A Texas woman has lost her job and now is facing criminal charges for
allegedly stealing $6,400 worth of sausage from her employer, the
Kiolbassa Provision Company.
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.
Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Woman arrested over $6,400 sausage heist
A Texas woman has lost her job and now is facing criminal charges for
allegedly stealing $6,400 worth of sausage from her employer, the
Kiolbassa Provision Company.
Domestic cereals in evidence 7,000 years ago in Sudan
Plant
particles found during the excavation of this Neolithic cemetery in
Nubia (Sudan) turned out to be traces of domestic cereals when analyzed
in a lab.
Humans in Africa already
exploited domestic cereals 7,000 years ago and thus several centuries
earlier than previously known. Researchers have successfully verified
ancient barley and wheat residues in grave goods and on teeth from two
Neolithic cemeteries in North and Central Sudan.
The results of the analyses were recently published (online) in the journal PLoS ONE.Dr. Welmoed Out from the University of Kiel was involved in the investigation. “With our results we can verify that people along the Nile did not only exploit gathered wild plants and animals but even crops of barley and wheat.”
These were first cultivated in the Middle East about 10,500 years ago and spread out from there to Central and South Asia as well as to Europe and North Africa – the latter faster than expected. “The diversity of the diet was much greater than previously assumed,” states Out and adds: “Moreover, the fact that grains were placed in the graves of the deceased implies that they had a special, symbolic meaning.”
One
of the graves at the Neolithic cemetery in Nubia (Sudan), containing a
skeleton and plant material deposited behind the skull (white structure
at the left picture margin).
The research team, coordinated by Welmoed Out and the environmental
archaeologist Marco Madella from Barcelona, used a special high-quality
light microscope as well as radiocarbon analyses for age determination.
Mineral plant particles, so-called phytoliths, survive for a very long
time, even when other plant remains are no longer discernible. In
addition, calculus on the teeth provide evidence about the diet of these
prehistoric humans due to the starch granules and phytoliths.Read full paper here: http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0110177
The Stone Towers Of Svaneti, Georgia
The ancient province of Svaneti in Georgia is located on the southern
slopes of the Caucasus mountain range. Surrounded by the gigantic,
snow-capped peaks of the high Caucasus and deep gorges, Svaneti is home
to some of the highest and most isolated villages in the Caucasus.
Marauding armies from foreign lands used to trouble the Svans during the Middle Ages leading to the construction of watchtowers and fortified homes. When powerful empires rampaged through Georgia, icons, jewels, religious artifacts and manuscripts were brought to the towers for safekeeping, turning Svaneti into a repository of early Georgian culture.
Marauding armies from foreign lands used to trouble the Svans during the Middle Ages leading to the construction of watchtowers and fortified homes. When powerful empires rampaged through Georgia, icons, jewels, religious artifacts and manuscripts were brought to the towers for safekeeping, turning Svaneti into a repository of early Georgian culture.
Sheep farmer proposed to girlfriend with help from his flock
A resourceful sheep farmer from Willingdon in East Sussex found an interesting way to propose to his girlfriend.
Henry Brown, 34, surprised his girlfriend Emily Walker, 22, from Hailsham, by proposing with a helping hand from his flock.
“We both work in the sheep farming sector, it felt an apt way to propose,” said Henry, who farms 450 lambing ewes.
“You’ve got to make a bit of effort with these things, you only do it the once. I just thought I would make it a bit of fun really.” He said he planned the proposal in advance, and wanted to make sure it was imaginative. “We both had the day off so I said shall we go for a ride around the farm,” said Henry.
Earlier, he had got five of his flock, sprayed them with ‘Emily, will ewe marry me?’, and put them out in a separate field.
When the pair spotted the sheep in the wrong place on their morning ride, they went out to investigate.
Emily said, “I did not have a clue, I did not expect it at all. “I was really surprised. I walked up and saw the sheep and thought hold on what’s going on. Then I realized what they had got written on them. He then did the gentlemanly thing and got down on one knee.” Emily said yes, and now the pair, who have been together since May, have set the wedding date for June 27 next year.
Annoying Anaconda
Video of people annoying a giant anaconda. The participants have been fined by local authorities, but the video does show the impressive size of the snake.
Four Weird Ways Animals Sense The World
When humans sniff in order to smell something, we draw a quick puff of
air into our nostrils and over chemoreceptors in our nasal cavity. But
octopuses, butterflies, and other animals don't have noses like ours.
