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Monthly Archives: December 2015
Ancient mouse-size creature uproots mammal family tree
An illustration of Haramiyavia, the earliest known proto-mammal, whose identity is based on a reconstruction of its 210-million-year-old fossil jaw (superimposed on bottom illustration). (April Neander)
Three-dimensional computer models of fossils from a tiny mouse-size creature that lived about 210 million years ago in what is now Greenland clear up a long-standing mammal mystery.
The high-tech analysis of the fossils suggests that mammals originated more than 30 million years more recently than previously suggested, the researchers say.
Paleontologists analyzed fossils of haramiyids, extinct relatives of modern mammals that lived about 210 million years ago. For decades, researchers only had isolated teeth from haramiyids, stymying investigations into where these creatures fit on the mammalian family tree. [See Images of 2 Tiny Early Mammals from China]
This uncertainty about where haramiyids belonged raised two possibilities. One was that haramiyids were crown mammals — the branch of the mammal family tree that all modern mammals descend from — suggesting that mammals began to diversify more than 210 million years ago in the Triassic Period. The other was that haramiyids occupied a separate branch at the base of the mammal family tree, suggesting instead that mammalian diversification began about 175 million years ago in the Jurassic Period.
To help solve this mystery, scientists analyzed a remarkably well-preserved jaw from a haramiyid species known as Haramiyavia clemmenseni, discovered in Greenland in 1995.
“These fossils are extremely rare,” study lead author Zhe-Xi Luo, a paleontologist at the University of Chicago, told Live Science. “You have to go into the Arctic tundra and search for tiny little bits of fossils.”
The paleontologists theorized that Haramiyavia was a small creature, weighing from 50 to 70 grams, or about twice as much as an adult mouse.
“As the earliest known haramiyid, Haramiyavia is the key piece of evidence for inferences about the timeline of early mammalian evolution,” Luo said in a statement.
The researchers used high-resolution computed tomography (CT) scans to develop 3D computer models of the jaw that helped them investigate this specimen in unprecedented detail.
“With the CT scans, we were able to see every little piece of this fossil,” Luo said.
This high-tech analysis revealed many primitive structures in the haramiyid jaw, including a trough in the back of the jaw that would have been connected to a primitive middle ear, and a bony prominence on the hinge of the jawbone. These two features provide strong evidence that haramiyids are more primitive than true mammals. This theory is supported by the lack of these two jaw features in the multituberculates, a group of early mammals that prior research suggested was closely related to the haramiyids.
“This was clearly a dead branch of the mammal family tree, going off to the side,” Luo said, referring to the haramiyids.
The scientists also created virtual animations that showed how Haramiyaviateeth functioned. Their research showed that haramiyids possessed incisors for cutting and complex cheek teeth for grinding plant food, suggesting that they were omnivores or herbivores. In contrast, other early proto-mammalian groups had less complex teeth, which were adapted for eating insects or worms.
“They broke away from being insectivores and carnivores and invaded an herbivorous-eating niche, opening up a whole new world for themselves,” Luo said.
Plant-eating mammals did later evolve complex teeth similar to those of haramiyids, despite the fact that they were not direct descendants of haramiyids. This is a striking example of convergent evolution, a bit like how flapping wings evolved from arms in birds, pterosaurs and bats.
“This herbivory adaptation evolved many times,” Luo said.
Many questions remain about how haramiyids lived. “Now that we know their address on the evolutionary tree, we want to better understand how they went about their daily lives — for instance, we’d like to know how they moved about,” Luo said.
The scientists detailed their findings online Nov. 16 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Filed under Humor and Observations, Uncategorized
Cosplay Pictures for Your Saturday
Your weekly dose of amazing cosplayers and their cosplay…
- Silk Spectre 2
- X-Men, Cassandra S. Kyle far right as Wolvesbane
- Lady Deadpool
- Catwoman
- Boba Fett between bounties…
- Toni Darling and Scotty Johnson at Amazing Arizona 2013
- Tia Dworshak
- Kato and friends, Steampunk at Steamgirl.com
- Shuttle craft
- Storm
- A Clockwork Orange
- Lindsay Elyse, I think…
- Guardians of the Galaxy
- Itty Bitty Geek as Harley Quinn
- Aladdin, with Vamptress Lee Anna Vamp and Nicole Marie Jean
- Judge Dredd
- Aquaman
- Black Cat by Shermie cosplay
- Cara Nicole as Black Cat
- Wonder Woman
- Zombie Captain America
- Jessica Nigri
- Mystique
- Wonder Woman
- Star Wars
- Steampunk
- Steampunk
- Steampunk
- Cara Nicole as Black Widow
- Klingons, Caitlin Fluck middle, Kurt Colin far right
- Batman
- Derp faced cosplay
- Wonder Woman and Super Woman
- Catwoman and Batman
- Sara Moni Cosplay
- Amber Skies cosplay
- Aarylyn Scarlet
- Christina Marie
- Cortney Reed
- Niki Powers
- Raychul Moore as Black Cat
- Toni Darling
- Tina Rybakova as Red Sonja
Filed under Humor and Observations
NASA just saw something come out of a black hole for the first time ever

You don’t have to know a whole lot about science to know that black holes typically suck things in, not spew things out. But NASA just spotted something mighty strange at the supermassive black hole Markarian 335.
Two of NASA’s space telescopes, including the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR), miraculously observed a black hole’s corona “launched” away from the supermassive black hole. Then a massive pulse of X-ray energy spewed out. So, what exactly happened? That’s what scientists are trying to figure out now.
“This is the first time we have been able to link the launching of the corona to a flare,” Dan Wilkins, of Saint Mary’s University, said. “This will help us understand how supermassive black holes power some of the brightest objects in the universe.”
NuSTAR’s principal investigator, Fiona Harrison, noted that the nature of the energetic source is “mysterious,” but added that the ability to actually record the event should provide some clues about the black hole’s size and structure, along with (hopefully) some fresh intel on how black holes function. Luckily for us, this black hole is still 324 million light-years away.
So, no matter what strange things it’s doing, it shouldn’t have any effect on our corner of the universe.
(Via Viral Thread)
Want more of Blastr’s coverage of the mysteries of spaaaace? Click here!
Filed under Humor and Observations, Uncategorized
Countess Elizabeth Báthory – History’s Most Prolific Serial Killer
AUG 212015
If power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, as Lord Acton once observed, then absolute power in the hands of a psychotic, sexual sadist can unleash the hounds of hell. Such was the case of Erzsébet “Elizabeth” Báthory, a late-16th-century Hungarian countess — and the most prolific female serial killer in history, whose murderous reign historians are still trying to make sense of today.
Four hundred years ago today, in August 1614, the notorious 54-year-old royal died under house arrest in Čachtice Castle in modern-day Slovakia, having been implicated in as many as 650 deaths — mostly peasant girls and servants. Báthory’s depraved life inspired a number of stories, films and books, including possibly Bram Stoker’s Dracula; so many, in fact, that the legends and myths surrounding the “Blood Countess” have begun to obscure the shocking, and very real, ledger of her vile deeds.
The scale of Báthory’s brutality was off the charts, even for her era.
Violence, cruelty and torture were endemic in the early modern period in which Báthory lived; her contemporary and namesake, Queen Elizabeth I of England, presided over countless executions and tortures. Medieval punishments like drawing and quartering were still very much a part of public life. Still, even if 650 victims sounds like an inflated figure, the scale of Báthory’s brutality was off the charts, even for her era, and she is a striking example of a very rare historical breed: the female serial killer.
Born in 1560 into Hungarian nobility and one of the wealthiest Protestant families in Europe, young Elizabeth was prone to fits of rage and seizures, and it appears that mental illness — possibly the result of years of inbreeding — was common in her extended family. Still, she was an accomplished student and, after having been engaged at the age of 11 to the older warrior Count Ferenc Nádasdy, is said to have been a loving and doting mother.
Báthory grew up in a time when nobles enjoyed the power of life and death over their subjects and servants, who were considered merely chattel. Cruel beatings were commonplace, but the countess developed a taste for something far more sinister. Her husband may have participated in the savagery as well, but by most accounts it was not until after the count’s death in 1604 that Báthory’s depravity reached truly pathological dimensions.
The torture and murder was done largely for Báthory’s pleasure.
With the help of a few of her maids and a dwarf manservant called Ficzko, Báthory began torturing and killing dozens of peasant girls, who had been lured to her castle by the prospect of employment. According to the testimony of witnesses, still preserved in the Hungarian archives, Báthory’s victims were beaten with lashes, knives, irons and cudgels; some were doused with cold water and left to freeze in the snow, while others had needles shoved under their fingernails and fingers lopped off if they tried to remove them.
The torture and murder was done largely for Báthory’s pleasure, and some scholars believe she was a sexual sadist in addition to a psychopath. Often there was a sexual element to the punishments, from genital mutilation to the countess biting off pieces of the girls’ faces and shoulders.
Báthory and her accomplices terrorized the surrounding countryside for years with impunity. And it was not until her bloodlust crept up the social ladder, and the daughters of nobles went missing, that her fellow royals started to pay attention to the dark rumors surrounding the countess.
Just after Christmas in 1610, Báthory’s castle was raided by the local authorities, who were horrified to discover dead and dying maidens strewn across the courtyard and basement. The countess’s collaborators were imprisoned, put on trial, and themselves tortured and executed. Báthory herself was never tried or convicted — perhaps to spare her family the embarrassment — but she was placed under house arrest in a tower room within Čachtice Castle where she died less than four years later.
In the years that followed, Báthory’s legend grew, and new stories about her, including that she was a vampire who liked to bathe in the blood of virgins to maintain her youthful appearance, also spread. More recently, an apologist backlash has emerged, arguing that Báthory was not a serial killer but was set up by relatives trying to take down the powerful widow and confiscate her lands.
But the Blood Countess was neither a vampire nor the victim of a grand conspiracy. She was a profoundly disturbed human being who, by virtue of her influence and place in society, could play out her darkest fantasies. It was Báthory’s privilege, as much as her psychosis, that was responsible for one of history’s greatest reigns of terror.
Filed under Uncategorized
Cute Dogs for Your Monday Blues!
Cute dogs to cheer you up!
Filed under Animals, Humor and Observations
Cosplay Pictures for Your Saturday!
Cosplay pictures and cosplayers for your Saturday enjoyment!
- Tina Rybakova
- Tarina Duffield with Ryan Tudor
- Slave Leia – Star Wars
- Sarah Clegg – Fantastic Four
- Rachel Rakowski
- Rachael Havey
- Velma
- Jessica Nigri
- Lindsay Elyse
- Krash Cosplay
- Riddle’s Messy Wardrobe
- Toni Darling, Lady Thor, left
- Red Sonja
- Lara Croft – Tomb Raider
- Twig the Fairy
- Harley Quinn
- Jessica Nigri
- Mystique
- Batman and Catwoman
- Wonder Woman
- Lollipop Chainsaw
- R2D2s
- Amy Wilder middle
- Elizabeth Kristina Lee and Tia Dworshak
- Cara Nicole as Black Cat
- Vegas Powergirl
- Amy Wilder
- Nicole Marie Jean
- Jessica Nigri
- Cruella DeVille
- Toni Darling as Lady Death and Kip Mussat as himself…
- Cara Nicole, AZ Powergirl
- Cara Nicole as Captain Marvel
Filed under Humor and Observations
Company Selling Pre-Fab Hobbit Hole Homes That Can Be Assembled In Three Days

Green Magic Homes is a company that manufactures per-fabricated shells that can be used to build Hobbit-hole style homes. The shells can be assembled by as few as three people in in three days, making them the perfect choice for a person who needs a new home RIGHT NOW. Plus the Hobbit-holes are eco-friendly and super customizable for those of you who need OPTIONS. Me? I just need enough space to lay my head at night. Okay, and a man-cave with a nice entertainment center. And, shit, can I get a chef’s kitchen? Also I’ve always dreamed of building a bathroom big enough to have an echo so I can talk to my make-believe far-away self while I’m on the potty. I can’t help it, I know how to have fun. “Your brain is mush.” That too I’m sure.
Keep going for several more shots of the possibilities.




Thanks to Sam The Slammer, who wants to live in that rabbit hole that Alice went down. Heck yeah, bring me one of those shrinking potions.
Filed under Humor and Observations, Uncategorized
Dog Shaming Pictures for Your Monday Blues
Ahh, shaming our poor dogs for their mistakes…
Filed under Animals, Humor and Observations
Cosplayer Pictures for the Weekend
On vacation at the beach with no wifi, found a lounge I could tap into, so posts will be slow for awhile… Here are cosplayers and cosplay for your enjoyment!
- Han Solo and Batgirl
- Steampunk crossover
- Fantastic Four
- Green Arrow
- Blademouth by Kiera Von Sierbagh
- The Shadow
- Cara Nicole, Resident Evil
- Catwoman
- Waldo/Wenda!
- Modern Harley Quin
- Guardians of the Galaxy
- Jessica Nigri
- Lindsay Elyse on the left.
- Red Sonja
- Sara Moni Cosplay
- Amber Skyes Cosplay
- Phasers set to stunning
- God of War
- Poison Ivy
- Harley Quin
- Icy Cosplay as Harley Quinn
- Krash Cosplay
- X-23
- Steampunk
- Psylocke
- Leeloo from Fifth Element
- The droids you were looking for
- Harley Quin
- Cara Nicole as Lady Punisher
- Sara Moni Cosplay
- Black Cat
- Cassandra S. Kyle
- Nicole Marie Jean and friend as Fall versions of Poison Ivy
- Steampunk
- Wasp – X-Men
- Rue Kurosawa
- ryan-green-shot-and-edited-by-eddie-bonneau-make-up-done-by-moe-hunt
- sapphire-nova-with-vincent-esposito
- tina-rybakova
Filed under Humor and Observations





























































































































































































































































































































