Welcome to ...

The place where the world comes together in honesty and mirth.
Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.


Saturday, November 8, 2014

Finding Spinosaurus

A Dinosaur Bigger Than T. Rex
by Tanya Lewis
Finding Spinosaurus: A Dinosaur Bigger Than T. Rex
A century ago, scientists unearthed fossils of a gigantic carnivorous dinosaur bigger than Tyrannosaurus rex in the Sahara desert, but until recently, paleontologists thought the fearsome beast was lost to history.
Known as Spinosaurus, the colossal predator sported a massive finlike sail on its back and a 3-foot-long (0.9 meters) jaw full of jagged teeth. Bigger than both T. rex and Gigantosaurus, it lived in the swamps and rivers of North Africa during the Cretaceous Period, about 112 million to 97 million years ago.
The only known specimens of Spinosaurus were destroyed during World War II, but a young paleontologist named Nizar Ibrahim has made it his life's work to track down traces of the massive beast. A new NOVA/National Geographic special follows Ibrahim on his journey to the dinosaur's final resting place.
Bigger than T. rex
A German aristocrat named Ernst Freiherr Stromer von Reichenbach made several expeditions to the Egyptian Sahara between 1910 and 1914, and discovered dozens of new dinosaurs, crocodiles, turtles and fish. Among Stromer's finds were two partial skeletons of a giant predatory dinosaur, which he named Spinosaurus aegyptiacus.
Stromer's skeletons were displayed in the Bavarian State Collection for Paleontology and Geology in Munich. During World War II, Stromer wanted to move the collection to a safer location, but he was an outspoken critic of the Nazi Party, and the museum director refused to move the skeletons. In 1944, Allied bombings destroyed the museum and with it, the only known fossils of Spinosaurus. Only a few old photographs and drawings remain, and Stromer himself has been largely forgotten.
But Ibrahim, now a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Chicago, and his colleagues launched an investigation to find more fossils of the elusive Spinosaurus.
Finding Spinosaurus: A Dinosaur Bigger Than T. RexDinosaurs have fascinated Ibrahim since he was five or six years old, he told Live Science. "I didn’t really see dinosaurs as big scary monsters or supernatural dragons, but as really interesting animals," he said. He learned about Spinosaurus from drawings in a children's book, but the illustrations were just guesses, since nobody knew exactly what the animal looked like.
Ibrahim wrote his own research proposal and obtained funding to travel to the border between Morocco and Algeria. There, he collected thousands of fossils, including the bone fragments and teeth of crocodiles, dinosaurs and flying reptiles. The ecosystem was totally dominated by predators, all living in the same place at the same time, Ibrahim said. "It was the most dangerous place in the history of our planet."
On a visit to Erfoud, Morocco, in 2008, Ibrahim came across a box of purplish stones with yellow streaks of sediment, containing what appeared to be a dinosaur hand bone and a flat blade bone with a creamy white interior. He bought the bones, even though he thought they were probably scientifically worthless.
The following year, Ibrahim visited the Natural History Museum in Milan, where some researchers showed him the partial skeleton of a giant dinosaur that they had obtained from a fossil dealer. Ibrahim immediately recognized it was a fossil of Spinosaurus. What's more, the bones were embedded in a purplish stone with yellow streaks, just like the one he had bought in Morocco. Ibrahim suspected the bones were from the same specimen, if only he could find where the rest was buried. But to do that, he would have to find the man who sold him the fossils.
"It was probably the craziest idea in the history of paleontology," Ibrahim said. He didn't know the man's name or address, all he knew was that the man had a beard. "It's not like finding a needle in a haystack, it's more like finding a needle in the desert," he said.
One day, Ibrahim was sitting in a cafe in Erfoud, ready to give up his hunt for the mystery fossil dealer. Just then, a bearded man walked by, and Ibrahim instantly recognized him as the man he had been looking for. The man took him to the original site where he had found the Spinosaurus bones, and there, the paleontologist dug up pieces of bone and teeth that matched those in the skeleton.
Ibrahim took the bones back to the University of Chicago, where he and his colleagues scanned them using a CT scanner, in order to create a digital reconstruction of Spinosaurus' skeleton.
But another mystery remained: Spinosaurus was a deadly predator, and it was found in an area with many other fearsome predators. How could the giant dinosaur coexist with so many competitors?
The answer seems to be that Spinosaurus lived in water for much of its life. It had long, slender jaws well suited for catching fish, short hind limbs that resemble those of the ancestors of whales, as well as flat claws and paddlelike feet. Spinosaurus' bones are also extremely dense, similar to other animals that spend a lot of time in water, Ibrahim said.
The purpose of the dinosaur's huge sail fin is still a mystery, but it may have functioned as a display structure to fend off would-be competitors.
"It's really exciting to find this incredible dinosaur," Ibrahim said. "But what's also interesting is the bigger picture." If you're trying to understand how the history of life on Earth has unfolded over deep time, "the Sahara is probably the best place to experience that," he said.
A life-size skeleton model of Spinosaurus is on display at the National Geographic Museum in Washington, D.C., until April 12, 2015.

