Irish Daily Mail

Tall storeys of the future

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QUESTION

Skyscraper­s are a popular setting for films such as Die Hard and The Towering Inferno. Do any high-rises feature in novels? NOTHING Lasts Forever by Roderick Thorp has retired cop Joe Leland visiting his family at Christmas and getting caught up in a terrorist attack on an office party in a high-rise.

If this sounds familiar, that’s because the film Die Hard was based on this book.

Joe Leland became the rather younger John McClane, played by Bruce Willis.

Most of the famous scenes from the film originated in the book, such as the hero jumping off the roof wrapped in a fire hose.

The book was the second to feature Joe Leland. The first, The Detective, was released as a film in 1965, with Frank Sinatra in the lead role.

Nothing Lasts Forever was reprinted in 2013 to tie in with Die Hard’s 25th anniversar­y.

Matt McLean, Odiham, Hants. SKYSCRAPER­S are a plot device in several great sci-fi novels. The best has to be JG Ballard’s HighRise, published in 1975. Ballard was interested in the psychology of inner space rather than the outer space of convention­al sci-fi.

High-Rise charts the descent into anarchy of the residents of a brutalist tower block.

The novel begins with the remarkable sentence: ‘Later, as he sat on his balcony eating the dog, Dr Robert Laing reflected on the unusual events that had taken place within this huge apartment building during the previous three months.’

The House Of A Thousand Floors, by Czech author Jan Weiss, is one of the earliest sci-fi novels in European literature. It was published in 1929, just four years after Franz Kafka’s The Trial, which clearly inspired it.

The novel describes the fever dream of an injured World War I soldier. He finds himself in the stairway of a gigantic skyscraper, used as a metaphor for modern society. He must rescue Princess Tamara from Muller, the lord of the edifice.

Robert Silverberg is a wellregard­ed American sci-fi author whose 1971 novel The World Inside explores the harsh realities of life in mega skyscraper­s.

The novel is set on Earth in the year 2381, when the population has grown to 75billion. Most of the action takes place in Urban Monad 116, a 3km-high skyscraper.

A nod must be given to the 2000AD comic character Judge Dredd. Following a series of nuclear wars, much of the planet has become a radioactiv­e wasteland, so people live in enormous skyscraper­s, or blocks, in mega-cities.

To control Mega-City One, law enforcemen­t officers called Judges have been given the powers of judge, jury and executione­r – and Judge Dredd is the hardest of the lot.

The character was played in a movie of the same name in 1995 by Sylvester Stallone.

Most of the blocks are named after people of note from the 20th century, often to comedic effect: there is plenty of murder and mayhem in the benignly named Des O’Connor and Enid Blyton blocks. Justin Davies, Kiddermins­ter, Worcs.

QUESTION

Are there collective nouns for groups of dinosaurs? SPECIFIC terms for groups of dinosaurs have not been adopted, other than that it is convention to split them into herds for herbivores and packs for carnivores.

Birds are considered to be living dinosaurs, so it has been suggested we adopt terms such as flock, gaggle, colony and murder. The recent discovery of fossilised footprints in Canada suggest Tyrannosau­rs worked together to stalk prey. Palaeontol­ogists who favour this theory have taken to referring to hunting packs as terrors of Tyrannosau­rs. Martin Lang, Lyme Regis, Dorset.

QUESTION

Has a circle always had 360 degrees? THE short answer to this is yes. The ancient Egyptians first divided a circle into 360 degrees, but they inherited their numerical system from Mesopotami­a.

Mesopotami­a was the area along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers that makes up a sizeable portion of modern-day Iraq. Regarded as the cradle of civilisati­on, it was where farming began, written languages were first used and mathematic­s started. The bestknown ancient civilisati­on from Mesopotami­a is the Babylonian­s, and their first use of mathematic­s dates from between the fifth and third millennium BC.

The Babylonian system of mathematic­s is built on a base of 60 (we use a base of 10). From this we get 60 seconds in a minute and 60 minutes in an hour. If we didn’t have this base of 60, the design of clock faces would be very different. With a circular clock face of 360 degrees, each minute division equals 6 degrees exactly.

The Babylonian­s had a love of the number 60, perhaps because it can be divided in so many ways (by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20 and 30) and still leave a whole number. They passed this love of the number 60 to the Ancient Egyptians, who found it worked when it came to dividing a circle. And 360 is a similarly useful number when it comes to division.

Divide a circle into 6 and you end up with 6 equilatera­l triangles, each with 3 internal angles of 60 degrees. A right angle, important for building pyramids and temples, is a quarter of a circle and is a convenient 90 degrees.

The first calendars, also created by the Egyptians, had 360 days in a year, though this became problemati­c as it didn’t match the Earth’s orbit. Bob Cubitt, Northampto­n.

QUESTION

Were the sports brands Adidas and Puma establishe­d by rival brothers? FURTHER to the earlier answer about the feud between German brothers Adolf (Adidas) and Rudolf (Puma) Dassler, the animosity between the two companies was brought to an end in 2009, decades after the deaths of the siblings.

Puma’s CEO Jochen Zeitz made the first move. He called Adidas CEO Herbert Hainer to arrange a friendly soccer match to coincide with UN World Peace Day.

There were mixed teams of employees plus their CEOs. Hainer played in attack while Zeitz was goalkeeper. Will Hague, Solihull, W Mids.

 ??  ?? Enforcer: Stallone as Judge Dredd in the film of the same name
Enforcer: Stallone as Judge Dredd in the film of the same name

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