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Saturday, February 28, 2009

10 Most Extreme Body Parts

Cathie Jung: World's Smallest Waist --15 inches

Honestly, no Photoshop. Cathie Jung’s tiny waist measures just 15in (38cm), making her figure distinctly hourglass. The Queen of Corsets, as she has aptly named herself, has worn tight-fitting corsets for years to get there, and appears in the 2007 edition of the Guinness Book of World Records. Whilst she currently holds the record for the smallest waist on a living person, the record for the smallest waist ever goes to Ethel Granger who had a wasit of just 13". 


 Lui Hua: World's Largest Hand --his left thumb is 10.2 inches long

Chinese man Lui Hua suffers from a rare condition known as macrodactyly. When he was hospitalized in Shanghai on July 2007, his left thumb measured 10.2 inches and his index finger measured close to 12. On July 20 surgeons undertook a seven-hour operation to reduce the size of Liu's fingers and thumb. Doctors removed 11 pounds of flesh and bone in the procedure. A second surgery is scheduled to take place. 


Annika Irmler: World's Longest Female Tongue --2.7 inches

German schoolgirl Annika Irmler has licked her way into the Guinness Book of Records with her whopping seven centimetre tongue. The twelve-year-old from Tangstedt, near Hamburg, can lick the ice cream from the bottom of a cornet - while her friends have to use their fingers. 


 Lee Redmond: World's Longest Fingernails --until she lost them on a car crash

Lee Redmond, a woman from Utah who has not cut her nails since 1979, had grown and carefully manicured them to reach a total length of 8.65 m (28 ft 4.5 in), and was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's longest fingernails. Sadly, on February, 2009, she lost them in a car crash. 


Radhakant Baijpai: World's Longest Ear Hair --almost than 10 inches long

Indian grocer Radhakant Baijpai certainly has a goal in life: make sure that he has the longest ear hair in the world. Radhakant was crowned the official Guinness world record holder for the longest ear hair back in 2003, when his aural fronds were an already-impressive 13.2cm long. But that didn't stop him pursuing his goal of ever-longer hair on his ears. After several more years of carefully cultivating and caring for the ear-hair, Radhakant's tufts now stretch an astonishing 25cm. He is now waiting for Guinness adjudicators to confirm that he has set a new high, hairy bar for his chosen field. 


Svetlana Pankratova: World's Longest Legs --more than 4 feet long

Russian woman Svetlana Pankratova has, according to Guinness World Records, the longest legs of any woman in the world. While she is not the world's tallest woman, her legs are 132 centimetres (4 ft 4 in) long. Because her upper body is of much more typical dimensions, she is 196 centimetres (6 ft 5 in) tall. She has also very large feet, size 13 (US) / 46 (EU), making shopping for shoes difficult. From 1992 to 1995, Pankratova played women's basketball in the USA, and on 2008 she appeared in Trafalgar Square in London on September 16, 2008 with He Pingping, the smallest man in the world, to promote the 2009 edition of the Guinness World Records. 


Mehmet Ozyurek: World's Longest Nose --4.5 inches

Mehmet Ozyurek, born in Turkey in 1949, has been confirmed as having the world's longest nose. His nose measured 4.5 inches (8.8 cm) when it was last measured on July 06, 2007. He currently lives in Artvin, Turkey. 


Devendra Harne and Pranamya Menaria: Most Fingers and Toes --25

Along with Pranamya Menaria, Devendra Harne shares the title of the person with the most Most Fingers and Toes, they are both indian and have 25 in total (12 fingers and 13 toes) as a result of the condition polydactylism. 


Frank Ames: World’s Longest Eyebrow Hair --3.7 inches long

Frank Ames of Saranac in New York earned his place in the Guinness Book of World Records with a pair of bushy brows measuring 9.6cm. He decided to go for the title on 2003, only to discover it didn't exist. After calling officials, he set up and claimed the hairy new record. "I don't know why it grows like that, it just always has," he told reporters. 


Vivian Wheeler: World's Longest Female Beard --11 inches

With the longest hair in her beard measuring 11 inches - 27.9 cm., Vivian Wheeler of Illinois is blessed with having the longest beard for a female. Her father insisted she start shaving at the age of 7, but since 1993 Vivian Wheeler has not, letting her beard grow.

5 Most Amazing Miniature City Replica

Moscow Miniature

If you don’t have the time to visit all of Moscow’s atractions you can see them all in miniature.
Russians have created a miniature model of their beautiful capital, ever since 1986. During an annual workshop, every structure in the model is wiped of dust and workers replace old buildings with the newly built, so the model is always up-to-date.



France Miniature


Elancourt lies just 30 km from the center of Paris and if you ever visit France, it’s a trip worth taking.
It’s here, at Elancourt, where you can see a big part of France’s culture and history…in miniature. There are over 5 hectares of land covered with typical French landscapes, complete with castles, mansions, ponds, courts, pastures, all built at a scale of 1:30.
There are over 160 miniature French monuments from all over the country, 60,000 miniature people, over 20,000 small trees, 5 rivers and 2 hectars of water. A visit in miniature France gives an overview of all important regions of the country, so it spares you a very long, expensive tour.





Mini City of Sweetness


Artist Meschac Gaba imagined a city of sugar, and then built it.
Models of some of the world’s most instantly recognisable buildings form part of a exhibition called Port City at the Greenland Street gallery in Liverpool, last summer.
He filled it with instantly recognizable landmarks from around the world, such as the Taj Mahal, the Eiffel Tower, the Sydney Opera House, the London Eye, Petronas Towers, the Reichstag, the Empire State Building, and more. There are 600 buildings in the fantasy city, which measures 30 feet by 20 feet and took two years to build.
last summer.





Biscuit City


Eating the City by Chinese artist Song Dong. Over three days in February, the artist constructed a city from biscuits and sweets in Selfridges department store in London. On the last day visitors were invited to eat the city.




Beijing Olympics 


During the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the Hong Kong LEGO User Group, has created an amazing reproduction of a city representing the upcoming Olympic games, made entirely out of LEGO’s. Containing 300,00 LEGO bricks along with 4,500 mini figures, the city features a sports complex, swimming arena, and even residential housing.

Friday, February 27, 2009

The 7 Biggest Things Ever Stolen

We think of thieves on a spectrum from the kid who steals a candy bar from 7-Eleven, to the group of guys in a tuxedos knocking over a casino in an elaborate heist involving grappling hooks.

But there is a level of thief even above them, guys who think a little bit bigger than everybody else. Too big, it turns out. That's why they tried to steal things like...



 #7.
A 3,000 Pound Bell



How often do you go to church (or in this case, a Buddhist temple) and, upon hearing the bell think, "I want one!" Well, some other guys apparently did, and they decided to make their dream come true.

You can imagine the surprise of the Buddhist monks at a temple in Tacoma, Washington when they noticed their enormous bell was missing. Especially considering the thing weighted 3,000 fucking pounds.

Experts (see local police) theorized that, unless the thieves had some kind of super powers, they would have had to have brought a forklift and a truck to load the thing onto. With all the quiet time at those temples, you'd assume someone would have heard something (it is a freaking bell, after all), but nobody heard or saw a thing.


The monks said the bell, cast in Vietnam, was so valuable that they couldn't calculate its worth, which must have pissed them off even more realizing that the assholes who stole it were probably going to sell it for scrap. That, of course, raises the question of just what the thieves thought they would do with the thing after they had it, as even the shadiest pawn shops and scrap metal yards would probably give you more than a raised eyebrow as you dragged this bastard through the door. 
It turns out they didn't have a plan. The monks got their bell back a year later, when some dumbass tried to sell it and some other junk for $500. The buyer went right to the cops, ruining his own chances to have a huge kickass bell on his porch.



A Beach



In July of 2007, officials in Jamaica were presumably walking along the beach when, all of a sudden, there was no more beach. After hiding their weed, they notified local police that an entire fucking beach had been stolen.


Approximately a half mile of beach was taken, and no one knows where it went or who took it. Natural causes were ruled out, and island officials believe approximately 500 dump trucks were loaded up with the sand and taken elsewhere on the island. Again, they don't know where it went, who took it or why, though you'd think that the dude suddenly selling timeshares for houses with the slogan "NOW WITH BEACH!" would be the key suspect.


 Tank



1995 was a simpler time. Terrorists weren't supposedly hiding under every rock and bringing too much shampoo on a plane wouldn't get you a body cavity search. Back then if you wanted to, say, borrow a tank from a military base, you could pretty much just walk in. It was all done on the honor system really.

Don't believe us? Ask Shawn Nelson. Shawn was a typical man whose life got a little tough, what with trying to sue San Diego, and a hospital, and trying to build a mining quarry in his back yard. Being the kind of guy who likes to think outside the box, Shawn decided to steal a 57-ton M60 Patton Tank from his local National Guard armory.


As it turns out, no, tanks don't require keys to start, and yes the hatches were locked, though police theorized he used a crowbar to break into three different tanks before finding one that would start. Yes, the only thing stopping Al Qaeda from taking over an armored division was that they didn't know about the crowbar thing.

Only after it was too late did a guard notice someone, you know, was stealing a freaking tank. Being the brave soul he was, the guard did the only thing his training and pay grade allowed him to do: call someone else. 

In the mean time, Nelson took his newly-found wheels out for a spin through suburban California; crushing cars, trailers, knocking over utility poles and prompting countless SUV drivers to lean out of their windows and ask him where they could buy one.

How do you stop a tank in that situation? You don't. The ensuing 23 minute chase ended only when Nelson managed to get the tank stuck on a jersey barrier in the middle of the highway. At that point, probably after shitting themselves at the sight of said tank, the cops jumped on the war machine, opened the hatch and shot Shawn to death. Yes, the man was presumably undone by the same technique he had invented: the ingenious "crowbar to the hatch" tank hack.


A Bridge



Ever had somebody say, "Well if you believe that, I have a bridge I'd like to sell you!" Well be careful if you happen to be in Russia at the time, because there's a certain chance that the dude just might have a bridge out back he's trying to move.

It may, in fact, be this bridge that was stolen in Khabarovsk, Russia. And the thieves stole it overnight! That's right, a 38-foot long steel bridge designed for automotive traffic was stolen overnight, without anybody noticing.


In what has got to be the most incredible "guess what I did while I was drunk last night" story ever, the local police theorize that a group of thieves dismantled the bridge to sell the metal for scrap. You know, because it's Russia. 

The worst part, is that these are probably serial bridge thieves. According to the article, two other bridges were completely stolen earlier in that same year, and police suspect the crimes are connected (though obviously not by a bridge). But of course the saddest part of this is what it suggests about Russia. One, that (unlike the bell thieves) the perpetrators were apparently able to find a taker for the scrap metal who'd turn a blind eye to the clearly bridge-shaped nature of many of the pieces ("I, uh, found it. In the river.").
Secondly, there's the motorists who stopped when their headlights revealed a half-gone bridge, along with a group of dudes with cutting torches running away with chunks and giggling, and who didn't bother to report anything. We can just picture them doing a U-turn, shaking their heads and muttering, "Yakov Smirnoff was right."


A Church



In what is perhaps the biggest simultaneous dick-slap to the face of both God and the legal system, an entire church was stolen. In--hold on, let's see which country this was here... 

Oh, right: Russia, again. 

According to reports, a local businessman came by and offered villagers about four cents a brick for the church. We'll theorize he actually meant a lump sum for the building, but was rather surprised to open his door one morning to hundreds of Russian villagers with their arms full of bricks. 



The theft of the church apparently happened over the course of less than a month, and officials believe that the bricks in question were re-purposed to build other local buildings which we're assuming are all hugely cursed. This in mind, they offered a reward for the return of the church. We like to imagine a large group of Russians huddled over a trashcan fire trying to determine which bricks the nearby McDonald's doesn't actually need to stay upright.


A Fully Loaded Oil Tanker



While Somalian pirates can only hijack oil tankers and hold them for ransom, others just steal these gargantuan, slow-moving boats outright. 

The tanker, called the MV Asterious, was moored at an oil field in Ghana, and was being guarded by the Nigerian navy. Now, two things: one, we suspect the Nigerian navy isn't all that impressive; two, the MV Asterious had an all Russian crew. The boat happened to be chartered by two different oil companies, GNPC and Lushann Eternit, who both blamed each other when they clearly should have been blaming the Russians.


The boat was never recovered and no suspects or leads have been reported. Later, in the same year, two more tankers were also stolen overnight, futher insulting the Nigerian navy. One tanker, the MV Jimoh, was found repainted. While that works great on cars (at least in the Grand Theft Auto universe), we doubt it has the same effect on ships. 

"The missing ship has been arrested," navy commander Kabir Aliyu said, which without checking further we are going to assume that involved slapping a pair of comically oversized cuffs on the boat and putting it into ship prison wearing an enormous striped uniform.


The Empire State Building



Yes, you read that right. The Empire State building was stolen, and it only took 90 minutes. Let us repeat that: The Empire fucking State Building was stolen in 90 minutes. Though you may be disappointed to learn that the actual theft did not involve a massive underground drill or a super-sized Superman villain helicopter.

No, instead, the building was stolen by the New York Daily News. Through an elaborate (see not that difficult) process of forgery, the news agency managed to create documents for a bill of sale and other undisclosed legal documents convincing enough to make the New York City Office of the City Register transfer the title of the building to Nelots Properties, LLC. You noticed it too, huh? That Nelots is 'stolen' backwards? Oh you didn't? Don't worry, neither did the Office of the City Register. 

You know what else they didn't notice? Some of the important names on the documents, like the witness the notary, who happened to be Fay Wray (the original King Kong star), and Willie Sutton (the famous bank robber).

In all fairness, the stunt was designed to draw attention to a flaw in the system in which the clerks are not required to verify any information. In the article they brought attention to actual cases of this kind of entire house theft where the thieves would take out mortgages on the house, and leave the actual owners stuck to pay off the mortgages while thieves pocket hundreds of thousands of dollars. 

Unlike the above mentioned assholes, the Daily News returned ownership of the building to Empire State Land Associates. We like to think we would have done the same. In exchange for a pile of money exactly the size of the building.
source:cracked.com

10 Worst Plastic Surgery Disasters

Hang Mioku: injected cooking oil into her own face

Hang Mioku, a 48 year-old woman from South Korea, became so addicted to plastic surgery that she was left unrecognisable after her obsession led her to inject cooking oil into her face. She had her first plastic surgery procedure when she was 28. Following operation after operation, her face was eventually left enlarged and disfigured, and the surgeons she visited refused to carry out any more work on her and one suggested that her obsession could be a sign of a psychological disorder. So Hang resorted to injecting cooking oil into her face. It became so grotesquely large that she was called "standing fan" by children in her neighbourhood - due to her large face and small body. 

As Hang's notoriety spread she was featured on Korean TV. Viewers seeing the report took mercy on her and sent in enough donations to enable her to have surgery to reduce the size of her face. During the first procedure surgeons removed 60g of foreign substance from Hang's face and 200g from her neck. After several other sessions her face was left greatly reduced but still scarred and disfigured. 


Jocelyn Wildenstein: a US$4 million monster

Known by the press by the nickname of "The Bride of Wildenstein" --a reference to The Bride of Frankenstein--, Jocelyn Wildenstein has allegedly spent almost US$4,000,000 on cosmetic surgery over the years, ending up as one of the worst and most famous cases of plastic surgery addiction. But who did that happened? 

Once upon a time, in the late 70’s there was a beautiful women named Jocelyn Wildenstein. Jocelyn really had it made. She was a fresh-faced mother of two and married to an extremely rich art dealer. That is until she caught her husband in bed with a 21 year old Russian model. Now, any normal person would just leave her husband and take all of his money with her, right? Not Jocelyn Wildenstein! Instead she decided to win back her husbands love and make herself more beautiful by going under the knife. Well, her husband left her anyways, but Jocelyn will always have her plastic surgeon. 


Michael Jackson: more than 10 nose surgeries

Does this really need to be explained? It’s incredible to forget how absolutely normal Michael Jackson looked back in the 70’s and 80’s, attractive even, before turning into the sideshow freak that he is today. He is rumored to have had more than 10 nose surgery procedures on his life. 




 Pete Burns: famous singer, spent almost all of his life savings on reconstructive surgery

Pete Burns, former frontman of the British band Dead or Alive --famous for their single "You Spin Me Round (Like a Record)"--, has had extensive polyacrylamide injections into his lips, along with cheek implants, several nose re-shapings and many tattoos. He revealed in early 2006 that he had spent almost all of his life savings on eighteen months of reconstructive surgery after a procedure on his lips went horribly wrong. 