Animals With Majestic Hair

No matter what sort of hair you've got (or how much), there's always a way to work it, and that's exactly what these animals do - their long hair makes them look fabulous and they know it.
For most of the animals on this list, their long hair or fur evolved as a way to cope with the cold. Others were bred to have long hair, and some of these are not even capable of surviving on their own in the wild because of it.

Strange Visitors

Warmer-than-normal waters off the west coast of North America are attracting an array of unfamiliar marine life from faraway places.

Animal Pictures

Friday, November 7, 2014

The Daily Drift

So, true ...!
 
Carolina Naturally is read in 200 countries around the world daily.   
 
Hey, wingnuts this means you ... !
Today is  -There is no special celebration  today
 
Don't forget to visit our sister blog: It Is What It Is

Some of our readers today have been in:
The Americas
Luquillo and San Juan, Puerto Rico
Toronto, Quebec and Calgary, Canada
Sao Paulo, Brasilia and Varzea Grande, Brazil
Cancun, Mexico
Guatemala City, Guatemala
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Caracas, Venezuela
Santiago, Chile
Bogota, Colombia
Europe
Mostar, Bosnia-Herzegovina
Ivrea, Bergamo and Naples, Italy
Salon-De-Provence, Champs-Sur-Marne, Rouen, Paris, Lyon and Velizy-Villacoublay, France
Bratislava, Slovakia
Athens and Vrilissa, Greece
Prague, Habry and Brno, Czech Republic
Vladivostok, Russia
Sofia and Ruse, Bulgaria
Eskilstuna and Mora, Sweden
Rendsburg and Zempin, Germany
Torrent, Madrid and Basauri, Spain
Milton Keynes, London and Waterloo, England
Kiev, Ukraine
Riga, Latvia
Triana, Albania
Ravne, Slovenia
Poznan, Poland
Reykjavik, Iceland
Halden, Norway
Groningen, Netherlands
Asia
Peshawar, Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore and Rawalpindi, Pakistan
Jakarta, Pontianak and Mulyorejo, Indonesia
Bangalore, New Delhi, Mumbai, Patna, Jodhpur, Kolkata and Delhi, India
Tehran and Shari-I-Tajan, Iran
Kathmandu, Nepal
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Petaling Jaya, Malaysia
Sinah, Iraq
Africa
Midrand and Cape Town, South Africa
Lusaka, Zambia
Cairo, Egypt
Accra, Ghana
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Windhoek, Namibia
Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
Yamoussoukro, Cote D'Ivorie
The Pacific
Kalgan, Australia

