Category Archives: Humor and Observations

Earthworm Regeneration

Ever wonder how earthworms regrow or survive dissection?  It is one of those weird/bizarre things in nature which fascinate me.  Here is a pretty comprehensive story detailing all you would ever want to know about the topic, including worms that only reproduce through this self-mutilation, akin to a masochistic mitosis.

Making heads or tails out of severed earthworms

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/7RAqS1/:ZfbbAu1e:Xl3NJ4zD/www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/metro/urban-jungle/pages/130604.html?tid=rssfeed/

The red wiggler, or compost worm, might regenerate a new head or a new tail, depending on where it suffers amputation.

red wiggler, Eisenia fetida, illustration by Patterson Clark

Loss of any of the first 8segments might result in a complete regeneration of the head.

The worm might grow a new head if cut behind the 13th segment, but it can’t replace sexual organs.

A separation between segments 20 and 21might yield a new tail for the head and a new head for the tail — a possible two worms.

The first 23 segments are roughly the limit for partial head regeneration by the cut-off tail. A loss of more than that might result in tail segments at both ends — and a dead end for the worm.

A cut-off head might regenerate a partial tail if separation occurs in front of the 55th segment. Behind the 55th, full tail regeneration is possible.

Eisenia fetida

Source: The Biological Bulletin

Every gardener has had the gruesome experience of plunging a spade into the ground, only to find that he has sliced anearthworm in half.

Will it die? Regenerate the lost part? Become two earthworms?

The answer depends on a variety of factors, including the type of earthworm and the location and tidiness of the amputation.

Scientists studying earthworms get mixed results even when using anesthesia and a scalpel, so sloppy surgery from a rusty trowel won’t do much for a worm’s chances for regeneration. However, worms can rebound from sacrificing some of their hundred-plus segments to a hoe or to a hungry robin or mole.

Regeneration of heads and tails commonly occurs when an injury activates stem cells that differentiate into replacement parts. Another transformation occurs when tissue suddenly finds itself closer to the front or back of a regenerating worm. Through a process of cellular reorganization, the tissue conforms to its new role in the worm.

The rules of regeneration

• Most earthworms can lose several segments from their head and grow them back. With the red wiggler, a worm often used in composting, the more head segments lost, the less likely they will be fully regenerated. The marsh-loving blackworm, however, always generates eight replacement head segments no matter where the worm has been bisected.

• The ability to generate a new tail is almost universal among segmented worms.

• An amputation between head and tail can sometimes result in two worms, with the front section growing a new tail and the severed tail growing a new head.

• Sometimes a severed tail generates new tail segments instead of a head. Like the rest of the worm, the twin-tailed creature absorbs oxygen from the soil and can stay alive for a while, but it’s unable to feed itself and will eventually perish.

• Severed red wiggler tails especially “have trouble mounting productive head regeneration and thus die of starvation and brainlessness, if you will,” says Mark Zoran, who studies nervous system regeneration at Texas A&M.

• A severed head made up of fewer than 20 segments can heal, but the animal tends to develop a dysfunctional lower digestive tract. Would it die of constipation? “I guess it is possible,” Zoran says, “but I doubt that little head fragment would be doing much eating while in such a state of disrepair.”

• If sexual organs are lost in an amputation,night crawlers can regenerate them, but red wigglers can’t.

The self-amputators

Temperature shifts can cause blackworms to develop a fissure between the head and tail, roughly at the 48th of its 150 segments. Each fragment develops a new head or tail, with each part forming a full set of gonads.

A not-too-distant relative of earthworms is the white worm, a tiny translucent worm that some people grow to feed to their aquarium fish.

One species of white worm relies exclusively on fragmentation to reproduce. It spontaneously fragments into five to 10 pieces, each of which grows a new head and tail. Sometimes, a fragment will grow heads at both ends, resulting in what scientists call a bipolar worm.

4 Comments

Filed under Animals, Humor and Observations

Man Walks around Cut In Half

Video:  (pretty funny)

http://foxnewsinsider.com/2013/07/20/man-cut-half-prank-scares-people

 

 

1 Comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

Atlantis Found in Brazil?

Possible Atlantis Found In Brazil Via Discovery Of Ancient Granite Rock

May 9, 2013
Image Credit: Photos.com

Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

First mentioned in two dialogues (Timaeus and Critias) by Plato in 360 BC, the legendary island of Atlantis has long been sought by historians, archaeologists, and explorers alike. Said to have originally existed between South America and Africa, this sunken island has been searched for in no less than dozens of locations worldwide, from Bimini to the Black Sea.

