Creepy’ Doodles Emerge From Medieval Text

 

UV LIGHT REVEALS ERASED ADDITIONS TO THE WELSH ‘BLACK BOOK’

By Arden Dier,  Newser Staff
Posted Apr 7, 2015

(NEWSER) – Experts have uncovered what LiveScience calls “ghostly” secrets hidden in a medieval manuscript, which happens to be one of the first to reference King Arthur and Merlin. “The Black Book of Carmarthen” was compiled around 1250, but contains poetry, religious verses, and other texts dating as far back as the 9th century. While perusing its old pages with an ultraviolet light, however, experts at the University of Cambridge uncovered additional lines of verse and “quite creepy” ghost-like faces, the Independent reports. High-resolution photos helped researchers get a closer look at what they now think are drawings added to the 54-page tome after its creation. They were perhaps erased by someone named Jaspar Gryffyth, who penned his name in the book now housed at the National Library of Wales.

1015410-0-20150407100953

“It was a living text that was constantly added to,” but “this man in the 16th century went through the book tidying it up,” researcher Paul Russell tells the BBC. “The owner erased a lot of material from the left, right, top, and bottom margins. Anything he thought was an addition, he got rid of.” As the pages of the book are vellum, or stretched animal skin, Russell says a pumice stone was likely used. “It takes off a slight layer off the surface, but the ink has penetrated a bit further so what we can do is use UV light to bring out that ink.” Researchers were startled to find faces, a drawing of a fish, and what may be a never-before-seen Welsh poem. They’re continuing to search for more. (Another medieval discovery: a cemetery beneath Cambridge.)

1015411-0-20150407101037

4 Comments

Filed under Humor and Observations

Cute Dogs for Your Monday Blues

Cute dogs to cheer up the start of your week…

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

World’s first head transplant volunteer could experience something “worse than death”

World’s first head transplant volunteer could experience something “worse than death”

“I would not wish this on anyone,” says top surgeon.

This week, 30-year-old Russian man, Valery Spiridonov, announced that he will become the subject of the first human head transplant ever performed, saying he volunteers to have his head removed and installed on another person’s body.

If this sounds like some kind of sick joke, we’re right there with you, but unfortunately, this is all too real. Earlier this year, Italian surgeon Sergio Canavero outlined the transplant technique he intends to follow in the journal Surgical Neurology International, and said he planned to launch the project at the annual conference of the American Academy of Neurological and Orthopaedic Surgeons (AANOS) in the US in June, where he will invite other researchers to join him in his head transplant dream.

At the time, it sounded completely outlandish – and it still is – but the difference now is that Canavero actually has a living, breathing volunteer willing to be the guinea pig for what Christopher Hootan at The Independent says is predicted to be a 36-hour operation requiring the assistance of 150 doctors and nurses. You can read about the procedure here.

Hootan brings home what’s really at stake for Spiridonov – it’s not just death he has to worry about:

“A Werdnig-Hoffman disease sufferer with rapidly declining health, Spiridonov is willing to take a punt on this very experimental surgery and you can’t really blame him, but while he is prepared for the possibility that the body will reject his head and he will die, his fate could be considerably worse than death,” says Hootan. 

“I would not wish this on anyone,” said Dr Hunt Batjer, president elect of the American Association for Neurological Surgeons. “I would not allow anyone to do it to me as there are a lot of things worse than death.”

From speaking to several medical experts, Hootan has pin-pointed a problem that even the most perfectly performed head transplant procedure cannot mitigate – we have literally no idea what this will do to Spiridonov’s mind. There’s no telling what the transplant – and all the new connections and foreign chemicals that his head and brain will have to suddenly deal with – will do to Spiridonov’s psyche, but as Hootan puts it rather chillingly, it “could result in a hitherto never experienced level and quality of insanity”.

This is actually happening, and we’re terrified. Also, I’ve suddenly got a great idea for a movie, and judging from the creepy performance below, Canavero could pretty much be cast as himself:

Leave a comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

Gaining weight in midlife may decrease dementia risk, study suggests

obese _skinny_women.JPG

A study of nearly 2 million people in Britain suggests an unexpected protective effect against dementia: obesity in midlife.