Instead, they've evolved other, sometimes bizarre ways of sensing the world around them.
Saturday, November 29, 2014
The Daily Drift
Hey, wingnuts, this means you ...!
Carolina Naturally is read in 200 countries around the world daily.
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:
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Tuckahoe, Silsbee, Tigard and Deeth, United States
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Mexico City, Mexico
Bogota, Colombia
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Europe
Nicosia, Cyprus
Sarajevo and Hadzici, Bosnia-Herzegovina
Athens, Greece
Boulogne-Billancourt, Rouen, Cherbourg-Octeville and Paris, France
Trinec and Prague, Czech Republic
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Moscow, Ryazan, Saratov and Nakhodka, Russia
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Africa
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Today in History
1760
Major Roger Rogers takes possession of Detroit on behalf of Britain.
1787 Louis XVI promulgates an edict of tolerance, granting civil status to Protestants.
1812 The last elements of Napoleon Bonaparte's Grand Armee retreats across the Beresina River in Russia.
1863 The Battle of Fort Sanders, Knoxville, Tenn., ends with a Confederate withdrawal.
1864 Colonel John M. Chivington's 3rd Colorado Volunteers massacre Black Kettles' camp of Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians at Sand Creek, Colo.
1903 An Inquiry into the U.S. Postal Service demonstrates the government has lost millions in fraud.
1923 An international commission headed by American banker Charles Dawes is set up to investigate the German economy.
1929 Commander Richard Byrd makes the first flight over the South Pole.
1931 The Spanish government seizes large estates for land redistribution.
1939 Soviet planes bomb an airfield at Helsinki, Finland.
1948 The Metropolitan Opera is televised for the first time as the season opens with "Othello."
1948 The popular children's television show, Kukla, Fran and Ollie, premieres.
1949 The United States announces it will conduct atomic tests at Eniwetok Atoll in the Pacific.
1961 NASA launches a chimpanzee named Enos into Earth orbit.
1962 Algeria bans the Communist Party.
1963 President Lyndon B. Johnson appoints Chief Justice Earl Warren head of a commission to investigate the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
1967 US Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara announces his resignation.
1972 Atari announces the release of Pong, the first commercially successful video game.
2007 Armed forces of the Philippines besiege The Peninsula Manila in response to a mutiny led by Senator Antonio Trillanes.
1787 Louis XVI promulgates an edict of tolerance, granting civil status to Protestants.
1812 The last elements of Napoleon Bonaparte's Grand Armee retreats across the Beresina River in Russia.
1863 The Battle of Fort Sanders, Knoxville, Tenn., ends with a Confederate withdrawal.
1864 Colonel John M. Chivington's 3rd Colorado Volunteers massacre Black Kettles' camp of Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians at Sand Creek, Colo.
1903 An Inquiry into the U.S. Postal Service demonstrates the government has lost millions in fraud.
1923 An international commission headed by American banker Charles Dawes is set up to investigate the German economy.
1929 Commander Richard Byrd makes the first flight over the South Pole.
1931 The Spanish government seizes large estates for land redistribution.
1939 Soviet planes bomb an airfield at Helsinki, Finland.
1948 The Metropolitan Opera is televised for the first time as the season opens with "Othello."
1948 The popular children's television show, Kukla, Fran and Ollie, premieres.
1949 The United States announces it will conduct atomic tests at Eniwetok Atoll in the Pacific.
1961 NASA launches a chimpanzee named Enos into Earth orbit.
1962 Algeria bans the Communist Party.
1963 President Lyndon B. Johnson appoints Chief Justice Earl Warren head of a commission to investigate the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
1967 US Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara announces his resignation.
1972 Atari announces the release of Pong, the first commercially successful video game.
2007 Armed forces of the Philippines besiege The Peninsula Manila in response to a mutiny led by Senator Antonio Trillanes.
Photos of colorful Tokyo
Kevin Kelly searches for maximum vibrancy in Tokyo
The Nakasendo is an old road in Japan that
connects Kyoto to Tokyo. It was once a major foot highway, but today
small sections retain some of its historical feel. In October I walked
along 5 short sections of it, staying at traditional inns along the way.
