Weird News of the World Thread - Part 2

Sailor Rescued After 66 Days Lost at Sea

oyjmbyuk8dohvu66lqes.jpg


A man who went missing more than two months ago was rescued by the Coast Guard, which apparently found him Thursday, floating on the overturned hull of his destroyed boat hundreds of miles off the coast of North Carolina.

A Coast Guard spokesperson tells the AP a German tanker spotted the debris and alerted authorities.

The sailor, 37-year-old Louis Jordan, disappeared in January after telling his family he was going on a fishing trip on the boat, NBC reports.

The Coast Guard said Thursday night a picture of Jordan's time at sea was beginning to emerge. On Jan. 23 he set sail from South Carolina, heading north. Jordan then decided to head offshore to go fishing, when his mast broke and his communication gear was damaged in a rough storm.

"At that point he became disabled and adrift," Coast Guard Lt. Krysten Pecora said at a news conference outside Sentara Norfolk General Hospital. Pecora added that it seemed the storm damage left Jordan unable to communicate back to shore.

Jordan says he survived through a combination of rationing the food he had already packed for the journey, drinking rain water and catching fish with a net, Pecora said.​

Investigators say they won't know what happened until they officially interview Jordan, but the marina manager where he stored his boat suggests inexperience may have contributed.

"He might sail up and down the Intercoastal Waterway, but he didn't have the experience he needed to go out into the ocean," the manager tells the AP.

Despite a shoulder injury and extreme dehydration, Jordan is recovering quickly—he was apparently able to walk without assistance almost immediately after reaching land.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MISSING_SAILOR_FOUND?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

That's hardcore, just goes to show you better known what your doing if you plan on heading out to deep water
 
Burger King Is Not King Anymore, Now This Pig Is King

ifsk1pf1uju5izjfkl7n.jpg


Roger Waters once wrote, "Big man, pig man, ha ha, charade you are." Was he talking about this pig who took over a Burger King in southwestern Pennsylvania on Thursday morning? He wasn't—he was talking about capitalism, or something about how you shouldn't trust authority, or maybe social inequality. Still, though, check out this pig.

The AP reports little Mr. Potbellied Pig wandered away from his little pig home and into a Burger King on U.S. Route 30 early Thursday morning. Burger King employee J.J. Nicols spoke to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review about his pig experience, which began "when [he] saw this big, black scary-looking ball of fur laying near the back door.” He continues:

"I was kind of scared. I got up and I realized it was a pig. I was beating on the back door, yelling for a manager and he was like, 'I'm not opening the door! Come round the side!'"​

Wow, rude manager. The New York Daily News reports the pig then blocked the drive-thru, straight up taking over the whole damn Burger King without even trying.

However, it wasn't all nonviolent resistance for this pig. Pennsylvania State Troopers were called to collect him after the fat little guy bit somebody on the little human foot. Nicols goes on about the foot attack, saying, "it was crazy":

"The pig was really friendly. [Pig bite victim Ashlee Shawley] was like, 'Hey!' And the pig just kind of walked up to her and bit her right on the foot."​

Damn.

Mr. Pig was eventually reunited with its owners and taken home. Big man, pig man, ha ha, charade you are indeed.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie...ME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2015-04-03-09-40-56

So begins the pig uprising
 
Man Found Dead in the Arms of His Lover, a Scarecrow in a Wig

uz7n8uzm9xl6nnhuphar.jpg


A lonely Argentine shepherd was found dead in his bed Tuesday, lying next to what initially appeared to investigators to be another person, but was quickly determined to be a scarecrow outfitted with "special features," including jeans, lipstick, a wig, and a 6-inch plastic sex tube.

The man, 58-year-old José Alberto Lescano, lived alone in a rural section of Balcarce, near Buenos Aires, and was described by a witnesses as a loner who never had visitors and didn't own a cell phone, the Buenos Aires newspaper Cronica reported. The shepherd's body apparently lay there for 24 to 48 hours before the owner of the house discovered it.