In a new twist, a team of scientists from Brazil and Japan say they have discovered their version of Atlantis, or at least an ancient piece of granite that was part of a continent that disappeared nearly a hundred million years ago when Africa and South America separated.

Brazilian “Atlantis,” as they are calling it, may actually have been part of the ancient supercontinent Pangaea. Pangaea formed about 300 million years ago during the late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras. It existed for more than 100 million years before beginning to break apart to form the continents as we see them today.

The researchers discovered the granite artifact more than 8,000 feet deep in a region known as the Rio Grande Elevation, about 900 miles of the coast of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The team said the granite is a natural formation that normally forms on dry land, which would offer evidence that the region was once above sea level.

The discovery was announced by the Geology Service of Brazil (CPRM) as a sign of a lost continent.

“This could be Brazil´s Atlantis,” said CPRM geology director Roberto Ventura Santos. “We are almost certain, but we need to strengthen this hypothesis.”

“It is unusual because it is granite rock,” he added. “And you don’t find granite on the seabed.”

The initial granite formation was discovered last year during seabed dredging by geologists. Just last month Japan offered undersea observations with its manned mini-sub Shinkai 6500 and reportedly found more granite formations.

Hiroshi Kitazato, the Japanese researcher who led the work for the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), said in an interview with The Telegraph that the region was of interest to researchers.

“This is the region that has been least explored worldwide,” he told the paper´s Donna Bowater. “So, we believe it is very important to research it. Previously, the Shinkai carried out “‹“‹expeditions closer to Japan, the Indian and the Pacific Ocean.”

The current theory on the granite formations is that the area was once a large island or more likely part of the continental crust, in part because the materials uncovered are much different than the surrounding seabed. However, the researchers said further testing and analysis will be needed to make a solid confirmation. The scientists plan to drill for more samples later this year after they can gather geological and biological data from the samples they collected so far.

Although Santos has called the finding a piece of the “Brazilian Atlantis,” he explained that the remark is “more in terms of symbolism“¦ Obviously, we don´t expect to find a lost city in the middle of the Atlantic.”

“But if it is the case that we find a continent in the middle of the ocean, it will be a very big discovery that could have various implications in relation to the extension of the continental shelf,” he told The Telegraph.

The research has been carried out by the Brazilian Geological Service, the Oceanographic Institute of the University of Sao Paulo and the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, which operated the Shinkai 6500 research sub.

Source: Lawrence LeBlond for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

 

2 Comments

Filed under Humor and Observations

NASA Tests 3D Printed Rocket Engine Injector

NASA Successfully Tests First 3-D Printed Rocket Engine Injector

Another step toward the day when 3-D printers spit out entire spacecraft.
By Shaunacy FerroPosted 07.12.2013 at 1:00 pm3 Comments

Rocket Engine Injector NASA Glenn Research Center

We’ve seen 3-D printed aircraft and drone parts, and even plans for a printable private jet. Now NASA has demonstrated another 3-D printing first: The agency has just finished successful tests of a 3-D printed rocket engine injector at the Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, marking one of the first steps in using additive manufacturing for space travel.

In conjunction with rocket manufacturer Aerojet Rocketdyne, NASA built the liquid-oxygen and gaseous-hydrogen rocket injector assembly using laser melting manufacturing. This sci-fi-sounding technique involves melting metallic powders down with high-powered laser beams, then fusing them into shape. Previous manufacturing methods for these type of injectors required more than a year. Being able to 3-D print the parts reduces the time frame to four months, at a 70 percent price reduction.

 

Installation In The Rocket Combustion Laboratory

Installation In The Rocket Combustion Laboratory:  NASA Glenn Research Center 

Eventually, 3-D printing is likely become a staple of the aerospace industry, as Davin Coburn describes in our July issue.

NASA has already expressed interest in putting 3-D printers in space, so astronauts could have easier access to spare parts and, most importantly, pizza.

Michael Gazarik, the associate administrator for space technology at NASA, even suggested entire spacecraft could one day be made with 3-D printing, calling it “game-changing for new mission opportunities.”

