Diesel

Diesel may refer to:

Technology

  • Diesel fuel
  • Diesel engine
  • Diesel cycle
  • Diesel exhaust
  • Diesel (game engine)
  • Diesel (programming language), successor of Cecil
  • Music

  • Diesel (band), a Dutch band
  • Udora (band) or Diesel, a Brazilian alternative rock band
  • Diesel (musician), an Australian rock singer-songwriter
  • Other uses

  • Diesel (film), a 1942 German film
  • Diesel, a 1985 film by Robert Kramer
  • The Diesel (aka D261), a character in Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends
  • Diesel, a character from The Railway Series
  • Diesel (Cannabis), a subset of sativa-dominant Cannabis strains
  • Diesel cigars, a brand manufactured by A. J. Fernandez Cigars
  • Diesel, a variety of the beer cocktail Snakebite
  • 10093 Diesel, an asteroid named after Rudolf Diesel
  • Diesel (brand), an Italian clothing company
  • Operation Diesel, a 2009 NATO military operation in Afghanistan
  • Names

  • Diesel Dahl (born 1959), drummer and co-founder of the Norwegian hard rock band TNT
  • David S. LaForce or "Diesel", cartographer and illustrator
  • John Riggins or "The Diesel", NFL football player
  • Diesel (musician)

    Mark Denis Lizotte, (born 31 May 1966,Fall River, Massachusetts, United States) is an American-born Australian musician, who has released material as leader of Johnny Diesel & the Injectors, under his birth name, or by the pseudonym Diesel. Two of his albums reached No. 1 on the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) Albums Charts, Hepfidelity in 1992 and The Lobbyist in 1993.

    Since 1987, Diesel has played on several albums by well-known Australian rock singer and brother-in-law, Jimmy Barnes. Although better known as a singer-songwriter and guitarist, Diesel is also competent on bass guitar, drums, percussion and keyboards; and has also produced an album by Richard Clapton and one by Vika and Linda Bull. He has won five ARIA Music Awards with three for 'Best Male Artist' in 1993, 1994 and 1995.

    Early years

    Diesel was born in 1966 in Fall River, Massachusetts, United States, and emigrated to Australia with his family, in November 1971. His father, Henry Bertram Lizotte (born 19 June 1929), and his mother, Theresa Rita (née Morin, born 18 January 1930) were parents of Jeannine, Bruce, Michael, Laura, Donna, Brian and Mark. They settled in Perth, Western Australia, where he later had a job pouring petrol—an experience that provided inspiration for his music. Henry was a professional saxophonist performing in the US and Australia, Diesel and his siblings were surrounded by music from an early age. While his siblings became teachers, Diesel eventually settled on electric guitar as his main instrument. He later recalled a time in Year 8 (c. 1979) at Scarborough Senior High School when he decided on a musical career: "I was trying to get my head around algebra [...] and suddenly I thought: 'Hang on, I don't have to do this. I can play music as a job!'".

    Robots (2005 film)

    Robots is a 2005 American computer-animated science fiction comedy film produced by Blue Sky Studios for 20th Century Fox, and was released theatrically on March 11, 2005. The story was created by Chris Wedge and William Joyce, a children's book author/illustrator. Originally developing a film version of Joyce's book Santa Calls, Joyce and Wedge then decided to develop an original story about a world of robots. Joyce served as producer and production designer for the film. It features the voices of Ewan McGregor, Halle Berry, Greg Kinnear, Mel Brooks, Amanda Bynes, Drew Carey and Robin Williams. The film received mixed or positive reviews from critics with critics praising the animation and visuals, but criticizing the story and it earned $260.7 million on a $75 million budget.

    Plot

    In Rivet Town, Herb Copperbottom, a dishwasher at Gunk's Greasy Spoon diner, races through the streets, elated that he is going to be a father. He and his wife, Lydia, after 12 hours of "labor", construct the baby. He is named Rodney, and he becomes a young inventor who dreams of making the world a better place. Rodney idolizes Bigweld, a master inventor and owner of Bigweld Industries. During Rodney's adolescence, he invents a gadget, "Wonderbot", intended to help his father clean the dishes at the restaurant. When Herb's supervisor unexpectedly confronts them, Wonderbot breaks dishes, causing Herb to be put in debt and Rodney to be dismissed. Rodney takes his invention to Robot City to see Bigweld and get a job as an inventor at Bigweld Industries, so that he can help his father pay back his supervisor. His father encourages him and confides that he has always regretted not pursuing his dream of becoming a musician. Rodney arrives in Robot City and meets Fender, a ramshackle robot who takes souvenir photos and sells maps to the stars' homes. After a spectacular but harrowing ride on the crosstown express, Rodney arrives at the gate of Bigweld Industries.

