Preview

Follow The Water Short Story

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
317 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Follow The Water Short Story
Science is study of the structure and behavior of the physical and natural world through observation and experiment. In the short story of “Follow the Water” many of the scientific facts about Mars can be found in the article “What Would it Take To Live There.” The first fact in “Follow the Water” is the deadly radiation that is found on Mars. “The cabin is made of thick black plastic, sturdy enough to protect us from the solar radiation, which can kill you—give you terrible skin cancer. That’s what the Firsts found out. Some of them had to have their noses removed.” In fact if you travel to Mar you could be exposed to the radiation which could cause severe memory loss, brain damage, and cancer. There is so much radiation in Mars because unlike

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Scientists are interested in whether water was or is on mars because this is the most direct clue to the signature of life. Scientist’s tests indicate most if not all water is frozen on Mars, but it was not in the distant past during which life could have existed.…

    • 482 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Sarah Gruen’s Water for Elephants is an account of ninety-something year old Jacob Jankowski’s life, both in the present day, where he resides in a nursing home, unhappy with his living conditions and the old age that has robbed him of his freedom, and through flashbacks of when he was young, traveling with the circus. Just a few days away from getting his veterinary degree from Cornell University, Jacob’s mother and father were suddenly killed in an automobile accident, sending Jacob’s life spiraling out of control; with his parents’ debt having left him with no home and no money, he hops aboard a circus train for the “Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth,”…

    • 1350 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    “The Color of Water”, written by James McBride, is a memoir. The book was introduced to us in 1995. The main narrator, James, born in the year of 1957 to an African-American father and a Jewish mother. James, at that time, was not to keen about the black power in the sense he had a white mother. During the Civil Rights, his stepfather had passed away. From this point on; James realizes the true responsibility of himself towards his friends and family. He unveils his true self to the world with his memoir entitled “The Color of Water”. His mother’s name was Ruth McBride. Her story was also compelling. Ruth, born in Poland in the year of 1921. Ruth was an immigrant to the United States. Later in her life, she met her black husband Andrew Dennis…

    • 810 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Wallace, David Foster. "This is Water." Kenyon college commencement speech. May 21, 2005. Wallace's speech gives a look at reality. The way an American adult's life is. The way how everything is routine, how if not "well adjusted," you will be self centered and in default setting. He describes the daily routine of an American adult, and how he goes to a supermarket, packed with more people. He gets frustrated and annoyed by all of these people; how they are just wasting his time. He then starts thinking how all of these people are going through the same thing he is going through; they have rough days just as he does. If someone was to think outside the box and actually focus on the beauty of this world, they will not be bored, annoyed, frustrated,…

    • 206 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    After reading the article “This is Water” by Wallace first of all I have to say that I enjoyed so much reading this article it had some great paragraphs that made you think and be like “Oh wow”. My overall thoughts about his article was that he was trying to convey on how most of the majority of adults life is on a every day to everyday basis with the majority have boring life and repetitive days making s angry and hate life because of the way we see life itself. He also talks about the way our brain sets up in the mode of its only about me and don’t see the lives of others and only worry about yours and makes it seem that only you are the one who is having problems and only you are the only one who matters in this world. But it’s not like…

    • 383 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Purpose: This text was written in order to bring light to the fact that as the science of hydrology has grown enormously in recent years, the legality that dictates how ground and surface water may be used has been stuck in the 1800s.…

    • 592 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In The Color of Water by James McBride, we are taught through the eyes of a black man and his white mother that color shouldn’t matter. Although Ruth McBride Jordan had grown up as a Jew and had a father who disliked Jews very much, she was never prejudice against them and learned that she fit into the black world better than the white world. When she married a black man, she accepted Christ into her life and told her children, “God is the color of water.” She taught her kids that color didn’t matter, because God loves all races.…

    • 571 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Short Story Mystic River

    • 704 Words
    • 3 Pages

    “The death part you do alone, but I could of helped with the dying” –Jimmy.…

    • 704 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Personally, I think the meaning of the short story “A Secret Lost in the Water by Roch Carrier is that we don’t appreciate our parents enough in what they are trying to teach us. While going through school and growing up, we tend to forget the lessons our parents and families have taught us. So, when we get to be an adult, a lot of our memories of our younger years have slipped our minds. Towards the end of the story, a farmer shows the boy the same alder branch his father had used to find water under the ground, and when the boy tried to use his own skills to find water, he had lost his fathers knowledge to find water sources. The farmer says, “Don’t feel sorry”, […] “nowadays fathers can’t pass anything on to the next generation”.…

