Information about Making Fire

A Vanuatu man making fire using the "fire plow" method
The oldest way to make fire would have been to carry a burning coal around from a natural fire, and to keep it smoldering in dry plant material (e.g. sage, tobacco) that can hold a burning coal for long periods of time. Dry tinder can be added to the coal, and then blown on to form flames. The problem with this method is that the coal can burn out, and the coal needs new plant material over long periods of time to keep smoldering. It may have been difficult to travel long distances in wet conditions with a burning coal wrapped in such plant materials. Many natives in North America still use certain smoldering plants to keep a fire alive for days. Birch bark, tobacco, sage, and other plants smolder very well and provide both smoke for insect repelling, and hot coals for fire making.
Natural occurrence
Fire occurs naturally as a result of volcanic activity and lightning strikes, and many animals are aware of fire and adapt their behavior accordingly. Plants, too, have adapted to the natural occurrence of fire. Thus humans would have known about fire, and later its beneficial uses, long before the ability to make fire on demand was developed. In addition, the first and easiest way to make a fire would have been to use the hot ashes or burning wood from a forest or grass fire, and then to keep the fire or coals going for as long as possible by adding more wood and plant materials many times each day. Natural sources of animal fats and petrochemicals that burn could have been used to keep and maintain fires that started naturally.Various plants have seeds that germinate only after fire when the ground has been cleared of competing plants, a behavior called serotiny.
Eucalyptus trees contain flammable oils which make fires more intense.
Friction
An ancient method of making fire on demand consists of rubbing a hard wooden stick (for example some poplar) sharpened to a point, sometimes using a fire bow, on a hollowed piece of soft wood (for example fig wood). The heat produced is used to ignite tinder, such as charred cloth, dry plant material, or wood.The hand drill grinding against the soft wooden base causes black dust to form near the hole of the soft wood, and that becomes a red hot coal. Tinder is added, and by blowing on the coal and tinder, a flame is produced. It can take a great degree of effort and experience to discover a successful combination of materials.
The bow drill uses the same principle but the spindle is driven by a bow, which allows longer strokes. With a good drill, fire can be rapidly created even in wet conditions.
Percussion
To produce sparks, one strikes a hard stone, for example flint or quartz, on another containing iron such as pyrite or marcasite. Sparks with this method must be immediately in contact with tinder, or with black charcoal cloth or steel wool that will smolder from the spark. The material used to hold the spark is held above the flint or quartz, tight against the stone. The striker is then brought against the stone in a quick, straight downward motion. The stone pulls steel flakes off the striker, which become hot, molten sparks.Modern methods
Matches
The invention of matches dates from the nineteenth century.Lighters
Cigarette lighters combine ferrocerium with fuel, and can produce adjustable flames. They are also generally very simple to light.Electric
This is done using an object with a high electric resistance on tinder. A current is run through the object until it is red hot, much like the burners on an electric stove, and it is then brought into contact with the wood, lighting it. Also, a low electric current, such as a battery, coming in contact with a thin wire mesh (such as steel wool) will produce heat along the lines of charcloth which will also ignite with the proper tinder.Solar
This uses a concave mirror to focus the Sun's rays on some tinder. Alternately, a magnifying glass can focus the Sun's rays to ignite tinder.Spark
A gas flame may be ignited by a spark, typically generated by piezoelectricity.Compression
An unusual method of making fire is by using a device called a fire piston. Commonly constructed from wood, horn and plastic, it is composed of a hollow tube with one sealed end and a piston which fits snugly within the tube. At the end of the piston is a depression where tinder is held during compression as well as a gasket which is located just a few millimeters away from the end. The tinder is inserted into the depression, and the piston is quickly pushed into the tube. This compresses the air, raising the temperature in the tube, similarly to the way a diesel engine fires, to the point where the tinder ignites and forms an ember. Tinder can come from a variety of sources such as "Tinder Fungus" and char-cloth.This was observed in the jungle by Laurens van der Post.
Sustaining fire
Once the tinder is lit, it must then be transferred to a larger tinder, such as a bundle of dried grass and then blown gently until a flame is created. Then it is necessary to put this lit bundle on the ground and then twigs or other small tinder be placed above it, then small branches and large twigs and so on until logs can be sustained in the fire. Most fires that fail are due to trying to shortstep the process of stepping up the size of the fire; one can't light a log with a match.It is important to increase the size of the wood slowly, as a small flame cannot heat a large mass enough to cause it to emit combustible gases. In addition, it is important to ensure a proper airflow to bring enough oxygen to the process without displacing the flame from the gases or cooling the fuel too much.
Once a fire is well underway, it is then possible to add fuels with more water or sap content as the heat may be enough to boil off the water. In wet weather, dry fuel can also be obtained by splitting dried out logs. Although the outside might be wet, the freshly split inner surfaces should be dry.
External links
- http://www.motherearthnews.com/Nature-and-Environment/1982-01-01/A-Home-In-the-Wilderness-Part-III-Fire.aspx
- Fire for Survival
Coal (IPA: /ˈkəʊl/) is a fossil fuel formed in swamp ecosystems where plant remains were saved by water and mud from oxidization and biodegradation.
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Tinder is easily combustible material used to ignite fires by rudimentary methods. A small fire consisting of tinder is then used to ignite kindling. Anything that can be ignited by a match can be considered tinder.
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Flint (or flintstone) is a hard, sedimentary cryptocrystalline silicate form of the mineral quartz, categorized as a variety of chalcedony and broadly part of the mineral group known as silicas.
