Is 93,737 seconds as long as The First Transatlantic Flight (Alcock and Brown, 1919)?
It's about one-and-three-fifths times as long as The First Transatlantic Flight (Alcock and Brown, 1919)
The length of The First Transatlantic Flight (Alcock and Brown, 1919) is about 58,300 seconds.
(John Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown) (1919) (first non-stop flight)
In an effort to win a £10,000 prize from London's
The Daily Mail, John Alcock and Arthur Brown completed a flight from St. John's, Newfoundland to Connemara, Ireland in
58,300 seconds in June, 1919. In spite of their fame as aviators, Brown would never fly again after this trip and Alcock would lose his life during a flight to France less than
15,800,000 seconds later.
MLA Style (8th Ed.)
"Is 93,737 seconds as long as The First Transatlantic Flight (Alcock and Brown, 1919)?" The Measure of Things, 2023, www.themeasureofthings.com/singleresult.php?comp=time&unit=s&amt=93737&i=146. Accessed 29 Jan 2023.
APA Style (7th Ed.)
The Measure of Things. (2023). Is 93,737 seconds as long as The First Transatlantic Flight (Alcock and Brown, 1919)?. Retrieved January 29, 2023 from www.themeasureofthings.com/singleresult.php?comp=time&unit=s&amt=93737&i=146
Chicago Style (17th Ed.)
"Is 93,737 seconds as long as The First Transatlantic Flight (Alcock and Brown, 1919)?." The Measure of Things. 2023. https://www.themeasureofthings.com/singleresult.php?comp=time&unit=s&amt=93737&i=146.