An autopsy revealed Lescano had died of "nontraumatic cardiac arrest," and there was no blood or sign of injury, according to El Diario de Balcarce, the only newspaper that visited the scene.

Local prosecutor Rodolfo Moure told El Diario Tuesday that "the presence of the doll is striking," and speculated that Lescano could have died in "some erotic game." Given the evidence, police thought it was unlikely there was third, non-scarecrow party involved in the death.

http://nypost.com/2015/04/03/shepherd-found-dead-after-having-sex-with-dolled-up-scarecrow/

There is somebody for everybody even if that somebody isn't real I guess
 
Teen Girl Miraculously Survives Car Careening Off Cliff, Landing On Her

zksb4r8buyjeaeia2wz5.jpg


A teen girl in Yavapai County, Arizona was driving her friends home from a day of activities when she took a turn too fast, toppling off a cliff one hundred feet below, and getting trapped beneath her car. She was trapped for four hours but somehow, miraculously, survived with only minor injuries.

The young woman was driving her two friends home, KPHO reports, when the driver took a turn too quickly, careening off a cliff. Her two friends were able to make it free from the accident within an hour, but the driver was trapped beneath the vehicle for four hours. Via KPHO:

"I just remember we had gone really fast around this corner and the car started to lean over, and we all kind of had that moment of, 'Oh crap, this is going to happen,' and then the car just started rolling," said Danielle Goldberg, who was a passenger in the car.

Reporter Greg Argos spoke with Goldberg and Viven Cantrell, the other passenger. The two Coconino High School juniors said their friend Holly was driving. The three had just left an afternoon of swimming at Fossil Creek and were trying to make it home before curfew.​

The 16-year-old was able to survive the accident because the car landed on her at exactly the right angle, one where the depressed hood of the car protected her from being totally crushed.

The driver of the car was airlifted to a Flagstaff Medical Center, while her two friends survived with minor injuries, police said. According to a NY Daily News report, alcohol and drugs have been ruled out.

http://www.kpho.com/story/28700795/...oes-over-cliff-near-strawberry?autostart=true

Nothing worse than that moment when you realize you royally f***ed up and there is absolutely nothing you can do about it
 
Everyone's Incomes Went Down Last Year, Except the Richest

Keeping abreast of the latest movements in America's class war: the rich are still winning.
According to the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics figures, for the year from June 2013-June 2014, every single segment of American workers saw its income decline compared to the year before—except for the top 20% of earners.

The bottom 20% of earners saw their income decline 3.5%
The second 20% of earners saw their income decline 2.7%
The third 20% of earners saw their income decline 2.8%
The fourth 20% of earners saw their income decline 2.1%
The top 20% of earners saw their income rise by almost 1%.

The BLS does not break out statistics more finely, but it is a safe bet that a large portion of the gains of the top 20% of earners were driven by disproportionate gains for the top 10%, and the top 5%, and the top 1%, and the top 0.1%. This is the second straight year that average incomes have declined.
Consider the fact that over the same period of time that incomes were declining for at least 80% of Americans, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by more than 10%. Thus the owners of capital grow wealthier while the majority of people who live by their labor grow poorer.
This has been your class war update. Please try to stop losing so much.

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/cesmy.nr0.htm

America is so awesome if your rich!
 
Monkeys Can't Stop Eating India's Delicious Fiber Optic Cables

crtsflkkiratyrm4ggzr.jpg


Right now, India’s in the middle of launching a massive, $18 billion plan to finally bring the country’s shoddy internet up to speed. There’s just one little problem: Adorable monkeys just can’t stop eating its delicious, delicious data cables.