2 Comments

Filed under Humor and Observations

More Cosplay Pictures – Wish I was at SDCC

I wish I could make San Diego Comic Con…sigh, but not this year.  Hello to all my awesome friends who are over there right now.  In your honor I post these cosplay pictures.  No, they are mostly NOT from SDCC since I am not there, but a few might have fallen in from your posts today.

1 Comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

American Wakes from Coma Speaking Swedish

Michael Boatwright, American, Wakes Up With No Memory Of Who He Is, Speaking Swedish

Michael Boatwright’s driver’s license says he was born in Florida, but after waking up from a hospital bed in Palm Springs, Calif., all he can speak is Swedish.

MyDesert.com has a new in-depth report on Boatwright, who was found unconscious in a motel room on February 28. He has no memory of his life and only responds to the name “Johan Ek.”

Doctors have diagnosed Boatwright with Transient Global Amnesia, a disorder in which patients are unable to form new memories.

boatwright2 boatwright-729-620x349

Medical personnel also believe Boatwright is in a dissociative fugue state, wherein a person forgets their past and can sometimes take on a new personality.

Boatwright, who appears to have lived in Sweden for much of his life, has an online portfolio that says he got a bachelors from Michigan State and Masters from Stockholm University.

It’s unclear if Boatwright’s symptoms will be temporary, but similar conditions make headlines with regularity.

Two months ago, the Telegraph reported on a man with “Walking Corpse Syndrome”who thought he was dead.

And, unlike Boatwright who likely spoke Swedish before he found himself in the California hospital, Englishman Alun Morgan woke up from a stroke last December to discover he could only speak Welsh, a language he never formally learned

1 Comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

3D Pencil Drawings

Pencil sketches that seem to stand up off the page 

JUNE 18, 2013

Most of these drawings by Ramon Bruin seem relatively simple, but at the same time, because of their shadows and some intriguingly placed real-life props in the photographs, the sketched images appear to be almost magically leaving the bounds of the paper they’re drawn on…

3D Pencil Sketches - 03

 

3D Pencil Sketches - 01

3D Pencil Sketches - 02

3D Pencil Sketches - 05

3D Pencil Sketches - 06

3D Pencil Sketches - 07

3D Pencil Sketches - 08

3D Pencil Sketches - 09

3D Pencil Sketches - 10

3D Pencil Sketches - 11

3D Pencil Sketches - 13

3D Pencil Sketches - 04

(via My Modern Met)

3 Comments

Filed under Humor and Observations

Does long-lost pyramid discovery rival those of Giza?

Does long-lost pyramid discovery rival those of Giza?

By Rossella Lorenzi

Published July 16, 2013

Discovery News 

 

Mysterious, pyramid-like structures spotted in the Egyptian desert by an amateur satellite archaeologist might be long-lost pyramids after all, according to a new investigation into the enigmatic mounds.

Angela Micol, who last year found the structures using Google Earth 5,000 miles away in North Carolina, says puzzling features have been uncovered during a preliminary ground proofing expedition, revealing cavities and shafts.

“Moreover, it has emerged these formations are labeled as pyramids on several old and rare maps,” Micol told Discovery News.

Located about 90 miles apart, the two possible pyramid complexes appeared as groupings of mounds in curious positions.

One site in Upper Egypt, just 12 miles from the city of Abu Sidhum along the Nile, featured four mounds with an unusual footprint.

“They would be the greatest pyramids known to mankind. We would not exaggerate if we said the finding can overshadow the Pyramids of Giza.”

– Medhat Kamal El-Kady and Haidy Farouk Abdel-Hamid. 

Some 90 miles north near the Fayum oasis, the second possible pyramid complex revealed a four-sided, truncated mound approximately 150 feet wide and three smaller mounds in a diagonal alignment.

“The images speak for themselves,” Micol said when she first announced her findings. “It’s very obvious what the sites may contain, but field research is needed to verify they are, in fact, pyramids.”

First reported by Discovery News, her claim gained widespread media attention and much criticism.

Authoritative geologists and geo-archaeologists were largely skeptical and dismissed what Micol called “Google Earth anomalies” as windswept natural rock formations — buttes quite common in the Egyptian desert.

“After the buzz simmered down, I was contacted by an Egyptian couple who claimed to have important historical references for both sites,” Micol said.