    Sulfur

    Sulfur or sulphur (see spelling differences) is a chemical element with symbol S and atomic number 16. It is an abundant, multivalent non-metal. Under normal conditions, sulfur atoms form cyclic octatomic molecules with chemical formula S8. Elemental sulfur is a bright yellow crystalline solid at room temperature. Chemically, sulfur reacts with all elements except for nitrogen and the noble gases.

    Elemental sulfur occurs naturally as the element (native sulfur), but most commonly occurs in combined forms as sulfide and sulfate minerals. Being abundant in native form, sulfur was known in ancient times, being mentioned for its uses in ancient India, ancient Greece, China, and Egypt. Sulfur is referred to in the Bible as brimstone. Today, almost all elemental sulfur is produced as a byproduct of removing sulfur-containing contaminants from natural gas and petroleum. The element's largest commercial use (after mostly being converted to sulfuric acid) is to produce sulfate and phosphate fertilizers, because of the relatively high requirement of plants for sulfur and phosphorus. Sulfuric acid is also a primary industrial chemical outside fertilizer manufacture. Other uses for the element are in matches, insecticides and fungicides. Many sulfur compounds are odoriferous, and the smell of odorized natural gas, skunk scent, grapefruit, and garlic is due to organosulfur compounds. Hydrogen sulfide imparts the characteristic odor to rotting eggs and other biological processes.

    Sulfur (disambiguation)

    Sulfur is a chemical element.

    Sulfur or sulphur may also refer to:

    Biology:

  • Coliadinae, a subfamily of butterflies commonly known as the Sulfurs or Yellows
  • Dercas, a genus of Coliadinae commonly called the Sulfurs
  • Colias, a genus of Coliadinae commonly called the Sulfurs (in North America) or Clouded Yellows (elsewhere)
  • Phoebis, a genus of Coliadinae that is not itself called the Sulfurs but that contains a number of species which are
  • Geography:

  • Sulphur, Indiana
  • Sulphur, Kentucky
  • Sulphur, Louisiana
  • Sulphur, Nevada, a ghost town and railroad siding at the Kamma Mountains in the Black Rock Desert
  • Sulphur, Oklahoma
  • Sulphur, South Dakota
  • Sulphur Mountain (disambiguation), various mountains
  • Sulphur River in Texas and Arkansas
  • Sulphur Spring, a geyser in Yellowstone National Park
  • Sulphur Springs (disambiguation)
  • Sulphur Creek (disambiguation), multiple
  • Other:

  • The sulfur cycle
  • Sulfur (pharmacy)
  • Sulfur (magazine), a defunct literary magazine
  • Fedora 9, codenamed Sulphur
  • Sulfur (band), an American dark cabaret band.
  • Sulphur, Louisiana

    Sulphur (French: Soufre) is a city in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, United States. The population was 20,410 at the 2010 census. Sulphur is part of the Lake Charles Metropolitan Statistical Area.

    History

    Sulphur is named for the sulfur mines that were operated in the area in the 1900s. In 1867, Professor Eugene W. Hilgard, an experienced geologist who was prospecting for oil and other minerals, conducted exploratory borings in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana and discovered sulfur in the caprock of a salt dome. However, the sulfur was beneath several hundred feet of muck and quicksand containing deadly hydrogen sulfide gas, which made mining extremely hazardous. Repeated unsuccessful attempts to sink conventional mining shafts in the 1870s and 1880s resulted in the loss of many lives.

    In 1890, the German immigrant Herman Frasch invented and patented the Frasch Process of mining sulfur, using concentric pipes to pump superheated water into the ground, liquefy the mineral, and force the liquid to the surface with compressed air. The first molten sulfur was brought to the surface on Christmas Eve of 1894. Sulfur soon began to be mined on an industrial scale, with the molten mineral allowed to solidify and dry in enormous vats 100 by 400 feet, then blasted and hauled by rail to the Sabine River for shipment. Frasch's invention greatly facilitated sulfur mining, and the Union Sulphur Company, a joint venture of Dr. Frasch and the American Sulphur Company that owned the land, sparked a period of booming growth in the decades that followed.

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