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Difference between revisions of "Wind Energy"

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'''Wind energy''' is a form of alternate energy that can be produced by harnessing the power of wind.  The '''wind turbine,''' the modern-day equivalent of the windmill, is used to capture the wind's power and to generate energy from that power.  As a form of energy, wind energy is both '''renewable''' (i.e., inexhaustible) and '''sustainable''' (i.e., able to be maintained without depleting natural resources).  Wind energy's potentially infinite supply is capable of providing power to large populations in areas where wind is plentiful and readily available.
  
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Brief History
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Wind energy has been readily available and used as a source of power throughout recorded human history.  Ancient peoples, such as the Egyptians, used wind power to move boats from one place to another by capturing the wind in boat sails.  Later, '''windmills''' were erected and used in China, Persia and the Middle East -- as early as 400 BCE -- to provide irrigation and power for grain mills.  These windmills used "sails" made of reed or cloth, which spun horizontally, to produce energy from the wind.  Later, windmills used sails that spun vertically to capture wind energy, such as the windmills erected by the Dutch and later throughout Europe and the Far East.  This technology was brought to North America by the earliest settlers, as they began to spread across the continent.<ref> United States. Department of Energy. "History of Wind Energy". Web. <http://www1.eere.energy.gov/wind/wind_history.html>.</ref>  For a more complete history of the use of wind energy, see
  
 
[[Category:Alternate Energy]]
 
[[Category:Alternate Energy]]

Revision as of 21:47, 29 January 2013

Wind energy is a form of alternate energy that can be produced by harnessing the power of wind. The wind turbine, the modern-day equivalent of the windmill, is used to capture the wind's power and to generate energy from that power. As a form of energy, wind energy is both renewable (i.e., inexhaustible) and sustainable (i.e., able to be maintained without depleting natural resources). Wind energy's potentially infinite supply is capable of providing power to large populations in areas where wind is plentiful and readily available.

Brief History

Wind energy has been readily available and used as a source of power throughout recorded human history. Ancient peoples, such as the Egyptians, used wind power to move boats from one place to another by capturing the wind in boat sails. Later, windmills were erected and used in China, Persia and the Middle East -- as early as 400 BCE -- to provide irrigation and power for grain mills. These windmills used "sails" made of reed or cloth, which spun horizontally, to produce energy from the wind. Later, windmills used sails that spun vertically to capture wind energy, such as the windmills erected by the Dutch and later throughout Europe and the Far East. This technology was brought to North America by the earliest settlers, as they began to spread across the continent.[1] For a more complete history of the use of wind energy, see

  1. United States. Department of Energy. "History of Wind Energy". Web. <http://www1.eere.energy.gov/wind/wind_history.html>.