The couple, Medhat Kamal El-Kady, former ambassador to the Sultanate of Oman, and his wife Haidy Farouk Abdel-Hamid, a lawyer, former counselor at the Egyptian presidency and adviser of border issues and international issues of sovereignty, are top collectors of maps, old documents, books and rare political and historical manuscripts.

El-Kady and Farouk have made important donations to the Egyptian state and the U.S. Library of Congress.

Their various gifts to the Library of Alexandria include Al-Sharif Al-Idrissi’s map of the Earth drawn for King Roger II of Sicily in 1154. According to the couple, the formations spotted by Micol in the Fayum and near Abu Sidhum were both labeled as pyramid complex sites in several old maps and documents.

“For this case only, we have more than 34 maps and 12 old documents, mostly by scientists and senior officials of irrigation,” El-Kady and Farouk told Discovery News.

For the site near the Fayum, they cited three maps in particular — a map by Robert de Vaugoudy, dating from 1753, a rare map by the engineers of Napoleon Bonaparte, and a map and documents by Major Brown, general of irrigation for Lower Egypt in the late 1880s.

The documents would point to the existence of two buried pyramids which add to the known Fayum pyramids of Lahoun and Hawara.

“They would be the greatest pyramids known to mankind,” the couple said. “We would not exaggerate if we said the finding can overshadow the Pyramids of Giza.”

Their sources would indicate the pyramids at the Fayum site were intentionally buried in a “damnatio memoriae” — an attempt to intentionally strike them from memory.

While the site in the Fayum has not been investigated yet, a preliminary on-the-ground expedition has already occurred at the site near Abu Sidhum, providing intriguing data to compare with El-Kady and Farouk’s maps and documents.

“Those mounds are definitely hiding an ancient site below them,” Mohamed Aly Soliman, who led the preliminary expedition near Abu Sidhum, told Discovery News.

“First of all, the land around them is just a normal flat land. It is just desert — sand and stones,” he said. “The mounds are different: You will find pottery everywhere, seashells and transported layers. These are different layers, not belonging to the place, and were used by the Egyptians to hide and protect their buried sites,” he said.

“Describing himself as “one of the many Egyptians obsessed with the pharaohs’ civilization,” Aly has a background as a private investigator and has been studying to identify archaeological sites in Egypt.

“If we look back in history we will find that pharaohs were using seashells in building their tombs and pyramids for ventilation purpose,” Aly said.

“Even the rocks used in building pyramids contained up to 40 percent seashells.”

He cited the work of Ioannis Liritzis, a professor of archaeometry at the University of the Aegean and colleagues at the University of Athens.

According to the amateur geo-archaeologist, the local people living near the mounds had long suspected the formations were ancient in origin. They had tried to dig on one of the small mounds years ago, but the excavation failed due to striking very hard stone that Aly and Micol believe may be granite.

“What made us sure those mounds are hiding pyramids was a special cavity and metal detector we used over the mounds,” Aly Soliman said. “The detector we used showed an underground tunnel heading north on both the big mounds.”

“It also signaled metal was present in the mounds,” he said. “Most Egyptian pyramids have north facing entrance tunnels, so this is another promising piece of evidence we have found.”

According to Micol, the Egyptian team believes they have identified a temple or habitation site near the site and a row of what may be mastaba tombs adjacent to the mounds.

So, has a bunch of amateur archaeologists made a discovery that will dwarf the Pyramids of Giza? Or are their pyramids just naturally occurring rock outcrops filled with wishful thinking and vivid imagination?

“Whether they prove to be anything more than nature must be verified on the ground, but this location seems promising and is the result of research beyond simply pointing out the first sand dune noticed on Google Earth,” archaeologist Patrick Rohrer told Discovery News.

To further research the pyramid puzzle and examine other sites, Micol’s set up the Satellite Archaeology Foundation, Inc. a pending non-profit — and launched a crowdfunding campaign.

“Due to unrest and economic distress in Egypt, life is not easy for archaeologists” Micol said. “We found no one from the Egyptian academic community who is interested in finding out about these sites at this time.”