Today in History

1665 The London Gazette, the oldest surviving journal, is first published.
1811 Rebellious Indians in a conspiracy organized in defiance of the United States government by Tecumseh, Shawnee chief, are defeated during his absence in the Battle of the Wabash (or Tippecanoe) by William Henry Harrison, governor of Indiana Territory.
1814 Andrew Jackson attacks and captures Pensacola, Florida, defeating the Spanish and driving out a British force.
1846 Zachary Taylor, one of the heroes of the Mexican War, is elected president.
1861 Union General Ulysses S. Grant launches an unsuccessful raid on Belmont, Missouri.
1876 Rutherford B. Hayes is elected 19th president of the United States.
1881 Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday, two participants in Tombstone, Arizona's, famous Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, are jailed as the hearings on what happened in the fight grow near.
1916 President Woodrow Wilson is re-elected, but the race is so close that all votes must be counted before an outcome can be determined, so the results are not known until November 11.
1916 Jeannette Rankin (R-Montana) is elected the first congresswoman.
1917 British General Sir Edmond Allenby breaks the Turkish defensive line in the Third Battle of Gaza.
1917 The Bolsheviks, led by Lenin, take power in Russia.
1921 Benito Mussolini declares himself to be leader of the National Fascist Party in Italy.
1940 Tacoma Bridge in Washington State collapses.
1943 British troops launch a limited offensive along the coast of Burma.
1944 President Franklin D. Roosevelt is elected to a fourth term by defeating Thomas Dewey.
1956 UN General Assembly calls for France, Israel and the UK to immediately withdraw their troops from Egypt.
1967 In Cleveland, Ohio, Carl B. Stokes becomes the first African American elected mayor of a major American city.
1967 President Lyndon B. Johnson signs a bill establishing the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
1972 President Richard Nixon is re-elected.
1973 Congress overrides Pres. Richard M. Nixon's veto of the War Powers Resolution that limited presidential power to wage ware without congressional approval.
1975 A uprising in Bangladesh kills Brig. Gen. Khaled Mosharraf and frees Maj. Gen. Ziaur Rahman, future president of the country, from house arrest.
1983 A bomb explodes in the US Capitol's Senate Chambers area, causing $250,000 damages but no one is harmed; a group calling itself the Armed Resistance Unit claimed the bomb was retaliation for US military involvement in Grenada and Lebanon.
1989 Douglas Wilder wins Virginia's gubernatorial election, becoming the first elected African American governor in the US; during Reconstruction Mississippi had an acting governor and Louisiana had an appointed governor who were black.
1990 Mary Robinson becomes the first woman elected President of the Republic of Ireland.
1994 The world's first internet radio broadcast originates from WXYC, the student radio station of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
2000 Hilary Rodham Clinton becomes the first First Lady (1993–2001) elected to public office in the US when she wins a US Senate seat.
2000 Election Day in the US ends with Al Gore clear the winner between presidential candidates but the shrub stole the election with the complicity of the court subverting the will of the people.

This Firepit Doesn't Take Up Space While Not in Use

The problem with most fire pits is that when you aren't using them, they take up a lot of space. The clunky designs are nice to have, but they're hardly handy when your kids want to run in the yard. This cool Hole Fire Pit by Italian design firm AK47 let you have your yard and burn it too. The pit can be installed in any yard and aside from having a sturdy metal lid that lets you walk over it, it also has a grill attachment so you can grill up some snacks when you are using the fire pit.
Read more about the design over at Homes and Hues: A Fire Pit That Stays Out Of The Way Until You Need It

Banking Regulatory Reform

14487-banking_newsU.S. banking industry needs more effective regulatory reform

Stanford finance Professor Anat Admati says requiring financial institutions to […]

Women's urinals have proved to be unpopular

Four women’s urinals installed in a convention center in Salzburg, Austria, have proven to be so unpopular that they might have to be removed - despite being lauded for their hygiene and water saving potential.
The urinals were installed 12 years ago, to some excitement as they were considered rather modern at the time. However, they failed to catch on and are now often locked and out of use. The manufacturers of the urinals said that when used correctly they are more sanitary than ‘sit down toilets’ as the user doesn’t have to come into contact with the seat.
They also take up less floor space - having only a small partition wall between each urinal - and use less water. The four women’s urinals in the Salzburg Congress building seemed to be a cause of confusion, Bert Brugger, boss of Tourismus Salzburg GmbH (TSG) said.
Some women believed they had mistakenly wandered into a men’s toilet and others just had no idea how to use them - although an illustration was available. Brugger confirmed that the urinals could soon be removed. Austria’s Chamber of Commerce said it doubted that women’s urinals would ever prove popular in Austria and that restaurants and guest houses were not keen on the idea.

Chemical warfare agent translation error led to office evacuation

An immigration office in western Germany was evacuated on Monday morning after a translator mistakenly said a refugee was carrying a bottle containing a “chemical warfare agent”.

The Dortmund Fire Brigade’s duty manager Athanassios Thanos confirmed reports that 48 of the city’s fire fighters, including a special decontamination group in protective suits, responded to a call that a visitor to the offices of the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) was carrying deadly liquid in a bottle.
“We evacuated everyone, around 20 people,” Thanos said. “In the end, it turned out the translator made a mistake. After we analyzed the liquid, we found it was something similar to honey.” The translator was called to help a Serbian man file a request for asylum as the applicant could speak not speak German.
He told BAMF employees the man said he was carrying a “chemical weapon”. But the asylum applicant was actually trying to say the liquid would protect him from a chemical attack. The employees were told they could return to work a little more than an hour after they had been evacuated.

