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・ Fire prevention
・ Fire Prevention Week
・ Fire Pro Wrestling
・ Fire Pro Wrestling Returns
・ Fire protection
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・ Fire protection engineering
・ Fire protection fluid
・ Fire in the Breeze
・ Fire in the City of Automatons
・ Fire in the Dark
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・ Fire in the hole
・ Fire in the Hole (album)
・ Fire in the hole (disambiguation)
Fire in the Hole (Silver Dollar City)
・ Fire in the Kitchen
・ Fire in the Lake
・ Fire in the Minds of Men
・ Fire in the Mist
・ Fire in the Night
・ Fire in the Nuts
・ Fire in the Pasture
・ Fire in the Sky
・ Fire in the Sky (disambiguation)
・ Fire in the Sky (Half Japanese album)
・ Fire in the Sky (Quasar album)
・ Fire in the Sky (song)
・ Fire in the Steppe
・ Fire in the Valley


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Fire in the Hole (Silver Dollar City) : ウィキペディア英語版
Fire in the Hole (Silver Dollar City)
Fire in the Hole is a three story steel enclosed roller coaster at Silver Dollar City in Branson, Missouri. The ride was built in-house by Silver Dollar City in 1972. The ride is often referred to as a cross between dark ride and roller coaster. A similar ride, "Blazing Fury", was built at Herschend Family Entertainment's other theme park, Silver Dollar City Tennessee, in 1978, now known as Dollywood.
==Theme==


Fire in the Hole is themed around the story of Marmaros, an Ozarks hill town. Marmaros was built near Marvel Cave and is the present day site of the theme park Silver Dollar City. Marmaros grew out of necessity. The miners attracted to the mining of guano from the cave along with their families began to grow in number. The investors designed a town with the intentions of becoming a resort village such as Eureka Springs, Arkansas or Monte Ne, Arkansas. Investments became substantial and the town’s population grew rapidly.
Marmaros’ existence relied heavily upon the mining operation of Marvel Cave. The town failed to attract tourists and began to slowly die out after mining ceased. Much of the town was later destroyed by fire, and what was left moved to a location south of the cave and is now submerged below Table Rock Lake.
The town was rumored to be burnt to the ground by a group of vigilantes known as the Baldknobbers. Obscure facts have turned into legend which makes deciphering the story virtually impossible. Some believe the burning of the village started out as a drunken fight in a local tavern. Others blame xenophobic outrage over William H. Lynch, a Canadian businessman who purchased Marvel Cave; Lynch would later open the cave as a tourist attraction. Evidence proves that the town did in fact burn, however the true story may never be established.
The original concept of the ride relied heavily upon Marvel Cave itself. During the planning phases of Fire in the Hole the ride was referred to as The Devil’s Den. This was a name given to the cave centuries before mining operation had started. The ride was to include volcanoes and exploding geysers. However, modifications were eventually made and the ride took on its current form.
Fire in the Hole's dated production values and odd subject matter have made the ride a cult favorite, with some people even developing "callback lines" to shout at various points during the ride. Riders pass scenes of the town's residents trying to extinguish the flames before crossing a collapsing bridge, nearly getting run-over by a steam train, and crashing into a dynamite storage shack. In the ride's finale the coaster trains are sent hurtling over a drop into a pool of water with a splash down finish. The splash has been part of the ride since its conception. Water cannons within the splash down lake can be enhanced during the summer months to drench riders and turned off during the cooler seasons to only mist riders.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Fire in the Hole (Silver Dollar City)」の詳細全文を読む



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