Dennis Avner: the Catman

Dennis Avner, also known by "Catman" or his native american name of "Stalking Cat", has undergone incredible extensive surgery in order to look like his totem animal, the tiger. Modifications include extensive tattooing, transdermal implants to allow whiskers to be worn, subdermal implants to change the shape of the face and the filing and shaping of the teeth to make them look more like a tiger's. 


Eric Sprague: the Lizardman

Born Eric Sprague in 1972, the Lizardman was one of the first people to have a split tongue and in some circles is seen to be wholly responsible for the recent popularity of this particular modification. This 37 year old man has transformed himself into a reptile via 700 hours of tattooing, five Teflon horns implanted beneath the skin of his eyebrows, filing down of his teeth into sharp fangs, bifurcation of his tongue, and stretching of his septum and earlobes. 



 Donatella Versace: a caricature of herself

Since taking over for her brother Gianni Versace, platinum blonde fashion designer Donatella Versace has gone through some drastic changes thanks to plastic surgery, turning herself into a caricature. Although nose jobs are usually done to make a nose smaller, Donatella’s has grown larger over the years. It is also wider and flatter and slightly crooked, indicating that at least one bad nose job took place. In addition to her big nose, Donatella also has large lips, like the trout pouts of the Hollywood divas the designer dresses. Although the fashion icon has always had big lips, the oversized upper lip indicates that fillers, like collagen, have been used liberally. For a 53-year old, Donatella’s skin is very firm, indicating a possible facelift. She probably also uses dermal injectables like Botox to eliminate wrinkles, even when she smiles. Her tight face is a strong contrast to the loose skin on the rest of her body. And yes, Donatella’s weight loss also revealed her breast implants. Anything left? 


Jackie Stallone: facelift, brow lift, cheek implants, nose job...

The mother of famous actor Silvester Stallone, Jackie was also famous for claiming she can talks to dogs about the future, she also once set up a psychic hotline which would charge callers for advice. Now she’s relatively famous for what looks like a little too much plastic surgery, as she has tried everything: facelift, brow lift, cheek implants, nose job and, of course, lip jobs. 



 Amanda Lepore: world's most famous transexual

Once a poverty-stricken young boy, Amanda Lepore's countless surgeries have made her one of the world's most famous transexuals. She had her first plastic surgery at the age of 15, getting a sex change in her last year of high school, and countless surgeries after that. 



 Michaela Romanini: italian socialite, famous for her collagen abuse

Last but not least. Meet italian socialite Michaela Romanini. This lip collagen abuser is only 40 years old, and became famous after her many surgeries.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Endangered The Most Dangerous Bird on Earth

The Southern Cassowary may not be as much of a household name as its cousins the Ostrich and the Emu, but even though it is classified as "only" the third largest bird on the planet it has a less welcome claim to fame. Take a look at officially the most dangerous bird on the planet.



Ask a ten year old what the largest bird in the world is and the chances are you will get the right answer - the ostrich. Asked about the second largest and the odds are still very good that they will be able to name the Emu. Go for third place in the size league and you may well start to get blank looks from all but the keenest young ornithologist. The answer is the Soutern Cassowary - and not only is it endangered but is also classified as the world's most dangerous bird.





The rainforest of the northeastern coast of Australia is home to the Southern Cassowary and as the third largest bird on the planet it is strange that its reputation is not greater. Certainly, it is a remarkable looking animal, almost like something out of ‘Jurassic Park' with its large casque (a horn like crest which indicates age and dominance) positioned, dinosaur-like on its forehead. Estimates vary but it is thought that only around 1500 of this mysterious and ancient creature still survive in the wild. 




Many female birds do not share the same brightly colored plumage as the male of the species. The female Cassowary, on the other hand, does and is stronger and bigger than the male. During the mating ceremony it is the male who takes the passive role and the female can take up to three different mates contiguously. The final partner she attracts will be the one to rear the young. That's correct, after a month or so of courtship the female lays the clutch of eggs and removes herself from the scene. The hapless male is left to incubate the eggs and look after the young. He may never be able to request a DNA paternity test but nevertheless it is unlikely that all of the brood will be his.



Not only this, during the fifty days and nights it takes to incubate the eggs the male will most often lose up to about a third of his body weight as he cannot wander far to forage for food. They are, however, omnivorous although their preferred food is fruit. They will eat small vertebrates and invertebrates. When surprised this inhibited and diffident bird will choose to run - and boy can they run. They can run at speeds up to fifty kilometers and hour through dense rainforest. However, when they are cornered they can maim or kill people and have (rarely) done so. The Guinness World Record Book puts them at the top of the list of birds dangerous to man.




Most of its habitat has been declared a World Heritage rainforest and this charismatic and bizarre looking bird - often as tall as a man - sometimes finds itself in conflict with a rather more common ape-like mammal whose settlements extend right up to the edge of the rainforest. This of course would be man and when natural disasters occur, such as Cyclone Harry in 2006, much of the rainforest can be flattened and become useless for foraging which means that the shy Cassowary must go looking for food.




The Australians have a renowned sense of humor and this extends to the Cassowary. They represent a real danger on the roads around their habitat and there are many road signs that indicate that cassowaries might cross in front of traffice. Someone thought that the 'before' warning wasn't sufficient and decided to engineer their own 'after' warning. This road sign probably has more effect that the more serious official ones, even if the recumbant and recalcitrant cassowary bears little resemblance to the real thing (at least they got the claws right).




The human inhabitants of the outlying towns do not hunt the birds but the reserved and somewhat timid nature of the bird means that both species easily become a danger to the other when they come in to contact. During the aftermath of Cyclone Harry four of the birds were found dead in a single township. That in itself is not a huge number but when it is considered that these were only the ones discovered and measured against their total population it becomes obvious that these birds and humans should not really mix. 




When reduced to begging in enclaves of humanity, the birds can often lose some of the wildness. Although they never become tame they do become seemingly more docile towards humans and this can sometimes lead to regrettable accidents where the birds become frightened (they are naturally skittish) and do damage with their claws, one of which is almost five inches in length. Their inner toe in the medial position looks like a dagger. When panicked these birds have been known to kick - and sometimes kill - dogs and humans. Tall tales abound but there is little real evidence of this species being an avian equivalent to a ninja army or, for that matter, hunting people in a ‘Planet of the Cassowaries' type scenario.





Although the danger presented by cassowaries is real it has been somewhat exaggerated and it is almost unheard of for one of the birds to instigate an attack. In the vast majority of cases the birds have been approached by people wanting to feed them. The birds suddenly panic and usually chase or charge their ‘victim'. Urban myths abound about the birds being able to disembowel a man with their claws. The last record human death by cassowary was in 1926. The claws however cannot do this - though they can leave a nasty puncture wound up to two centimeters in diameter. 



It is hoped that with the right kind of intervention that the species can be saved. With cyclones of ever increasing severity and the pressure from human population threatening the bird, the Southern Cassowary is in dire straits at the moment. Even when it makes its incursions in to human territory it may find food but it will never be at home. Unlike the ostrich and emu, to which it is related, the Cassowary is most at home in the rainforest where the vegetation is dense and it can disappear from view quickly. By preserving and hopefully extending the rainforest it is hoped that this beautiful but shy species can be left to its own devices - and thrive.

7 Most Bizarre Skin Conditions

Argyria: Blue Skin, a real-life Smurf

A condition caused by the ingestion of silver, the Argyria's most dramatic symptom is that the skin becomes blue or bluish-grey colored. On 2008, ABC reporters interviewed Paul Karason, 40 year-old who's skin turned blue after he used colloidal silver to ease his ailments. It started a decade ago, when he saw an ad in a new-age magazine promising health and rejuvenation through colloidal silver. Karason sent away for a kit for making colloidal silver -- a home brew of microscopic silver particles suspended in water. For a while, he was drinking at least 10 ounces a day as a cure for arthritis. "I had arthritis in my shoulders so bad I couldn't pull a T-shirt off. And the next thing I knew, it was just gone." he explained the media, but these claims have no basis in science and after a couple of months, his whole skin turned blue. "I kind of hoped it would fade off!" But it didn't fade off. Argyria is permanent. 


Human Pappiloma Virus: meet the Tree Man

After a severe Human Pappiloma Virus (HPV) infection, Dede Koswara, a 35-year-old Indonesian fisherman, was dubbed the "tree man" because of the gnarled warts all over his body. He first noticed the warts on his body after cutting his knee as a teenager. Over time, Dede was sacked from his job, deserted by his wife and shunned by neighbours as the horn-like extensions covered much of his body and stopped him working. He has two children. After his case received widespread publicity, donations from the public and government help allowed him to get treatment, and in 2008, six kilos of warts were surgically removed from his body. 



 Hypertrichosis: the Human Werewolf Syndrome

Hypertrichosis is a medical condition that causes excessive growth of hair in areas where hair does not normally grow. It may be present over the entire body, or you could have it in only one or more areas. Some individuals will be born with the condition and others will develop it later on in life. Congenital Hypertrichosis is very rare. In fact, it is so rare that there have been only 50 verified cases since the Middle Ages. On 2008, the press interviewed Pruthviraj Patil, an 11-year-old indian boy who's face and body are covered with hair. He rarely leaves his home village in India because of the cruelty of strangers. Pruthviraj’s family has tried homeopathy, traditional Indian Ayurvedic remedies even laser surgery without success, and he's now appealing to doctors to help him find a permanent cure since even after laser treatment the hair grows back. 



 Blaschko's lines: strange stripes all over the body

An extremely rare and unexplained phenomenon of human anatomy, Blaschko's lines were first presented in 1901 by German dermatologist Alfred Blaschko. Neither a specific disease nor a predictable symptom of a disease, Blaschko's lines are an invisible pattern built into human DNA. Many inherited and acquired diseases of the skin or mucosa manifest themselves according to these patterns, creating the visual appearance of stripes. The cause of the stripes is thought to result from mosaicism; they do not correspond to nervous, muscular, or lymphatic systems. What makes them more remarkable is that they correspond quite closely from patient to patient, usually forming a "V" shape over the spine and "S" shapes over the chest, stomach, and sides. 


 Vitiligo: white patched skin

Vitiligo is a skin condition where the cells that make the pigment in your skin, the melanocytes, get destroyed. This causes white patches to appear on your skin, and this disease may affect any area of skin. These patches also show up on yoiur mucous membranes and the retina of your eyes. Symptoms include white or gray hair on the patches, as well as the white patches on your skin, mucous membranes, and eyes. The precise cause of vitiligo is complex and not fully understood. There is some evidence suggesting it is caused by a combination of auto-immune, genetic, and environmental factors. The population incidence worldwide is considered to be between 1% and 2%. 


Tungiasis: fleas burrow into the skin and lay eggs

Tungiasis is a skin infestation of the Tunga penetrans flea, found in the tropical parts of Africa, Caribbean, Central and South America, and India. This fleas burrow into the skin and lay eggs, creating a disease which is actually endemic in Nigeria and Trinidad and Tobago, where in the 1980s the prevalence of tungiasis among children approached 40%. 


Dermatographia: overly sensitive skin

Dermatographia is a rare condition where the skin is overly sensitive to minor injuries; even light scratches will cause it to become red and raised. The person's immune system exhibits hypersensitivity, via skin, that releases excessive amounts of histamine, causing capillaries to dilate and welts to appear (lasting about thirty minutes) when the skin’s surface is lightly scratched

Rare Cheetahs Photographed

One of the first camera-trap photos of cheetahs in Algeria. The images were snapped as part of the first systematic camera trap survey across the central Sahara. 

Another of the first camera-trap photos of cheetahs in Algeria. The images were snapped as part of the first systematic camera trap survey across the central Sahara.


Four Saharan cheetahs have been photographed as part of the first systematic camera-trap survey across the central Sahara. 

The four big cats — a subspecies of cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus hecki) — were roaming in Algeria and identified via spot patterns unique to each individual, as part of a survey covering an area of 2,800 square kilometres (1,081 square miles). 

"The Saharan cheetah is critically endangered, yet virtually nothing is known about the population, so this new evidence, and the ongoing research work, is hugely significant," said Sarah Durant, Zoological Society of London (ZSL) senior research fellow. 

The Northwest African cheetah is found over the Sahara desert and savannas of North and West Africa, respectively, including Algeria, Niger, Mali, Benin, Burkina-Faso and Togo. The populations are very fragmented and small, with the biggest thought to be found in Algeria. The ongoing surveys in the region will also work with the local Tuareg pastoralist community to find out more about the ecology of the cheetah and identify threats to it.  

The survey was conducted by researchers from ZSL, the Office du Parc National de l’Ahaggar (OPNA), and the Université de Béjaïa, with support from the Wildlife Conservation Society and Panthera.

Farid Belbachir, who is implementing the field survey, said: "This is an incredibly rare and elusive subspecies of cheetah, and current population estimates, which stand at less than 250 mature individuals, are based on guesswork. This study is helping us to turn a corner in our understanding, providing us with information about population numbers, movement and ecology."

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Underrated Predators

Dolphin
Using sonar location to find their prey, a dolphin pod will work cooperatively to herd fish into a tight ball before taking turns swooping through the mass to eat as many fish as possible. Some dolphin subspecies even drive fish into shallow water where they are unable to escape, and some will use their tails to stun their prey. These underrated predators should be acknowledged for their ability to work as a team and their devastatingly effective hunting methods. 


Short-tailed shrew

Like many rodents, this shrew has to eat at least the equivalent of its own body weight every day due to its rapid metabolism. What makes this worthy of our list of underrated predators is the fact that, unlike most mammals, the short-tailed shrew is poisonous. Only four or five inches long, and weighing around half to one ounce, the neurotoxin they produce is powerful enough to subdue prey much larger than itself, such as frogs and mice. They’re armed with 32 razor-sharp teeth, noses that are filled with olfactory receptors that allow them to smell prey, and dense whiskers to aid in tactile detection. Rodents are usually seen as prey rather than predators, but this tiny animal works to redress that balance. 


Harpy eagle

Amazingly, despite being the strongest eagle in the world, this is a bird far less famous than many of its cousins. This underrated predator grows to about three-and-a-half-feet tall, with a wingspan that's twice as long. The harpy eagle has talons that are up to five inches long, longer than the claws of a full-grown grizzly bear. It can lift prey up to three-quarters its own body weight, including monkeys, sloths and other tree-dwelling mammals, as well as other birds such as macaws. The harpy eagle benefits from excellent eyesight, being able to spot an inch-long object from distances greater than 200 yards.


Army ants

Most of us will have heard of these insects, but we probably don’t appreciate just how formidable they really are. There are several different species of army ant, but the ones from the Amazon are the most powerful. The soldier ants can grow to half an inch long, with powerful jaws half their length. They move as a single predatory force across the jungle floor, one million blind ants attacking anything unable to get out of their way, including insects, frogs, lizards and other animals vastly bigger than themselves, making tens of thousand of kills a day.  


Honey badger

With a name like this, you would be forgiven for thinking this is a fairly cute little animal. In reality, the honey badger is one of the most ferocious animals on the planet, and pound for pound it's probably the most fearless. Standing around a foot tall, the honey badger’s diet includes almost anything it can catch, including cobra, black mamba, and even jackals and small crocodiles. It has extremely sharp teeth, and fore claws that are up to two inches long, helping make it an adept climber and allowing it to raid beehives for the nutritious larvae inside. This underrated predator is so fearless that it will continue eating while being attacked by a swarm of angry African bees.


Chameleon

When people think of predatory reptiles, thoughts inevitably turn to crocodiles, Komodo dragons and monitor lizards, but few would credit the chameleon for its deadly hunting prowess. A highly specialized group of lizards, these underrated predators benefit from stereoscopic eyes that enable them to see a full 360 degrees and to focus on two different points at once. They can even see ultraviolet light. Once they’ve located their prey, their tongue (three times their own body length) extends to hit its prey in about 30 thousandths of a second, stunning the insect and pulling it back to be crushed by the chameleon’s jaws.  


White-mustached Portia 

No list of predators would be complete without an arachnid, and this little spider gets our vote. This spider is small, about the size of a thumbnail, but what it lacks in size, it makes up for in intelligence. Believed by scientists to be the most intelligent spider in the world, this underrated predator hunts other spiders and actually works out a strategy for attacking its prey. By arachnid standards it has exceptional eyesight, and it will use trial-and-error tactics to see how to attack a spider it has never encountered before.