The research, published Friday in the journal The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, linked a 34 percent increased risk of dementia among people who had a BMI of less than 20 kg/m2. A BMI of 18.5 is considered to be underweight. Meanwhile, the study findings linked very obese people— those with a BMI greater than 40— to having a 29 percent decreased risk of dementia.

Study authors, from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, did not examine the reasoning behind the link, but in a news release, they noted their findings contradict previous research that suggests obesity increases dementia risk.

Researchers collaborated with global data research firm OXON Epidemiology to analyze the study participants’ medical records from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink, a database comprising about 9 percent of the United Kingdom population. Study participants had a median age of 55 and an average BMI of 26.5, which is considered overweight, at the beginning of the study. During an average nine years of follow-up, nearly 50,000 people were diagnosed with dementia.

The authors noted a gradual declining trend of dementia risk above a BMI of 25, which is considered healthy, up to 35 and higher. The participants’ birth year, age of diagnosis, as well as potentially confounding factors believed to increase dementia risk— like alcohol use and smoking— didn’t impact the results significantly, the news release said.

 Lead study author Nawab Qizilbash, of OXON Epidemiology, and an honorary senior lecturer at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said further research is needed to identify the reason behind the link.

“If increased weight in mid-life is protective against dementia, the reasons for this inverse association are unclear at present,” he said in the news release. “Many different issues related to diet, exercise, frailty, genetic factors and weight change could play a part.”

Study author Stuart Pocock, medical statistics professor at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said his team’s initial findings may hold promise for future dementia treatment.

“Our results suggest that doctors, public health scientists, and policy makers need to rethink how to best identify who is at high risk of dementia,” Pocock said. “We also need to pay attention to the causes and public health consequences of the link between underweight and increased dementia risk, which our research has established. However, our results also open up an intriguing new avenue in the search for protective factors for dementia.”

Researchers noted in the release that their threshold for “underweight” in the study was 20 kg/m2, which is slightly higher than the BMI usually considered to be underweight, 18.5 kg/m2, to allow for more direct comparison with earlier dementia and BMI studies.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Scientists seek to pinpoint source of mysterious mass of methane hovering over Southwest

Methane Hot Spot Things to Know-1.jpg

File photo – undated handout image. (AP Photo/NASA, JPL-Caltech, University of Michigan)

Scientists are working to pinpoint the source of a giant mass of methane hanging over the southwestern U.S., which a study found to be the country’s largest concentration of the greenhouse gas.

The report that revealed the methane hot spot over the Four Corners region — where Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Arizona meet — was released last year.

Now, scientists from the University of Colorado, the University of Michigan, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and NASA are conducting a monthlong study to figure out exactly where it came from.

The answer could help reduce methane emissions that contribute to global warming. Here are some key things to know:

HOT SPOT

 Last year’s study by NASA and the University of Michigan was based on images from a European satellite captured between 2003 and 2009. They showed the methane hot spot as a red blip over the area, which is about half the size of Connecticut.

The study found the concentration of methane detected there would trap more heat in the atmosphere than all the carbon dioxide produced each year in Sweden.

Methane doesn’t last as long in the atmosphere as carbon dioxide, but it’s far more potent for capturing heat in the short term.

POSSIBLE SOURCES

Methane occurs naturally and also is emitted by landfills and the agricultural and oil and natural gas industries.

One possible source of the hot spot is methane released from the region’s coal deposits.

The releases can happen naturally, especially where coal seams reach the earth’s surface. They also occur deliberately when energy companies extract methane — the primary component of natural gas — from coal beds.

The region is home to the San Juan Basin, North America’s most productive area coal bed methane extraction area.

Methane also is released by coal mining and oil and gas drilling systems, and cattle produce large amounts of the gas. Scientists can pinpoint the kind of methane created by fossil fuels by looking for the presence of associated hydrocarbons.

HEALTH EFFECTS

The methane emissions pose no direct safety or health risks for Four Corners residents, although the hot spot does factor into overall global warming.

Also, methane emitted from traditional oil and gas operations usually is accompanied by hydrocarbon emissions that can create ozone, a pollutant that leads to smog and is linked to asthma and respiratory illness.