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The word spark has several meanings:
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- In electricity, "spark" usually refers to a momentary electrostatic discharge across a spark gap. It can also refer to a continuous electric arc or a corona discharge.
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Paleolithic is a prehistoric era distinguished by the development of stone tools. It covers virtually all of humanity's time on Earth, extending from 2.5 million years ago, with the introduction of stone tools by hominids such as Homo habilis
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S. apiana
Binomial name
Salvia apiana
Jepson
White sage (Salvia apiana), also known as Sacred sage, is an evergreen perennial shrub of the genus Salvia, the sages.
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Binomial name
Salvia apiana
Jepson
White sage (Salvia apiana), also known as Sacred sage, is an evergreen perennial shrub of the genus Salvia, the sages.
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Tobacco is an agricultural product processed from the fresh leaves of plants in the genus Nicotiana.
Tobacco has been growing on the American Continent since about 6000 BC and began being used by native cultures at about 3000 BC.
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Tobacco has been growing on the American Continent since about 6000 BC and began being used by native cultures at about 3000 BC.
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Tinder is easily combustible material used to ignite fires by rudimentary methods. A small fire consisting of tinder is then used to ignite kindling. Anything that can be ignited by a match can be considered tinder.
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Betula
L.
Species
Many species;
see text and classification
Birch is the name of any tree of the genus Betula (Bé-tu-la
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L.
Species
Many species;
see text and classification
Birch is the name of any tree of the genus Betula (Bé-tu-la
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Serotiny is the behaviour of some plant species that retain their non-dormant seeds in a cone or woody fruit for up to several years, but release them after exposure to fire. The cones protect the seeds from granivores and the heat generated by bush fires.
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Eucalyptus
L'Hér.
Species
About 700; see the List of Eucalyptus species
Eucalyptus
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L'Hér.
natural range
Species
About 700; see the List of Eucalyptus species
Eucalyptus
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This article is about woody plants of the genus Populus. For other uses, see Poplar (disambiguation).
Poplar, Aspen, Cottonwood
Western Balsam Poplar foliage
Scientific classification
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The bow drill is an ancient tool. While it was usually used to make fire, it was also used for primitive woodworking and dentistry. It consists of a bearing block or handhold, a spindle or drill, a hearth or fireboard
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Ficus
L.
Species
see text
Figs, dried
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy 0 kcal 0 kJ
Carbohydrates 64 g
- Sugars 48 g
- Dietary fiber 10 g
Fat 1 g
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L.
Species
see text
Figs, dried
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy 0 kcal 0 kJ
Carbohydrates 64 g
- Sugars 48 g
- Dietary fiber 10 g
Fat 1 g
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The bow drill is an ancient tool. While it was usually used to make fire, it was also used for primitive woodworking and dentistry. It consists of a bearing block or handhold, a spindle or drill, a hearth or fireboard
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Flint (or flintstone) is a hard, sedimentary cryptocrystalline silicate form of the mineral quartz, categorized as a variety of chalcedony and broadly part of the mineral group known as silicas.
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pyrite, or iron pyrite, is iron sulfide, FeS2. It has isometric crystals that usually appear as cubes. The cube faces may be striated (parallel lines on crystal surface or cleavage face) as a result of alternation of the cube and pyritohedron faces.
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The mineral marcasite, sometimes called white iron pyrite, is iron sulfide (FeS2). Marcasite is often mistakenly confused with pyrite, but marcasite is lighter and more brittle.
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A match is a consumable tool for lighting a fire under controlled circumstances on demand. Matches are readily available, being sold in tobacconists and other shops. Matches are rarely sold singly; they are sold in multiples, packaged in match boxes or matchbooks.
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A lighter is a portable device used to create a flame. It consists of a metal or plastic container filled with lighter fluid (usually naphtha or liquid butane under pressure), as well as a means of ignition and some provision for extinguishing the flame, by depriving it of either
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Ferrocerium is the "flint" in lighters, and its ability to give a large number of sparks when scraped against a rough surface (pyrophoricity) is used in many other applications, such as clockwork toys and strikers for welding torches.
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Electrical resistance is a measure of the degree to which an object opposes an electric current through it. The SI unit of electrical resistance is the ohm. Its reciprocal quantity is electrical conductance measured in siemens.
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electric stove is a cooker which uses electricity as a source of energy.
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History
Lloyd Groff Copeman invented the first electric stove in 1896 while working for the Washington Power Company...... Click the link for more information.
The word concave means curving in or hollowed inward. The term is most commonly used to refer to:
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- Concave lens, a lens with inward-curving (concave) surfaces.
- Concave polygon, a polygon which is not convex.
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mirror is an object with a surface that has good specular reflection; that is, it is smooth enough to form an image. The most familiar type of mirror is the plane mirror, which has a flat surface.
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A magnifying glass (called a hand lens in laboratory contexts) is a convex lens which is used to produce a magnified image of an object. The lens is usually mounted in a frame with a handle (see image).
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Piezoelectricity is the ability of some materials (notably crystals and certain ceramics) to generate an electric potential[1] in response to applied mechanical stress. This may take the form of a separation of electric charge across the crystal lattice.
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A fire piston, which in the Philippines is known as a sumpak,[1] is a device of ancient origin which is used to kindle fire. It uses the principle of the heating of a gas (in this case air) by its rapid (adiabatic) compression to ignite a piece of tinder, which is
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Sir Laurens Jan van der Post (aka Laurens van der Post) (December 13, 1906 – December 16, 1996) was a famous 20th century Afrikaner author of many books, farmer, war hero, to British heads of government, godparent of Prince William, educator, journalist, humanitarian,
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