Specifically, its the 3,000 year-old holy city of Varanasi that’s having the hardest time getting an internet overhaul, since its many temples are home to hordes of (presumably) hungry, tech-hating macaque monkeys. And since the monkeys are seen as sacred, chasing them away is apparently out of the question. As a communications engineer for the project told Reuters:

We cannot move the temples from here. We cannot modify anything here, everything is built up. The monkeys, they destroy all the wires and eat all the wires.​

The team even had to replace some of the wires less than two-months after they were installed because those goddamn monkeys couldn’t help themselves.

While the engineers are currently looking for alternative, prospects are bleak. According to Reuters, “The city of over 2 million people is impossibly crowded and laying underground cable is out of the question.”

Another option? Stop making such delicious cables.

http://in.reuters.com/article/2015/04/01/india-digital-idINKBN0MS5EP20150401

Who can blame them? Fiber optic cables are my fave late night snack :o
 
The Fake Places That Only Exist to Catch Copycat Mapmakers

twcikl9tqwg1wogxucgm.jpg


There are fake towns, there are real towns, and then there is Agloe in upstate New York. The town was invented as a cartographical ruse in the 1930s, but it somehow ended up becoming real. Agloe’s story might be the strangest in the already strange history of copyright traps in maps.

Usually, mapmakers don’t invent whole towns out of paper and ink. Usually, they craft more subtle traps: nonexistent dead ends or fake river bends or adjusted mountain elevations. Mapmakers rarely officially admit to “trap streets,” but it’s an age-old practice to keep copycats at bay.

If a competitor just so happens to have the same fake town on their map, then you’ve pretty much caught them red-handed.

That’s what Otto G. Lindberg of General Drafting Co. thought when he saw Agloe on competitor Rand McNally’s map. Agloe was the invention of Lindberg and his assistant, Ernest Alpers; its very name was a mix of their initials (OGL and EA). Agloe did not exist, Lindberg asserted with confidence.

Except it did. Rand McNally had sent cartographers up to upstate New York, and there, where Agloe was marked on a map, was a building called Agloe General Store. Huh? Robert Krulwich described this weird twist of fate for NPR:

The owners had seen Agloe on a map distributed by Esso, which owned scores of gas stations. Esso had bought that map from Lindberg and Alpers. If Esso says this place is called Agloe, the store folks figured, well, that’s what we’ll call ourselves. So, a made-up name for a made-up place inadvertently created a real place that, for a time, really existed. Rand McNally, one presumes, was found not guilty.​

So there you have it, a fake town that became real. Agloe’s fate may be among the strangest, but it is not the only copyright trap that took on a life of its own.

Argleton

Take Argleton, for example, a town in northeastern England—or, more accurately, an empty field in northeastern England. Yet, for a while, Argleton existed on Google Maps, and websites listed hotels, businesses, and apartments for rent in the town. The businesses were real, but they just existed in other nearby towns. In 2009, Google erased Argleton from its digital map.

Moat Lane

zvrclv3t7yujnt3x2o5d.jpg


Moat Lane is supposed to be a curving road in Finchley, North London, though Google’s satellite view reveals only trees and gardens. Like Argleton, Moat Lane was likely carried over from the TeleAtlas directory, which formed the early basis for Google Maps in Europe. Like Argleton, it has since been erased.

Lye Close

cvnfnec8haixcnmfd4op.jpg


The A-Z map of Bristol contains a little dead-end street called Lye Close, jutting out of Canynge Square. It’s not indexed in the map’s list of streets and it’s oddly placed, though you might say it is aptly named. Good job, mapmaker.

Kemp Ave

Because the practice of trap streets is unofficial, sometimes it’s not so clear if a nonexistent street was deliberate or just an error. Kemp Ave in Toronto, for instance, is an unmarked and unpaved lane behind some houses. It’s been erased from Bing Maps, but it still appears in Google.

Whither the trap street in the age of Google?

Perhaps you’ve noticed that the fates of many of these copyright traps have ended with being erased by Google or Bing or some other keeper of the digital map space. With multiple maps of every square mile of the world at our fingertips, trap streets are no longer the secret they once were.