INVESTIGATING THE MYSTERY

For the next month, scientists based in Durango will fly in planes with a variety of instruments that can sense methane in the San Juan Basin. Crews in vans will follow up on their leads on the ground.

The European satellite that captured the hot spot is no longer in use, but Japan’s GOSAT satellite plans to focus in on the Four Corners when it passes over the area.

It’s possible methane levels over the Four Corners have changed since 2009, said Gabrielle Petron, a scientist at the University of Colorado’s Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences who is working on the latest study. Coal bed methane operations have declined since then, but oil production has increased.

Leave a comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

Cosplay Pictures for Your Weekend

Cosplay pictures to enjoy!

Leave a comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

Random Humor for the End of the Work Week

Random humor to cheer you up for the weekend…

Leave a comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

Europeans’ white skin developed later than thought

Europeans' white skin developed later than thought

Sweden’s Crown Princess Victoria and Prince Daniel in 2011. Traits of white skin emerged more recently than thought in Europe. (AP Photo/Lehtikuva/Vesa Moilanen)

Science notes that Europe is often thought of as the “ancestral home of white people.” But a new DNA study suggests that pale skin and other traits we associate with the continent may have emerged only within the last 8,000 years—a “relatively recent” occurrence.

The study—published last month on the bioRxiv.com server and presented last week at the American Association of Physical Anthropologists’ annual meeting—compared genome DNA across three populations of farmers and hunter-gatherers who crossed over into Europe in discrete migrations within the past eight millennia, Science notes.

What scientists found: a handful of genes tied to diet and skin pigmentation that withstood natural selection and thrived in the northern regions. The data indicates hunter-gatherers who settled in Spain, Hungary, and Luxembourg about 8,500 years ago lacked two specific genes—SLC24A5 and SLC45A2—and had darker skin, Science notes.

But hunter-gatherers hunkered down further north in Sweden had both those light-skin genes and also a third gene that leads to blue eyes (and possibly fair skin and blond hair).

When the third demographic, the Near East farmers, arrived, they also carried the SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 genes, so paler skin started emerging throughout the continent as the populations interbred.

Although researchers don’t offer a definitive answer as to why natural selection picked those genes to thrive in the north, one paleoanthropologist speculated at the meeting that the lack of sun in the northern parts of Europe required people to adapt by developing lighter skin to better absorb more vitamin D, as well as the LCT gene that allowed them to digest the sugars their ancestors couldn’t in milk, also filled with vitamin D.

(This one infant could tell us where the first Americans came from.)

This article originally appeared on Newser: Europeans’ White Skin Came Later Than Thought

1 Comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

Giant, Tubular Creature Caught On Camera Under The Sea

April 3, 2015 | by Kristy Hamilton

photo credit: A pyrosome (Pyrostremma spinosum). Screen capture from EaglehawkDive YouTube video / Michael Baron

What looks like a large inflatable tube is actually a pyrosome. And while it appears to be one behemoth creature, it is actually many hundreds or thousands of animals called zooids embedded in a gelatinous tube.

“One long pyrosome is actually a collection of thousands of clones, with each individual capable of copying itself and adding to the colony,” writes marine biologist Rebecca Helm in Deep Sea News.

The creature’s name means “fiery body” due to its bioluminescence, a bright green-blue glow that can light up the colony when disturbed. This intense light even inspired 19th century scientist Thomas Huxley to write, “I have just watched the moon set in all her glory, and looked at those lesser moons, the beautiful Pyrosoma, shining like white-hot cylinders in the water.”

These “cylinders in the water” can grow to formidable sizes, sometimes exceeding 12 meters (40 ft) in length. Each zooid feeds by sucking in water, filtering small particles and blowing the waste back out. This is also the method that propels the colony into motion, albeit at a very slow pace. When the zooids pause this process, the colony can sink 500-700 (1,640-2,295 ft) meters below the surface of the sea, according to New Scientist.

The footage was captured by Eaglehawk Dive Centre in Tasmania, Australia. Watch the video here:

 

Leave a comment

Filed under Animals, Humor and Observations

Cute Dogs for Your Monday Blues

Cute dog pictures – enjoy!

Leave a comment

Filed under Animals, Humor and Observations