The Nakasendo is full of history and many artists and poets over the
centuries have travelled along it, including Basho, the haiku genius. We
met a lot of characters, too, and thoroughly enjoyed the exquisite
details that make up this country. [See Kevin's photos of the Nakasendo here]
The other side of Japan is full-tilt modern,
and at times, overloaded with color. The Japanese also love uniforms;
every role has a uniform. I tried to capture some of the uniforms on the
streets and trains, especially the cosplay uniforms in Harajuku, Tokyo.
I found maximum color in Japanese shows on TV, in their vending
machines, and at a crazy, bonkers, over-the-top show in Tokyo called the
Robot Restaurant. Turn up that color dial to 11!
BoingBoing has a host of colorful photos: here.
With One Move Obama Has Completely Shattered The repugican Agenda
The consequence of President Obama turning the tables and using the repugican just say no strategy against them is that the president has
completely shattered Boehner and McConnell’s agenda.
Jonathan Chait explained how the repugican model of obstruct and blame worked for repugicans,
The repugican cabal has withheld cooperation from every major element of President Obama’s agenda, beginning with the stimulus, through health-care reform, financial regulation, the environment, long-term debt reduction, and so on. That stance has worked extremely well as a political strategy. Most people pay little attention to politics and tend to hold the president responsible for outcomes. If repugicans turn every issue into an intractable partisan scrum, people get frustrated with the status quo and take out their frustration on the president’s party. It’s a formula, but it works.
The formula only fails to work if the president happens to have an easy and legal way to act on the issue in question without Congress. Obama can’t do that on infrastructure, or the grand bargain, and he couldn’t do it on health care. But he could do it on immigration. So repugicans were stuck carrying out a strategy whose endgame would normally be “bill fails, public blames Obama” that instead wound up “Obama acts unilaterally, claims credit, forces repugicans to take poisonous stance in opposition.” They had grown so accustomed to holding all the legislative leverage, they couldn’t adapt to a circumstance where they had none.
Obama knew that repugicans wouldn’t act on
immigration no matter what he said, so the president used this knowledge
against them. The problem with only having one strategy is that
eventually opponents figure out how to defeat it. President Obama took
one step beyond defeating it, and used the only game that repugicans
know how to play to his advantage.
The simple fact is that repugicans don’t act on
anything the president proposes. Having seen this behavior for years,
the White House knew that they could threaten immigration action for
months and repugicans would respond by doing nothing. After the
president had acted, repugicans were placed in a new dynamic that they
weren’t built for.
The repugicans have no counter immigration bill to
offer. They have no legal leg to stand on to oppose the president’s
action. Their position on the issue is unpopular and costing them
support with Latinos. They have so conditioned themselves to view
inaction as action that when they are forced to act, they can’t.
The new dynamic that Obama forced on Boehner and
McConnell has devastated the repugican agenda, and it signals the
beginning of a new era in congressional/presidential relations. Repugicans aren’t going to be able to leverage Obama vetoes to their
advantage, and they are going to be faced with the fact their agenda will never see daylight.
Another Epic repugican cabal Fail: Almost Half a Million People Sign Up for Obamacare in First Week
Almost half a million people signed up in a week.
It’s the close of week one of the open enrollment period for Obamacare,
aka, “the glitch” that killed American’s desire for affordable health
insurance, according to your media and repugicans last year.
In week one (November 15 -November 21) of open
enrollment on year two, 462,125 people selected plans for Marketplace
coverage and 1 million plus people spoke with call center
representatives, according to numbers released by Health and Human
Services on Wednesday. The Obama administration says that of those who
selected plans, 48% were new.
Wingnuts will point and gloat because the
administration released inaccurate information earlier this fall, but
that is also why they are doing a weekly release. Neither the website
glitch nor the enrollment number inaccuracy invalidate the need for
affordable healthcare. And yet still, for all of the trolling, repugicans have yet to offer a viable, specific alternative.
The report also showed over 1.6 million reviewed
prices for coverage, 1 million people surfed the site shopping for
coverage with wait times of over three minutes to speak to someone on
the phone.
Things are going so well for Obamacare that the
countdown clock to repugicans taking credit for it and renaming it has
begun. Soon, they’ll try to disappear “Obamacare”, and they’ll issue
stern looks to anyone who uses the term, as if it is shameful to credit
the President for his legacy policy.
The thing is, President Obama and the Democrats
passed Obamacare because they knew people were dying from lack of access
to affordable healthcare. They did something about it. Yeah, there were
some glitches when it rolled out, and they were exacerbated by the repugican refusal to play along with how the law was written, forcing
extra burden onto the system, but just like Social Security, people love
their Obamacare.
