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Thread: skiing civilizations

  1. #1
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    skiing civilizations

    have there ever been any civilizations who have used skiing for more than a recreational purpose? or that skiing has had a tremendous affect on their everyday life.

    draft due tomorrow




    thread prolly going to be deleted soon thanks to google


    EDIT: yay or nay could I construe:
    "In this paper you will investigate a civilization or culture of your choice, and show how water contributed to its rise, or fall, or both."

    to a paper about ski bums

    Towards the end of the 20th century due to econmic stability, lack of major conflicts in the US and Canada, development of mountanous regions, and newfound discovery of the superdrug p^2 (pow-pow) conditions were prime for the evolution of a new life calling: the ski bum.
    Last edited by lax; 03-08-2005 at 07:23 PM.
    http://tetongravity.com/forums/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=932&dateline=12042516  96

  2. #2
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    Seems like a stretch to me, but more power to ya if you pull it off.

  3. #3
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    pretty sure norweigans used skis to get around all winter dating back about 800 years or more...

  4. #4
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    I believe the oldest record of skiing is around 2000 years old & Scandinavian.
    Calmer than you dude

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by freshie247
    I believe the oldest record of skiing is around 2000 years old & Scandinavian.


    your probably right....i was half guessing

  6. #6
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    Actually I think it's a bit over 5000 years. I just read it somewhere in the last few days, maybe the ski museum in Stowe...

  7. #7
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    History of Skiing
    The oldest skis, found in bogs in Sweden and Finland, are believed to be 4,000 to 5,000 years old.
    http://inventors.about.com/library/i...s/blskiing.htm

    just one link in a sea of links about it.



    Petroglyph from Rodoy, Norway c.2500 B.C.

    Among the hard evidence suggesting such an early origin are a rock carving from Rødøy in Helgeland of a hunter on skis which has been dated at around 2000 B.C. and a ski found in a peat bog at Hoting in Sweden which is about 4,500 years old. {2} This Hoting ski is quite advanced technologically; more primitive types must have existed earlier. It can also be shown that the ski is an offshoot of the snowshoe. . {4} On distributional grounds it appears that the snowshoe must have been invented in the Altai mountain region of the Soviet Union by 7000 B.C. or earlier, after which it slowly spread east and west.
    http://www.naha.stolaf.edu/publicati...9/vol29_12.htm
    Last edited by powderfinger; 03-08-2005 at 09:01 PM.
    Livin the moon time.

  8. #8
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    http://www.skiinghistory.org
    http://www.abc-of-skiing.com/skiinghistory.asp
    http://www.iranmania.com/travel/tours/ski/history.asp
    http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Chateau/6110/ski.htm



    Skiing History - History of Skiing


    Thousands of years ago, Skiing started in Northern Europe and Asia. It is believed that the first skiers used Skis from the bones of large animals strapping the bones to the toe of their boots using leather strips. Meanwhile, wooden Skis believed to be 2,500 to 5,000 years old were found in Norway, Finland, and Sweden. All these early Skis were mostly used on flat ground since the Ski Bindings were loose toe straps that would not keep the Skis attached to the boots during downhill runs.

    There was a time when Skis were used in a war. This was during the Battle of Oslo, Norway (A.D. 1200) where Norwegian scouts used Skis to spy on Swedish enemies. In 1747, a Norwegian military Ski company was formed. This paved the way of introducing the manner of fastening the Skis both at the heels and toes of boots. In this way, the Skis remained attached even in downhill Skiing.

    Modern Skiing developed in 1850. Sondre Norheim, a Norwegian, invented the first stiff Bindings. He made them by tying pieces of twisted wet birch roots on his boots. These roots dried up and turned stiff. These Bindings provided more control than leather straps. With these improved Bindings, Sondre Norheim had come up with new turning motions.

    Other Skiing enthusiasts marked the development of modern Skiing. In 1896, Mathias Zdarsky of Austria introduced the technique of pushing one Ski at an angle to the fall line in order to control speed. During the early part of 1900s, Hannes Schneider, also of Austria, got inspired of Zdarsky's technique and developed new stopping and turning maneuvers, which he organized into the first formal method of Ski instruction. It was later known as the Arlberg technique, in which most modern Skiing techniques were based.

    In the early 1900s, Skiing became a very popular competitive sport. The first Slalom race was held in 1921 at Switzerland. After three years, Nordic competitions became part of the first Winter Olympic Games, as well as the Alpine events which were included in 1936.

    In the early part of World War II (1939-1945), Finland troops used Ski patrols to resist the Russian intruders, and in 1945, Ski troops of the U.S. army fought the Germans in the mountains of Italy.

    After the war, Skiing was seen in a whole new perspective. Skiing winners of international competitions got increasing publicity. This publicity, as well as the extensive television coverage of different Ski meets and exposure to other forms of media, have stimulated fascination to recreational Skiing. In fact, around 400 Ski resorts were built in the United States in 1960.

    Nowadays, Skiing is the most popular winter sport with about 45 million fans and thousands of Ski Resorts worldwide. The sport has developed itself in a couple of ways coming with a number of variations of which Snowboarding is the largest.