African hunting dog

Much less famous than wolves and other canine predators, the African hunting dog is a remarkable animal, being successful in as much as 94% of its hunts. They hunt in large packs of up to 40 animals, relentlessly pursuing and ultimately exhausting their prey before they all move in for the kill. Their numbers allow them to work as a relay team, taking turns chasing their prey before dropping back and allowing another dog to do the work. Perhaps even more remarkable is that these underrated predators will return to feed injured or sick pack members, displaying a tender social side as well as a relentless hunting instinct.


Fossa

Of all the animals on this list, we know the least about the fossa. A predatory mammal unique to Madagascar, an adult is about two-and-a-half-feet long with a tail of similar length. This helps them move with agility through the trees, allowing them to catch lemurs and other animals. Extremely strong for its size, the fossa is also an aggressive hunter, drawing comparisons with mongoose for its bravery. They seem to hunt at all times of the day, which suggests they are also opportunistic predators, although their actual diet remains shrouded in mystery. Given that it weighs less than a cocker spaniel, its role as top predator on Madagascar coupled with its low profile means it ranks as one of the most underrated predators in the world.  


Domestic cat

We are all aware of the incredible diversity and hunting abilities of wild cat species, from the formidable tiger to the streamlined cheetah. But no wild cat is on record as being responsible for wiping out at least six entire species. The domestic cat is seen as a docile and gentle creature, but in the right environment it's more lethal than its wild counterparts, with great eyesight, hearing, agility, and razor-sharp claws. No other animal has had such a devastating impact on the natural world as this top underrated predator

Amazing Photos From Greenland, Where Unfortunately Ice Runs Away By Hundreds Of Billions Of Tons A Year

Ice sculptures constructed from the spare core samples by the scientists working on the North Greenland Eemian Ice Drilling project.


The ice samples, which the researchers analyze for clues to the temperature and concentration of greenhouse gases of the ancient atmosphere, are collected using this drill.



The visiting group of scientists, journalists and Danish environmental officials land at NEEM, the North Greenland Eemian Ice Drilling project. NEEM had arranged for the visitors to examine their research, which focuses on the climatic conditions which shaped the warm geologic period before the earth's last Ice Age, an important clue in understanding global warming. The camp is located approximately 600 miles north of the Arctic Circle.


The scientists are drilling deep into the ice, which is 1.5 miles thick, the accumulation of 130,000 years of snow. These researchers are taking ice near the surface, which can help them analyze the last few hundred years of climatic history.




The main drill, which will excavate the deepest ice cores, is being built in this underground site.




The tour also included a visit to the coastal town of Ilulissat, home to one of the most productive glaciers in the world. A tour of Disko Bay, outside the town, revealed massive icebergs floating in the water, the product of accelerated melting.



The main graveyard in Ilulissat, just outside the town, overlooks the icebergs of Disko Bay.


Pools of melted water slice through the Ilulissat icefjord, which is fed by the melting Sermeq Kujalleq glacier.


Greenland has lost an average of 150 billion tons of ice a year over the past four summers.


In 2004, UNESCO declared the Ilulissat icefjord a World Heritage site.



Every year, the Sermeq Kujalleq glacier surrenders around 20 billion tons of icebergs into the ocean. Most of them end up in the northern Atlantic.

In the Footsteps of Jesus

The life of Jesus was played out in a relatively small geographical area of the world. Most of the major sites associated with Jesus' life are in Israel and the West Bank, with the few exceptions including the journey to Egypt, a healing miracle in Tyre (modern Lebanon) and his possible baptism in modern-day Jordan. But within this area, Jesus traveled a great deal, especially in the course of his three-year ministry in the region of Galilee.



Event in the Life of Jesus

The Annunciation


Nazareth was the hometown of Mary and Joseph. It was here that Mary was visited by the angel Gabriel and told she would conceive a child by the Holy Spirit. Lk 1:26-38

Associated Location

Basilica of the Annunciation  
Nazareth 

The Basilica of the Annunciation in Nazareth stands on the traditional site of Gabriel's announcement to Mary. In Nazareth you can also visit Mary's Well, where she may have fetched water regularly, and St. Gabriel's Orthodox Church.


Mary's Well

St. Gabriel's Orthodox Church





Birth of Jesus 

Jesus was born in a manger in Bethlehem, the City of David, while Mary and Joseph were there for the Roman census. Angels announced the event to nearby shepherds and Magi arrived to worship him. Lk 2:1-20; Mt 2:1-9



Associated Location

Church of the Nativity  
Bethlehem

This church in Bethlehem was originally built by Constantine over a cave associated with the manger. A star that marks the traditional site of the Nativity. The relics of the Three Magi are said to be in Cologne Cathedral.





Escape to Egypt


Joseph was warned in a dream to flee to Egypt to avoid the wrath of Herod, who heard about the birth of the "King of the Jews" from the Magi and had all young boys in Judea killed. The family stayed in Egypt until Herod died. Mt 2:13-20


Associated Location

Nile Valley
Egypt

The Holy Family is traditionally believed to have followed a route along the north of Egypt, then south along the Nile River Valley, not staying in any one place too long . There are several churches, convents, and sacred springs along the route.


Childhood

The New Testament says little about Jesus' formative years, but it does indicate that he grew up in Nazareth. He is assumed to have trained as a carpenter under Joseph and to have had a traditional Jewish upbringing. Mt 2:22-23; 21:11; Mk 1:9


Associated Location

Mary's Well  
Nazareth
In Nazareth, pilgrims can visit Mary's Well, where Mary may have drawn water and would have brought the young Jesus along, and the Church of St. Joseph, built over the site of Joseph's workshop where Jesus probably helped.



First Miracle

Jesus performed the first of many miracles at Cana, a small village near Nazareth. Invited to a wedding, Jesus helped the frantic host by turning water into wine. Jn 2:1-11



Associated Location


Franciscan Wedding Church 
Cana (Kafr Kanna) 
It is not known for certain where Cana is located, but the main tradition identifies it with the modern village of Kefr' Kenna, about 7 km northeast of Nazareth. Here there is a Franciscan "Wedding Church."





Baptism 

Jesus was baptized by his cousin, John the Baptist, on the shores of the Jordan River. Here John identified Jesus as the Lamb of God, and a dove was seen to land on Jesus as he came up out of the water. Mt 3 He later returned to the site to teach. Jn 1:40-42


Associated Location

Baptism Site 
Bethany-beyond-the-Jordan, Jordan
The site traditionally identified with Jesus' baptism is east of Jericho in Jordan. It has been extensively excavated and developed since the 1994 peace treaty and there are now many ancient ruins and modern structures to see here.




Temptation in the Wilderness 


After his baptism, Jesus withdrew into the nearby desert to fast and pray for 40 days. The Devil tried three times to tempt Jesus to break his fast or compromise his mission.Matthew 4:1-11


Associated Location

Monastery of the Temptation 
Mount Quarntal
Mount Quarntal, just north of Jericho, is the traditional site of this event, and it is commemorated by the Greek Orthodox Monastery of the Temptation.



Calling of the Disciples

Christ's first disciples were fishermen Jesus encountered on the shores of the Sea of Galilee. He challenged them to leave their nets and become "fishers of men."Mt 5:18-22


Associated Location

Galilee Boat (Jesus Boat)
Kibbutz Ginosar, Galilee 
The Sea of Galilee and the region of Galilee is in northern Israel. A 1st-century fishing boat was recently discovered in the mud here, which may be very similar to the one Jesus used. Known as the Galilee Boat or Jesus Boat, it is on display at Kibbutz Ginosar.



Rejection in Nazareth

After his temptation in the desert, Jesus returned to Nazareth where he grew up and began to preach in the synagogues. When he said "No prophet is accepted in his hometown," the people tried to throw him off a cliff. Luke 4:14-30


Associated Location

Mount Precipice
Mount Kedumim, Nazareth
A clifftop site on Mount Kedumim near Nazareth is traditionally believed to be the site of this event and is known as Mount Precipice. There are few ruins here, but fine views.



Ministry in Galilee 

Most of Jesus' early teachings and miracles occurred around the Sea of Galilee. During this time, he made his home in Capernaum at the family home of St. Peter.


Associated Location

House of St. Peter  
Capernaum
A spaceship-like modern Franciscan church stands on the site of the House of St. Peter in Capernaum, where Jesus lived, healed a paralytic, and healed Peter's mother-in-law.



Feeding of the 5,000

On the shores of the Sea of Galilee, Jesus multiplied just a few loaves and fishes into enough food to feed 5,000 people. Mt 15:32-39


Associated Location

Church of the Loaves and Fishes  
Tabgha
This famous miracle is commemorated by the Church of the Loaves and Fishes at Tabgha, on the northwestern shore of the Galilee. The church features 5th-century mosaics, including one of a basket of bread with two fish.




Sermon on the Mount

The most famous of Jesus' many sermons is the Sermon on the Mount, which begins with the Beatitudes ("Blessed are the meek...) Mt 5-7


Associated Location

Mount of Beatitudes  
Tabgha
According to tradition, the Sermon on the Mount occurred on a small rise at Tabgha, where now stands the octagonal Church of the Beatitudes. There are lovely views from here.






Transfiguration

"Jesus took with him Peter, James and John the brother of James, and led them up a high mountain by themselves. There he was transfigured before them." Mt 17:1-9


Associated Location

Mount Tabor
Since the 4th century, this hill rising above the Jezreel Valley has been identified as the Mount of Transfiguration. There are Franciscan and Greek Orthodox churches at the top.




Triumphal Entry

 
In what was to be the last week of his life, Jesus entered into Jerusalem on a donkey, while cheering crowds lauded him with palm fronds.


Associated Location

Palm Sunday Procession
Jerusalem
Religious processions take place in Jerusalem on Palm Sunday each year to commemorate this event.


 Raising of Lazarus
Jesus raised a man named Lazarus from the dead after he had been in the tomb four days. Jn 11:1-44

Associated Location

Tomb of Lazarus 
Bethany 
In Bethany, pilgrims can visit the Tomb of Lazarus, which has been revered from an early date. There is also a Franciscan Church of St. Lazarus that stands on the site of earlier churches.



Anointed at Bethany 

Jesus stayed at the house of Simon the Leper, where his feet were anointed with perfume by Mary. Mk 14:1-10


Associated Location

House of Simon the Leper 
Bethany
Near a modern Greek Orthodox church in Bethany are substantial ruins that belong to the Orthodox Patriarchate and are traditionally identified as the House of Simon the Leper.



Last Supper

On the night Jesus was betrayed and arrested, he shared a last meal with his disciples. It was during this meal that he instituted the Christian sacrament of the Eucharist. Mk 14:12-26;



Associated Location

Last Supper Room
Jerusalem 
The event is traditionally associated with the Last Supper Room on Mount Zion in Jerusalem. The event was most famously commemorated by Leonardo da Vinci's fresco The Last Supper, which is in a church in Milan.



Prayer, Betrayal and Arrest


After the Last Supper, Jesus led his disciples to the Garden of Gethsemane and asked them to keep watch while he prayed. They fell asleep, and then fled when Jesus was identified by Judas and arrested. Mt 26:36-56; Mk 14:32-51


Associated Location

Basilica of the Agony 
Jerusalem 
The Church of All Nations (or Basilica of the Agony) marks the place where Jesus prayed alone and in agony. The Cave of Gethsemane marks the site of the betrayal.



Trial and Condemnation by Pilate 

After being condemned by the Sanhedrin, Jesus is taken before the Roman governor Pontius Pilate for trial. At the instigation of the crowd, Jesus is sentenced to death by crucifixion. Mt 27; Mk 15


Associated Location

Chapel of the Condemnation or Citadel
Jerusalem
On the Via Dolorosa is the Chapel of the Condemnation, built over the site traditionally identified with the trial of Jesus. But a more likely historical candidate for the site is the Citadel, which was the royal palace during the time of Christ and is where Pilate would have likely resided.


Flagellation

Jesus was flogged by Roman soldiers before being led to his execution. Mt 27:27-30



Associated Location

Monastery of the Flagellation
Jerusalem
This event is commemorated in the Franciscan Monastery of the Flagellation on the Via Dolorosa, next to the Chapel of the Condemnation.



Walk to Calvary


Jesus was made to carry his own cross from the place of his condemnation to Calvary. Jn 17:19


Associated Location


Via Dolorosa 
Jerusalem
The Via Dolorosa in Jerusalem is believed to be the path Jesus took to Calvary, where he was crucified. Stations of the Cross mark various events along the way, some of which are not recorded in the New Testament.



Crucifixion 

Jesus was crucified at "a place called Golgotha (which means The Place of the Skull)" between two thieves. Afterh about three hours of suffering and mocking, Jesus "gave up his spirit." Mt 27:32-55


Associated Location


Church of the Holy Sepulchre  
Jerusalem
The site of Jesus' crucifixion is believed to be the area identified as Calvary within the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. A Greek Orthodox altar stands directly over the rocky outcrop on which the cross of Christ is believed to have stood. The rock can be touched through a hole on the floor under the altar.




Burial and Resurrection 


"As evening approached, there came a rich man from Arimathea, named Joseph, who had himself become a disciple of Jesus. Going to Pilate, he asked for Jesus' body, and Pilate ordered that it be given to him. Joseph took the body, wrapped it in a clean linen cloth, and placed it in his own new tomb that he had cut out of the rock. He rolled a big stone in front of the entrance to the tomb and went away." Mt 27:57-60


Associated Location

Church of the Holy Sepulchre or Garden Tomb
Jerusalem
The holiest site in Jerusalem, and indeed all of Christianity, is the Tomb of Christ, located within the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. The church was built around the tomb by Constantine. Pilgrims can see the place where Jesus' body was laid as well as a piece of the stone that was rolled away. An alternative site is the Garden Tomb outside the walls, which has less claims to authenticity but is popular especially with Protestant pilgrims.



Post-Resurrection Appearance


Jesus appeared to his disciples and others in various places and times after his resurrection. The first time was to two disciples on the road to Emmaus, who did not recognize their Lord at first. Lk 24


Associated Location

Emmaus
The site of Emmaus Nikopolis, 18 miles from Jerusalem on the road to Jaffa, has been identified as the biblical Emmaus since as early as the 3rd century. However, its authenticity is unlikely. Today there are ruins of a Byzantine-Crusader basilica and a museum on the site.




 Post-Resurrection Appearance


The third time Jesus appeared was on the shores of the Sea of Galilee, where he helped Peter and other disciples catch a netful of fish, then shared breakfast with them. 
Jn 21


Associated Location

Church of the Primacy of Peter 
Tabgha
A Franciscan chapel stands on the site of a 4th-century church just offshore near Tabgha. A large rock is revered as the place where Jesus laid out fish and bread for his disciples, and reinstated Peter with the words "Feed my sheep."





Ascension


"When he had led them out to the vicinity of Bethany, he lifted up his hands and blessed them. He was taken up before their very eyes, and a cloud hid him from their sight. Then they worshiped him and returned to Jerusalem with great joy." Lk 24:50-51; Acts 1:9-11

Associated Location

Chapel of the Ascension 
Mount of Olives, Jerusalem 
The traditional site of Jesus' ascension into heaven after his Resurrection is marked by the Chapel and Mosque of the Ascension on the Mount of Olives. The chapel includes an impression of Christ's footprint.





Tuesday, February 24, 2009

10 Of The Best Cities Offering Quality Life Measured By Traffic Congestion, Air Quality, And Personal Safety

Munich, Germany
Mercer score: 107
GDP: $2.833 trillion (2007 est.)
Population: 82,369,548 (total country); 1,332,650 (total city)
Life expectancy: 79.1 years

Zurich, Switzerland
Mercer score: 108
GDP: $300.9 billion (2007 est.)
Population: 7,581,520 (total country); 347,517 (total city)
Life expectancy: 80.74 years

Vienna, Austria
Mercer score: 107.9
GDP: $319.7 billion (2007 est.)
Population: 8,205,533 (total country); 1,825,287 (total city)
Life expectancy: 79.36 years


Vancouver, Canada
Mercer score: 107.6
GDP: $1.274 trillion (2007 est.)
Population: 33,212,696 (total country); 560,000 (total city)
Life expectancy: 81.16 years


Auckland, New Zealand
Mercer score: 107.3
GDP: $112.6 billion (2007 est.)
Population: 4,173,460 (total country); 1.18 million (total city)
Life expectancy: 80.24 years


Sydney, AustraliaMercer score: 106.3GDP: $766.8 billion (2007 est.)
Population: 20,600,856 (total country); 4,297,100 (total city)
Life expectancy: 80.73 years



Copenhagen, DenmarkMercer score: 106.2
GDP: $204.6 billion (2007 est.)
Population: 5,484,723 (total country); 1, 086,762 (total city)
Life expectancy: 78.13 years


Brussels, Belgium
Mercer score: 105.4
GDP: $378.9 billion (2007 est.)
Population: 10,403,951 (total country); 1,067,162 (total city)
Life expectancy: 79.07 years



Stockholm, Sweden
Mercer score: 104.5
GDP: $333.1 billion (2007 est.)
Population: 9,045,389 (total country); 794,700 (total city)
Life expectancy: 80.74 years


 
Honolulu, U.S.
Mercer score: 103.1
GDP: $13.86 trillion (2007 est.)
Population: 303,824,646 (total country); 380,000 (total city)
Life expectancy: 78.14 years

World's Tallest Buildings

Cheops Pyramid – Egypt, finished in 2,600 BC (481 ft - 146 m)

The Cheops Pyramid at Giza, Egypt, was finished in the year (approx) 2,600 BC and reigned as the world's tallest building / structure for another 4,000 years. How the Great Pyramid was built is a question that may never be answered. This pyramid is thought to have been built between 2589 - 2566 BC. It would have taken over 2,300,000 blocks of stone with an average weight of 2.5 tons each. These stones were brought from Aswan and Tura and the water would have brought the stones right to the pyramid. The total weight would have been 6,000,000 tons and a height of 482 feet (140m). The Great Pyramid of Cheops (Khufu) is the largest and the oldest of the Pyramids of Giza. It wasn't until the 13th Century that Egypt lost the title to a cathedral that was constructed in the U.K. at Lincoln.


