilarating album. Well, sort of... much of this is bluegrass music of a type that Bill Monroe might not recognize... The album's most thrilling moments come on the complex and exhilarating "Leaving Cottondale," which is both one of the prettiest and one of the most technically impressive of Brown's compositions. Here she's joined by fellow banjo maverick Bela Fleck for one of the most jaw-dropping passages of twin-banjo counterpoint ever put on tape. Call it bluegrass, call it newgrass, call it jazzgrass, whatever. This is one of the best albums of 2000 in any genr ...
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The Light Is Leaving Us All
''The Light Is Leaving Us All'' is an album by British experimental music group Current 93. It was released on 13 October 2018 through The Spheres record label and House of Mythology. The album was performed in its entirety on 13 October 2018 in a rare performance at O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire in London, backed by a series of slow-moving films bDavide Pepein the style of the album's artwork. Critical reception ''The Light Is Leaving Us All'' has received generally positive reviews from critics. Writing for ''Brainwashed'', Anthony D'Amico praised the album, stating it "effortlessly transcends time and space and dissolves reality to open a fleeting portal into an alternate world swirling with unknowable mystery, unearthly beauty, and ineffable sadness. At its best, this album feels like a motley and wild-eyed caravan of minstrels, actors, and puppeteers unexpectedly appeared in a medieval town to share a vividly haunting, hallucinatory, and deeply eschatological fairy tale that wi ...
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Fairweather Glacier
Fairweather Glacier is a long glacier in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in the U.S. state of Alaska. It begins on the west slope of Mount Salisbury and continues west to its 1961 terminus 0.2 miles (300 m) east of Cape Fairweather, 100 miles (161 km) northwest of Hoonah. Fairweather Glacier is the eponym of the Alaska Marine Highway fast ferry MV ''Fairweather''. References See also * List of glaciers A glacier ( ) or () is a persistent body of dense ice that is constantly moving under its own weight; it forms where the accumulation of snow exceeds its ablation (melting and sublimation) over many years, often centuries. Glaciers slowly defor ... Glaciers of Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve Glaciers of Hoonah–Angoon Census Area, Alaska Glaciers of Unorganized Borough, Alaska {{Alaska-glacier-stub ...
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Fairweather Range
The Fairweather Range is the unofficial name for a mountain range located in the U.S. state of Alaska and the Canadian province of British Columbia. It is the southernmost range of the Saint Elias Mountains. The northernmost section of the range is situated in Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park while the southernmost section resides in Glacier Bay National Park, in the Hoonah-Angoon Census Area. In between it goes through the southeastern corner of Yakutat Borough. Peaks of this range include Mount Fairweather (the highest point in British Columbia) and Mount Quincy Adams . The range is home to the Fairweather Fault, an active geologic transform fault of the larger Queen Charlotte Fault along the boundary between the Pacific and North American North America is a continent in the Northern and Western hemispheres. North America is bordered to the north by the Arctic Ocean, to the east by the Atlantic Ocean, to the southeast by South America and the Caribbean Sea, and ...
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Mount Fairweather
Mount Fairweather (or ''Tsalxaan'' in the Tlingit language) is a mountain located east of the Pacific Ocean on the Canada–United States border. With an elevation of , it is the tallest mountain in British Columbia and the seventh-tallest mountain in both Alaska and the United States. Fairweather is part of the Saint Elias Mountains and mostly lies within Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, though the summit borders Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park. After a failed attempt in 1926, Fairweather was first climbed in 1931 by Allen Carpé and Terris Moore. Naming It is said this mountain and ''Yaas'éit'aa Shaa'' (Mount Saint Elias, Mt. St. Elias) were originally next to each other but had an argument and separated. Their children, the mountains in between the two peaks, are called ''Tsalxaan Yatx'i'' (Children of Tsalxaan.) The colonial name for the mountain came from Captain James Cook,Terris Moore, "Mount Fairweather, Correction", ''American Alpine Journal'' 1982, p. 1 ...