Mystery surrounds theft of 60 doorbells


Residents of Bendysh Road in Bushey, Hertfordshire, have reported that their doorbells were pulled apart. The police, who have received eight reports, are investigating the thefts and are appealing for witnesses.
They believe the incident happened between 7.30pm on Thursday and 10am on Friday. The offenders are reported to have pulled off the bell-push part of the doorbell and taken it with them.
Nick Green, who lives on the street said: "Approximately 60 doorbells in the area have been stolen. This is really annoying and we now have to spend money on replacing the bells. Whoever did this has literally pulled the bell apart and the only thing left is the plastic back."
Bushey north Councillor, Leslie Winters said: "I urge residents of Bendysh Road to go to the police if they have found their doorbell pulled apart. These people have done about a £1,000 worth of damage and need to be caught." If anyone has any information, they should contact the police.

Club bouncer guilty of 'manky feet' assault

A bouncer has been found guilty of assaulting a woman while throwing her out of a nightclub on account of her "manky feet". Danielle Kelly was left with cuts and bruises when she was "unceremoniously" ejected from Dusk nightclub in Stirling on 14 February after bouncer Michael Thom saw her with no shoes on. The 30-year-old was also convicted of grabbing another woman by the throat. Thom denied the charges, but was found guilty at Stirling Sheriff Court.
Ms Kelly, 20, told the court she had been instructed to sit in a booth at the club by another steward after she lost one of her high heels on the dance floor, before Thom intervened. She said: "He approached me and said my feet were manky, and I needed to get my shoes on or leave the club. He grabbed my by the arms and dragged me down three steps, and used my body to push through the fire exit onto an alleyway at the side of the nightclub. Because I was struggling he pushed me down onto a pile of stones. I got back up and he grabbed me again and chucked me back down and smacked me against a gate."
Ms Kelly's friends saw what was happening and followed, at which point Thom grabbed one of them, 19-year-old Amy Quinn, by the throat. Ms Quinn was uninjured, but Ms Kelly was left with cuts and bruises on her knees, a cut on the bottom of her back, and a bruise on her arm where Thom had grabbed her. Ms Quinn told the court: "He said she had manky feet and she had to get out." Thom, a licensed steward, of Kirkcaldy, insisted Ms Kelly "never fell", and claimed she was drunk and argumentative. He said he had told her she had to leave in case she cut her feet on the dance floor, and said he had joked: "I can smell your feet from here".

Finding him guilty of assaulting both girls, both from Falkirk, Sheriff Kenneth McGowan said there were inconsistencies in Thom's version of events. He said: "I think what happened here is that Mr Thom made an initial misjudgement in assessing the situation, and then he has lost his temper and committed these assaults. You pushed this lady out into an area where you had no idea what was underfoot - there could have been broken glass, anything." He deferred sentence until next month for clarification of means so Thom could be fined, and ordered him to be of good behavior in the meantime.

Man faces terrorist charge after brandishing scissors when told bar didn't sell orange juice

A man is facing multiple charges after he threatened the patrons of a bar with a pair of scissors after he was told the establishment doesn't serve orange juice.
Edward Iannacone, 50, was charged with making terrorist threats and possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose following an incident on Wednesday night at the Chester House in Manville, New Jersey. Iannacone entered the bar at about 10:20pm and ordered an orange juice.
When the bar owner told him there the bar did not serve orange juice, Iannacone said, "Don't ever do that to me again," then left the bar, according to an affidavit filed in Superior Court. Iannacone returned to the bar about 30 minutes later. He held a pair of five-inch scissors over his head and said he would kill everyone in the bar, the affidavit said.
Iannacone then left the bar, but police had already been called. Arriving officers found him on the sidewalk and several people outside the bar identified him as the man with the scissors, the affidavit said. When Iannacone started walking toward the bar, he was tackled and "disarmed" by police, the affidavit said.