Lincoln Cathedral, U.K., completed in 1311 AD (525 ft - 160 m)

Construction of the Cathedral finished in the year 1311 AD, and the Cathedral maintained the title of the world's tallest building for 238 years until 1549 AD, when the central spire was destroyed in a storm. The central spire was never re-built.


St. Olav, Tallinn, Estonia, finished in 1519 (522 ft - 159 m)

Construction was finished in the year 1519, and the Cathedral was not originally as high as Lincoln Cathedral, however, due to the storm that destroyed Lincoln Cathedral's main spire in 1549, St. Olav became the worlds tallest building. 76 years later, in 1625, St. Olav also saw it's spire destroyed by a storm.



Strasbourg Cathedral, France, erected in 1439 (472 ft - 142 m)

Strasbourg Cathedral (Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Strasbourg) completed in 1439, finally received the title of world's tallest building in 1625 due to storms that had destroyed the spires of other taller constructions. Strasbourg Cathedral was to hold this title for another 249 years from 1625 until 1874.


St. Nikolai, Hamburg, Germany, completed in 1874 (482 ft - 147 m)

St. Nikolai took the title of world's tallest building upon completion in the year 1874 being just 10 feet higher than it's predecessor, however, St. Nikolai's moment of glory as the world's tallest building only lasted 2 years as another Cathedral was to take the title away in 1876.



Rouen Cathedral, France, erected in 1876 (495 ft - 151 m)

Rouen Cathedral, the world's tallest building from 1876 to 1880, has been dubbed the "City of a Hundred Spires," for many of its important edifices are churches. Towering above them all is the highest spire in France, erected in 1876, a cast-iron tour-de-force rising 490 ft above the Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Rouen. Claude Monet immortalized Rouen's cathedral (particularly the facade) in his paintings.


Cologne Cathedral, Germany, completed in 1880 (516 ft - 157 m)

Construction of Cologne Cathedral actually took over 640 years to complete (construction began in 1248) and was officially completed in 1880 giving the Cathedral the title of the world's tallest building although this title was only to last for 4 years until 1884 when The Washington Monument, U.S.A. was finally completed.

Up until this point in history, the Lincoln Cathedral, U.K. completed in 1311 would have remained the world's tallest building at 525 ft - 160 m had it's spire not been destroyed by a storm. However, from this moment on, structures were to undergo dramatic changes in construction techniques allowing vastly taller buildings.


The Washington Monument, U.S.A., completed in 1884 (555 ft - 169.29 m)

The Washington Monument took the title as the world's tallest building in 1884 and is among the world's tallest masonry structures, standing 555 feet - 169.29 m in height, and is made of marble, granite, and sandstone. The Monument held the title for just 3 years.


Eiffel Tower, Paris, France, completed in 1887 (1,063 ft - 324 m)

The Eiffel Tower, completed in 1887 took the title of the world's highest building not with just a few extra feet in height - it is twice the height of it's predecessor, The Washington Monument. The Eiffel Tower was to retain the world's tallest building title for another 43 years.


The Chrysler Building, New York, USA, finished in 1930 (1046 ft - 319 m)

Completed in 1930, the Chrysler Building had just 1 year of glory as the world's tallest building. You will note from it's height that it appears to be shorter than the Eiffel Tower, however this is because a new antenna was located on the Eiffel Tower in the year 2000 - before this the Eiffel Tower was some 79 ft - 24 m shorter than The Chrysler Building.


The Empire State Building, New York, U.S.A., finished in 1931 (1,472 ft - 449 m)

The Empire State Building is a 102-story Art Deco skyscraper in New York, NY on the intersection of 5th Ave and W 34th Street. It stood as the world's tallest building for more than forty years, from its completion in 1931 until the construction of the World Trade Center North Tower topped out on December 23, 1970. It is now once again the tallest building in New York, after the destruction of the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001 from terrorist attacks.


World Trade Center, New York, U.S.A., 1972 - 2001 (1,727 ft - 526.3 m)

When completed in 1972, 1 WTC became the tallest building on Earth, unseating the Empire State Building after a 40-year reign. 2 WTC became the second tallest building in the world when completed in 1973. The WTC towers held the height record only briefly. As the building neared completion in 1973, work had already begun on Chicago's Sears Tower, which ultimately reached 1,450 ft - 442 m (not including spire or antenna). Sadly both WTC towers were destroyed in the terrorist attacks of 9-11-2001.


Sears Tower, Chicago, U.S.A., finished in 1973 (1,729 ft - 527 m)

The Sears Tower was completed in May 1973 and held the title as the world's tallest building until 1998.



Petronas Towers, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, finished in 1998 (1,482 ft - 542 m)

The Petronas Towers were completed in 1998 and became the tallest buildings in the world on the date of completion, although there is controversy surrounding this because the Sears Tower, including antenna is actually taller - but due to a change of regulations and guidelines used to define tall structures, the antennas of the Sears Tower were not counted as part of its architectural features.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Mind the crevasse: The amazing 3D pavement art that has pedestrians on edge

Giant ice-age crevasses are few and far between - especially in Ireland. 

Don't worry, it is the latest creation of 3-D street artist Edgar Mueller.

The crack, appearing to show a fault in the earth's crust, was created for the town's 'Festival of World Culture' last year in the town of Dun Laoghaire.

The Crevasse: The giant fissure, in Dun Laoghaire, Ireland, spans over 250 square metres and appears to show a fault in the earth's crust


And locals wasted no time having fun with the work by pretending to teeter precariously on the edge of the deep hole. 


Mueller said: '3D street painting itself is a very new artform which only a handful of people do worldwide. Its nature is to trick people's eyes and show them a new "reality".

'The technique itself is called anamorphism and has been known since the Middle Ages. It was used by famous painters like Michelangelo, da Vinci and others in their murals.'

Hard work: Together with up to five assistant, Mueller painted all day long from sunrise to sunset



Residents of a German town were horrified when they emerged from their homes to find a lava pool running through the middle of the road.

Scroll down to watch a video of the making of the The Crevasse...

Spanning over 8 x 50 metres, 'Use your eyes' is one of the biggest three-dimensional street paintings ever made.


Use your eyes: The apocalyptic street art by German artist Edgar Mueller

With the help of locals, the German artist's jaw-dropping art involved clever planning so that when the picture is viewed from a certain angle it looks totally three-dimensional.  
Mueller plays with big areas and elemental forces - and also asks that his audience enter the scenery and interact with the picture.


He said: 'it gets thrilling when the observer runs in the picture.'

His other works include a 250 square metre giant fissure in Ireland, that took five days to paint. 

Watch the video here


Sunday, February 22, 2009

Top 5 Most Clever Storefronts Ever

The store is called The Guitar Store and it is on Commercial Road opposite Southampton Central railway station, Southampton, England.


Shop on Randall Street in Monrovia, Liberia, West Africa, circa 1987 



Clever storefront for an internet cafe 


Small building centre in Basel. Took quite a while to figure out that this is a shop for paint and that guy a puppet.


All of these metallic discs were on little pins so as the wind blew they moved slightly and cause some beautiful effects

9 People, Places & Things That Changed Their Names

When much-reviled security firm Blackwater changed its name to Xe last week, it wasn’t just cleverly attempting to squash criticism by tossing out a name nobody would know how to pronounce. (Although that idea was probably a foreseen fringe benefit of the switch.) It was just joining in on a long tradition of corporations, places, and people opting to pick up a catchier, less tainted, or more unique name. Here are nine other famous entities that changed their names; you might not even recognize them by their original monikers. 



. BackRub


In 1996, Stanford computer science grad students Sergey Brin and Larry Page started working on a new web crawling search engine. Since the engine used backlinks to gauge how important a site was, the enterprising pair called their creation “BackRub.” By 1997 they decided this name wasn’t so hot and brainstormed some new ideas before eventually settling on “Google.”

 Jeff Gillooly

If ever anyone had good cause to change his name, it’s Jeff Gillooly. While he was married to former figure skater Tonya Harding, Gillooly became a despised national figure for helping orchestrate the knee whacking of Harding’s rival Nancy Kerrigan. To make things worse, he apparently sold a sex tape of one of his romps with Harding to a tabloid TV show. After spending six months in prison on racketeering charges, Gillooly returned home to Oregon, but picked up a new name, “Jeff Stone.”

New name or not, he was still the same old Jeff Gillooly. According to a 2008 Newsweek report, Stone has been briefly married, divorced, twice arrested for domestic violence (although the charges were dropped), owned a tanning salon, sold used cars, and dated a stripper. Sort of makes Tonya’s boxing career sound respectable.


. Bombay


In 1995, millions of Indians went to sleep in Bombay and woke up in Mumbai. How did that happen? Since India achieved independence from British rule in 1947, various place names around the country have been changed to reflect Indian heritage rather than British colonial influences. When the right-wing Shiv Sena party romped in India’s 1995 elections, one of its early acts was changing Bombay’s name to Mumbai in honor of the city’s patron Hindu goddess, Mumbadevi.

Mumbai’s hardly alone in getting renamed, though. In 2001 Calcutta became Kolkata, while Madras became Chennai in 1996.


 Andersen Consulting

In 1989, accounting giant Arthur Andersen spun off its consulting division into its own linked business that quickly grew into a juggernaut. When Andersen Consulting was raking in over $9 billion a year by the end of the 1990s, the consultancy no longer had much of a desire to stick with the accounting firm that incubated it. Following a rather acrimonious split in 2000, Andersen Consulting changed its name to Accenture. 

Splitting up and changing names proved to be a stroke of luck for Accenture. Barely a year after the two companies parted ways, Arthur Andersen’s name became inextricably linked to Enron-type accounting shenanigans, and by the end of 2002, the company’s business was for all intents and purposes dead. Accenture, on the other hand, didn’t suffer from negative associations with its document-shredding former brethren and remains on the Fortune Global 500.


Blue Ribbon Sports

In 1963, an ambitious young runner named Phil Knight met with the Japanese running shoe company Onitsuka about distributing their sneakers in the U.S. The Japanese makers of Tiger running shoes decided to give Knight a shot, but they needed to know the name of Knight’s company. He responded that he was running Blue Ribbon Sports, and he soon began selling Tigers out of his car at track meets around the U.S. By 1971, though, his business had grown to the point where Knight was making his own shoes. He decided to name the shoes and the business after the Greek goddess of victory, Nike.

 Jerry and David’s Guide to the World Wide Web

“BackRub” sounds positively inspired compared to this behemoth of a title. When David Filo and Jerry Yang started a guide to Internet content in 1994, they christened it “Jerry and David’s Guide to the World Wide Web.” Like Page and Brin, they quickly realized they might need a name that took less than three minutes to say, so they switched to a word they liked from the dictionary – one that described someone who was “rude, unsophisticated, and uncouth.” And that’s how Yahoo! was born.

Brad’s Drink

In 1893, pharmacist Caleb Bradham created a new cola formula at his New Bern, North Carolina, business. Customers loved the sweet, fizzy libation, but the name “Brad’s Drink” didn’t really do much for them. After five years, Bradham decided maybe it was time to come up with a better brand name for his drink, so he started calling it Pepsi Cola.

David Jones

Jones showed a certain flair for showmanship and songwriting in the early 1960s, but he was unfortunately named. Pop music already had a Davy Jones, the diminutive member of The Monkees. To spare himself any career-killing confusion, David Jones decided to adopt a stage name in 1965. He settled on the last name Bowie in part due to his fascination with Alamo-defending patriot Jim Bowie and his namesake knife. Jones wasn’t instantly successful after he became David Bowie, but the Thin White Duke eventually rode his new name to stardom.

David John Moore Cornwell

Cornwell enjoyed long, successful careers in the British intelligence services MI5 and MI6, and he started writing novels while he was with MI5. As it turned out, the novels were quite good, but he couldn’t publish them under his own name due to British foreign office rules. Cornwell adopted the pseudonym John le Carre so he could stay in the good graces of his bosses, but it wouldn’t matter for long. After achieving major commercial success and critical acclaim for his dazzling novel The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, le Carre quit his day job in 1964 to focus on writing full-time. The decision paid off when le Carre became one of the most successful thriller writers of his generation.










Saturday, February 21, 2009

4 Huge Explosions Nobody Could Explain

Tunguska - Thousands of square kilometres of trees were burned 


In the early morning of 30 June, 1908, witnesses told of a gigantic explosion and blinding flash. Thousands of square kilometres of trees were burned and flattened.
Scientists have always suspected that an incoming comet or asteroid lay behind the event - but no impact crater was ever discovered and no expedition to the area has ever found any large fragments of an extraterrestrial object.

The explosion, equivalent to 10-15 million tonnes of TNT, occurred over the Siberian forest, near a place known as Tunguska.

A flash fire burned thousands of trees near the impact site. An atmospheric shock wave circled the Earth twice. And, for two days afterwards, there was so much fine dust in the atmosphere that newspapers could be read at night by scattered light in the streets of London, 10,000 km (6,213 miles) away.

Nearly a century later, scientists are still debating what happened at that remote spot. Was it a comet or an asteroid? Some have even speculated that it was a mini-black hole, though there is no evidence of it emerging from the other side of the Earth, as it would have done. More



The Cando Event - A fireball in the sky



The Cando event was an explosion that occurred in the village of Cando, Spain, in the morning of January 18, 1994. There were no casualties in this incident, which has been described as being like a small Tunguska event.
Witnesses claim to have seen a fireball in the sky lasting for almost one minute. Up to 200 m³ of terrain was missing and trees were found displaced 100 m down the hill.
Opinions are divided about the causes of the explosion.Local residents, claim it was a meteor, as an object “the size of a full moon” was seen in the skies of the Spanish region of Galicia. The mystery became fertile ground for conspiracy theories that point to military or “alien activities”.



The Vela Incident - An unidentified double flash of light


On 22 September 1979, sometime around 3:00am local time, a US Atomic Energy Detection System satellite recorded an unidentified double flash of light in a remote portion of the Indian Ocean.
Moments later an unusual, fast-moving ionospheric disturbance was detected by the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico, and at about the same time a distant, muffled thud was overheard by the US Navy’s undersea Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS). Evidently something violent and explosive had transpired in the ocean off the southern tip of Africa. 
Half a year later, researchers in western Australia detected increased amounts of radiation in the area. The signal appeared to come from a 3,000 mile area that included the South Atlantic, Indian Ocean, tip of Africa, and part of Antarctica. A presidential panel concluded in May 1980 that the signal was more likely an artifact of a meteoroid hitting the satellite and sunlight reflecting off particles ejected as a result of the collision.
Much of the information about the event is still classified.



Eastern Mediterranean Event - Calculated yield of about 2 Hiroshima bombs 



The Eastern Mediterranean Event was a high-energy aerial explosion over the Mediterranean Sea, -between Libya and Crete, Greece- on June 6th, 2002.
This explosion, similar in power to a small atomic bomb, has been related to an asteroid undetected while approaching the Earth. The object disintegrated and no part was recovered. Since it did not reach the surface and it exploded over the sea, no crater was formed.
It was detected by satellites and seismographic stations, with a calculated yield of about 26 kilotons of TNT, approximately double the yield of the Hiroshima bomb, comparable to a small modern nuclear bomb.