Wingnut 'News'papers; Their Version And The True Version
Most of what passes for newspapers these days are embarrassingly
partisan rags and feature, above all else, totally irresponsible wingnut opinion detritus hardly worth a second glance.
In many ways today’s newspaper industry is like some
Rube Goldberg contraption gone terribly awry. A collection of pay
websites, digital and, oh yes, the actual print product. Newspapers
change hands more often than Larry King exchanges wedding vows and, just
like a King marriage, many are teetering on the edge of extinction.
Most of what passes for newspapers these days are
embarrassingly partisan rags and feature, above all else, totally
irresponsible wingnut opinion detritus hardly worth a second glance.
U.S. dailies are little more than repugican propaganda sheets.
My local offering, the Spartanburg Herald Journal,
is buried in yet another hot-potato exchange of ownership. It seems to
be an every couple of years or so occurrence, locally and around the
country. One Worcester, Massachusetts paper changed ownership 3 times in
16 months.
No matter the owner, the content stays true to the
extremist line. Let me give you a flavor of what I’m stuck with as my
primary local reading matter. Let’s start with three recent
representative editorial page cartoons. We begin with a Dana Summers
by-lined insult showing the president inking in the word “stupid”
between the ‘the’ and ‘People’ in the “We the People…” preamble of the
Constitution. The next cartoon acquired from the Sacramento Bee depicts a
tree trunk (representing tree-hugging environmentalists) stuffed into
the end of a pipe. The word “extremism” is etched into the tree trunk,
and “jobs” printed on the pipe.
The last cartoon is the second Dana Summers
contribution via the Tribune Content Agency. It’s titled “Porous
Borders.” A bulldozer driven by the president has crashed through two
fences. One marked “Separation of”, the other “Powers.” Summers
conveniently ignores the fact that five days before the appearance of
his partisan inking, the Senate failed to end the Democrats blockage of
the repugican lawmakers favorite project, the Keystone XL pipeline.
Included in that bill, Congress would usurp White House (executive)
authority over the project. So, what Summers has misleadingly done is
lay the onus of a proposed Legislative branch interference on the
Executive branch.
Wingnut propagandists, George Will, Walter
Williams, Michelle Malkin, Cal Thomas, Charles Krauthammer and Paul
Greenberg (he describes the Affordable Care Act as an “elaborate gizmo”)
show up all the time. Occasionally the paper will feature an obscure
partisan from a distant land like Texas, as was the case with Cynthia
Allen, a columnist with the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. The only criteria
for such an appearance is a column ripping Obama or any other
high-profile Democrat. Her contribution was the familiar renouncing of
the Affordable Care Act. To wit, in her words: “In fact, the opacity
employed in drafting, passing and then marketing the law is one of the
reasons why cynicism about Obamacare remains so high.” Propaganda catnip
to the huge litter of Southern racists, Obama-baiting pussycats.
Clarence Page, a reasonable and objective
progressive moderate will sneak in from time to time just to balance out
the boatload of his opposite number.
As for Letters to the Editor, I have managed to get a
few of my contributions printed in that space. Congressional
Representative golden boy, Trey Gowdy, is off-limits however. Criticisms
of Gowdy of even the most minor stripe rarely make it into Letters to
the Editor.
The real censor is a local column by a guy who will
allow awesomely misleading and deceptive wingnut contributions and
refuse to print rebuttals of same. I should know; it’s happened to me
over and over.
One of my rebuttals that was deep-sixed addressed a
November 11th column by a writer who informed readers that according to a
study by an academic, Dr. Martin Fiebert, from Southern California
University, “men are victims of domestic violence at greater rates than
women.” The good PhD surveyed more than 300 studies on domestic violence
and found that women were more aggressive than men, especially within
lesbian relationships.
Supposedly women’s physical viciousness is hidden by
supporters of the Violence Against Women Act so VAWA programs can
continue to be funded.
Knowing my chances for publication of a refutation
were near zero, I nonetheless sent in hundreds of words in opposition
after researching this obviously bogus take on what the studies and
numbers were really about. Here is my response in one block as the
column is not written in paragraphs:
“To read a November 11th column from a fellow from
Gaffney, that suggests that women are like a pack of wild dogs just
waiting to commit “violence” on their unsuspecting male prey (WAP! POW!)
was eye-opening to say the least. Of course these women were
characterized as feminists, apparently a goodly number mired in the
“violence” of female/female relationships. Darn those liberal lesbians!