Boston Marathon suspect's sister pleads guilty

Sister of accused Boston marathon bombers arrested after alleged bomb threat
A sister of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev pleaded guilty Tuesday to misleading a police detective during a counterfeiting investigation, avoiding jail time in an agreement with prosecutors.
Ailina Tsarnaeva, 24, entered the plea in South Boston Municipal Court. If she avoids further legal trouble for 30 days, she will be free of any court supervision. If she does get into trouble, the judge could sentence her up to 2 ½ years in jail.
Prosecutors said Tsarnaeva failed to cooperate with a police officer investigating the passing of a counterfeit bill by a group of people eating at an Applebee's restaurant in the South Bay Center, a mall in Boston's Dorchester neighborhood, on April 16, 2010. A server saw the group leaving and wrote down their license plate number.
Police traced the car to Tsarnaeva at her family's Cambridge home. When questioned, Tsarnaeva said she did not know the names of the people she picked up from the restaurant, according to the police report. She also told police that she had not lied but "did not want to be a snitch," according to the report.
In court Tuesday, Tsarnaeva's lawyer, George Gormley, acknowledged that Tsarnaeva had misled police but said her motivation was to protect a female friend, not the person who allegedly passed the counterfeit bill. Gormley said he obtained the name of that person from Tsarnaeva's friend and gave it to prosecutors.
Assistant District Attorney William Champlin IV said the disposition was appropriate because of the age of the case and Tsarnaeva's acceptance of responsibility by pleading guilty.
Jake Wark, a spokesman for Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley, said prosecutors also considered separate charges pending against Tsarnaeva in New York, where she is accused of threatening to "put a bomb" on a perceived romantic rival.
"The most effective way of handling this and not interfering with her other pending case is to place this conviction on file, which allows the judge to re-sentence her if she re-offends at any time during the next 30 days and also prevents any appellate challenges to the conviction," Wark said.
Tsarnaeva left the courthouse without commenting, carrying an infant and covering her head with the hood of a fur coat.
Tsarnaeva's brother could be sentenced to death if he's found guilty in the marathon bombing, which killed three people and injured more than 260 others. He has pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial in January.
Federal prosecutors say Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and his older brother, Tamerlan, planted two bombs near the 2013 marathon finish line. Tamerlan Tsarnaev later was killed in a shootout with police.

43-year-old woman who told police she was 22 claimed to have medical condition that aged her

A Florida motorist said she suffered from a “medical condition that makes her age faster” when a suspicious police officer questioned her claim that she was 22, according to a police report.
Upon spotting a Ford Ranger with inoperable tail lights, an Indian River County Sheriff’s Office deputy pulled over the pickup on Saturday night and asked the driver for her license, vehicle registration, and proof of insurance. The woman “said she did not have her license because she forgot her purse,” according to a police report. The driver then identified herself as “Christina R. Topp with a date of birth of March 16th, 1992.”
Deputy Colby Smith noted that, “Immediately I was suspicious because the driver appeared significantly older than that.” After providing her social security number, Smith reported, “the driver could tell I was suspicious and went on to tell me that she has a medical condition that makes her age faster.” However, after the deputy accessed a database that provided a photo of Topp, the driver “admitted that her name was Jennifer R. Crosby and she gave me her daughter’s name because her driver’s license was suspended.”
The 43-year-old Crosby was then arrested for driving on a suspended license and providing a false name. The Vero Beach resident was booked into the county jail, where she remains locked up in lieu of $4000. Crosby was arrested in June for possession of crack cocaine, which she hid in a body orifice. While fishing out the narcotics for officers, Crosby said “ouch” and remarked, “the foil is hurting the inside of my vagina.”

How not to teach kids a lesson

How not to teach kids a lesson A 28-year-old woman was sentenced Thursday to three years in prison for planting a pistol in a child’s backpack and anonymously reporting him to the school.
Heather Hodges, who pleaded guilty to unlawful carrying of a weapon on restricted premises in exchange for the dismissal of two lesser charges, was the live-in girlfriend of the boy’s father but they had struggled as a blended family.
Hodges wanted to teach 13-year-old James Bailey McKeegan a lesson for what she considered to be the mistreatment of her own children, ages seven and four.
So she took her boyfriend’s 9-millimeter Smith and Wesson handgun, replaced the child’s cologne and deodorant in his backpack, and then called Magnolia Junior High School from a nearby payphone to report him by name.

