One can find a course for learning details on online statistics by going to the CMU website. Another place to find courses for learning details on statistics is the Berkeley website.
To find the critical value in statistics, it requires a hypothesis testing. Using the critical value approach can also be helpful in this matter.
in statistics, summation denoted by upper case sigma, is used to find the sum of a series of observation in a particular variable.
I am pretty sure that there aren't. I have been following this area very closely for several years and have never seen any statistics.
The term "muck fire" is a compound noun, with the noun fire modified by the noun muck as a noun adjunct (attributive noun).
lightning can start a muck fire if there is a natural resource in the ground where it strikes
A muck fire occurs when muck, a soil made up from peat in dried-out swamplands, catches fire underground. These fires can burn nonstop until reaching a water source.
Muck fires are difficult to fight. Often the only way to stop a muck fire is to contain it.
Muck fires are difficult to fight. Often the only way to stop a muck fire is to contain it.
Yes.
lignite
up to 500
In the book "Tangerine," the perfect conditions for the muck fire were the combination of hot, dry weather, the decomposing organic matter in the muck soil, and the lack of rain to help contain or extinguish the fire.
Firefighters are able to stop a muck fire when the rain comes. The rain seeps into the ground to put out the fire. Or the fire runs into a lake.
smoke and fire
No, but you can slow it down with fire breaks and keeping the surrounding areas clear of dead brush, alert a local FD and let them handle the rest of the job. NEVER try to contain a muck fire alone. The cause of them is lightning storms, the lightning will strike the ground and cause the fire, but it strikes in a marsh type area, thus it being a muck fire, the muck underground is flammable, and it smolders. That's what causes the smoke in the air. Muck fires are DANGEROUS!