“Now that we have ground proof and historical evidence,” she added, “my goal is to go to Egypt with a team of U.S. scientists and videographers to help validate the evidence found by the expedition team and to prove if these sites are lost pyramid complexes.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/16/does-long-lost-pyramid-discovery-rival-those-giza/#ixzz2ZQlSMYRo

3 Comments

Filed under Humor and Observations

Accidental Racism

These are collected from various websites including The Chive.  I want to explain that while they are funny, racism is not.  Accidental racism occurs, hopefully, because the ones that do it are unaware since they don’t think in terms of race.  If they are doing it because they really are racist, all the better to point it out.  Although I am caucasion (mixed from hundreds of races as most Americans are) of indeterminate origin (I have not looked myself up on Ancestry.com) I have experienced blatant racism while living in Hawaii.  My wife had a difficult time finding work because several employers told her they would not hire her because she was white.  (most businesses in Hawaii are asian held, the largest population is Japanese in origin)  At schools, they had ‘kill a haole day’.  Haole being roughly equivalent of the ‘n’ word, but for white people.  So, I know first hand how horrible racism is, not just as a concept.  With that preamble, hopefully this post will serve two purposes; 1) to be funny; and 2) to make all of us a bit more sensitive so we can avoid accidental racism.

6 Comments

Filed under Humor and Observations

Scientists create levitation system with sound waves

Scientists create levitation system with sound waves

By Tia Ghose

Published July 16, 2013

LiveScience
  • acoustic levitation.jpg

    A new technique uses sound waves to levitate objects and move them in mid-air. (Dimos Poulikakos)

Hold on to your wand, Harry Potter: Science has outdone even your best “Leviosa!” levitation spell.

Researchers report that they have levitated objects with sound waves, and moved those objects around in midair, according to a new study.

Scientists have used sound waves to suspend objects in midair for decades, but the new method, described Monday, July 15, in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, goes a step further by allowing people to manipulate suspended objects without touching them.

‘If you have some dogs around, they are not going to like it at all.’

– Daniele Foresti, a mechanical engineer at the ETH Zürich in Switzerland 

This levitation technique could help create ultrapure chemical mixtures, without contamination, which could be useful for making stem cells or other biological materials.

Parlor trick
For more than a century, scientists have proposed the idea of using the pressure of sound waves to make objects float in the air. As sound waves travel, they produce changes in the air pressure — squishing some air molecules together and pushing others apart.

By placing an object at a certain point within a sound wave, it’s possible to perfectly counteract the force of gravity with the force exerted by the sound wave, allowing an object to float in that spot.

In previous work on levitation systems, researchers had used transducers to produce sound waves, and reflectors to reflect the waves back, thus creating standing waves.

“A standing wave is like when you pluck the string of a guitar,” said study co-author Daniele Foresti, a mechanical engineer at the ETH Zürich in Switzerland. “The string is moving up and down, but there are two points where it’s fixed.”

Using these standing waves, scientists levitated mice and small drops of liquid.

But then, the research got stuck.

Acoustic levitation seemed to be more of a parlor trick than a useful tool: It was only powerful enough to levitate relatively small objects; it couldn’t levitate liquids without splitting them apart, and the objects couldn’t be moved.

Levitating liquids
Foresti and his colleagues designed tiny transducers powerful enough to levitate objects but small enough to be packed closely together.

By slowly turning off one transducer just as its neighbor is ramping up, the new method creates a moving sweet spot for levitation, enabling the scientists to move an object in midair. Long, skinny objects can also be levitated.

The new system can lift heavy objects, and also provides enough control so that liquids can be mixed together without splitting into many tiny droplets, Foresti said. Everything can be controlled automatically.

The system blasts sounds waves at what would be an ear-splitting noise level of 160 decibels, about as loud as a jet taking off. Fortunately, the sound waves in the experiment operated at 24 kilohertz, just above the normal hearing range for humans.

However, “if you have some dogs around, they are not going to like it at all,” Foresti told LiveScience.

Right now, the objects can only be moved along in one dimension, but the researchers hope to develop a system that can move objects in two dimensions, Foresti said.

Major advance
The new system is a major advance, both theoretically and in terms of its practical applications, said Yiannis Ventikos, a fluids researcher at the University College London who was not involved in the study.

The new method could be an alternative to using a pipette to mix fluids in instances when contamination is an issue, he added. For instance, acoustic levitation could enable researchers to marinate stem cells in certain precise chemical mixtures, without worrying about contamination from the pipette or the well tray used.

“The level of control you get is quite astounding,” Ventikos said.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/16/scientists-create-levitation-system-with-sound-waves/?intcmp=features#ixzz2ZHRSSz3j

1 Comment

Filed under Humor and Observations