What Different Religions Say About Aliens

As a consequence of the rapid discovery of planets around other stars, it's possible that within a few years astronomers will discover clear evidence of life beyond the Earth. Such a discovery of extraterrestrial life will change everything.
Religions have surprisingly diverse approaches to the issue of possible extraterrestrial life, according to 'Religions and Extraterrestrial Life: How Will We Deal With It?', a book by David Weintraub.

Cool Facts About Your Biological Clock

Feeling tired after turning the clock back? That's because the internal clock that controls your circadian rhythms needs time to adjust. Circadian rhythms are physical, mental and behavioral changes that follow a roughly 24-hour cycle, responding primarily to light and darkness in an organism's environment.
Our biological clocks drive our circadian rhythms. These internal clocks are groupings of interacting molecules in cells throughout the body. A 'master clock' in the brain coordinates all the body clocks so that they are in synch.

Nightmare or Reality?

It doesn't happen often, but a new study finds that occasionally people wake up during surgery.

Conflict and Motivation

Sleepless nights can turn lovers into fighters
Intractable conflicts stem from misunderstanding of motivation

Idea of motive attribution asymmetry corrected with financial incentives Chestnut […]

Retro Photos

Wreck Discovered

The vessel found in the southern Caribbean may be the Huis de Kreuningen, which was lost during a bloody fight between Dutch and French colonists.

Illegal Discovery

Seven men have been arrested in Egypt after digging up an ancient temple under a house in Giza, just outside Cairo. 

The Sarcophagi Of Karajia

Northeast of the city of Chachapoyas, in Luya Province, in Peru, lies the archaeological site of Karajia, where the funeral tombs of the 'ancient wise men' are located. Perched high on a ledge by the side of a limestone cliff, the six sarcophagi resembling six limbless torsos with large heads and enormous jaw lines, stand proud with their chin up and facing the abyss.
The sarcophagi were built by the Chachapoya people to house the remains of important individuals in their culture, about 600 years ago. Originally, there were eight sarcophagi but two were destroyed by earthquakes and other natural elements.

Ganvié

Lake City Of Africa
This is not a picture of a flood. This is Ganvié, in the Republic of Benin, the largest collection of lake dwellings in Africa. 20,000 People call Ganvié's stilt supported dwellings home. The city, in the middle of lake Nokoué, is not a recent construct however.
Ganvié is up to five hundred years old. Sometimes called the Venice of Africa, like the Italian city its first inhabitants set up home there out of sheer necessity.

Kelp Forests

A decade of restoration efforts have helped bring back hidden kelp forests, which provide habitat for hundreds of marine species along the Southern California coast.

Explaining Rare 'Hole Punch' Cloud With Rainbow in the Middle

Residents of Wonthaggi, near Melbourne, Australia, were taken off guard by the appearance of a hole punch cloud earlier this week.
Photo of a fallstreak hole cloud with a rainbow in it.
Residents of Wonthaggi, Australia (map) snapped pictures of a rare, rainbow-filled "hole punch" cloud on Monday. By the next day, the photos had gone viral with speculation about the unusual phenomenon overhead
Clouds are made of water droplets, and hole punch clouds—also known as fallstreak hole clouds—occur when part of that cloud falls out, leaving behind a hole. That opening in the cloud is the result of an extremely localized snowfall.
Usually, atmospheric water droplets latch on to particles in order to form ice crystals, or snow. This happens on a massive scale during snowstorms. The only way water droplets can spontaneously form ice crystals without those particles is if temperatures fall to roughly -40°F (-40°C).
In a hole punch cloud, temperatures fall in only a small portion of the cloud, forming a localized snowstorm. When that snow falls, it leaves behind a hole. Refraction of sunlight by the ice crystals results in the rainbow, while the arrangement of those crystals gives us a bright patch of light in the middle called a sun dog.
The expansion of air as an airplane passes can also produce hole punch clouds by cooling water droplets enough for them to form ice crystals.



Missing Link

Evidence has been uncovered that connects the ichthyosaur with its transition from land to sea. 

Life-or-Death

An imagined race between a carnivorous tyrannosaur like T. rex and a big plant-eating dino found that the veggie-lover often won by outrunning and outwitting its predator.

Living with Dinosaurs

A scrappy, furry plant-lover named Luck coexisted with dinosaurs and provides important new insights into the evolution of Earth's earliest mammals. 

