Furry critter fun to start your week.
Furry critter fun to start your week.
Filed under Animals, Humor and Observations
When you are out fishing in the middle of a river, and a tiger jumps up and kills you, it was pretty much your time. You can prepare for a lot of deaths, but tiger attack while fishing is not usually anticipated…
April 26, 2014 – Royal Bengal tiger prowls in Sunderbans, at the Sunderban delta, about 80 miles south of Calcutta, India. An Indian fisherman says a tiger has snatched a man off a fishing boat and dragged him away into a mangrove swamp.AP
KOLKATA, India – A Bengal tiger snatched a man off a fishing boat in eastern India, dragging him away into a mangrove swamp as his children looked on in horror, the man’s son said Friday.
The attack happened Thursday as Sushil Manjhi and his son and daughter were crab fishing in a stream in the Sunderbans National Park. The tiger leaped aboard the boat and clamped its jaws on Manjhi’s neck, said Sushil’s son, Jyotish.
The attack underlines the difficult existence of millions of poor Indians who make a living by scavenging in forests and rivers, often at risk from wild predators. Many villagers fish for crabs in the Sunderbans — even though it’s illegal in the protected reserve — because they fetch a good price at markets in nearby towns.
The national park is one of the largest reserves for the royal Bengal tiger. Thursday’s attack was the fourth deadly assault by a tiger this year in the Sunderbans, wildlife officials said.
India has more than half of the 3,200 tigers believed to be left in the wild in the world. But as the country undergoes breakneck development to accommodate the growth of its 1.2 billion people, tiger habitats have been shrinking.
The big cat’s numbers have also dwindled because of rampant poaching to feed a flourishing market for tiger organs and bones in China.
Filed under Animals, Humor and Observations
The term developed in common usage in response to the ship’s appearance when fully loaded. A total of 44 such vessels were constructed from 1887 to 1898.
Filed under Humor and Observations
Your weekly collection of cool cosplay photos. Enjoy!
Filed under Humor and Observations

Shapeshifting isn’t just for sci-fi movies; new shapeshifting technology can change video chats of the future.
A research group out of MIT has created a way to allow inanimate objects to respond to human touch. Internet users may soon use this technology to interact with each other or play with objects virtually.
MIT research assistant Daniel Leithinger says shapeshifting can take your smart device to the next dimension. “Right now, if you think about it, we are just poking at glass surfaces, and then we have these rich graphics underneath. Wouldn’t it be more engaging if we could actually touch information, reach out to other people and have a much richer sensory experience?”
The technology uses motorized plastic pins to respond to your movement. A group of pins are attached to a structure, each with an individualized motor. A motion sensor camera measures your movements and tells the pins how to respond. Fellow researcher Philipp Schoessler explains the technology: “Each element is like a pixel on a screen and if you have a lot of pixels, you can get the illusion of forms of shapes.”
Tangible media, like shapeshifting, can allow you to interact with other users, even shake hands virtually. Leithinger says it can also be used to develop 3D models. “Originally we started out developing shape displays. And the idea of a shape display is, they are kind of like your average multi-touch display like your computer or phone. But rather than just sensing touch and outputting graphics it can also output shapes and you can deform those shapes.”
It can even be used to transform your furniture. Researchers hope to incorporate shapeshifting into furniture that can mold to your body, identify pressure points, or stimulate movement to keep you alert on the job. “I think of it more as helping you, not forcing you to change yourself. Going from a seated to a standing position, that’s definitely something it can do, help you form healthy habits,” says Leithinger.
The possibilities move beyond furniture and video chats. The technology can be used in other fields like landscaping and architecture.
The tech is still in its developmental stages but Leithinger says it may soon become a part of daily life. “We really feel we can go much more interesting…We can have the richness of real objects, of using our hands and our bodies, when interacting with computers. But we think that this shapeshifting technology will be necessary in order for us to do so.”
Hillary Vaughn is part of the Junior Reporter program at Fox News. Get more information on the program here and follow them on Twitter: @FNCJrReporters
Filed under Humor and Observations
Archaeologists have uncovered the remains of an epidemic in Egypt so terrible that one ancient writer believed the world was coming to an end.
Working at the Funerary Complex of Harwa and Akhimenru in the west bank of the ancient city of Thebes (modern-day Luxor) in Egypt, the team of the Italian Archaeological Mission to Luxor (MAIL) found bodies covered with a thick layer of lime (historically used as a disinfectant). The researchers also found three kilns where the lime was produced, as well as a giant bonfire containing human remains, where many of the plague victims were incinerated.
Occurring between roughly A.D. 250-271, the plague “according to some sources killed more than 5,000 people a day in Rome alone,” wrote Francesco Tiradritti, director of the MAIL, in the latest issue of Egyptian Archaeology, a magazine published by the Egypt Exploration Society.