18 of Nature’s Most Powerful Medicinal Plants

From marijuana to catnip, there are hundreds of remarkably common herbs, flowers, berries and plants that serve all kinds of important medicinal and health purposes that might surprise you: anti-inflammatory, anti-fungal, insect repellent, antiseptic, expectorant, antibacterial, detoxification, fever reduction, antihistamine and pain relief. Here are eighteen potent medical plants you’re likely to find in the wild - or even someone’s backyard - that can help with minor injuries, scrapes, bites and pains.*


Marijuana

Seriously. Though marijuana is still illegal in the United States, it is legal in 12 states for medicinal purposes, and if a case of poison ivy in the woods isn’t a medicinal purpose, what is? Marijuana was *mostly* legal until 1970 when it became classified as a hard drug. No one thought of it as a dangerous or illicit drug until the 20th century; in fact, hemp was George Washington’s primary crop and Thomas Jefferson’s secondary crop. The Declaration of Independence is written on it; the Gutenberg Bible was printed on hemp, too. There’s actually an environmental dimension to legalizing marijuana - hemp is a remarkable and renewable plant, offering all kinds of foodstuff and product uses that surpass cotton and plastic. But health benefits are well documented, from depression and anxiety relief to reduced blood pressure, pain alleviation and glaucoma treatment. It is not addictive, does not kill brain cells and is not a “gateway” drug - in fact, when pot is more available, studies show that the use of hard drugs like heroin and cocaine actually decreases. The bottom line for hikers: when your leg is broken from a misjudged boulder hopping attempt (pain) and a bear has eaten your friend (depression) and you’re lost because you forgot the compass (dumbass), consult the cannabis.


Lady Ferns

If you grew up in the Pacific Northwest you likely know what ferns are good for: treating stinging nettles. One of the world’s oldest plants, there are many varieties of ferns, but if you’re lucky enough to spy the soft, delicate lady fern, grab some and roll it up between your palms into a rough mash. The juices released will quickly ease stinging nettle burns and can also ease minor cuts, stings and burns (fresh salt water also works in a pinch for bee stings). Bracken fern are similar to lady fern and will work, as well. The rougher, glossier, stiff sword fern and deer fern won’t be as effective, though. (Learn about types of ferns.) Lady ferns actually grow all over North America but are common in areas with high rainfall.


California Poppy

The brilliant blooms of the poppy make this opioid plant an iconic one. The plant is an effective nervine (anxiety reliever) and is safe for use on agitated children. Can be made into a a tea for quick relief of nervousness and tension. A stronger decoction will offer pain relief. (A decoction is made by “stewing” all safe plant parts, including stems and roots if possible, in water for several hours and, ideally, soaking overnight.)


Blood Flower

The blood flower (also Mexican butterfly weed) is a type of tropical milkweed with toxic milky sap that is emetic (it makes you hurl). It’s also historically favored as a heart stimulant and worm expellent. Pretty useful for a number of potential hiking disasters, if you think about it. (Of course, if you’d quit eating those poisonous berries you probably wouldn’t need to worry about finding a natural expectorant.)


Tansy

If you’ve decided to backpack through Europe instead of the mountains of Mexico (but why?), you’ll want to know about a few helpful medicinal plants. Tansy is an old-world aster and remedy, used for flavoring beer and stews as well as repelling insects. Rubbing the leaves on the skin provides an effective bug repellent, but tansy can also be used to treat worms. It is said to be poisonous when extracted, but a few leaves are not harmful if ingested.


Korean Mint (hyssop)

Who doesn’t want to be minty fresh? Most of the various types of “mint” or mentha - spearmint, Korean mint, applemint, regular old mint - offer reported health benefits and medicinal properties. (Avoid pennyroyal, as it’s poisonous.) Mint is famous for soothing headaches, fighting nausea, calming the stomach and reducing nervousness and fatigue. Korean mint, also called Indian mint and hyssop, is a fairly effective antiviral, making it useful for fighting colds and the flu. Whatever continent you’re on, some type of mint is usually to be found. Eat whole, garnish food or make tea to get the all purpose health benefits.



Alfalfa

Alfalfa is fodder for livestock for a reason: it’s incredibly rich in minerals and health-promoting nutrients and compounds. With roots that grow 20 to 30 feet deep, alfalfa is considered the “father of all plants”. (It also contains a high amount of protein for a green.) Alfalfa originally grew in the Mediterranean and Middle East but has now spread to most of Europe and the Americans. It can treat morning sickness, nausea, kidney stones, kidney pain and urinary discomfort. It is a powerful diuretic and has a bit of stimulant power, helping to energize after a bout with illness. It’s a liver and bowel cleanser and long-term can help reduce cholesterol. You can purchase seeds and sprouts, but it’s fine to eat the leaves straight from the earth.


Catnip

The cannabis of the cat kingdom. Famous for making cats deliriously crazy, catnip has health properties that are great for humans, too. Catnip can relieve cold symptoms (helpful if you’re on a camping trip and don’t have access to Nyquil). It’s useful in breaking a fever as it promotes sweating. Catnip also helps stop excessive bleeding and swelling when applied rather than ingested. This mint plant (yep, another one) is also reportedly helpful in treating gas, stomach aches, and migraines. Catnip can stimulate uterine contractions, so it should not be consumed by pregnant women. It grows in the Northern Hemisphere.


Sage

Sage is an incredibly useful herb, widely considered to be perhaps the most valuable herb. It is anti-flammatory, anti-oxidant, and antifungal. In fact, according to the noted resource World’s Healthiest Foods, “Its reputation as a panacea is even represented in its scientific name, Salvia officinalis, derived from the Latin word, salvere, which means ‘to be saved’.” It was used as a preservative for meat before the advent of refrigeration (eminently useful: you never know when you’ll be forced to hunt in the wild). Sage aids digestion, relieves cramps, reduces diarrhea, dries up phlegm, fights colds, reduces inflammation and swelling, acts as a salve for cuts and burns, and kills bacteria. Sage apparently even brings color back to gray hair. A definite concern when lost in the woods.


Blackberries

Did you know blackberries have useful healing properties? Of course they’re loaded in antioxidants and vitamins, but the leaves and roots have value, too. Native Americans have long used the stems and leaves for healing, while enjoying the young shoots peeled as a vegetable of sorts and the berries, either raw or in jams. The leaves and root can be used as an effective treatment against dysentery and diarrhea as well as serving usefulness as an anti-inflammatory and astringent. Ideal for treating cuts and inflammation in the mouth.


Wild Quinine

According to Alternative Nature Online, wild quinine is a potent herb that “is used as an antiperiodic, emmenagogue, kidney, lithontripic, poultice. It has traditionally been used in alternative medicine to treat debility, fatigue, respiratory infection, gastrointestinal infection, and venereal disease.” Whatever the ailment, quinine is famously helpful in treating it. Only the root and flowers are edible; avoid the plant.


Navajo Tea 

Also called greenthread, Plains Tea or Coyote Plant, this plant has been used for centuries by Native Americans to quickly relieve that most brutal and irritating of infections: the UTI (urinary tract infection). Best when made into a tea or decoction.


Red Clover

Native to Europe, Northern Africa and Western Asia, red clover is now ubiquitous worldwide. The plant’s reddish pink blossoms can be used for coughs and colds, but they are an excellent detoxifier and blood cleanser as well.


Sweet Marjoram

Marjoram and oregano are often used interchangeably, but the aromatic sweet marjoram is slightly different. The Greeks called it the “Joy of the Mountain” and it was revered throughout the Mediterranean for its fragrance, flavor and medicinal value. The famous French herbs de provence and Middle Eastern za’atar both use sweet marjoram. Marjoram has many uses (it’s a famous digestive aid) but it is effective as an antifungal, antibacterial and disinfectant treatment in a pinch.


Burdock Herb

Burdock, or cocklebur, is a prickly, thistle-like plant that grows commonly in many parts of the world. It can get fairly big and its leaves resemble the elephant ear plant. Though the burs often get caught in pets’ and livestock’s fur, don’t think of it only as an annoying plant. It is a highly effective treatment against poison ivy and poison oak (claims that it cures cancer are slightly *less* substantiated).


Feverfew

Feverfew is a plant that has well-known and documented health properties and medicinal benefits. This anti-inflammatory can treat rheumatism, arthritis and, most famously, migraine headaches and tension headaches. It’s also good for alleviating tension and general anxiety (it is a natural serotonin inhibitor). It also helps to reduce swelling and bruising. Though feverfew is most effective when taken daily, it can be a helpful pain reliever when no Advil is on hand.


Sweet Violet


Native to Europe and Asia, sweet violet is cultivated around the world and is a pleasant, delicate purple color. When brewed into a syrup the plant is effective as a treatment for colds, flu and coughs or sore throat. However, when made as a tea, it is wonderfully effective for relieving headaches and muscle and body pain.


Winter Savory


Winter savory is your savior against insect bites and stings. One of the most effective natural plant treatments for bug bites is originally from Europe and the Mediterranean but often shows up elsewhere thanks to global trade. In addition to being an antiseptic, it is delicious - used for flavoring meats and stews - and all parts are edible.

With so many amazing medicinal plants on the planet, be sure to look for future posts covering more. Feel free to submit your own request or share your botanical knowledge in the comments.
* Disclaimer: the content of this post is for informational and entertainment purposes only and should not be considered qualified medical advice. Always consult an expert before consuming or applying any foreign substance or material. Also, don’t do drugs.

Hawk kestrel manoeuvres in the park: Thousands of starlings form the shape of a giant bird of prey in spectacular dawn sight

Swooping low in the evening sky, tens of thousands of starlings combine in perfect harmony as they gather to roost. 

In an astonishing natural display of formation flying, they took the shape of a bird of prey looming in the skies above Taunton. 

Normally at the mercy of a kestrel or a deadly sparrowhawk like the one they appear to be mimicking, this swift-moving flock of starlings, known as a murmuration, finds safety in numbers.


Wings outstretched as they come home to roost, tens of thousands of starlings combine in perfect harmony to soar like an eagle over a dusky evening sky

Dr Andre Farrar, of the RSPB, explained the phenomenon, saying: 'Just as fish swim in shoals for safety, starlings flock to confuse predators such as sparrowhawks, buzzards and peregrines.'

Despite speeds of at least 20mph, mid-air crashes are apparently rare, thanks to the starlings' amazing spatial awareness and quick reactions.

British starling numbers are thought to have halved to 4million in recent years, but there were plenty on show in this extraordinary image captured by photographer Geoff Hall who watched the birds swoop and swirl over the Somerset landscape.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Unbelievable Escapes from dea th

She jumped but, her skirts was a ‘parachute’



All Bristol is today recalling a story that outstrips fiction - a story too good to be true, but one that really happened - the miraculous escape from death over 60 years ago of a young woman who jumped from the Suspension Bridge - and lived!
She jumped, the story goes, after a lovers quarrel, but, her skirts acting as a ‘parachute’, she landed in the mud.
Sarah Ann Henley was the girl who jumped. She was 22. It happened on May 8th 1885.
Sarah Ann’s jump has become legend. It is recorded in the official history of the Suspension Bridge. What really happened?
The story: Sara received a letter from her fiancé breaking up their engagement. In a state of despair she rushed to end her life by the jumping off the Clifton Suspension Bridge. That particular morning there was a slight wind blowing and Sarah’s skirt was inflated (acting like a parachute) and considerably slowed down her decent. The wind also prevented her falling straight into the water. Sarah lived a full life and died in 1948. Her incredible luck gave her an extra 62 years of life.

Brooklyn Bridge jumper survives without scratch 



A despondent woman bent on suicide not only survived a 10-story leap from the Brooklyn Bridge Monday - she was barely scratched.
The woman was quickly plucked from the chilly East River waters by an NYPD Harbor Unit after several witnesses called 911, police said.
“She’s alive - no broken bones or anything,” marveled a police source
Police sources said she was not carrying identification but was able to tell rescuers her name was Michelle.

He jumped but, he was caught by some extending rocks




Martin Hinchcliffe After writing a note to his mother saying he would kill himself he walked to Sugar Lump cliff on Beachy Head and jumped. 35 feet into his fall he was caught by some extending rocks and was completely hidden from view in a deep crevasse. After spending 72 hours holding on to the cliffs, his cries were finally heard by a man walking on the beach below.
Hinchcliffe suffered a broken leg and cracked several ribs. He said he sucked on rocks during the 72 hours to avoid dehydration.

Man Survives Suicide Jump From Golden Gate Bridge




Years ago, when Kevin Hines was in high school, he started hearing voices. His torment became so intense that he finally decided to kill himself. One day, as usual, he attended his first class, then took a bus to the bridge, crying all the way. Hines picked his spot and stood there for 40 minutes. No one approached him to ask what was wrong and when a tourist came up and asked whether he could take her photo, Hines thought that was clear proof that no one cared. He took the picture, and then jumped. Instantly he realized he had made a mistake and thought to himself “God save me”. As he was falling Hines came up with a plan to save his life, and threw his head back and tried to hit feet first. Hines was hurtled 40 feet underwater but miraculously survived. Hines endured arduous physical rehabilitation after his near-death experience, but said dealing with his bipolar disorder had been far more difficult. He now lives by a strict schedule, and has found a combination of drugs and therapy that allows him to regulate his manic highs and depressions. Currently, Hines works with several mental health groups and suicide prevention hot lines.

With a broken leg but alive



A Brooklyn woman fought off a rescue attempt and plunged more than 200 feet from the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge in 1995 but survived after being plucked within seconds from the chilly waters of Lower New York Bay, the police said.
The woman, Connie Mercure, 29, was listed in critical but stable condition at Lutheran Medical Center with a broken leg, extensive internal bleeding and hypothermia after jumping from the midpoint of the bridge. The bridge, which connects Staten Island and Brooklyn, is about 230 feet above the water at high tide.
She was upset over a failed relationship, said Officer Bernadette Rainy, a police spokeswoman. The police said it was rare for someone to survive a jump from the bridge. In 1989, a Staten Island woman survived a jump and was later seen walking on a nearby beach. In 1975, a New Jersey college student survived a leap.

Survived 140-foot leap and suffered only bruises to his ribs


In 2001 26 year old Matthew Sicoli, after a fight with his girlfriend and job woes walked on the pedestrian lane toward the center of the Throgs Neck Bridge. Authorities spotted Sicoli kneeling and then watched in horror as he hopped over a railing and disappeared. Police quickly mounted a rescue effort and saved Sicoli in less than 10 minutes. Matthew survived the 140-foot leap and suffered only bruises to his ribs, stomach and face. It is estimated he went into the East River hitting the water at 64 mph. Sicoli’s 51-year-old mother committed suicide by jumping off the Whitestone Bridge just five years earlier.

The force of the impact ripped his clothes off.



Hans Jones, on May 30, 2001, after several business pressures, heavy drinking and a horrible fight with his wife, decided to jump off the bridge in a suicide attempt. He survived the jump.The force of the impact ripped Jones’s clothes off. Despite multiple rib fractures, internal bleeding and a collapsed lung, he was able to swim to the rocks near one of the pylons. He was sitting there naked when rescuers arrived, and then spent weeks in the hospital recovering.

He jumped but,his survival instincts took over



Did Belizaire was thousands of dollars in debt. After a night of big losses, he tried to commit suicide by jumping off of the Jacques Cartier Bridge.
Bélizaire survived the jump and was unable to force himself to drown because his survival instincts took over. The jump cost Bélizaire the use of his legs and is now a paraplegic.
Bélizaire takes every opportunity he can to tell young people his story and sound the alarm against compulsive gambling.


Incredibly, he had a change of heart as he plunged 174 feet,increasing speed to approximately 70 mph



From his Wallingford halfway house, 22-year-old John Dittmann had a view of the Aurora Bridge and not much else.
He felt suicidal, blaming it on his daily regimen of gulping tranquilizers to treat mental illness and drinking alcohol to offset the pills. Depression had set in. He hated his life.
Dittmann stared at the bridge for three weeks before marching up to it just before 11 p.m. on May 28, 1979. Standing precariously outside the east rail, he looked down and saw only darkness and certain death. Then he jumped.
But his story did not end with a splash.
Incredibly, Dittmann had a change of heart as he plunged 174 feet, increasing speed to approximately 70 mph. He had about three seconds to think.“At that point, I decided I didn’t want to die,” he said.
Frantically, Dittmann threw his arms back and fought to keep his body from pitching forward. He strained to keep his feet extended. He hit Lake Union with a crack, struggled to find the surface and swam meekly to shore.Dittmann fractured his back and injured his lungs, but he lived.

Great Macro photos of Insects by Martin Amm

These photos are really fantastic!!!!!!!!!

Martin Amm is a genius. w He’s got breathtaking shots of landscapes and other insects as well, but the ones that really made my jaw drop were these dew-covered insects. They look like bugs with bling.








































Thursday, February 19, 2009

The Real Campuses Behind The Top 19 College Movies Of All Time

If you’ve been to college then you love college movies, no matter what. Anything that reminds you of getting wasted, hitting on girls or even being late for class has a special place in your student-heart. But where did the production crews venture to make these college classics? Why, actual colleges, of course! To give you a behind-the-scenes look, we’ve compiled found all the real campuses behind the best college films of all time.


Accepted


Sometimes being mediocre is the only way to go, which is the entire basis for this movie: create a fake college, with slacker classes, so you don’t have to actually make anything of yourself. That’s all this movie is about–getting ahead through an excellent, if confounded, plan. Oh yeah, and girls and partying, but did we even need to mention that?

Movie Campus: South Harmon Institute of Technology (”S.H.I.T.”)

Actual Campus(es): 

• Chapman University; Orange, California, USA


Good Will Hunting

For some reason, working-class, secret geniuses make for a good movie-watching experience. Robin Williams is awesome and Matt Damon’s struggling character has us with him all the way. The Damon-Affleck duo might be gone these days, but this classic reminds us all of the good ol’ times.

Movie Campus: MIT

Actual Campus(es):

• Harvard Square’s Bow & Arrow Pub, The Tasty; Cambridge, Mass.
• Harvard University’s Dunster House (exterior); Cambridge, Mass.
• Bunker Hill Community College; Boston, Mass.
• Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cambridge, Mass.
• University of Toronto (dorm scenes); Toronto, Ontario


Slackers

If you take nothing else away from college, make sure to learn a good scam. In Slackers, pulling a fast one is Dave, Sam and Jeff’s ticket to the top, until Ethan figures out their schemes, giving them a heaping pile of blackmail–and tries to get the hot girl in the process. The love story sucks, but the rest is good enough to carry you through.

Movie Campus: Holden University

Actual Campus(es):

• University of California; Riverside; Riverside, California
• University of Redlands; Redlands, California



Van Wilder

A reluctant coming-of-age tale, Van Wilder combines all the best of college–hot girls, huge parties and endless shananigans. Plus, you get to see Tara Reid before she turned into a plasticly, haggard hose-beast. Shot mostly in at Marymount High School and UCLA’s Royce Hall, this feel-good laugh-fest will have you rolling.

Movie Campus: Coolidge College

Actual Campus(es):

• Marymount High School; Los Angeles, California
• UCLA’s Royce Hall; Los Angeles, California



Back to School

Comic genius Rodney Dangerfield’s character Thorton may have a chain of successful Tall and Fat clothing stores, but that doesn’t stop him from joining his son at college–and buying his way through the whole thing. Filming for this one took place at UCLA and the University of Wisconsin.

Movie Campus: Grand Lakes University

Actual Campus(es):

• UCLA; Los Angeles, California
• University of Wisconsin; Madison, Wisconsin


Beautiful Mind

When we think of Russell Crowe, the first movies that come to mind are Gladiator and Romper Stomper–fear instilling flicks that make you wish you were 100-times more badass than you actually are. Beautiful Mind, on the other hand, proved that Crowe can do more than just whoop people’s asses.

Movie Campus: Princeton University

Actual Campus(es):

• Bronx Community College (MIT scenes); Bronx, New York City
• Fairleigh Dickinson University; Madison, New Jersey
• Fordham University; Bronx, New York City
• Manhattan College (Harvard scenes); Manhattan, New York City


 Road Trip

Not since Jack Kerouac wrote On The Road did a travel story make us want to drop everything and see all that elsewhere had to offer-especially if that something includes college chicks and drinking. But the best thing about this movie is Tom Green’s hilarious debacles. Unleash the fury, Mitch. Unleash the fury…

Movie Campus: University of Ithaca

Actual Campus(es):

• University of Texas; Austin, Texas
• Emory University; Atlanta, Georgia
• Georgia Institute of Technology; Atlanta, Georgia
• Harvard University; Cambridge, Mass.
• University of Tennessee; Knoxville, Tennessee
• University of Georgia


Rudy

He might be small, but he’s got heart–or at least the balls to bust his ass and get onto the Notre Dame football team for which this rascal has a borderline obsession. Obviously intended to be set at Notre Dame, primary filming took place at the College of the Holy Cross. Not exactly the same, but Christian enough to be close.

Movie Campus: University of Notre Dame

Actual Campus(es):

• Holy Cross College; South Bend, Indiana
• University of Notre Dame; South Bend, Indiana



Drumline

People in marching band aren’t exactly known for being cool. That is they weren’t until Nick Cannon laid down some badass licks, showing that even if you have to wear a uniform and a funny hat at football games, it doesn’t mean you’re a pu**y.

Movie Campus: HBCU Atlanta A&T University

Actual Campus(es):

• Clark Atlanta University; Atlanta, Georgia
• Morris Brown College; Atlanta, Georgia



Breaking Away

Breaking Away’s main character Dave, played by Dennis Christopher, must beat out his nemesis, the French bicycle team to regain his self-respect. More than just a mindless college flick, this film won an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay in 1979 for its story about coming of age and sticking to your guns.

Movie Campus: Indiana University

Actual Campus(es):

• Indiana University; Bloomington, Indiana


 We are Marshall

Arguably one of the best sports movies of all time, this story of overcoming odds brings tears to anyone with a soul–ok, maybe not tears, but at least an emotional understanding that those football players have heart. Though some filming took place at Marshall University in West Virginia, it was primarily shot at Morris Brown in Atlanta.

Movie Campus: Marshall University

Actual Campus(es):

• Morris Brown College; Atlanta, Georgia
• Marshall University; Huntington, West Virginia



Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle

These goofy bastards took a mission to get some delicious sliders and turned it into one of the most hilarious, epic college movies of all time. We’re not saying it’s a great work of cinema in general, but it’s definitely a good addition to the “you’ve got to smoke before watching this” category.

Movie Campus: Princeton University

Actual Campus(es):

• University of Southern California; Los Angeles, California


Without Limits

A film about friendship between coach Bill Bowerman and athlete Prefontaine, Without Limits didn’t do so well at the box office, grossing on $777,000 after spending $25 million to shoot the damn thing. Often compared to Prefontaine, this heartwarming story more follows the coach’s story than the athlete’s, but that doesn’t mean it’s not clutch.

Movie Campus: University of Oregon

Actual Campus(es):

• Citrus College; Glendora, California
• University of Oregon’s Hayward Field; Eugene, Oregon



Real Genius

Even though the whole plot is as realistic as Pamela Anderson’s lady lumps, Real Genius delivers on every level of awesomeness. But in the end, all you really need to know is that Val Kilmer stars in this feel-good ’80s college classic about partying, revenge and high-powered lasers.

Movie Campus: Pacific Tech

Actual Campus(es):

• Occidental College; Los Angeles, California
• Pomona College; Claremont, California


Wonder Boys

Adapted from the novel by Michael Chabon this story follows creative writing professor Grady Tripp (Michael Douglas) as he struggles to finish his second novel, and gets involved in a complicated love triangle, easing the pain and complications by smoking a bunch of weed. There’s a lot of ins, outs and what-have-yous, but they all pay-off by the end.

Movie Campus: Carnegie Mellon

Actual Campus(es):

• Carnegie Mellon University; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
• Chatham College; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

PCU (1994)

A cult classic to the core, PCU attacks the world of political-correctness by being as politically incorrect as possible. The “plot” centers around a scheme to raise money by throwing a huge party. Filmed at the University of Toronto, PCU might be simple, but that doesn’t mean it won’t make you crap your trousers laughing.

Movie Campus: Port Chester University

Actual Campus(es)

• University of Toronto; Toronto, Ontario

• Wesleyan University; Middletown, Connecticut


Revenge of the Nerds

There’s something so visceral about Jocks vs Nerds that you can’t help but take sides. Either you got beat up, or you did the beating–either way, this movie sums-up this timeless divide so well, it’ll have you wearing thick-brimmed glasses and a pocket protector before you can say “Nerds!”

Movie Campus: Adams College

Actual Campus(es):

• University of Arizona’s Old Main, Alpha Gamma Rho Fraternity House, Bear Down Gym, Chi Omega Sorority House, Cochise Hall, University of Arizona, Friends Meeting House Tucson (Tri Lam Fraternity House); Tucson, Arizona
• Texas A&M University’s Kyle Field (fundraiser carnival/skits); College Station, Texas


Animal House

The source. The original. Arguably the best college movie of all time, Animal House paved the way for all the college-comedy greats that were to come. Filmed all around Eugene, Oregon, home of the University of Oregon, this classic flick set the standard for how much you have to drink to even say you party.

Movie Campus: Faber College

Actual Campus(es):

• University of Oregon’s Omega House/Phi Kappa Psi, Autzen Stadium, Hayward Field; Eugene, Oregon



Old School

Most men wish they could spend their entire lives partying like they did in college. But when Vince Vaughn and Will Ferrell do it, some of the most genius comic-gold this side of Caddy Shack. From the best scene with a van in movie history to the greatest KY-wrestling match ever caught on film, this instant classic will forever remind us why we went to college in the fist place. Though the fly-over shots are of Harvard, this one was shot mostly at UCLA as well as USC and the Rose Bowl Aquatics Center.

Movie Campus: Harrison University

Actual Campus(es):

• Harvard University’s Eliot House; Cambridge, Mass.
• University of California - Los Angeles’ Janss Steps, Murphy Sculpture Garden (fountain where “Spanish” gets tackled), Royce Hall, Royce Quad; Los Angeles, CA
• University of Southern California’s Rose Bowl Aquatics Center; Pasadena, California

10 Gorgeous Pilgrimage Sites You Need to See

 Jagannatha

location: Puri, India
most frequented by: Hindus
Festivals are an important part of Hinduism, and Ratha Yatra is certainly one with a lot of pull … and pulling.

The celebration takes place in June or July of each year in Puri, a city on the southeastern coast of India. Why Puri? It’s home to the 12th-century Jagannatha temple and three roughhewn (and highly sacred) wooden statues. They represent Jagannatha, an incarnation of the Hindu Lord Krishna; his brother, Balarama; and his sister, Subhadra. Hindus believe that around 5,000 years ago, devotees of Krishna pulled the chariots of these three siblings to the family’s nearby childhood home. Each year, as many as 1 million faithful visit the temple to re-enact the event, dragging the statues in giant chariots. And we do mean giant: The largest is 45 feet high and sports 16 wheels. Devout Hindus believe if they help transport the chariot bearing Jagannatha, they will be granted the opportunity to serve him in the spiritual world.
During Ratha Yatra, some of the more enthusiastic pullers have been known to deliberately throw themselves under the chariots’ wheels. Fortunately, the frequency of this practice has waned in recent years, but the popularity of the festival certainly hasn’t. In fact, those who can’t make it to Puri for Ratha Yatra can participate in smaller versions in cities all over the world, from Kuala Lumpur to New Orleans.
And if you think Jagannatha bears significance for Hindus only, you’re wrong. Turns out, the statue is credited with giving the English language the word “juggernaut.” In the 17th century, British travelers returning from India brought back lurid (and highly exaggerated) tales of the festival in Puri, describing hordes of people being squashed by the chariots. “Juggernaut” is an Anglicization of Jagannatha, and the word has since come to mean “a massive, inexorable force that crushes everything in its path.” That certainly describes a four-story-high chariot.



Cathedral of St. Mary of Zion

location: Aksum, Ethiopia
most frequented by: Ethiopian Orthodox
Anyone who’s seen “Raiders of the Lost Ark” knows that the Ark of the Covenant is the chest containing the stone tablets on which the 10 Commandments were inscribed. Aside from that, you can forget all the other Indiana Jones nonsense. The most prominent story of the Ark comes from Ethiopian tradition. According to that legend, the biblical Queen of Sheba was actually Queen Makeda of Ethiopia. After adopting Mosaic laws for the Ethiopian people, she sent her son Menelik and members of his staff to steal the Ark and bring it to Aksum. There, ostensibly, it remains—housed in the Church of Saint Mary of Zion, a relatively modest 17th-century stone building. Who gets the honor of guarding the holy relic and, consequently, being the only human on Earth allowed to actually see the Ark? That job goes to an especially holy monk, who’s tasked with the duty until death. In accordance with tradition, he names his successor with his dying words. So, if you want to know whether or not the Ark is really there, you’ll have to take the guardian’s word for it.
There are more than enough people, however, who don’t need any visible proof. Every year, thousands of tourists and pilgrims visit Aksum, a small mountain town about 300 miles north of the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa, to see the shrine protecting the Ark. Aksum is considered one of the holiest sites for followers of Ethiopian Orthodoxy, which counts itself among the oldest forms of Christianity.


Sri Harmandir Sahib

location: Amritsar, India
most frequented by: Sikhs
Most Westerners know Sri Harmandir Sahib simply as “The Golden Temple,” so named for its structures adorned with gold and gold paint. But to the world’s roughly 20 million Sikhs, it’s their religion’s most sacred site. In fact, followers pray daily for a chance to visit the temple at least once during their lives.
Sri Harmandir Sahib is in Amritsar, a city about 240 miles north of New Delhi. Built in the late 16th century, the temple’s impressive architecture was designed to represent the magnificence and strength of the Sikh people. Sikhism itself is an offshoot of Hinduism founded about 500 years ago by Guru Nanak, a government accountant who rejected both Hinduism and Islam.
The temple at Sri Harmandir Sahib occupies a small island in the middle of a pool and is connected to land by a marble causeway. Every year, it attracts millions of pilgrims. In 2004 alone, more than 2.5 million Sikhs visited The Golden Temple to take part in a five-day celebration marking its 400th anniversary. Sadly, however, the temple has also attracted its fair share of violence, including attacks and conquests by Mongol, Arab, Afghan, and British armies. Perhaps the most notable incident occurred in 1984. Sikh separatists, feeling oppressed by the Hindu-dominated Indian government and seeking an independent state, occupied the temple and refused to leave. When Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi ordered soldiers and tanks to attack, more than 1,000 people were killed, and some of the buildings around the temple were badly damaged. Gandhi received scores of death threats and was assassinated a few months later by Sikh terrorists.


 Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe


location: Mexico City, Mexico
most frequented by: Roman Catholics
The story of the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe begins on a frosty December day in 1531, only a decade after the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortéz toppled the Aztec empire. A 50-year-old Indian peasant named Juan Diego was trudging along between his village and modern-day Mexico City when he encountered the Virgin Mary, who told him to build a church on the site where they were standing. Not one to ignore an order from the mother of Christ, the peasant relayed the request to the local bishop. A bit suspicious of Diego’s claim, the bishop demanded proof of Mary’s request. In response, the Virgin (who conveniently appeared to Diego again) supplied the peasant with a bunch of roses in the dead of winter. Needless to say, the bishop was pretty impressed with the bouquet, but even more so by the likeness of Mary that was mysteriously imprinted on Diego’s cloak, and a church was promptly built.
Today, the site houses the old Basilica as well as a newer one, and millions of Catholics travel the world for a chance to walk inside. Pilgrims praying to the Virgin Mary there have reported miraculous cures, particularly for alcoholism. (Why alcoholism? We have no idea.) Diego’s cloak is also on display at the site, though it’s an object of controversy. Scientists argue about the authenticity of his cloak, and historians quibble over the authenticity of Juan Diego himself—some doubting such a man ever existed. The arguments, however, had a hard time competing with former Pope John Paul II’s stamp of approval. He visited the Basilica several times, and on a 2002 journey there, he made Juan Diego a saint.



Shatrunjaya Hill


location: Palitana, India
most frequented by: Jains

Shatrunjaya Hill just might have been what Led Zeppelin had in mind when the band wrote “Stairway to Heaven.” The site has no fewer than 3,950 steps—enough to make you think you can reach heaven (either by looking up or keeling over) by the time you actually get done climbing it.
Located in the western Indian city of Palitana, Shatrunjaya (or Satrunjaya) Hill is the primary pilgrimage destination for followers of Jainism and home to 863 temples dedicated to the Jain religion. Founded in India about the same time as Buddhism, Jainism teaches the path to spiritual purity through a life of discipline, austerity, and non-violence. In fact, this aversion to violence has led many among India’s Jain community (which consists of about four million people) to shun most occupations outside of commerce and finance. Jains not only frown upon killing people, but animals as well. For that reason, none of the temples at Palitana contain ivory (since that would mean dead elephants) or even clay (since it contains dead insects and micro-organisms). Instead, they’re constructed of marble, bronze, or stone. So if you’re going, don’t wear anything made of fur, leather, or any other part of a dead animal.
Oh, and about those steps up the Hill to the temples: It can take as long as three hours to climb up them, depending on your level of fitness. The elderly and ailing go up in a dholi, a small seat attached under a bamboo pole, carried by two men who take a few jouncing steps at a time. If ever an employee deserved a great tip, it would be one of these guys.


Destination: Sri Pada

location: Sri Lanka
most frequented by: Everyone! (It’s multi-denominational)
Sri Pada is the only mountain in the world sacred to four major religious groups. Oddly enough, it also happens to be nestled in Sri Lanka, a country ravaged by civil war for the past 20-plus years.
Sri Pada is a modest, cone-shaped peak on an island in the Indian Ocean. At the top of the mountain, you’ll find a 1,600-square-foot platform on which there’s a depression the shape of a human foot—a very large foot, about 1 yard wide and nearly 2 yards long. (See how carefully we avoided measuring the foot in “feet?”) Buddhists believe the footprint to be Buddha’s. Hindus think it belongs to the god Shiva. Christians claim St. Thomas left it there before he ascended into heaven. Muslims believe Adam made it after he descended from heaven (hence the mountain’s nickname, Adam’s Peak).
Despite the ongoing civil war in Sri Lanka between the Sinhalese government and Tamil separatists, hundreds of thousands of travelers of all religious stripes make the pilgrimage up the mountain each year. The climb up Sri Pada, which can take three to four hours, is marked by crumbling steps, hundreds of colorful butterflies, lots of leeches in the surrounding forests, and tea houses for breaks along the way. In some places, there are iron chains to help out climbers who wish to pull themselves up. It’s said that Alexander the Great left them behind when he visited the site in 324 BCE. There’s no record regarding who Alexander believed created the footprint, but if we had to take a guess, we think he probably told people that it was his own.


Mecca

location: Mecca, Saudi Arabia
most frequented by: Muslims
A trip to Mecca isn’t likely to be confused with anything but a pilgrimage. Located in a drab, sandy valley about 50 miles from the Red Sea (where summer temperatures can easily reach 115 F), it’s hardly a vacation destination. Regardless, it’s a must-see for followers of Islam … and we do mean “must.” Mecca is the birthplace of the Islamic prophet Mohammed and therefore the holiest city to Muslims. In fact, one of the religion’s “Five Pillars” requires followers to attempt a hajj, or pilgrimage to Mecca, at least once during their lives if at all physically and financially possible. Not ones to take pillars lightly, more than 2.5 million devout Muslim pilgrims flock to the city each year.
The hajj takes place during Dhu’l-Hijja, the last month of the Muslim calendar year (which is based on lunar cycles, meaning the hajj dates change annually). While there, pilgrims follow a pattern of devotional duties. One such ritual involves circling the Ka’ba, a cube-shaped building said to be the first place Mohammad preached and the holiest shrine in Islam. In addition, pilgrimages include the ritual kissing of the Black Stone.
Although not a formal object of Islamic veneration, the Black Stone is believed to be a meteorite and is revered by pilgrims as a traditional symbol of Mecca. According to Muslim legend, it was originally a white stone given to Adam after he was expelled from Paradise, and since then, it’s turned black from absorbing the sins of all those who have touched or kissed it.
Sadly, pilgrimages to Mecca are sometimes marred by tragedy. In 1990, a human stampede in an underground pathway resulted in nearly 1,500 deaths. And in 2004, another stampede killed 251 worshippers. More recently, cases of polio discovered in the city led health officials to fear a situation in which returning pilgrims could spread the disease around the world. But Mecca’s potential dangers are less of a threat to non-Muslims. Members of all other religions are banned from the city to prevent its sanctity from being “polluted.” 



Western Wall

location: Jerusalem
most frequented by: Jews
In Hebrew, it’s known as ha-kotel ha-ma’aravi. In English, it’s usually referred to as the Wailing Wall or the Western Wall. But whatever you call it, it’s old … as in 2,000 years old. The Wall is all that remains of Jerusalem’s Second Temple. King Solomon built the First Temple around 960 BCE, but after the Babylonians destroyed it and expelled the Jews from the region, construction began on its replacement. The Second Temple’s luck wasn’t much better. In 70 CE, the Romans flattened it—all but the Western Wall. Some historians claim Emperor Titus left this small section standing to remind the Jews who was in charge. The Jewish faithful, however, choose to view it as God’s way of showing them that He hasn’t forgotten about their whole “chosen” pact.
Westerners, observing Jewish worshippers crying over the destruction of the temple, dubbed it the Wailing Wall. But the appellation belies the site’s much greater religious significance. For Jews, the Wall symbolizes God’s presence, which is why millions of people come from all over the world to pray before the structure and insert written prayers into its crevices.
Unfortunately, as in just about everything else in the Middle East, the Wailing Wall is a point of controversy between Muslims and Jews. That’s because the site is also home to the Dome of the Rock, one of the holiest sites in the Islamic religion. Muslims believe it’s where Mohammed ascended into heaven with the messenger archangel, Gabriel. 


Mount Athos

location: Greece
most frequented by: Eastern Orthodox
Depending on your views on gender equality, this one’s either going to entice you or make you really, really angry. It’s for men only. The Byzantine emperor Constantine IX officially banned women from Mt. Athos in 1045, but he didn’t stop there. He also prohibited female animals and children, as well as eunuchs. These days, the eunuch ban isn’t strictly enforced (how could it be?), and you might be able to find a hen or two walking around. The rule excluding women, though, is still very much in place, despite the ardent efforts of feminist groups, not to mention the European Union, to pressure the Greek government into lifting the ban.
Mt. Athos, a self-governed region on a peninsula in northeastern Greece, is the Rolls-Royce of meditation retreats. The 6,670-foot peak is populated by 20 monasteries sprinkled across dazzlingly beautiful marble cliffs and ancient evergreen forest. There, monks practice Heyschasm, a lifestyle in which followers seek hesychia, or “divine quietness,” a practice common to the Eastern Orthodox Church. As for the religion itself, it arose after a split with the Church of Rome in 1054, largely due to questions concerning the authority of the pope.
To visit one of the monasteries, men must obtain permits in advance, and crowds are limited to 100 per day. Once there, serious contemplation and meditation are encouraged; gawking tourism is not. Visitors are allowed to eat and room with the monks, as well as participate in daily work routines. More than 350,000 men travel to Mt. Athos annually. In recent years, England’s Prince Charles has been a regular visitor. 




Destination: Bodh Gaya

location: Bodh Gaya, India
most frequented by: Buddhists
For years, Siddhartha Gautama tried to find an end to human suffering through, well, human suffering. He nearly starved to death following a life of extreme self-denial. When that didn’t work, he decided to try sitting under a tree and meditating. Luckily for him, after a few weeks, Gautama found Enlightenment—the understanding that suffering comes from desire—and thereafter became known as Buddha. Thus began one of the world’s great religions.
In a nutshell, that’s why an average of more than 2,000 people per day visit the small town in northeast India known as Bodh Gaya. For Buddhist pilgrims and tourists alike, there are two main attractions: the Mahabodhi Temple, a pyramid-shaped building first erected in the 3rd century BCE; and the Bodhi Tree, said to be a direct descendant of the tree under which Buddha attained Enlightenment.Buddhists regard Bodh Gaya as the first place Buddha began teaching his reap-what-you-sow idea of karma. Ironically, the city has the unsavory reputation as the center of one of the poorest and most lawless regions in India.

Record-breaking cache of Ice Age fossils discovered... beneath a car park in LA

Scientists have uncovered the world's largest known cache of fossils since the last Ice Age under an old car park in the heart of Los Angeles. 

The haul includes a near-intact mammoth skeleton, a skull of an American lion and the bones of saber-toothed cats, dire wolves, bison, horses, ground sloths and other mammals. 

The remains were located near the famous La Brea Tar Pits in the Miracle Mile district of America's second-largest city.

Scientist Shelley M. Cox stands alongside the lower jawbone section of the mammoth skeleton, part of a haul of fossils found in central Los Angeles


Researchers discovered the 16 fossil deposits in 2006 and began sifting through them last summer. 

Archaeologist Robin Turner, who has previously overseen work on other sites at or near the tar pits, said the fossils were found 10ft below the surface.

'I knew we would find fossils but I never expected to find so many deposits,' he said. 'There was an absolutely remarkable quantity and quality.'

The mammoth desposits, including 10ft-long tusks, were in an ancient riverbed near the fossil cache. 

Officials at the Page Museum at the tar pits plan to formally announce their findings today. The discoveries could double the museum's Ice Age collection.

Such a rich find usually takes years to excavate. But with a deadline looming to build an underground car park for the art museum next door, researchers boxed up the deposits and lifted them out of the ground using a crane.

Delicate procedure: Scientists brush away the dirt around the mammoth's pelvis. The mammoth has been nicknamed Zed
The haul of fossils were found beneath the car park of the old May Company building on Wilshire Boulevard and Fairfax 

'It's like a paleontological Christmas,' research team member Andie Thomer wrote in a blog post in July.

The research is dubbed Project 23 because it took 23 boxes to house the deposits. It has uncovered fossilised mammals as well as smaller animals including turtles, snails and insects. 

Separately, scientists found a well-preserved Columbian mammoth that they nicknamed Zed.

An examination reveals Zed, which is 80 per cent complete, had arthritic joints and several broken and re-healed ribs - an indication that he suffered a major injury during his life.

'It's looking more and more as if Zed lived a pretty rough life,' Thomer blogged in December.

Fossil hunt: Excavator Kristen Brown carefully searches for remains in a crate of earth taken from the site

Some scientists not connected with the discovery said this is the first significant fossil find since the original excavations at the tar pits more than a century ago.

'Usually these things are either lost in the mixing or not recovered in the processing of the oily sand and soil they occur in,' paleontologist Jere H. Lipps of the University of California, Berkeley, said.

The La Brea Tar Pits ranks among the world's most famous fossil sites. 

Between 10,000 and 40,000 years ago, mammoths, mastodons, saber-tooth cats and other Ice Age beasts became trapped by sticky asphalt oozing upward through cracks and fissures in the ground. The newly recovered fossils were also in asphalt.

Since 1906, more than a million bones have been unearthed from the sticky ponds.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

World's Top Best Cycling Adventures

Cruise through french vineyards or power up mountains and across countries.

We show pedal-pushers where to set their own pace. From Lonely Planet's Best in Travel 2009 - 850 trends, destinations, journeys & experiences for the year ahead. 



 Coast-to-coast, USA.

The TransAmerica trail is a cycle-touring classic. Try all or parts of the 6835km from Astoria, Oregon, on the Pacific Ocean, to Yorktown, Virginia, on the Atlantic. It spans the continent - its mountains, its prairies, its greatest river and the forests of its national parks.



 European vineyards.

Most of Europe's peerless vineyards are accessible via public roads. In France, plunge into the fields of Champagne, Burgundy and Bordeaux. In Italy, Tuscany's hills help burn off culinary dalliances. You won't lose your way in Germany's steep-sided Mosel River valley



Tour D'Afrique.

Start in northern Egypt with your handlebars pointed south; the Cape of Good Hope is only 12,000km and 10 countries away. Join the Tour d'Afrique, the world's longest (120 days) and most gruelling bicycle event. Go self-propelled from Cairo to Cape Town.



Tour D'Afrique.

Bike like a local through Egypt as part of the Tour D'Afrique



European Alps.

Europe's spine of snow-capped Alpine peaks draws the national borders of Italy, France, Switzerland, Austria and Slovenia. Human engineering has defiantly incised zigzag surfaced roads up and over dividing mountain passes, dozens thrusting up above 2000m. Here, dedicated cyclists test their mettle



America's Great Divide Mountain Bike Route.

Declared the longest off-pavement route on the planet, the full Great Divide Mountain Bike Route criss-crosses the continental divide for 4363km from Banff, Alberta, in the Canadian Rockies to Antelope Wells, New Mexico, on the Mexican-American border



Pan-American Highway, Central and South America.

It's epic - about 14,000km through 12 countries. Although it begins in Alaska, the Pan-American Highway from Mexico City claws through every kind of geography and climate imaginable on its way to Ushuaia at the Tierra del Fuegan tip of South America



Northwest Vietnam.

From Hanoi, Route 6 slides 490km through gorges, over mountains and past fruit and tea plantations to historical Dien Bien Phu. Then tough, unpaved roads launch another 316km, up and over Tram Tom Pass (1900m) on Vietnam's highest and most breathtaking road, before the descent, via the hill station at Sapa, to Lao Cai.



Tasmania, Australia.

The 1000km Giro Tasmania covers the state's highlights, man-made as well as natural, on well-graded sealed roads. Experienced backcountry mountain bikers will love the Tasmania Trail, a 477km traverse from Devonport to Dover via fi re trails and forestry roads




Danube Bike Trail, Europe.

Europe's second-longest river, the Danube, begins in Donaueschingen in Germany's Black Forest and flows 2850km to the Black Sea. Tracing its banks much of the way is the continent's best-beloved bike path: the Donauradweg. Its first 550km to Passau take in Bavaria, but the 320km to Vienna and 330km more to Budapest are the most famous.



Maui, Hawaii.

The 100km West Maui Loop follows a coastal road skirting a phenomenal forest reserve. The full century East Maui Loop is an even more challenging littoral route of rolling hills around the base of Mt Haleakala. Cycle to the Sun is the annual mid-August 56.5km race from near sea level to the 3048m summit of Haleakala. 



This is an edited extract from Lonely Planet's Best in Travel 2009.

Amazing Street Installations



























Tuesday, February 17, 2009

World's Coolest, Coldest Hotel

Women bathe at an outdoor bathroom of an ice hotel in the Alpha Resort-Tomamu's ice village in Shimukappu town, Japan's northern island of Hokkaido




The hotel where dining room, bed room and bath room are made out of ice, charges 8000 yen (A$255) per person per night and provides dinner served on an ice plate



Guests snap themselves on the bed of the ice hotel. 



Women are reflected on a mirror while eating their dinner served on an ice plate at the ice hotel.



Women eat dinner served on an ice plate at the ice hotel in the Alpha Resort-Tomamu's ice village.


A woman drinks cocktail from an ice glass at the ice bar



A chef prepares dinner on an ice plate for the visitors. 



Women stand on the bed of the ice hotel in the Alpha Resort-Tomamu's ice village in Shimukappu.


Women bathe at an outdoor bathroom of the ice hotel



A woman makes cocktails at the ice bar



Women bathe at an outdoor bathroom of the ice hotel.



Women sit on the bed in the ice hotel

 

A woman uses a mobile phone in a bed room of the ice hotel. 

 

A woman eats dinner served on an ice plate at the ice hotel.


Dinner served on an ice plate at the ice hotel.


Women drink cocktails at the ice bar in the Alpha Resort-Tomamu's ice village in Shimukappu town




Women drinks cocktails at the hotel's ice bar. 

Bizarre and Disgusting Foods From Around the World

Kopi Luwak Coffee 


Kopi Luwak or civet coffee is made by brewing the undigested coffee beans in the crap of the Asian Palm Civet, a weasel-like mammal. The civet’s stomach enzymes break down proteins in the beans giving the coffee a less bitter taste.
And even though the coffee is made from feces-beans,is the most expensive coffee in the world, selling for between $120 and $600 USD per pound, and is sold mainly in Japan and the United States.


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Casu Marzu Cheese

The name of this Sardinian specialty literally translates to “rotten cheese.” Casu Marzu, otherwise known as walking cheese, is an Italian sheep’s milk variety with a little something extra. You could say it’s alive. Very alive… the “chesse fly”(Piophila casei). These larvae are deliberately introduced to the cheese, promoting an advanced level of fermentation and breaking down of the cheese’s fats.
This cheese is a delicacy in Sardinia, where it is illegal. That’ right. It is illegal in the only place where people actually want to eat it, but mountain shepherds continue to produce it in small quantities for the black market. It’s often kept under the table, but only for the most trusted customers. Selling or serving it is punishable by a hefty fine.