    • 428 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In 1982 an Air Florida Flight crashed into Washington D.C., destroying an entire street and landing is the fridge waters of the Potomac River. After this crash as response units rushed to the scene, six people were found at the tail of the plane. The response units used a helicopter in an attempt to save all six of these people, but not all of them survived and that is what makes this story interesting. One man who was unidentified and later known as the man in the water, helped to save these five other survivors. Unfortunately, The Man in the water did not survive, but what he did helped to save the survivors. Many looked at this and saw it as a good deed, but others looked at it differently seeing it as an example of humanity and nature.…

    • 402 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The Red River Short Story

    • 1593 Words
    • 7 Pages

    River is loved by everyone from his small town in Tree Hill, located in North Carolina. He is known as the “perfect guy”. He is 5’8 with dark blue eyes. He is a pale Caucasian teenage boy. He had a tragic childhood, which is why many people feel sorrow for him. Everyone in his neighborhood knows the traumatic accident that happened to his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Camden died in a car accident while driving to the mountains on their way to surprise River. Luckily, River made it out alive. People think that River is an angel because although his parents are dead, he still manages to have perfect grades in all his classes. River was 16 when his parents died. Every night, he would quickly get flashes of memory going through his head. About the death…

    • 1593 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Blood River Short Story

    • 756 Words
    • 4 Pages

    I was at "Blood River" in Nairobi. My major problem is complaining about small stuff that happen to me now and then. I never had any patience, especially when it came to education. My dream was to get everything that I needed without issue. Nuur, my closest friend, always gave me guidance whenever he saw me getting out of line. He tried to solve other people’s problems before his own. He often took advantage of every opportunity that appear in his life. There was a day he gave me some great advice that, in fact, changed my life. He made me put other people’s problems before mine. From this, I learned about that people lacked opportunity, people lacking national security and individual having unfortunate circumstance.…

    • 756 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    “Floating” by Karen Brennan is a story about a woman who believes she can float or levitate. The authors target audience is people that have had depressing things occur in their lifetime, or even more specifically, women that have gone through miscarriages. The story is told through the perspective of a woman and I think that the author did this to show that if guilt and pain eat at a person this is what can happen. The author uses symbolism to get her point across. The story is told in the first person and no names mentioned in the story because it makes it more relatable to other people. The author portrays a woman who was pregnant, had a miscarriage and is depressed; she is also delusional and believes her baby is still alive and is her little secret, and lastly on some deep level she knows her baby is dead and feels a tremendous amount of guilt. The author shows that the miscarriage can be a metaphor for any situation in life: you lose something, or fail at something you cannot just give up, let the sadness overcome you, become delusional, or keep feeling guilty, one has to be able to move on and be happy, and live your life.…

    • 1799 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Water on Mars

    • 1737 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Mars perhaps first caught public interest in the late 1870s, when Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli reported using a telescope to observe canali, or channels, on Mars. By the turn of the century, popular songs told of sending messages between Earth and Mars by means of huge signal mirrors. On a darker side, H.G. Wells' 1898 novel The War of the Worlds portrayed an invasion of Earth by technologically superior Martians desperate for water. (1) In the early 1900s novelist Edgar Rice Burroughs, who is best known his creation of the jungle hero Tarzan, also entertained young readers with tales of adventures among the exotic inhabitants of Mars, which he called Barsoo. (2)…

    • 1737 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    aliens

    • 326 Words
    • 2 Pages

    An article on extraterrestrial life might not be finished without talking about Mars. Damages has been the grandest center of the progressing quest for life on different planets for a long time. This is not only a wild supposition or extravagant; there are a few reasons why researchers consider Mars the best place to search for extraterrestrial life. One motivation behind why numerous individuals, including researchers, look to Mars as a conceivable wellspring of life is on account of they accept there may be water on the planet. Since the telescope was initially created, space experts have had the ability to see the stations in the territory that look like waterways or gulches. Discovering water on a planet is fundamentally essential to demonstrating that life exists there on the grounds that it gesture as a dissolvable in compound responses for carbon-based life.…

    • 326 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays