Category Archives: Humor and Observations

New Island Appears

New photo of Pakistan’s ‘Earthquake Island’

By Becky Oskin

Published October 06, 2013

LiveScience
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    An aerial photo from Pakistan’s National Institute of Oceanography suggests the new island is 60 to 70 feet (15 to 20 meters) tall.(PAKISTAN’S NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF OCEANOGRAPHY/NASA EARTH OBSERVATORY)

The Earth performed the ultimate magic trick last week, making an island appear out of nowhere. The new island is a remarkable side effect of the deadly Sept. 24 earthquake in Pakistan that killed more than 500 people.

A series of satellite images snapped a few days after the earthquake-triggered island emerged offshore of the town of Gwadar reveals the strange structure is round and relatively flat, with cracks and fissures like a child’s dried-up mud pie.

The French Pleiades satellite mapped the muddy hill’s dimensions, which measure 576.4 feet long by 524.9 feet wide. Aerial photos from Pakistan’s National Institute of Oceanography suggest the gray-colored mound is about 60 to 70 feet tall. [Gallery: Amazing Images of Pakistan’s Earthquake Island]

Geologists think the new island is made of erupted mud, spewed from the seafloor when trapped gases escaped. 

Gwadar is about 230 miles from the earthquake’s epicenter. The magnitude-7.7 earthquake was likely centered on the Chaman Fault, Shuhab Khan, a geoscientist at the University of Houston told LiveScience last week..

Geologists think the new island, named Zalzala Koh, is made of erupted mud, spewed from the seafloor when either trapped gases escaped or subsurface water was violently expelled.

The new island could be a mud volcano. Mud volcanoes form when hot water underground mixes with sediments and gases such as methane and carbon dioxide. If the noxious slurry finds a release valve, such as a crack opened by earthquake shaking, a mud volcano erupts, said James Hein, a senior scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Santa Cruz, Calif, said in an earlier interview. Geologists from the Pakistan Navy report that Zalzala Koh is releasing flammable gas. But seafloor sediments commonly hold methane-producing bacteria, so the possible methane coming from the island isn’t a clincher to its identity.

Shaking from the powerful Sept. 24 earthquake could have also loosened the seafloor sediments offshore of Pakistan, jiggling them like jelly. The great rivers coming down from the Himalayas dump tons of water-saturated sediment into the Arabian Sea every year. The new island could be a gigantic example of a liquefaction blow, when seismic shaking makes saturated sediments act like liquid and trapped water suddenly escapes, Michael Manga, a geophysicist at the University of California, Berkeley, told LiveScience last week.

Similar islands have appeared offshore of Pakistan after strong earthquakes in the region in 2001 and 1945. If the earlier examples hold, the soft mud island won’t last a year, disappearing under the erosive power of the pounding of waves from monsoon storms.

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Time Magazine Caught Dumbing Down American Version

STUNNING: COMPARING U.S. & WORLD COVERS FOR TIME MAGAZINE

by David Harris Gershon

Each week, TIME Magazine designs covers for four markets: the U.S., Europe, Asia and the South Pacific. Often, America’s cover is quite, well – different. This week offers a stark example.

Witness:

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Yes, what you see is TIME devoting its cover in international markets to a critical moment in Egypt’s revolution – perhaps the most important global story this week – while offering Americans the chance to contemplate their collective navels (with a rather banal topic and supposition, to boot).This is not an isolated incident, for perusingTIME’s covers reveals countless examples of the publication tempting the world with critical events, ideas or figures, while dangling before Americans the chance to indulge in trite self-absorption.

Witness these stunning dichotomies:

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Viewing these covers, a question must be asked: do these moments of marketing (through a choice in covers) reveal more about Americans, or about the state of American journalism?I fear the answer.

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Model Dying of Organ Failure from Anorexia Got More Bookings

Former model: Her organs were failing, but designers still tried to book her

Former teen model Georgina Wilkin was scouted in 2006 and started modeling at age 15. Throughout her career, she became so thin from lack of eating that her organs began to fail, but designers were still lining up to book her. So for the next 7 years, she would battle with anorexia. She is stepping forward now to tell her story.

When she was sixteen, she was booked for a 2-month long job in Japan, on the condition that she lose 3 inches from her hips and 1 inch from her waist. On an already thin frame, this is a serious feat. She did it, and though she was basically emaciated, she realized when she got to Japan that she was one of the “bigger” girls there. “I wasn’t looked after, or told what to do. Nobody told me where the supermarket was so I just didn’t really eat,” she writes in The Telegraph. Completely miserable and barely eating, she couldn’t even go home to her parents because part of the contract indicated that she had to repay the agency for her flight and apartment from the money she earned.

After just a year of working, she became too ill to continue, and was immediately admitted into the hospital for anorexia. “In hospital the doctors made no secret of the fact that my life was in danger. My vital organs were under such strain that there was a risk my heart could stop or my kidneys pack up,” she said. What upsets her most now is that she still sees women in huge campaigns that show the same signs of anorexia that she did: blue lips and fingers that needed to be covered with concealer because her heart was barely pumping to send blood around her body. At 5’10”, she was only 118 pounds in the beginning of her career, and won’t reveal her weight from her thinnest moments out of fear that it might become a goal for women suffering from anorexia today. Still fighting the battle, she spoke at this year’s “Shape of Fashion” debate during London Fashion Week, shaming the industry for its effects on young women. (Daily Mail)

Now an advocate for young women, she wrote in the Telegraph “I was encouraged to lose weight unhealthily by my modelling agent, but teenage girls need to be proud about what they have as a human being. I want to encourage modelling agents and casting directors to talk to girls about healthy eating, and where they do put pressure on young girls to lose their weight, to do so healthily and sensibly.”

We’ve seen this story before and we will continue to see it until there are serious changes made in the fashion industry. Click here for more experiences of the modeling world.

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A silly, funny animation

This is something I found when I was bored and clicking on StumbleUpon.  It’s an animation about one of those cherub-like statues that pees into a pond and the mermaid in the pond who tries to stop it.

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1z2nz3/:1XhA!n8QM:QyDK1vES/riffsy.com/view/riff/3453432/lmao-this-is-super-long-and-silly-and-I-it/

Not particularly high brow, but I found it amusing.

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Awesome Tracked Motorcycle – 1938

February 1938:Caterpillar Track Motorcycle

“Named the “tractor-cycle” by the inventor, J. Lehaitre, the vehicle is said to be superior to an ordinary motorcycle in its ability to climb steep and rough grades, although its speed on level ground is limited to about 25 m.p.h. Fitted with a machine gun, the cycle could be used by dispatch riders or entire military units to travel over shell-torn terrain.”

– Modern Mechanix

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Terrifying Lake Turns Birds Into Statues

Terrifying Lake Turns Birds Into Statues

by Jessie Fernandez, Your Daily Media

Lake Natron is an insidious ​trap for the birds of northern Tanzania: The terrifying lake turns to stone all birds that are foolish enough to immerse themselves or unlucky enough to fall into its deceptive water.

Volcanic ash from the nearby Great Rift Valley contaminated Lake Natron with sodium carbonate and baking soda to the point that only extremophile fish like the alkaline tilapia can survive there, while other animals that take a dip will soon thereafter feel their bodies begin to calcify and harden until they look as if they’ve had a run-in with the White Witch or Medusa.

Even trickier is that the combination of chemicals in the water makes the lake extremely reflective, which often confuses birds into diving into it.

If there are this many statues above the water, it must be an aquatic garden of statues at the lake’s creepy bottom.

The effects and dead scenery of Lake Natron are both fantastic and morbid, inspiring associations with certain Tim Burton movies and other Edward Gorey-esque imagery.

 

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Amazing Finger Art

Judith Ann Braun’s Fingers Are Magical 

With an art career spanning more than three decades, Judith Ann Braun has tested the limits of her artistic musculature. She began as a self-described “realistic figure painter,” and worked through the struggles common to anyone who endeavors upon an artistic pursuit, that of searching for one’s own voice in the chosen medium.

Fast forward to the 21st century where the evolution of Braun’s work has brought us to the Fingerings series, a collection of charcoal dust landscapes and abstracts “painted” using not brushes but her fingertips. Braun has a specific interest in symmetry, as evidenced by the patterns she follows in a number of the Fingerings pieces as well as work in the Symmetrical Procedures collection. Her fingerprints are obvious up close in some of the paintings, though a step back and the grandeur of Braun’s imagination sprawls into a landscape of soft hills, overhanging trees, delicate florals, and a reflective waterway.

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Cosplay Pictures for Saturday!

As promised, from now on I will have lots of cool cosplay pictures each Saturday.  Enjoy, get ideas for your own outfits, and appreciate the efforts made by these cosplayers to have awesome outfits.

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Ancient Skeletons Were All Killed From Above

Skeleton Lake of Roopkund, India. The Surprise Is What Killed Them …

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Atlas Obscura on Slate is a new travel blog. Like us on FacebookTumblr, or follow us on Twitter @atlasobscura

In 1942 a British forest guard in Roopkund, India, made an alarming discovery. More than three miles above sea level, he stumbled across a frozen lake surrounded by hundreds of human skeletons. That summer, the melting ice revealed even more remains, floating in the water and lying haphazardly around the lake’s edges.

Since this was the height of World War II, there were fears that the skeletons might belong to Japanese soldiers who had died of exposure while sneaking through India. The British government, terrified of a Japanese land invasion, sent a team of investigators to determine whether this was true. Upon examination they realized these bones weren’t Japanese soldiers at all, but of a much much older vintage. But what killed them? Many theories were put forth, including an epidemic, landslide, and ritual suicide. For six decades, no one was able to shed light on the mystery of “Skeleton Lake.” 

In 2004 a scientific expedition offered the first plausible explanation of the mysterious deaths. The answer was stranger than anyone had guessed.

All of the bodies were dated to about 850 AD. DNA evidence indicated that there were two distinct groups of people killed near the lake: one a family or tribe of closely related individuals, and a second, shorter group. Rings, spears, leather shoes, and bamboo staves were found, leading experts to believe that the group was comprised of pilgrims heading through the valley with the help of local porters.

Analysis of skulls showed that, no matter their stature or position, all of the people died in a similar way: from blows to the head. However, the short, deep cracks in the skulls appeared to be the result not of weapons but of something round. The bodies had wounds only on their heads and shoulders, indicating the blows came from directly above. The scientists reached an unexpected conclusion: The hundreds of travelers all died from a sudden and severe freak hailstorm.

Hail is rarely lethal. But trapped in a valley without shelter, the 9th-century travelers could not escape the sudden barrage of rock-hard, cricket-ball-size spheres of ice. Twelve hundred years after the storm, the green-tinged bones of the hail victims still ring the lake, preserved alongside their tattered shoes 

More photos of Skeleton Lake can be seen on Atlas Obscura.

Unusual distasters:

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London Street life in 1876

London Street life in 1876

 

From the Retronaut

All images by John Thomson; copyright Bishopsgate Institute via Spitalfields Life

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