Google, Bing, and HERE all gave me roughly the same response about how seriously they take such errors. And it’s true, many chronicled trap streets and towns have quickly disappeared from the digital record when someone pointed them out. These fake streets were always kind of a paradox, inherently contradicting a map’s purpose of accurately reflecting reality.

But that doesn’t mean digital mapmakers don’t still have tricks up their sleeves. OpenStreetMap, which is a wiki-style open source map editable by anyone, expressly warns contributors against copy existing map files:

A class of Easter Eggs can be implemented by digital map providers who do not want their raw map data (vectors) copied. The lower bits of the geographic coordinates are mangled in some systematic way so that it would not be obvious to a user of the map, but could be used in a Copyright trial to show that the data had been copied.​

There are more subtle things, too. OpenStreetMap is in the business of letting anyone copy their maps (with credit), and so when Apple Maps took OSM data, the community immediately noticed. They noticed, for example, that Apple Maps had the exact same streets and buildings labeled in Pakistan. They noticed winding trails oddly mischaracterized as roads.

tyj6mr7pjjm5mv2qg7bi.png


A similar area of Norwich in Apple Maps (left) and OpenStreetMap (right). The shape of the trails are the same, but they are miscategorized as roads in Apple Maps. As noticed by Alastair Aitchison.

“The specific shape of roads or coastlines or rivers are another giveaways,” says Alex Barth, who works for Mapbox and sits on the board for OpenStreetMap’s U.S. chapter. “A map is like a huge fingerprint.”

Trap streets are easier to spot nowadays, but that doesn’t mean maps are easier to copy sneakily.

http://gizmodo.com/the-fake-places-that-only-exist-to-catch-copycat-cartog-1695414770

What an odd practice
 
Fatal Familial Insomnia: The Brain Disease That Stops You Sleeping

vsttfv6a4wrv02wfflmj.jpg


Sometimes the worst nightmares are the ones you don't have. There are numerous conditions, disorders, and illnesses that either limit or prevents the amount of sleep an individual is able to get. Many of them are quite dangerous, but none of them are as frightening or rare as fatal familial insomnia.

Prion diseases are a category of rare fatal brain diseases that can strike both humans and animals. The disease hits the nervous system and impairs essential brain functions, which can cause memory loss, decrease in intelligence, personality and behavioral changes, and insomnia. It is caused by an altered and mutated PRNP gene, inherited from a parent, that manifests itself in misshapen protein cells that can pop up in brain tissue.

In humans, there are five known prion diseases: Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker Syndrome, Kuru, and Fatal Familial Insomnia. There are six known animal prion diseases, including bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or more commonly known as "Mad Cow Disease."

The first prion disease to be identified was in the 1730s when sheep and goats in Great Britain started to come down with a mysterious illness that caused them to be irritable, lose weight, and become uncoordinated. The illness, which became known as "Scrapie," could kill off whole flocks at a time. Scrapie was only found in Western Europe for the first two hundred years of its known existence, but in the mid-20th century, a Michigan farmer imported sheep from England and his entire flock was killed off by the disease. Today, only Australia and New Zealand are known to be free from scrapie.

Like all prion diseases, Fatal Familial Insomnia (FFI) is caused by a change or mutation of the PRNP gene, which allows it to clump together in the thalamus region of the brain, eventually destroying the cells there. The thalamus region controls sensory and motor skills, as well as regulation of consciousness and sleep. The mutated PRNP gene "eats" holes in the brain, giving it a "sponge-like" appearance. This can lead to the inability to sleep (progressively getting worse overtime) and when sleep is achieved, very vivid dreams. It has been observed from EEG readings taken while the victim is awake show signs associated with REM sleep. Essentially, they are so sleep deprived, they enter a dream-like state when awake.

Other symptoms associated with FFI include lack of controlled movement or coordination, as well as personality changes. Depending on the severity of the symptoms, it is fatal within months or could persist (and get worse) for a few years. The normal life span once diagnosed is 12 to 18 months, but it always leads to death.

