Archive | May, 2011

Letter X spotted on planet Mercury

31 May

The below photo clearly shows the letter X, as in x marks the spot. The photo was taken by NASA’s Messenger probe. NASA says the X is the result of two separate meteor strikes whose craters are outside the area that can be seen in this photo. When each meteor hit the planet’s surface, the force of impact threw off material that left behind its own, smaller, craters when it hit the ground. What you’re seeing here isn’t really an X, but two unrelated, intersecting lines of secondary crater chains.

Uh huh, sure….

Image NASA.

Headbanging causes injuries

30 May

Not shocking as some headbanging can be quite energetic, and perhaps euphoric.

Headbanging image by Harlenn Quinzel from http://harleyquinnheart.blogspot.com

Head-bangers, beware of injury, rocker scientists warn
By Jordan Lite | Dec 17, 2008 07:01 PM www.scientificamerican.com

Because it’s the first thing you consider when you go to a heavy-metal concert, we just thought you should know: Head-banging can be hazardous to your health.

That’s right — depending on the tempo of the music and the range of motion of your noggin, you could be looking at a head or neck injury, Australian researchers report in today’s British Medical Journal.

Andrew McIntosh, an associate professor of biomechanics at the School of Risk and Safety Sciences as the University of New South Wales, and his research assistant, Declan Patton, attended several hard rock and heavy-metal concerts, taking careful note of the most popular head-banging techniques in the audience.

While head-banging generally refers to violent, rhythmic movement of the head, it takes various forms. At the concerts McIntosh and Patton attended, the “up-down” style — which looks like you’re bobbing for apples, long hair covering your face at all times — trumped the others. The “circular swing” (long locks swung around your head like a mini tornado) the “full body” (hair whipped up and down in exaggerated fashion) and the “side-to-side” (looks like you’re shaking your head in disagreement) didn’t get as much representation. (Thanks to our resident head-banging expert, tech editor Larry Greenemeier, for those colorful descriptions.)

After rockin’ out with Ozzy Osbourne, Skid Row and Whitesnake, among others, McIntosh and Patton got down to business. Based on the popularity of the up-down style of head-banging at the concerts, and the average tempo of 11 songs deemed the best for head-banging by a minion of local musicians, the scientists developed a mathematical model of how violently you’d have to shake your noodle to hurt yourself. Their conclusion? Head-banging to a song with a tempo of 146 beats per minute can make you dazed and confused (read: give you a headache and make you dizzy) if you’re rotating your head by more than 75 degrees.

For the record, popular heavy metal often has a tempo of 180 beats per minute, according to the study. So head-banging to faster tunes with even more range of motion (say, 120 degrees) could cause a neck injury — mainly pain, McIntosh and Patton conclude.

“If the tempo is increased, you have to accelerate more to keep in time,” McIntosh tells us. “You’ve got a limit to that range of motion. The more you’re going through it, the higher the risk of mild brain injury or some sort of neck injury.”

The tongue-and-cheekiness of the research aside, musicians have actually hurt themselves head-banging. A 15-year-old drummer in his neighborhood band suffered an aneurysm in his cervical vertebral artery, according to a 1991 case report in the journal Pediatric Neurosurgery, and Evanescence guitarist Terry Balsamo had a stroke three years ago that his docs blamed on his head-banging tendencies.

Worried? Try to rotate your neck at no more than 45 degrees. Alternatively, consider slower tempo, easy-listening music instead — or a neck brace, McIntosh and Patton suggest.

“You could have a stylish neck brace built into a leather jacket,” McIntosh quips. “We didn’t take into account whether if someone had a poodle-style hairdo, that that might dampen some of the acceleration, or if dreadlocks make it worse. The next step would be to look at the effects of some of these hairstyles.”

Rock on!

Sai Baba: Exit of the master at 86

29 May

G’bye guru. Pretty sure this is the first time I’ve used the Nigerian Compass as a news source. Apparently the foundation and organization (and money) he leaves behind is being fought over.

Sai Baba: Exit of the master at 86
Friday, 29 April 2011  |  Emmanuel Agozino | www.compassnewspaper.com

As one of the few avatars of this age, Sathya Sai Baba, died, curiously on the Christians’ Easter day, EMMANUEL AGOZINO, probes the life of the man of mystery, a Guru, and holy man whom many deemed to be a living diety whose home in Andhra Pradesh, India remains a pilgrims’ spot.

CHRISTIAN philosopher Origen, once noted, “God must not be thought of as a physical being, or as having any kind of body. He is a pure mind. He moves and acts without needing any corporeal space, or size, or form, or colour or any other property of matter.”

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Man survives tentacled “Alien” tumor

28 May

Yoiks. He seems like such a nice guy, too.

The huge tumor displaced his heart, lungs and stomach and sent tentacles to his ribs and spine.

The Abken family.

Chico Father Survives ‘Alien’ Tumor
By Kelli SAAM  |  www.krcrtv.com  |  February 16, 2011

CHICO, Calif. — A Chico man survived what some are calling an alien tumor. A cantaloupe-sized tumor sprouted tentacles inside Josh Abken’s chest and attached to his backbone and ribs.

Now Abken’s surgery and successful recovery are the subject of a medical case study. His case was profiled earlier this month at a medical conference at Mercy Cancer Institute in Sacramento to explain his rare and risky procedure.

Abken, 37, said the medical scare gave him and his family a new lease on life. His children, 4-year-old Isabella and 2-year-old Sydney, are too young to know that their dad is a medical miracle. He said after first hearing his diagnosis in February 2010, he didn’t want them to grow up without a father.

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Woman drives wrong way on I-95

27 May

As we enter a big weekend for travel, be careful on the roads. Seniors behind the wheel can be a real menace. Thank goodness most seniors don’t text while they drive or we’d all be dead.

(Passerby Tim Fleming shot cell phone video of the car being driven the wrong way in the opposite lanes of the highway.)

Elderly Wrong-Way Del. Driver Gets License Suspended
November 4, 2010 | KYW.com

DELAWARE COUNTY, Pa. (CBS) — An elderly woman from Delaware who drove the wrong way on two local superhighways has been charged with traffic violations, and will have to be retested if she wants to keep her driver’s license.

Pennsylvania State Police say 86-year-old Margaret Lazor of Wilmington, Del. got lost on October 28 and drove her Buick station wagon onto westbound Route 322, heading east. She then continued onto I-95, driving north in the southbound lanes (see previous story).

Lazor was not hurt, but police say she caused a four-vehicle crash on I-95 in Upland Boro (Delaware County), Pa.

Supreme Court upholds “Cheerleader must cheer her rapist”

26 May

Wow, talk about a town with no pity, I mean a nation with no pity. The guy wasn’t just accused of raping her, he got sentenced for it. Making her pay the school’s legal fees really takes this over the top. This is sad sad news for all American women. I do not like this one iota.

For more background on the story, read here.

The cheerleader refused to chant the name of Rakheem Bolton

Cheerleader must compensate school that told her to clap ‘rapist’
By Guy Adams in Dallas  |  Wednesday, 4 May 2011  |  www.independent.co.uk/

A teenage girl who was dropped from her high school’s cheerleading squad after refusing to chant the name of a basketball player who had sexually assaulted her must pay compensation of $45,000 (£27,300) after losing a legal challenge against the decision.

The United States Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear a review of the case brought by the woman, who is known only as HS. Lower courts had ruled that she was speaking for the school, rather than for herself, when serving on a cheerleading squad – meaning that she had no right to stay silent when coaches told her to applaud.

She was 16 when she said she had been raped at a house party attended by dozens of fellow students from Silsbee High School, in south-east Texas. One of her alleged assailants, a student athlete called Rakheem Bolton, was arrested, with two other young men.

In court, Bolton pleaded guilty to the misdemeanour assault of HS. He received two years of probation, community service, a fine and was required to take anger-management classes. The charge of rape was dropped, leaving him free to return to school and take up his place on the basketball team.

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Sea urchin body seems to be one giant eye

25 May

Creepy when you think about one giant eye roaming the sea floor. I love when science discovers something new about something old and familiar.

Red sea urchins line the seafloor in British Columbia, Canada (file picture). Photograph by Paul Nicklen, National Geographic

Sea Urchin Body Is One Big Eye
Prickly critters may use their feet as retinas, study says.

Charles Q. Choi for National Geographic News  |  May 2, 2011

Sea urchins may use the entire surfaces of their bodies—from the ends of their “feet” to the tips of their spines—as huge eyes.

Scientists had already known the marine invertebrates react to light without any obvious eye-like structures—raising the question of how the animals see.

Previous genetic analysis of the California purple sea urchin had revealed that the animals possess a large number of genes linked with the development of the retina—the light-sensitive tissue lining the inner eyeball in people and other vertebrates.

This and other research suggested that sea urchin vision might rely on light-receptor cells randomly scattered across their skin, which collectively function like retinas.

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Plant myths debunked by medicinal plant expert

24 May

I’d trust a guy like this on this subject. Placebo is pretty effective and may account for much of the beneficial effects commonly attributed to plants.

Dr Henry Oakeley (above) at the New Medicinal Garden, TCD, marking 300 years of Botany at the college. Below (from left): St Johns Wort, deadly nightshade and liverwort. Photographs: Cyril Byrne, Thinkstock

Unearthing deeply rooted plant ‘myths’
JOANNE HUNT   |  The Irish Times  |  April 19, 2011

While a few plants can be used to cure disease, most are only effective as placebos, according to an expert

‘PLANTS HAVE been trying to kill us, not cure us,” says Dr Henry Oakeley, the garden fellow at London’s Royal College of Physicians.

Not a comment you might expect from a man who oversees a garden of 600 plants used in medicine for 3,000 years, a man you’d expect to extol medicine’s indebtedness to the plant kingdom.

In Dublin to open a medicinal garden at Trinity College to mark 300 years of botany at the college, he’s well aware that his “very anti-herbal medicine” stance and will jar with some.

“I [nearly] got lynched when I gave this lecture at a herbal medicine conference,” says the former physician and psychiatrist, who is passionate about botany.

But if plants are, for the most part, as medicinally useless as he believes, how does he explain their centrality to the beliefs and practices of medical practitioners for centuries?

“Because they believed in the tooth fairy,” he says matter of factly. “They had no concept of illness or of chemistry or biochemistry. They believed all plants had been put on the earth by the creator for mankind’s use. So if the plant had a particular shape, it indicated that the creator had put it on the planet for a particular use.”

Citing as an example the use of blue liverwort, Hepatica nobilis , once cultivated as a liver tonic because its three-lobed leaf form mirrored the shape of the liver, he says, “It was absolute rubbish. They had no idea how the body worked.”

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Rapture did not happen, apocalypse unlikely

23 May

Time is my source for this article, which seems so appropriate as we discuss the end of the world. I do wonder if Mr Camping will be held to account legally for the millions of dollars worth of tax deductible donations he squandered on worldwide outdoor advertising, printing handbills and paying people to wear slogan shirts and signs.

On the bright side, if the rapture didn’t happen then the world will probably not end in October as Camping predicted nor in 2012 as the Mayan calendar perhaps forecasts.

Harold Camping, shown above, was also wrong about the Rapture in 1994.

One of the many people, some hired, to spread Camping's mesage. Image ibtimes.com

Random artist's depiction of the rapture, which was supposed to happen on May 21, 2011. The rapture is a recent American Christian phenomenon in which the most virtuous Christian's are "air lifted" to heaven before the world endures great disasters and tribulations that will culminate in the world ending.

Prankster's version of the rapture. Random internet find.

Example of one of the hundreds, perhaps thousands of billboards Camping erected.

Example of one of the hundreds, perhaps thousands of billboards Camping erected.

Example of one of the hundreds, perhaps thousands of billboards Camping erected.

Example of one of the hundreds, perhaps thousands of billboards Camping erected.

The end of the rapture
May 23rd, 2011 | By Bruce Gorton  |  Time magazine

As it turns out the world didn’t end this weekend, which leaves Harold Camping looking like an idiot – so not much has changed.

And of course in that vein you have the disease that is “Atheists are such meanies” from the religious apologists. Todays example, is Tim Stanley.

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SETI runs out of cash, ends

22 May

Maybe if some money comes from somewhere SETI can stay open.

The Allen array. Image from seti

Shrinking funds pull plug on alien search devices
MARCUS WOHLSEN | AP | Apr 26, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – In the mountains of Northern California, a field of radio dishes that look like giant dinner plates waited for years for the first call from intelligent life among the stars.

But they’re not listening anymore.

Cash-strapped governments, it seems, can no longer pay the interstellar phone bill.

Astronomers at the SETI Institute said a steep drop in state and federal funds has forced the shutdown of the Allen Telescope Array, a powerful tool in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, an effort scientists refer to as SETI.

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Machete vs feather duster

21 May

Brave or dumb clerk with a feather duster fights off an attacker armed with a machete. Link.

Clerk fights off two alleged robbers with feather duster
www1.whdh.com | 12/10/10

WALTHAM, Mass. — Two would-be robbers made a clean getaway when a convenience store clerk armed with a feather duster fought him off.

A man dressed in black from head to toe, armed with a machete marched into a popular Waltham convenience store and demanded the clerk to put money in the bag.

You can see on the surveillance video the robber slamming the 3-foot blade down on the counter, which left a divot. The clerk, Jackie Patel, says by the door there was a second man threatening he had a gun.

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May 2011 WWW Guide

20 May

Hi ho campers, at the link below is this May’s WWW guide for PDF. Click the image to download the letter size .pdf file.