The core premise was that contrary to women being the victims of
violence, “The truth is that men are victims of domestic violence at
greater rates than women.” The writer attributed his “facts” to an
assessment by a Dr. Martin Fiebert at Southern California University of
more than 300 studies of domestic violence. The PhD supposedly concluded
that women were more aggressive (violent) than men. Erroneous fact
number 1: Fiebert was a faculty member of Cal State Long Beach at the
time of the study. Erroneous-fact number 2: There were not 300 studies
on domestic violence. The breakdown included, 117 scholarly
investigations, 94 empirical studies and 23 reviews and/or analysis.
There are also a couple critical caveats here that change the whole
tenor of the story. The academic inquiries were conducted 15 years ago.
Many references date back to the mid-1980’s. The basic group that was
studied might be of interest as well; college kids, even high school
students. There were exceptions, but a number of those cases examined
involved dating and/or boyfriend/girlfriend experiences. Yes, the male
was occasionally smacked on the kisser, and likely for the same reason,
but rarely was there physical injury. When struck by a man, there was
the strong likelihood of injury to the female victim. Fiebert admitted
that most of the female “violence” was, by definition, of the emotional
kind; yelling, screaming and demeaning words. My challenge to our
Gaffney friend; give us the latest domestic physical violence facts from
last year, or even the last decade. And for your next piece, please
include the salient facts of the dates of the studies and the primary
subjects. Otherwise, it would be wise to update your research. If it’s
objective, the conclusions will be the reverse of what you would have us
believe. All domestic violence is concerning, but to deal with the
problem, objectivity is a must.”
This response failed to pass the muster for
publication. This is outright censorship, obviously blessed by the
high-ups at the paper. Whenever I send something in, I’m told to source
everything, right down to the last comma. And yet, if it’s misleading,
deceptive wingnut pap, it goes sailing through, usually as the lead
contribution.
Now you know what it’s like to live in a land of repugican make believe. You also know why people vote as foolishly as
they do since the media makes damn sure that only extremists are given
opinion columns. Real facts are rarely in evidence.
Hate speech radio is even worse!
Texas chemical leak kills four, seven years after plant's last workplace safety inspection
A reminder Rick Perry wants companies to know that Texas is open for business.
Four DuPont workers died and a fifth was hospitalized because of a
leak at a Texas chemical plant over the weekend. The event was called
unusual for being so deadly without involving a fire or explosion.
Instead, a valve leak released methyl mercaptan, killing the workers.It's a sad fact that when workers die on the job in a Texas chemical plant, one of the key questions is when the site was last inspected by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency. And in this case, the answer is that OSHA has not inspected the plant since 2007, a visit that resulted in fines for two serious violations. Additionally:
EPA records show that it is out of compliance with hazardous-waste-management and air-emissions standards. The agency brought formal enforcement actions for violations at the site in 2012 and 2014, resulting in penalties totaling $117,375.DuPont last month disclosed that it was continuing discussions with the EPA and the Justice Department related to waste-water treatment, hazardous-waste management and air emissions at the La Porte site.
Making and storing dangerous chemicals is always going to be dangerous. But that's why it's so important to have strong regulations, regular inspections, and companies that treat their responsibility to their workers and their neighbors with the utmost seriousness.
Driver who smashed into restaurant apologized before buying everyone chicken wings

A Dodge Ram pick-up truck smashed into the Wing'N It restaurant in
Clarenville, Newfoundland, Canada, on Saturday afternoon, disrupting
diners, all of whom escaped injury.
None of the customers at the Shoal Harbour Drive restaurant were seated at the center tables when the truck crashed through the front window into the dining area.
The apologetic driver then bought chicken wings for the startled customers who were in the restaurant at the time.
A spokesperson with the company said there was no structural damage to the building, just broken windows and damaged furniture. The restaurant was open for business again by Saturday evening.
You can see CCTV footage of the incident here.
Lady arrested after game of Monopoly turned violent
A game of Monopoly ended with a young woman under arrest in New Hampshire.
Police say they were called to a home in Hooksett late on Sunday night to a report of a domestic disturbance.
Alyssa Ferraro, 21, told officers “she got into an argument with her boyfriend over a game of Monopoly and open hand slapped him in the face,” according to a police statement.
The boyfriend was not seriously hurt. But Ferraro was arrested and charged with domestic violence related simple assault. She was released on $2,000 bail and ordered to appear in court on December 31.