Oddly, the first signs and symptoms of FFI don't tend to develop until our 40s and 50s. While no one knows for sure why the gene sits dormant and does not mutate until then, doctors have theorized that perhaps it is spurred on or activated by the vulnerability of the brain during middle age.

While no one knew it at the time, the first recorded case of Fatal Familial Insomnia (though, possibly not the actual first case of it) was that of a Venetian doctor in 1765. Originally thought to have died from "an organic defect of the heart's sack," he suffered from "paralysis" and long bouts of not sleeping, symptoms that are consistent with FFI. Not only that, as documented in the book The Family That Couldn't Sleep, he may not have been the first member of his family to die this way. The book goes on to detail the 200 year history of this Italian family and their battles with this rare genetic disorder.

There have been other profiled cases of FFI. In 1991, a Chicago music teacher named Michael Corke, shortly after his 40th birthday, began to experience insomnia. As it got worse and worse, his physical and mental health began to deteriorate. He was sent to the University of Chicago hospital and was wrongly diagnosed with severe depression. The symptoms got worse and Corke became unable to sleep at all. Eventually, doctors induced a coma. In the end, Corke died six months after the symptoms began. Some years later, his case was featured in the BBC documentary "The Man Who Never Slept." It is also unclear if there were others in Corke's family who suffered from this disease.

Another interesting story is the one of Vietnam man Thai Ngoc. In 2004, he claimed that he hadn't slept for 31 years (since 1973) after being stricken with a bad fever. Despite over 11,000 sleepless nights, he claimed that he suffered very little ill physical or mental effects. Some have claimed that Ngoc is proof that Fatal Familial Insomnia isn't always fatal. Others, primarily doctors and experts, have claimed that Ngoc is actually sleeping, he just doesn't know it. According to Dr. Wadhwa, some insomniacs can't tell the difference between sleeping and being awake and engage in very brief "micro-naps" throughout the day.

http://gizmodo.com/fatal-familial-insomnia-the-brain-disease-that-stops-y-1695446513

That sounds horrific
 
A Drug-Resistant Form of Dysentery Is Appearing in the U.S.

lrr4e5nj9dgxaru4iysn.jpg


A drug-resistant form of dysentery known as Shigellosis has begun to appear in the U.S, prompting the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to recommend that doctors stop providing antibiotics to treat mild forms of the illness.

In a report issued yesterday, the CDC explained that 243 people across 32 US states and Puerto Rico have presented with a drug-resistant form of Shigellosis, sometimes known as bacillary dysentery. Caused by the bacteria Shigella, the illness can bring about symptoms ranging from mild abdominal discomfort to fever and diarrhea with blood, pus, or mucus in the stool. It usually takes a week to recover from, but can be incredibly painful.

Shigellosis is increasingly brought into the country by international travelers—many of whom take the antibitotic ciprofloxacin to stymie its effect, as Verge notes. The CDC doesn’t know exactly why this new strain of drug-resistant Shigella has appeared, but it could be due to sufferers not finishing a full course of antibiotics—in turn exposing the bacteria to low doses which encourage resistance without killing them.

It’s feared that the new strain could spread rapidly. “Although this Shigella strain is strongly associated with international travel, it is now circulating domestically,” writes the CDC. “If introduced to populations of homeless persons, MSM, or children in child care settings, Shigella can spread rapidly and cause large, protracted outbreaks, as has occurred in the homeless population in San Francisco.”

Clusters of the drug-resistant form of Shigellosis have been idenitifed in Massachusetts, California, and Pennsylvania. The CDC has made a series of recommendations to try and curb the spread of illness. It suggests that international travelers consume hot foods and fluids directly from sealed containers and doctors prescribe ciprofloxacin less often when treating mild cases of Shigellosis. And, unsurprisingly, it encourages everyone to wash their hands thoroughly with hot soap and water. But you knew that already. Right?

http://www.theverge.com/2015/4/2/8335021/Shigellosis-cdc-drug-resistant-intestinal-illness

That is no bueno. Evolution strikes again
 
I wouldn't poopoo those recommendations.
 
It's amazing how often grown folks in our society have to be told to wash their damn hands with soap and water haha
 
The First Schizophrenia Medication Was Developed As An Antihistamine

q8brkf6u5cutujynfbrv.png


Thorazine, or chlorpromazine, was the first antipsychotic. It freed many people with severe schizophrenia from mental asylums, but that's not why it was developed. It was first tested because it's an antihistamine. Yes, like the allergy medications.

The incessantly itchy eyes and noses that some people get in the spring is the result of their body desperately trying to keep them alive. It senses an invader, and kicks into gear to fight this invader off. The fact that the invader happens to be harmless pollen cuts no ice with the body, so often the best way to tamp down the reactions is to tamp down the bodily system.

Antihistamines are good at that. They decrease the body's response to a lot of different signals. Sometimes this causes allergy sufferers more agita, as the antihistamines suppress body systems that are responsible for things such as salivation and alertness.

In 1949, a Henri Lavorit, a French doctor working in Tunisia, saw huge potential in antihistamine's suppression of bodily systems — including the autonomic nervous system responsible for many unconscious body responses. Too many patients were dying during surgery, due to the body's natural responses to being cut open, manipulated, and stitched back up. If Lavorit could suppress that response, he could save many lives.

One particular antihistamine, known as chlorpromazine, seemed to do a good job lowering blood pressure, but it also rendered patients utterly indifferent to their upcoming surgery. Lavorit wanted to use it on nervous surgical patients, but he was stymied when it did too good a job lowering blood pressure. The patients fainted.

Looking for a useful application for this drug, he tried psychiatrists treating schizophrenic patients. Up until then, the psychiatrists had been doing nothing more than knocking their patients out with sedatives, which were the only known way to treat mania and schizophrenia. When a schizophrenic patient took chlorpromazine, he was calm and rational in three weeks. In another few weeks, he went home. This was something that no one had ever seen before.

Today, the most popular theory is that chlorpromazine, better known as Thorazine, treats schizophrenia by doing just what antihistamines are meant to do — blocking an overactive bodily response. Too much dopamine can cause visual and auditory hallucinations. Thorazine blocks dopamine receptors. Some doctors disagree, and the "dopamine theory" of schizophrenia isn't universal, but few disagree with the notion that chlorpromazine was a revolution in psychiatric treatment at the time.

http://io9.com/the-first-schizophrenia-medication-was-developed-as-an-1695565236

As a schizophrenic person the history always fascinates me
 
We were using a gas station map - this was over 10 years ago and we didn't have our "Navigating Nancy" yet.
 
Ahh Ya than that's a good probability then. I'm sure you weren't the first person it happened to
 
There's a 400 million dollar collectible sneaker economy on Ebay

c0svhxzmdkd6ylo24hun.jpg


Remember those Back to the Future shoes we all freaked out over in 2011? They're but one instance of rare collectible sneakers, which have grown into a 400 million dollar economy on Ebay. Who knew?

And the number of collectors, or sneakerheads, is growing daily. According to Quartz:

Today, the numbers point to a growing, and increasingly globe-spanning, population of eBay-enabled sneaker collectors. Their spending on sneakers purchased over eBay has grown by double-digit percentages each year since 2010. Last year about 6.3 million pairs of sneakers were sold on the site. Of those, 1.2 million were priced at $200 or more, pushing total sales of those pricier models past the $400 million mark, and making them one of eBay's top 10 fashion categories, according to Marcelle Parrish, eBay's head of fashion.​

Leading the collectible craze are buyers in the UK, Germany, and the US, but emerging markets in India, Russia, and Italy have more than quadrupled in recent years. What are the world's growing population of sneakerheads buying? Mostly, Nike Air Jordans:

In 2013, Nike Air Jordans accounted for $1 in every $3 spent on sneakers on eBay. Of the more than 1,300 sneaker models that sneaker-data site Campless tracks on eBay, eight of the top 10 models in terms of dollar sales between March 2014 and February 2015 were Jordans. All 10 of the top selling sneakers on eBay—including those Air Jordans—were made by Nike.​

If you're still not convinced that sneaker collecting is worth your time, four words: Power laces are coming.

http://factually.gizmodo.com/theres...tible-sneaker-economy-1695724976/+maddiestone

I know CC is a sneakerhead
 
Punk Frogs Are First Known Vertebrate to Change Skin Texture

i7wvl6jllmuhnyohslgq.jpg


A new species of frog is the first known vertebrate able to change the texture of its own skin. The frogs, which live among mossy forests in Ecuador, sprout protrusions called tubercles to mimic their surroundings. When moved away from moss, the tubercles recede.

Named Pristimantis mutabilis, or the “mutable rainfrog” this trait has led them to be called “punk frogs” by their researchers, named so for their Mohawk-like protrusions.

Though the tiny, marble-sized frogs (23 millimeters) were discovered back in 2006, their mutative powers have only been documented recently. A bit like Michigan J. Frog’s refusal to perform in front of audiences, the frogs were able to fool their captors, causing them to think they had repeatedly collected the wrong specimen. As Katherine Krynak, biologist at Case Western Reserve University puts it, “We took a specimen back to the house in a cup to photograph it, and when we looked in the morning, we thought we had grabbed the wrong frog. We put the frog back in the cup with some moss, and soon, it had the spines again.” The research team set up cameras to take pictures of the frogs every ten seconds to monitor the changes.

Following the discovery, the researchers found another Ecuadorean frog, Prismantis sobetes would demonstrate the same skill. The discovery of these variable species poses challenges to amphibian taxonomists and field biologists, who traditionally use skin texture and the presence or absence of tubercles as discrete traits in diagnosing and identifying species.

The next step is to find how many known species are also capable of this shapeshifting trait – one that, until now, was reserved for select marine invertebrates like cuttlefish and the octopus.

http://www.newsweek.com/shape-shifting-frog-discovered-316605

That's pretty punk rock
 
Fish in Death Valley Hold Their Breath For Five Hours At a Time

bvdqou9z3iudrpcvwpx4.jpg


The desert pupfish, a fish on the verge of extinction due to the simple misfortune of living in Death Valley, has managed to survive by learning to hold its breath for up to five hours at a time.

Having spent the bulk of its evolutionary history in cool waters, the last 10,000 have been rough on the fish due to the valley’s ever-receding Lake Manley. The limited water and sheer heat have forced them to survive in temperatures as high as 95 degrees fahrenheit – and they’re not exactly flourishing because of it.

The pupfish survive by randomly switching between aerobic and anaerobic breathing techniques – an example of “physiological plasticity”, adjustments organisms are forced to make due to seismic shifts in their environment. Usually, such adaptations result in stunted dietary habits or hibernation, but the desperate pupfish has managed to cease breathing altogether. Unfortunately for the pupfish, life without oxygen takes 15 times the metabolic energy of regular breathing and the fish has a very short life span because of it. But desperate times call for desperate measures, and the pupfish is doing the best he can under the circumstances. Says researcher Frank Van Breukelen of the University of Nevada, “Sometimes organisms have to take the lesser of two evils, but it doesn't necessarily mean this alternative is a great option. We think this process is really tough on the fish.”

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/...ygen-environment-desertification-temperature/

I didn't even know they had fish there
 
UV Light Reveals Ghostly Graffiti in Medieval Manuscript

ya1pdmyt16n8n52tm7bu.jpg


The Black Book of Carmarthen, named for the color of its binding and believed location of origin (the Augustinian Priory of Saints John the Evangelist and Teulydog in Carmarthem), is the oldest surviving manuscript written in the Welsh language.