Tiradritti’s team uncovered the remains of this body-disposal operation between 1997 and 2012. The monument his team is excavating was originally built in the seventh century B.C. for a grand steward named Harwa. After Harwa’s death, the Egyptians continuously used the monument for burial (Akhimenru was a successor who built his own tomb there). However, after its use for body disposal during the plague, the monument was abandoned and never used again.
The use of the complex “for the disposal of infected corpses gave the monument a lasting bad reputation and doomed it to centuries of oblivion until tomb robbers entered the complex in the early 19th century,” Tiradritti writes.
End of the world
Cyprian left a gut-wrenching record of what the victims suffered before they died. “The bowels, relaxed into a constant flux, discharge the bodily strength [and] a fire originated in the marrow ferments into wounds of the fauces (an area of the mouth),” he wrote in Latin in a work called “De mortalitate.” The “intestines are shaken with a continual vomiting, [and] the eyes are on fire with the injected blood,” he wrote, adding that “in some cases the feet or some parts of the limbs are taken off by the contagion of diseased putrefaction ”
Cyprian believed that the world was coming to an end.
“The kingdom of God, beloved brethren, is beginning to be at hand; the reward of life, and the rejoicing of eternal salvation, and the perpetual gladness and possession lately lost of paradise, are now coming, with the passing away of the world ” (translation by Philip Schaff, from the book “Ante-Nicene Fathers”, volume 5, 1885).
While the world, of course, did not end, the plague weakened the Roman Empire. “It killed two Emperors, Hostilian in A.D. 251 and Claudius II Gothicus in A.D. 270,” wrote Tiradritti. It is “a generally held opinion that the ‘Plague of Cyprian’ seriously weakened the Roman Empire, hastening its fall.” [In Photos: 14th-Century ‘Black Death’ Grave Discovered]
The newly unearthed remains at Luxor underscore the plague’s potency. Tiradritti’steam found no evidence that the victims received any sort of religious rites during their incineration. “We found evidence of corpses either burned or buried inside the lime,” he told Live Science in an interview. “They had to dispose of them without losing any time.”
What caused the plague?
The plague may have been some form of smallpox or measles, accordingto modern day scientists. While the discovery of human remains associated with the plague will give anthropologists new material to study, Tiradritti cautions they will not be able to extract DNA from the bodies.
While stories about researchers extracting DNA from mummies (such as Tutankhamun) have made headlines in recent years, Tiradritti told Live Science he doesn’t believe the results from such ancient specimens. “In a climate like Egypt, the DNA is completely destroyed,” he said. DNA breaks down over time, and permafrost (something not found in Egypt) is the best place to find ancient DNA samples, Tiradritti said.
Immense monument
The discovery of the body disposal site is just one part of the team’s research. Thebes is a massive site containing a vast necropolis, and the excavations of the MAIL are providing new data that allows scholars to determine how it changed between the seventh century B.C. and today.
The funerary complex of Harwa and Akhimenru, which the MAIL has been excavating since 1995, is one of the largest private funerary monuments of Egypt. Tiradritti notes that it is considered a key monument for studying a peak period in Egyptian art known as the “Pharaonic Renaissance” that lasted from the start of the seventh century B.C. until the mid-sixth century B.C. During this time, Tiradritti notes, artists created innovative new works that were rooted in older Egyptian artistic traditions.
Filed under Humor and Observations
Or at least the public’s perception of you. That is the principal argument behind the Russian Interior Ministry’s recent ban on short skirts and other uniform modifications, the Moscow Times reports.
“When you meet people, the first thing you see is their clothing, and for a police officer fulfilling his duties, it is crucial to have a tidy and neat appearance. From time to time, we have seen instances of officers improperly wearing their uniforms. … Heads [of departments] must pay more attention to the appearance of their subordinates,” Deputy Interior Minister Sergei Gerasimov said in a memo obtained by Russian newspaper Izvestia.
The Moscow Times reports that the ban was imposed to counteract a growing trend of rising hemlines among female officers, as well as a tendency of male officers to cut off their shirt sleeves. Department heads are encouraged to inspect uniforms daily to make sure they’re appropriate.
Here’s a photo that allegedly depicts a small group of infractions just waiting to happen:
(We can’t think of a single police force where high heels are standard uniform.)The photo ran in the Moscow Times, but we’re taking it with a grain of salt.
We’re always hungry for more proof. Feel free to tweet your modified Russian police uniforms at us (before the state’s hammer blow crushes your freedom).
It’s worth noting that in the U.S., female officers commonly wear pants.
NOTE from me: (The validity of this story cannot be confirmed, but just figure Putin would ruin another good thing, just like the Ukraine.)
Filed under Humor and Observations
Crews with the Illinois State Archaeological Survey discovered five house plots from the Mississippian Era at the Southern Illinois Airport in Murphysboro. The dig also uncovered a stone ax that is thousands of years older than the plots. It would have been used to cut trees and wood.
Gary Shafer is the airport’s manager. He says he knew the area had history, but added that the discoveries ended up being much “denser” than anticipated.
Archaeologists say they’ll continue working at the area for a few more weeks to search for more artifacts.
Filed under Humor and Observations