Alyssa Ferraro, 21, told officers “she got into an argument with her boyfriend over a game of Monopoly and open hand slapped him in the face,” according to a police statement.
The boyfriend was not seriously hurt. But Ferraro was arrested and charged with domestic violence related simple assault. She was released on $2,000 bail and ordered to appear in court on December 31.
Doctor Fatigue
Alzheimer's and Schizophrenia
A weak region in the brain may be associated with both Alzheimer's disease and schizophrenia.
Human Memory
A Good One
House Sitting
So
my friend went on a vacation for a week and asked me to take care of
his place for him. Everything was going fine, for the most part.On the third morning he gave me a call and asked: “So how is everything going?”
“The house is fine,” I said, “but your cat died.”
“Wha . . .” click. He hung up on me.
Later that day my friend called back and said, “Sorry I hung up on you. I was just so distraught. It really ruined my day. I wish you had given me the news a little more slowly.”
“How’s that?” I asked.
“Well, maybe you could have told me that my cat had climbed on the roof and wouldn’t come down. Then tomorrow you could have told me you were trying to get him down, but he wouldn’t budge. The next day you could have said he’s not eating, then the following that he had died. At least it wouldn’t be so shocking.”
“Ok, sorry. Next time I’ll know better.”
He said, “it’s ok, I know you didn’t mean it. So how’s my mom?”
“She’s climbed on the roof and I can’t get her down.”
Earth Magic
Photography of witches at play and at ritual
There has long been a tension between the witch of legend and the modern day practitioner. The former has its origins mainly in polemical christian ideas and folktales, where the witch is a consort of the devil, brewing wicked and foul smelling potions in a cast-iron pot, and eating children.
This image of the witch -- crooked nosed hag she is -- has not been completely wiped from the popular imagination, but certainly the modern day witch movement has gone a long way to challenge these often sexist views. The rise of the Wiccan movement in the 1960s took its lessons not from the Malleus Maleficarum, but from the writings of people like Gerald Gardner and Alex Sanders. Their vision of the witch is rooted in tales of cunning folk and (sometimes) faulty anthropology regarding the existence of pre-christian horned deity cults whose practices remained hidden, but very much alive, through the centuries. It is, of course, important that the modern Wiccan movement has elevated the image of the witch, but unfortunately a New Age character has settled in, and in so doing removed some of the mystery from a form of worship that was once practiced in quiet groves and amongst ancient megaliths. The two surviving pictures -- the storybook crone and the nature-worshiping hippie -- are both unsatisfying.
Like most things, it takes an artful eye to realize an idea that has weight, that can evoke a sense of other-worldliness, of magic. Of witchcraft. Fulgur Press, one of the most important publishers of limited edition occult and related volumes, has recently released Earth Magic by Rik Garrett, a collection of photographs of, well, witches. These are neither claw-fingered nor filk-playing neo-pagans. Garrett’s photos are studies of private moments of worship. They are erotic, but not pornographic, mysterious but not contrived, haunting but not exploitive. These are photographs of witches at play and at ritual. The photos themselves have no explanation. There are no captions or any other corresponding material (except for an illuminating introduction by Pam Grossman). The only other element is a sigil on the facing page of each image, a kind of seal or brand that only heighten the sense of strangeness. There is no denying it. Garrett’s photos are spooky. My only hesitation is that maybe these photos reveal what should have remained hidden. Thankfully Garrett’s eye is that of someone who knows they don’t belong. The photos appear to be taken furtively, shakily, with a sense of trepidation and humble awe.
Choleric Vampires
Polish 'vampires' weren't targeted for their status as
immigrants, as previously thought, but instead probably had contracted
cholera.
Norsemen And Vikings: The Culture That Inspired Decades Of Fear
by Alexandra McKenna and John Broom
Introduction: When one thinks of Vikings the mind’s eye often envisions muscular men covered in furs with large horned helmets. Thoughts of these monstrous men link themselves with words such as bloodlust, raids, and conqueror. Which leaves one to ponder why these men have come to be forever linked with such carnage, surely they must have had some redeeming qualities? Viking studies have increased in popularity during modern times. This has led many historians to pick up the sagas left behind by the Norse people, so that they may better understand the driving forces behind the decades of fear these Viking raiders inspired. What these historians have uncovered sheds new light on the Vikings, showcasing not only men of destruction, but also of enlightenment.