Koala saved by kiss of life released back into the wild

A koala who was brought back to life after being hit by a car has finally been released back into the wild. In August, Sean the koala stopped breathing and wildlife carer Michelle Thomas stepped in to give him the kiss of life and her mouth-to-mouth resuscitation successfully revived him.
Michelle has been caring for Sean at her animal wildlife shelter ever since. "He's an absolute sweetheart," she said. "He's been a really good koala to look after. He's a happy little soul." At his final vet check up, the feisty koala was fighting to get back into the wild, but he had to have some X Rays and a cataract checked first.
After being given the all-clear, veterinary staff deemed Sean well enough to return to his natural habitat. Sean was taken back to the bush, well away from any roads or cars. He was placed at the base of a gum tree and gave Michelle a kiss before taking off. He then climbed up the trunk and into the tree tops for his first taste of freedom in several months.

"It was a really strong climb up the tree so we know he's in tip top condition," said Michelle. A particular spot on the Mornington Peninsula was chosen for Sean's release because there is a young female in the area who will make a perfect match. It should not take long for him to find her, as he has already got the mating call down pat.

Ass stuck in manhole rescued by firefighters

Firefighters in the canton of Basel Country, Switzerland, faced an unusual rescue mission at the weekend - rescuing a donkey stuck in a manhole.
The 13-year-old ass, named Nilo, fell into the uncovered manhole in a playground in the town of Pratteln and became stuck. The incident occurred on Saturday when passer-by Bruno Schneider noticed the agitated animal with his head and two front feet sticking out of the ground.
Schnedier contacted the police who in turn alerted the fire department. It took a team of firefighters to lift the donkey delicately to safety. His hind legs were stuck in the piping below. Police said the donkey suffered a few “flesh wounds” that were quickly attended to but the animal was largely unharmed.
Spokesman Meinrad Stoeklin said Nilo responded in an exemplary way to the rescue. “He was very cool,” Stoeklin added. The cantonal force said the circumstances that led to the donkey falling into the manhole, and why the cover was removed, are the subject of an ongoing investigation. Nilo, meantime, has returned to his home in a petting zoo for children apparently none the worse for wear.

Invasive Bug Prompts Quarantine In Pennsylvania Townships

An adult spotted lanternfly is seen, its wings spread to show a colorful hind wing. The invasive pest has sparked a quarantine in Pennsylvania.
An adult spotted lanternfly is seen, its wings spread to show a colorful hind wing. The invasive pest has sparked a quarantine in Pennsylvania.The spotted lanternfly has officially arrived in the U.S., and leaders in Pennsylvania are hoping it won't be staying long. The invasive pest poses a threat to fruit orchards and grape vines, along with forests and the timber industry. It was detected in Berks County, northwest of Philadelphia.
"Berks County is the front line in the war against Spotted Lanternfly," Agriculture Secretary George Greig said in a news release. "We are taking every measure possible to learn more, educate the public and ourselves and eliminate this threat to agriculture."
The spotted lanternfly, or Lycorma delicatula, is native to parts of China and eastern Asia. It attacks trees by feeding on sap and harms them further by excreting large amounts of a fluid that coats leaves and stems and encourages the growth of mold, according to researchers.
Pennsylvania announced both the insect's discovery and a quarantine to contain it in a bulletin Saturday, saying that in the U.S., the spotted lanternfly "has the potential to greatly impact the grape, fruit tree and logging industries." The agriculture agency added that along with pines and stone fruit trees (such as peaches), the pest attacks "more than 70 additional species."
When officials declared a quarantine for the Pike and District townships in Berks County, they also urged citizens to help look for both mature insects and egg clusters. Adult spotted lanternflies begin to lay their eggs around September; nymphs emerge in the spring.
The state explains what its action entails:
"The general quarantine of the two townships restricts movement of any material or object that can spread the pest. This includes firewood or wood products, brush or yard waste, remodeling or construction materials and waste, packing material like boxes, grapevines for decorative purposes or as nursery stock, and any outdoor household articles like lawnmowers, grills, tarps and any other equipment, trucks or vehicles not stored indoors.
"Businesses in the general quarantine area need to obtain a Certificate of Limited Permit from the department in order to move articles. Criminal and civil penalties of up to $20,000 and prison time can be imposed for violations by businesses or individuals."
Greig said, "We know we're asking a lot, but we know Pennsylvanians will assist us and help save our fruit trees, grapes and forests."
A research paper about the bug's spread in Korea explains why it can be tough to control:
"Furthermore, no natural enemy of L. delicatula seems to exist in Korea. Thus, farmers use pesticides to control them in vineyards (Park et al. 2009). However, the use of pesticides kills natural enemies of other grape pests and L. delicatula can repopulate pesticide-sprayed areas from nearby forested areas, which contain suitable host species."
The study's authors recommended using sticky traps at the base of trees that can host the insects.
Here are some of the plants the bug particularly likes, according to the researchers: Ailanthus altissima (tree of heaven), Evodia danielii (Korean evodia), Parthenocissus quinquefolia (Virginia creeper), Juglans mandshurica (Manchurian walnut) and Vitis vinifera (the common grapevine).

