12-24-2011, 06:51 PM | #341 | |
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12-24-2011, 06:53 PM | #342 |
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12-24-2011, 06:55 PM | #343 |
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12-24-2011, 06:58 PM | #344 |
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12-24-2011, 07:00 PM | #345 |
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They do the hard landing for everything LOL and this one is gonna be a splat in a bunch of places.
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12-25-2011, 07:17 PM | #346 |
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12-26-2011, 05:59 PM | #347 |
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Mayans lived in North Georgia 1100 years ago. They even built a pyramid. Wonder where they went? Wonder if they merged with the local peoples?
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12-26-2011, 06:00 PM | #348 |
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12-26-2011, 06:06 PM | #349 |
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hummmmm, interesting.
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12-26-2011, 07:59 PM | #350 |
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"Golden Chief" Tomb Treasure Yields Clues to Unnamed Civilization
"Spectacular find" includes gold, jewels, and a small army of likely sacrifices. A seahorse pendant is among gold ornaments found in a chief's grave at El Cańo, Panama. Photograph by David Coventry, National Geographic It's really a very spectacular find. ... probably the most significant" for this culture since the 1930s, when the nearby Sitio Conte site, also in central Panama, yielded a wealth of gold artifacts, anthropologist John Hoopes said. Until now, Sitio Conte provided the only major evidence of the golden-chiefs culture, which can be traced from about A.D. 250 to the 16th century, when Spanish conquerors arrived on the scene. Dating to between A.D. 700 and 1000, the new artifacts were excavated about two miles (three kilometers) from Sitio Conte, at a site called El Caño. Striking Gold, Second Time Around El Caño's field of stone monoliths and sculptures had drawn treasure seekers in the early 20th century, but as luck would have it, they dug up only artifact-poor graves of common people. A few years ago, after having worked at Sitio Conte—also marked by ancient monoliths—archaeologist Julia Mayo of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute decided to reinvestigate El Caño. Mayo's ground surveys, beginning in 2005, traced the circular outline of a series of burials, about 260 feet (80 meters) wide. Not long after digging had begun, in 2008, the team uncovered the skeleton of a high-ranking chief, clad in circular breastplates embossed with ghoulish faces, patterned arm cuffs, and a belt of large golden beads—a taste of the bounty to come. More at - http://news.nationalgeographic.com/n...panama20111224 |
12-26-2011, 08:26 PM | #351 |
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Fascinating!
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12-29-2011, 05:41 PM | #352 |
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12-29-2011, 06:02 PM | #353 |
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12-29-2011, 06:07 PM | #354 |
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12-29-2011, 06:09 PM | #355 | |
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12-29-2011, 06:38 PM | #356 |
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I love this blog.
http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2...ot_animals.php |
12-29-2011, 07:33 PM | #357 |
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01-01-2012, 09:21 PM | #358 |
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If you don't have deep cloud cover as I do, you may have an amazing first night of sky viewing.
The year 2012 is starting off with a big bang, displaying all five visible planets within the course of a single night. By visible planet, we mean any planet that has been known since time immemorial, and can easily be seen with the unaided eye. In their outward order from the sun, the five visible planets are Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
The sky’s brightest and second-brightest planets – Venus and Jupiter, respectively – pop out first thing at dusk. Look for the moon, the brightest heavenly object in the nighttime sky, and you simply can’t miss nearby Jupiter. And Venus, the most brilliant heavenly body after the sun and moon, blazes away in the southwest corner of the sky after sunset. Venus sets at early evening while Jupiter stays out till well past midnight. The evening planets after dark on Sunday, January 1, 2012. For the fun of it, we show the solar system’s two outermost planets, Uranus and Neptune, on our sky chart. Uranus, the seventh planet outward from the sun, was discovered in 1781, and Neptune, the eighth planet outward, was first seen in 1846. You’ll need an optical aid and a detailed sky chart to see either planet in the evening sky. Where is the ecliptic in relation to the Milky Way? As viewed from mid-northern latitudes, the moon and Jupiter swing pretty much due west around 11:00 p.m., at about the time the red planet Mars comes up in the east. Some three hours thereafter, at roughly 2:00 a.m. local time, Jupiter sets in the west as the ringed planet Saturn rises in the east. Watch for Mercury, the innermost planet, to climb above the southeast horizon some 80 to 60 minutes before sunrise. Morning planets - Mars, Saturn and Mercury - at early dawn. You don’t have to stay up all night long to see all five visible planets. Watch Venus and Jupiter beautify the evening shortly after sunset, and then catch Mars, Saturn and Mercury as the predawn darkness begins to give way to dawn. From - http://earthsky.org/tonight/five-vis...f-the-new-year |
01-03-2012, 11:05 PM | #359 |
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Scientists rediscover rarest US bumblebee
Cockerell’s Bumblebee was last seen in the United States in 1956. A team of scientists from the University of California, Riverside recently rediscovered the rarest species of bumblebee in the United States, last seen in 1956, living in the White Mountains of south-central New Mexico. Known as “Cockerell’s Bumblebee,” the bee was originally described in 1913 from six specimens collected along the Rio Ruidoso, with another 16 specimens collected near the town of Cloudcroft, and one more from Ruidoso, the most recent being in 1956. No other specimens had been recorded until three more were collected on weeds along a highway north of Cloudcroft on Aug. 31, 2011. Most bumblebees in the U.S. are known from dozens to thousands of specimens, but not this species. The area it occurs in is infrequently visited by entomologists, and the species has long been ignored because it was thought that it was not actually a genuine species, but only a regional color variant of another well-known species. Yanega said that there are nearly 50 species of native U.S. bumblebees, including a few on the verge of extinction, such as the species known as “Franklin’s Bumblebee,” which has been seen only once since 2003. That species, as rare as it is, is known from a distribution covering some 13,000 square miles, whereas Cockerell’s Bumblebee is known from an area of less than 300 square miles, giving it the most limited range of any bumblebee species in the world. Yanega pointed out that it is not especially surprising for an insect species to be rediscovered after decades, when people might otherwise imagine that it may have gone extinct. When an insect species is very rare, or highly localized, it can fairly easily escape detection for very long periods of time,” he said. “There are many precedents – some of them very recently in the news, in fact – of insects that have been unseen for anywhere from 70 to more than 100 years, suddenly turning up again when someone either got lucky enough, or persistent enough, to cross paths with them again. It is much harder to give conclusive evidence that an insect species has gone extinct than for something like a bird or mammal or plant. Entomologists rediscover many such “lost” insect species and discover entirely new species on a regular basis, at the rate of several dozen species every year, primarily in groups such as bees, wasps, beetles, and plant bugs. According to recent estimates, approximately 8 million species are in existence, the vast majority being insects of which only about 1 million have been described. Bottom line: A team of scientists from the University of California, Riverside recently rediscovered Cockerell’s Bumblebee, the rarest species of bumblebee in the United States, in the White Mountains of New Mexico. The bee was last seen in the U.S. 1956. Douglas Yanega is senior museum scientist at UC Riverside. From - http://earthsky.org/biodiversity/sci...t-us-bumblebee |
01-04-2012, 12:04 AM | #360 |
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Fly away fly away little bees. They have found you again! lol
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