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Mount Fairweather (Antarctica)
The Duncan Mountains () are a group of rugged coastal foothills, about long, extending from the mouth of Liv Glacier to the mouth of Strom Glacier at the head of the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica. Discovery and naming The Duncan Mountains were discovered by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition in November 1929 and named for James Duncan (shipping agent), James Duncan, the Manager of Tapley Ltd, shipping agents for the Byrd expeditions at Dunedin, New Zealand. Location According to ''Sailing Directions for Antarctica'' (1960), "Duncan Mountains (James Duncan Mountains) lie along the 85th parallel between 165° W and 168° W. These conspicuous foothills are marked by a series of ragged peaks rising to about 4,800 feet, eroded by many cirques and with small glaciers descending from the slopes." The northernmost point of the Duncan Mountains is Morris Peak, just east of the point where the Liv Glacier enters the Ross Ice Shelf. The Somero Glacier flows to the northwest of the Duncan Moun ...
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Cape Fairweather
Cape Fairweather is a cape in Antarctica that is high and is ice-covered except for rocky exposures along its southeast and east sides. It lies midway between Drygalski Glacier and Evans Glacier on the east coast of Graham Land and divides Nordenskjöld Coast from Oscar II Coast. Rogosh Glacier branches at the ridge forming Cape Fairweather and flows into Artanes Bay to the south, and into Weddell Sea west of Pedersen Nunatak to the east. The cape was charted in 1947 by the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey, which named it for Alexander Fairweather, captain of the Dundee whaler ''Balaena'', which operated along the northeast coast of the Antarctic Peninsula The Antarctic Peninsula, known as O'Higgins Land in Chile and Tierra de San Martin in Argentina, and originally as Graham Land in the United Kingdom and the Palmer Peninsula in the United States, is the northernmost part of mainland Antarctica. ... in 1892–1893. References Headlands of Graham Land Oscar ...
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MV Fairweather
MV ''Fairweather'' is a catamaran ferry built by Derecktor Shipyards in Bridgeport, Connecticut for the Alaska Marine Highway, Alaska Marine Highway System entering service 2004. After being laid up since 2019, in March 2021 it was sold to Servicios y Concesiones Maritimas Ibicencas for service between Mallorca and Menorca. Construction and characteristics Much of coastal Alaska is inaccessible by road, leaving many widely dispersed communities dependent on weather-affected flights and long ferry rides. Residents of Southeast Alaska urged political leaders to find better transportation alternatives. In January 2000 Governor Tony Knowles (politician), Tony Knowles rejected building a road from Juneau to Skagway which would connect the state capital to the rest of the North American road network. Instead, he pushed for fast ferries between the towns of Southeast Alaska. ''Fairweather'' was the result of this initiative. ''Fairweather'' was designed by BMT Nigel Gee & Associates of ...
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NOAAS Fairweather (S 220)
NOAA Ship ''Fairweather'' (S 220), originally operated by the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey as USC&GS ''Fairweather'' (MSS 20), is an Oceanography, oceanographic research ship operated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). ''Fairweather'' primarily conducts hydrographic surveys in Alaskan waters, but is considered a multi-mission-capable vessel and has conducted Fishery, fisheries research cruises. She is the sister ship of the NOAAS Rainier (S 221), NOAAS ''Rainier'' (S 221) and of the retired NOAAS Mount Mitchell (S 222), NOAAS ''Mount Mitchell'' (S 222). Overview ''Fairweather'' is named for Mount Fairweather in Alaska. She was constructed for the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey as a "medium survey ship" (MSS) by Aerojet-General Shipyards at Jacksonville, Florida, Jacksonville, Florida. She was Keel-laying, laid down on 12 August 1963 and Ship naming and launching, launched on 15 March 1967. The Coast and Geodetic Survey Ship commissioning, c ...
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