Animal Pictures

Thursday, November 6, 2014

The Daily Drift

So, true ...!
 
Carolina Naturally is read in 200 countries around the world daily.   
 
Sax ... !
Today is  - Saxophone Day
 
Don't forget to visit our sister blog: It Is What It Is

Some of our readers today have been in:
The Americas
Longueuil, Quebec, Ottawa and North York, Canada
Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Kingston, Jamaica
Federal, Buenos Aires and Jose Bonifacio, Argentina
Luquillo, Puerto Rico
Lamentin, Guadeloupe
Managua, Nicaragua
Bogota, Colombia
San Isidro, Peru
Europe
Reykjavik and Selfoss, Iceland
Bergamo, Ravenna and Naples, Italy
Salon-De-Provence, Velizy-Villacoublay, Lyon, Roubaix and Paris, France
Karlin, Satalice and Prague, Czech Republic
Eskilstuna, Stockholm, Sveg and Kista, Sweden
Roosendaal and Amsterdam, Netherlands
Polva, Estonia
Dublin, Ireland
Vienna, Austria
Nesoddtangen, Norway
Saint Petersburg, Ryazan and Novosibirsk, Russia
London, England
Gdansk, Poland
Bucharest, Romania
L'Olleria, Spain
Kongens Lyngby, Denmark
Mostar, Bosnia-Herzegovina
Asia
Chakwal and Karachi, Pakistan
Kuala Lumpur, Mulyorejo and Bukit Mertajam, Malaysia
Jahanabad, Jodhpur, Bhubaneshwar, Patna and Denpasar, India
Tabriz and Tehran, Iran
Riyadh and Medina, Saudi Arabia
Bangkok, Thailand
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Damascus, Syria
Hanoi, Vietnam
Jakarta, Indonesia
Guangzhou, China
Africa
Cairo, Egypt
Johannesburg and Polokwanie, South Africa
The Pacific
Sydney, Perth and Subiaco, Australia

Today in History

1429 Henry VI is crowned King of England.
1812 The first winter snow falls on the French Army as Napoleon Bonaparte retreats form Moscow.
1860 Abraham Lincoln is elected 16th president of the United States.
1861 Jefferson Davis is elected to a six-year term as president of the Confederacy.
1863 A Union force surrounds and scatters defending Confederates at the Battle of Droop Mountain, in West Virginia.
1891 Comanche, the only 7th Cavalry horse to survive George Armstrong Custer's "Last Stand" at the Little Bighorn, dies at Fort Riley, Kansas.
1911 Maine becomes a dry state.
1917 The Bolshevik "October Revolution" (October 25 on the old Russian calendar), led by Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, seizes power in Petrograd.
1923 As European inflation soars, one loaf of bread in Berlin is reported to be worth about 140 billion German marks.
1945 The first landing of a jet on a carrier takes place on USS Wake Island when an FR-1 Fireball touches down.
1973 Coleman Young becomes the first African-American mayor of Detroit, Michigan.
1985 Guerrillas of the leftist 19th of April Movement seize Colombia's Palace of Justice in Bogata; during the two-day siege and the military assault to retake the building over 100 people are killed, including 11 of the 25 Supreme Court justices.
1986 A British International Helicopters Boeing 234LRR Chinook crashes 2.5 miles east of Sumburgh Airport; 45 people are killed, the deadliest civilian helicopter crash to date (2013).
1986 The Iran arms-for-hostages deal is revealed, damaging the Reagan administration.
1995 The Rova of Antananarivo, home of Madagascar's sovereigns from the 16th to the 19th centuries, is destroyed by fire.
1999 Australia's voters reject a referendum to make the country a republic with a president appointed by Parliament.