Excluding a few passages on the horses of great Welsh heroes, the book mainly contains poems dating from the 9th to 12th century – including the first written tales of Arthurian legends — all of which were chronicled by a single, unknown scribe in 1250. These include a conversation between Merlin and Taliesin and one of the very first appearances of King Arthur in known literature (in which he sings praises of his men in order to gain admittance into a castle!).

The original owner of the Black Book was believed to be Sir John Price of Brecon, who came upon the volume after he was sent by King Henry the VIII to loot ruined monasteries. Since then, the book has passed through many hands, including a 16th century gentleman believed to be Jasper Gryffyth, who felt it best to erase each mark written by previous owners in the book’s margins with a pumice stone.

Now, with the aid of UV light, PhD student Myriah Williams and Professor Paul Russel of the University of Cambridge have spent the last three years uncovering these mysterious etchings from the book’s animal skin pages – and revealing hordes of ghostly doodles in the process.

brqll36d3xda4etfxozr.jpg


Among the drawings, they’ve unearthed the heads of beasts, illustrations of fish, and a poem not previously recorded in the Welsh canon. Among the writings, the researchers discovered an inscription suggesting the book was gifted to a family member – and possible criticisms of the text itself.

The National Library of Wales has digitized the entire manuscript – which you can browse page by page, right now, at their website. Although no translations are currently available, the uncovered notes and scrawlings are now eminently legible on the first few pages of the legendary Black Book.

http://io9.com/uv-light-reveals-ghostly-graffiti-in-medieval-manuscrip-1695706365

How would they even know how to do that back then?
 
Human-Shaped Fungus Grows in England

whbo9ogc1ksvct2lep9l.png


A human-shaped mushroom species has been discovered on the side of a road in Norfolk, England.

Jonathan Revett, a mycology hobbyist for over 40 years and owner of fenfungi.com, found the mushroom and sent a specimen in for analysis after noticing its unique, humanoid shape.

Naturally seeming to possess a “head” and “arms”, the fragile stalk can split in two, creating the “legs” – which has caused some to compare the mushroom to a fisherman, or a “hat villain”, wearing a poncho.

The species has been named Geastrum britannicum, a new type of Earthstar mushroom; which means that locomotion isn’t actually out of the question. The fruit bodies of several Earthstar species are known to dry out and curl around the ‘shroom’s delicate spore sac. In this state, the fungus will detach from the ground and roll off toward new, moister pastures, like tumbleweeds. One such species, Sphaerobolus stellatus, is commonly referred to as the “shotgun” or “cannonball” fungus, as it’s capable of throwing black spore-globs on painted surfaces and ruining homes.

This tumbling humanoid fungus is both inedible and highly poisonous—not unlike a Triffid’s deadly sting. So stay away. “There’s no sense in getting killed by a fungus!"

https://uk.news.yahoo.com/new-mushr...ide-look-like-fun-guys-104248090.html#umGeKWc

Of course the UK has human fungi that kill you
 
UV Light Reveals Ghostly Graffiti in Medieval Manuscript

ya1pdmyt16n8n52tm7bu.jpg




http://io9.com/uv-light-reveals-ghostly-graffiti-in-medieval-manuscrip-1695706365

How would they even know how to do that back then?

We don't give humans of previous centuries enough credit. Sure they did some stuff that seems backwards, foolish, and strange but they were human just like us and possessed the same mental capacity we do. Just like we stumble unto discoveries and how to do new stuff so did they. We too often think that our ancestors were fools stumbling through the centuries until the Industrial Revolution came along. Truth be told they probably knew lots of stuff that is lost and we've yet to discover. They probably knew a lot of stuff that we think they didn't or couldn't have.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Staff online

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
202,265
Messages
22,075,719
Members
45,875
Latest member
shanandrews
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"