It is widely believed that at the opening of the Viking age, Scandinavia housed a mere two million people. This time also saw an age of rapid population growth, which many historians and geologist alike, attribute to climate change. The warmer climate brought on during the early eighth century allowed for milder winters in the Norsemen’s cold climate. The warmer climate inspired the typical response of lower infant mortality rates, and a more protein rich diet that allowed for overall better health. It is thus feasible to believe that the overall population boom supplied the necessary push factor that inspired the Vikings to take to the sea in search of new lands.
Iceland remains one of the lands most linked with the Vikings. The land was first colonized in 874 AD, under Ingolf Arnarson and Leif Hrodmarson. This country has seen some of the most far-reaching land degradation in northern Europe. Many historians attributed this erosion as a consequence of Viking occupation, which would supply another push factor for Viking exploration and raiding. However, Rannveig Olafsdottir, launched a study that proved the shift in landscape actually began in 2500 BP. The study suggest that the Norse settled on land that had already experienced severe degradation, and that their settlement just contributed to an overall downward spiral. Given this evidence, one could still argue that the poor land of one of the major Norse territories helped to reinforces the need to explore and conquer.
To understand the warriors that took the world by storm, one must realize that not all Norsemen were Vikings. Viking, as a word, during the period meant raider, or better yet “warfare at sea,” therefore Viking was an occupation within the Norse community. Vikings as explorers expanded their reach across the globe. They are noted by many historians to be the earliest point that American’s can trace their history. Thor Heyerdahl, who spent time in Peru studying the Incan culture, discovered light-skinned inhabitants that trace their ancestry to, “Mythical white forbears.” While the possibility exists that Vikings did not father any children in Peru One thing is certain, Viking explorers explored and colonized many lands leaving behind lasting impressions.
Army Assists With Study of Anglo-Saxon Sword
Take A Trip To Iran's Dasht-e Lut Desert
Wanna take a trip to the hottest place on Earth? No, you don't need to
dig down to the core to reach it. Just go to Iran and head to the
spectacular Dasht-e Lut desert. Dasht-e Lut (which means Emptiness Desert) is a sandy and muddy salt desert plain north-east of Kerman, Iran.
The surface of the sand there has been measured at temperatures as high as 70.7°C (159°F), and it is one of the world's driest and hottest places. You will find a series of eroded towers and walls standing high on the desert, making every traveler definitely notice the amazing land formations.
The surface of the sand there has been measured at temperatures as high as 70.7°C (159°F), and it is one of the world's driest and hottest places. You will find a series of eroded towers and walls standing high on the desert, making every traveler definitely notice the amazing land formations.
Shit Fuel
Neutrino Beacon
Fossil hunters unearth galloping, dinosaur-eating crocodiles in Sahara
The primitive crocodiles, which lived 100m years ago, were good swimmers but were also capable of galloping
by Ian Sample
Fossil hunters have uncovered the remains of primitive crocodiles
that "galloped" on land and patrolled the broad rivers that coursed
through north Africa one hundred million years ago.
The skeletons of five creatures that walked with dinosaurs – and ate them – were unearthed in remote and rocky regions of what are now Morocco and Niger during a series of expeditions in the Sahara desert.
Three of the crocodiles are new species and include Kaprosuchus saharicus, a 6.5m-long beast with three sets of dagger-like tusks and an armoured snout for ramming its prey.
Another species, Laganosuchus thaumastos, was of similar length but had a pancake-flat head and is thought to have lurked in rivers with its jaws open, waiting for unsuspecting fish to pass.
The most striking feature the beasts have in common was revealed by their bone structure, which suggests they were efficient swimmers but that when they clambered ashore they were also capable of galloping across the plains. Modern crocodiles crawl on their bellies because their legs sprawl out to the side.
"My African crocs appeared to have had both upright, agile legs for bounding overland and a versatile tail for paddling in water," writes Paul Sereno, a palaeontologist at the University of Chicago, in National Geographic Magazine. "These species open a window on a croc world completely foreign to what was living on northern continents."
The third new species, Araripesuchus rattoides, was only a meter long and probably used a pair of buckteeth in its lower jaw to dig for grubs.
The other two crocodiles unearthed during the expedition are known species. One had a wide, overhanging snout containing sensory areas that it used to sniff out prey in shallow waters. The other had a soft, dog-like nose and is thought to have been extremely agile.