    THE EVOLUTION OF A PREHISTORIC SPORT: SKIING

    by Miriam Meijer
    SKIING is the world's oldest sport. The post-glacial Stone Age people of the northern latitudes in Europe and Russia used skis—not made for speed but to keep hunters on top of the snow—to survive harsh winters. The Rodoy rock carvings of a hunter on runners, 4500 years old, are above the Arctic Circle in Norway. The oldest ski, found in Sweden, is 5000 years old. Scandinavia's peat bogs contain many ski artifacts, and the Viking "Sagas" described kings as skiers. In 1206, two Norwegians on skis carried the infant heir to the throne, still celebrated as the "Birch leg Race" (legs wrapped in birch bark for warmth). Sweden's annual Vasaloppet Cross Country race honors Gustav Vasa's 1523 ski trip to raise an army against the Danes. Old skis consisted of one long runner, used to glide, and a shorter one to brake and climb (on which skins could be applied). By 1840, cross-country ski ("x-c ski") races, with skis of equal length, were held among military personnel in Norway. With civilian participation, ski contests became popular among rural peasants. Early ski races were all "Nordic" events: skiing over rolling terrain and down short steeper slopes where jumping was necessary. A "Nordic ski" refers to boots mounted to the ski only at the toe, with the heel free to move up and down.

    In 1868 Sondre Norheim, from the Telemark region of Norway, broke all records in Christiana (Oslo). The "Father of Modern Skiing" had added a willow strap around the heel and contoured his skis so that they were slightly waisted in the middle. His methods of artfully controlling speeds in downhill descents are now called the Telemark and the Christiana (now known as the Christie) turns. The first Winter Olympic Games in 1924 in Chamonix, France, had just 5 sports; both skiing events were Nordic: Ski Jumping and Nordic Combined. Cross-Country Skiing first made the Olympic agenda as an event during the 1932 Winter Games in Lake Placid. The Telemark turn proved to be insufficient for the steeper slopes of the Alps. Boots that were mounted to the ski at both the toe and the heel increased control for much faster speeds, giving birth to the downhill and slalom events. An Alpine ski event—the Combined—was first introduced in the 1936 Winter Games in Innsbruck, Austria.

    Alpine skiing is the fastest non-motorized sport on earth. Its popularity exploded after the invention of the ski lift. After World War II, Austria and Switzerland developed the first Alpine ski resorts. The most spectacular forms of skiing are ski jumping and ski flying, thrilling for both jumper and spectators. Giant Slalom appeared first in the 1952 Oslo Winter Olympics. Super G—a hybrid of Giant Slalom and Downhill—added a 4th Alpine ski discipline to the World Cup events in 1983 and the Olympics in 1988.

    The California Gold Rush of 1849 imported the "Norwegian snowshoes" to America. Gold miners, including many Scandinavian immigrants, used skis extensively in the Sierra Nevadas. "Snowshoe Thompson," a Norwegian-American who carried mail for 20 years from Placerville, California to Genoa, Nevada, made his "Snow-Shoe Express" the counterpart to the Pony Express. Miners amused themselves during the winter with downhill races. Camp rivalry created a racing circuit and secret recipes for "doping" (waxing) often determined the winner. Betting and après-ski revelry were intense. The first ski tournament in America was organized by miners in La Porte, California—15 years before Europe.

    The discovery of gold in the Rockies moved skiing to Colorado. At the turn of the century, many of Norway's finest ski jumpers came to America. Alf Engen, a sixteen-time U.S. ski champion during the 1930s and 40s, coached the 1948 U.S. Olympic Ski Team and taught skiing at Alta, Utah, for 50 years. Scandinavians who came to be miners and lumbermen became part of Upper Michigan's skiing history as well. The Norden Ski Club founded in 1887 in Ishpeming (a tiny mining community near Lake Superior) joined 17 other Midwestern ski clubs in 1904 to form the National Ski Association (NSA)—later the United States Ski Association. In 1907 Carl Howelsen, "The Flying Norseman," ski jumped in Madison Square Garden. Barnum & Bailey Circus billed ski jumping as "The Greatest Show on Earth." The early days of ski competition focused on ski jumping, which peaked in the 1930s. The 1940 and 1944 Olympics were canceled, but skiing became part of the war effort. Trained in Colorado, the 10th Mountain Division was deployed in Italy in 1945. Its veterans helped develop new ski areas nationwide. Once a rowdy silver mining town, Alta turned into Utah's first ski area and became a world premier Alpine ski destination, thanks to the Engen brothers (Alf, Sverre, and Corey) whose collective skiing feats were unrivaled. Salt Lake City will host the 2002 Winter Olympics. Seeking greater thrills, the first "ski flying" tournament was hosted in 1970 at Suicide Hill, Michigan. Rather than following the curve of the hill, ski fliers aim for much greater heights and distances, but the Olympics banned ski flying by limiting jumping distances to 90 meters. Federation Internationale de Ski (FIS), the governing body for ski jumping, holds ski flying on a 120-meter jump. There are no more than 100 skiers in the entire world capable of participating in this highly specialized and dangerous sport.

    A prehistoric sport has made a lot of history!


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    B i b l i o g r a p h y
    Baulch, Vivian M. "Michigan's Long History of Ski Jumping," The Detroit News (2000).

    Engen, Alan. For the Love of Skiing: From Dreams to Olympic Rings—Utah's Story (Gibbs Smith, Publisher, 1998). Ski News, Inc.

    SpeedSki.com History of Alpine Skiing.

    New England Ski Museum (1999). Franconia, NH (1999).

    Pfeif, Pat. "Ski History," Colorado Ski Museum (1996-2000).

    United States National Ski Hall of Fame. Ishpeming, MI.

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