Most
of the fossils were found near the site where, in 2001, Sereno
uncovered a 12m-long crocodile that lived 110m years ago. The beast,
nicknamed SuperCroc, weighed around eight tonnes. The latest fossils are
described in the journal ZooKeys.
"We were surprised to find so many species from the same time in the same place," said Hans Larsson, a palaeontologist at the University of Montreal, who took part in the expedition. "Each of the crocs apparently had different diets, different behaviors. It appears they had divided up the ecosystem, each species taking advantage of it in its own way."
The expedition was sponsored by National Geographic, which airs a documentary about the discoveries, When Crocs Ate Dinosaurs, at 5pm on Sunday 20 December on the Nat Geo Wild channel.
The skeletons of five creatures that walked with dinosaurs – and ate them – were unearthed in remote and rocky regions of what are now Morocco and Niger during a series of expeditions in the Sahara desert.
Three of the crocodiles are new species and include Kaprosuchus saharicus, a 6.5m-long beast with three sets of dagger-like tusks and an armoured snout for ramming its prey.
Another species, Laganosuchus thaumastos, was of similar length but had a pancake-flat head and is thought to have lurked in rivers with its jaws open, waiting for unsuspecting fish to pass.
The most striking feature the beasts have in common was revealed by their bone structure, which suggests they were efficient swimmers but that when they clambered ashore they were also capable of galloping across the plains. Modern crocodiles crawl on their bellies because their legs sprawl out to the side.
"My African crocs appeared to have had both upright, agile legs for bounding overland and a versatile tail for paddling in water," writes Paul Sereno, a palaeontologist at the University of Chicago, in National Geographic Magazine. "These species open a window on a croc world completely foreign to what was living on northern continents."
The third new species, Araripesuchus rattoides, was only a meter long and probably used a pair of buckteeth in its lower jaw to dig for grubs.
The other two crocodiles unearthed during the expedition are known species. One had a wide, overhanging snout containing sensory areas that it used to sniff out prey in shallow waters. The other had a soft, dog-like nose and is thought to have been extremely agile.
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"We were surprised to find so many species from the same time in the same place," said Hans Larsson, a palaeontologist at the University of Montreal, who took part in the expedition. "Each of the crocs apparently had different diets, different behaviors. It appears they had divided up the ecosystem, each species taking advantage of it in its own way."
The expedition was sponsored by National Geographic, which airs a documentary about the discoveries, When Crocs Ate Dinosaurs, at 5pm on Sunday 20 December on the Nat Geo Wild channel.
Joggers saved stranded dolphin
A morning training session turned into a rescue mission to save a beached dolphin in Sydney, Australia.
A jogger found the Risso's dolphin with a gash to its head lying on its side in the shallows of North Curl Curl Beach.
Five men helped slowly right it and got it back into deeper water.
They then spent half an hour nursing the animal so it could regain its strength,
before it eventually swam back out to sea.
One rescuer Richard Smith said: "We went out there and just held it for a
while and it regained its composure I guess and off it went. It was
pretty amazing."
"Dolphins are surprisingly heavy," said another rescuer Pierce Howell.
Libby Eyre from Sydney Sea Life Aquarium said it was unusual to see this
type of dolphin in the shallow water as they're usually a deep water
species.
"We don't know why it's come ashore, it could be sick or injured," she
said.
The dolphin had some scratches around its face which could have been from colliding with something or maybe an injury from even before it was stranded. Unfortunately there is a strong chance that it will come back, but according to Ms Eyre, "if it swam off strongly which I'm led to believe it did than that's a good sign."
The dolphin had some scratches around its face which could have been from colliding with something or maybe an injury from even before it was stranded. Unfortunately there is a strong chance that it will come back, but according to Ms Eyre, "if it swam off strongly which I'm led to believe it did than that's a good sign."
Turkey Bacteria
'Good' bacteria inside the holiday food favorite produces
medicine that can kill roughly half of all infectious bacteria.
Amazonian shrimp
Brutal Cuddly Killer
More than 1,000 mutilated marine mammals thought to have been
victimized by humans were attacked by another marine mammal with a
cuddly reputation.
Hanging on every word ...
Dogs might not understand everything we say, but new research shows that they are doing their best to figure us out.
Friday, November 28, 2014
The Daily Drift
Hey, wingnuts, this means you ...!
Carolina Naturally is read in 200 countries around the world daily.
Today is - Maize Day
Don't forget to visit our sister blog: It Is What It Is
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