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Durian fruit

The durian is the fruit of trees from the genus Durio belonging to the Durionaceae family and has been known and consumed in southeastern Asia since prehistoric times, but has only been known to the western world for about 600 years. It’s hard to imagine a fruit, which smells like a rotting corpse, is considered as the king of all. Durian fruit, has actually been banned in some hotels and public transportation because its reeks.
In Malaysia, a decoction of the leaves and roots used to be prescribed as an antipyretic. The leaf juice is applied on the head of a fever patient


Baby Mice Wine

Baby mice wine is a traditional Chinese and Korean “health tonic”. This dandy of a drink has been rumored to taste like pure gasoline.
It’s made by dropping little baby mice, eyes still closed, into a bottle of rice wine while still alive (the Chinese think that torturing these little guys adds to the flavor)


Surstromming

What the Swedes call Surstromming anyone else in their right mind would call rotting fish in a can. And, that is basicaly what it is. They get fish, can them and leave it to rot for a long time. Then they open it up and eat it as a delicacy. Swedes describe it as sour. Although swedes admit that its not the best smelling food in the world, it definately makes up for its taste.



Escamoles

Escamoles are the eggs of the giant black Liometopum ant, which makes its home in the root systems of maguey and agave plants. Collecting the eggs is a uniquely unpleasant job, since the ants are highly venomous and have some kind of blood grudge against human orifices.
The eggs have the consistency of cottage cheese. The most popular way to eat them is in a taco with guacamole, while being insane.

The green-eyed monster that lives in your brain: Scientists discover the jealousy lobe

It is a vice that few can avoid but that nobody craves.

Now the area of the brain which controls jealousy has been found, scientists have ­announced. 

It is the same part which detects real physical pain – perhaps explaining why feeling envious of your lover's philandering ways hurts so much.

The spot which makes people delight in others' misfortune – called schadenfreude – was also located by the team.

'It's interesting the part of the brain which detects physical pain is also associated with mental pain,' said Hidehiko Takahashi, who led the research.

Home of the green-eyed monster: This part of the frontal lobe lights up when you are jealous



'Assessing these feelings of jealousy will possibly be helpful in mental care such as counselling.'

'Envy is corrosive and ugly, and it can ruin your life,' Richard Smith, a professor of psychology at the University of Kentucky told the New York Times. 

'If you’re an envious person, you have a hard time appreciating a lot of the good things that are out there, because you’re too busy worrying about how they reflect on the self.' 

In the experiments, 19 students were asked to talk of a more successful rival while having MRI scans, which monitor brain activity.


Schadenfreude: This is the region of the brain that controls taking delight in other people's misfortune 


A part of their frontal lobe became more active when the students felt jealous of their rivals, the Japanese study showed. 

They then read a story in which the subject of their envy suffered a series of misfortunes, including food poisoning. 

Their scan data showed the mishaps sparked greater activity in the 'reward reaction' part of the brain, which normally lights up when receiving social and financial fortune.

'We have a saying in Japanese, ‘The misfortunes of others are the taste of honey,’' said Mr Takahashi. 'The ventral striatum is processing that ‘honey.’'

And there appears to be a relationship between jealousy and schadenfreude. The scientists noted that the more jealous one person was of another, the more schadenfreude they felt at that person's downfall.

'We now have a better understanding of the mechanism at work when people take pleasure in another's misfortune,' said Mr Takahashi.

'This is the way other needs-processing systems like hunger and thirst work,' Matthew Lieberman of the psychology department at the University of California, Los Angeles, who co-wrote a commentary that accompanies the report, told the New York Times. 

'The hungrier or thirstier that you feel, the more pleasurable it is when you finally eat or drink.'

Monday, February 16, 2009

A Tree That Cuts Its Own Branches and Other Amazingly Bizarre Namib Desert Plants

The Namib Desert is home to some of the world’s rarest and most interesting flora and fauna. A plant that resembles an alien life form and thought to be a relic of the Jurassic period can only be found here.


The Namib is a largely unpopulated and inaccessible desert in Namibia and southwest Angola which forms part of the Namib-Naukluft National Park. Nicknamed the world’s oldest desert, it stretches 1,200 miles in length with an average width of only 70 miles along the coast of Namibia to form one of the most spectacular and richest deserts in the world. It’s also called the Skeleton Coast as many ships have been marooned on its treacherous coast. The Namib Desert is also home to the highest sand dunes in the world and some of the world’s rarest and most interesting flora.


Halfmens ( A half-human tree)


The succulent tree known as the halfmens (Pachypodium namaquanum) is cast as a descendant of humankind in Khoekhoe legend. Fugitives from war were changed into trees, so it is told, to relieve their suffering in a hot waterless land. 

Seen against the skyline from a distance, clumps of them do look somewhat like people frozen in motion, their spiny trunks forever inclined northwards, with leaves on top like mops of crinkly hair. Their common name, the Afrikaans word for half-human, is used in English as well. 

Endemic to a small part of the Namib, rocky desert on both sides of the Orange River, the halfmens grows on steep mountainsides. It is a stem succulent, slightly bottle-shaped and devoid of branches, that reaches a height of 1-2m. 

Under threat from illegal collectors, the species is internationally protected. It is classified as highly endangered under the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species of Flora and Fauna (Cites).

 The flowers which appear from July to September are red on the inside and yellow-green on the outside. The crinkled leaves found at the top are velvety to the touch. Fruits are horn-like and brown in color.




Baobab Tree

If there’s one tree you will never forget, it’s the Adansonia digitata. This is the most amazing plant in the planet. It’s capable of providing food, water, shelter and medicine for both animals and humans giving it the title “The Tree of Life.” It’s been called “grotesque” and “botanical monster” by some. The tree is leafless during most time of the year giving it an appearance as if its roots are sticking up in the air thus one of its common name—the upside-down tree. The humongous white flowers last only a day and are pollinated by fruit bats. The fruit, called monkey-bread is a large, egg-shaped capsule covered with grayish green to yellowish brown hairs. It has a hard, woody outer shell with a dry, powdery substance rich in vitamin C which when soaked in water provide a refreshing drink that resembles lemonade thus giving another one of its common name—lemonade tree. This drink is also used to treat fever and other common ailments. The cork-like bark is fire resistant and is used to make cloth and rope. The leaves are used for condiments and medicines. The tree is capable of storing hundreds of liters of water, which is tapped during dry periods. Mature trees are frequently hollow, providing living space for animals and humans. Trees are even used as houses, prisons, pubs and barns. Its broad trunk which can measure up to 15 meters in diameter doesn’t have annual growth rings. Its age can only be measured through radio carbon dating which found that baobabs can be over 2,000 years old. The name Adansonia was named in remembrance to French naturalist Michel Adanson; the specie digitata meaning hand-like refers to the shape of the leaves. Other nicknames include cream of tartar tree, bottle tree and even dead-rat tree from the fact that it’s woody seed pods with furry coating look like rats hanging by their tails. Adansonia has six species in Madagascar and one each in mainland Africa and Australia. The biggest specie is the digitata or the African Baobab.



Baobab tree on the way to Kayes.
A baobab fruit split open to show the seeds. The fruit is about 18 cm long, and the seeds themselves are dark and encased in cubes of dry, white pulp, which can be dissolved in water with sugar or warm milk to make a drink. This fruit was obtained in the Eastern Highlands of Zimbabwe


Baobab from Madagascar
Monkey bread tree, Tarangire National Park in Tanzania. Adansonia digitata, baobab, Norwegian


Baobab in Recife.
Adansonia grandidieri, Avenue of the Baobabs, Madagascar
Adansonia madagascariensis in a Madagascar dry deciduous forest
Adansonia grandidieri, Madagascar
Adansonia grandidieri, Madagascar
Baobab in Kruger National Park, South Africa
Boab Adansonia gregorii in Australia
Baobab flowers in Mulund, Mumbai, India
Quiver Tree

Another amazingly bizarre desert plant is the Kokerboom or Quiver tree. It has smooth branches covered with a thin layer of whitish powder that helps reflect away the hot sun rays. The bark has beautiful brown scales with razor sharp edges. The tree has blue-green leaves and the flowers which bloom in the months of June and July are bright yellow in color. The branches and bark are used by Kalahari San Bushmen to make quivers for their arrows thus the name. Large trunks of dead trees are also hollowed out and used as a natural refrigerator where water, meat and vegetables are stored inside. The fibrous tissue of the trunk has a cooling effect as air passes through it. The branches and trunk of the quiver tree are filled with a soft fiber that can store water. But in severe drought, it seals off its own branches to save moisture loss through the leaves. The branch end looks like an amputated limb. The quiver tree is in fact not a tree but a giant aloe. Its height can reach up to seven meters and has a lifespan of more than 80 years old.

Quiver tree in southern Namibia
Quiver trees in a greenhouse

Welwitschia Mirabilis

This plant is one of the few things on earth that can be truly called one of a kind. It consists only of two leaves and a stem base with roots. Both leaves that grow from opposite sides of the stem will continue to grow and never drops and instead gets brown by the sun and torn by the wind which will eventually look like lots of individual leaves. The stem gets thicker rather than higher although it can grow up to six feet high and twenty-four feet wide. At the age of 20, cone-like flowers appear. The female plant produces up to 100 flowers in a season, while the male produces an abundance of pollen. Its lifespan is estimated to reach 2000 years.


Welwitschia mirabilis was discovered by botanist, explorer and medical doctor, Friedrich Welwitsch, in 1860 in the Namib Desert. He wanted to name it Tumboa, its native Angolan name but the plant was still named in his honor. The specie mirabilis means marvelous or wonderful in Latin. This plant is considered a living fossil and Charles Darwin was reported to have described it as “the platypus of the plant kingdom.”  


Female plant
Male plant and cones
Female plant and cones

Revealed: The bizarre creatures living at the bottom of the Arctic AND Antarctic seas

At least 235 types of cold-loving creatures have been discovered thriving at the bottom of the Arctic and Antarctic seas, puzzling scientists about how they got to both ends of the earth.

Until now, the warm tropics have been seen as a barrier keeping polar bears in the Arctic separate from penguins in the Antarctic. Only a few creatures have been known to live in both polar regions, such as long-migrating grey whales or Arctic terns.

'At least 235 species live in both polar seas despite an 11,000-km (6,835 miles) distance in between,' a decade-long international project to map the world's oceans , Census of Marine Life, has found.

A shell-less pteropod or swimming snail, clione limacina, found in both Arctic and Antarctic waters


Species living at both poles include cold-water worms, crustaceans, sea cucumbers and snail-like pteropods. 

They make up two percent of the 7,500 Antarctic and 5,500 Arctic animals known to date, out of a global total estimated at up to 250,000.


'The Arctic and Antarctic are much more alike than we thought,' senior scientist of the census Ron O'Dor said. Genetic studies were being carried out to confirm that the 235 species were identical.

A bean-sized swimming snail, limacina helicina, which has crossed the tropics to live in both seas. The creature spins a mucus-net off its paddle-like foot-wings to trap algae and other small particles on which it feeds

The findings, along with a discovery that the frigid seas teem with life, raise questions about where common polar species 'originated and how they wound up at both ends of the earth,' the census said in a statement.

Among theories were that larvae of some species could be swept northwards from Antarctica by chill currents along the deep floor of the Atlantic Ocean -- away from warm surface waters in the tropics that would kill them.

'Animals can be dispersed over such long distances at the deep sea floor,' senior member of the census Julian Gutt, of the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany, said.

A sand-flea hyperoche capucinus, a common predator swimming in polar waters

'The most likely direction is from the Antarctic.'

But he said scientists were yet to discover cold-loving species in the depths near the equator that would back up the theory.

Ice Ages may have helped species disperse.

The nemertean pelagonemertes rollestoni has a yellow stomach that reaches out to feed all parts of the body

During Ice Ages, Antarctica's ice smothered surrounding seas and caused new northbound currents that could have carried species such as sea spiders or crustaceans known as isopods. 

Genetic studies have traced many types of octopus to an Antarctic ancestor.

Among other findings, researchers said smaller marine species of copepods, a sort of crustacean, were replacing larger ones in some Arctic waters, perhaps because of shifts linked to global warming.


One of the Antarctic's ice fish, which can withstand temperatures that freeze the blood of all other types of fish

'A change in these few species might impact the whole food system,' Rolf Gradinger of the University of Alaska said. The larger copepods were key food for creatures such as whales and seabirds.

Among bizarre creatures, one of the Antarctic ice fish known as Chionodraco hamatus can withstand temperatures that would freeze the blood of other fish.

The census, the results of which are due next year, is seeking to lay down a benchmark for judging long-term shifts in the oceans. The U.N. General Assembly has asked for regular assessments of the oceans to gauge the impact of pollution, over-fishing and climate change.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

16 Bat Houses And Bat Caves

Bat houses are like slimline bird houses on stilts. It seems that bats will slither into folder sized slots, and a phone box sized house will carry tens of thousands of bats. Something to think of, if you want to annoy your neighbors. Along with the houses are some artificial bat caves, built by bat men and bat women, such as the Dorset Bat Group.


Iraqi Bat House

In the evening at dusk, when the sun goes down hundreds of bats come out to feast


Bat House Project, Jorgen Tandberg and Yo Murata
Beautiful, poetic and unexpected, combining state-of-the-art technology with a rural and romantic aesthetic. 


 Modernist Bat House by Alex Metcalf


Henry Doorly Zoo artificial bat cave




 Bat House by Arup Associates


Sugarloaf Key Bat Tower, Florida
Built in 1929 by Richter Clyde Perky, a fish lodge owner, to control the mosquito problem in the Lower Keys. However, when the bats were put in, they supposedly flew away, never to return.


Seven Chamber Steel Bat House
Built from the ground up to never separate, never delaminate, and possibly never need to be re-coated, this bat house is ideal where regular maintenance may be infrequent, inconvenient, or dangerous. The super-duty exterior houses a rectangular baffle cluster with seven chambers. Over 100" of linear crevices provides roost space for 210 Myotis-sized bats.

The shell is composed of a combination of steel and exterior plywood, then end-user painted with either rust-resistant paint or readily available spray-on, truck-bed liner. This bat house should remain airtight and serviceable many times longer than even the best protected wooden bat house. The interior baffles are still traditional yellow pine plywood to add mass and thereby retain heat. Our bat houses never need cleaning as the droppings simply fall to the ground.

Each baffle is individually hand scratched and features a pass-thru at the top allowing bats to easily change crevices. This special ÒatticÓ area allows bats to roost against the top of the roof. Baffles form standard 3/4" crevices, suitable for little brown, Indiana, big brown, and many other bat species across North America. Baffles are predicted to last over 20 years.These baffles are permenantly hand scratched for bats to "get a grip".







Municipal bat-roost in San Antonio

1914. Dr. Charles Campbell and a “municipal bat-roost” in San Antonio, Texas (”for one of man’s best friends“), his idea for mosquito control at a time when malaria was a major public health problem. Disguised as a favorite bat habitat, a church steeple (complete with cross), the roost was fitted with a trapdoor and stilts to facilitate the harvesting of guano by the wagonload for use as fertilizer.


 Japanese Highland Bat House
 Fort McCoy Bat House
A group of interested people observes the bat house site near the Sparta-Fort McCoy Airport on South Post


Richard West, a bat researcher, checks a bat house site at Fort McCoy to see if it's inhabited.

  Richard West, a bat researcher, helped construct three artificial bat house sites at Fort McCoy under the guidance of Mike Bakke, better known as the Wisconsin bat specialist. The housing sites are approximately 15 feet off the ground and have more than 10 structures each to house bats.
  Eventually, each of the three sites could house as many as 10,000 bats, he said. The bat houses have differing habitat arrangements where the nocturnal bats can spend the daylight hours in hiding before beginning their search for food during the nighttime hours.


Dorset Bat Group, purpose built bat cave
The Dorset Bat Group consists of a number of people from all walks of life who help the conservation of bats in Dorset in many ways
The group has an active volunteer section that carries out much of the practical work involved in monitoring bats and their habitats throughout Dorset. Much of this work involves roost visits on behalf of Natural England, although They also carry out rescues of injured and downed bats, as well as running a number of Bat Box schemes.They also carry out project work and participate in the National Bat Monitoring Programme


Used Tire Bat Cave

Constructed with used tires from SWEPCO’s huge earthmoving equipment, the bat cave is only the second of its kind built in the United States.
The cave contains a plethora of “bat condos” formed by wire mesh hung on the inside of each tire.
 Gary Hanson (left) checks the positioning at the heart of the cave of “Big Bertha,” the largest of the tires with a 42-inch “footprint” (tread width), 100 inches in overall diameter and 45 inches in its interior opening, as Amanda Crnkovic, an instructor of biology, goes for a shovelful of dirt to toss under the tire for stability. At the controls of the excavator is SWEPCO equipment operator William Huggens, while Jack Walker checks alignment from atop the huge tires and Mac Soules works with a shovel from below to stabilize the tires. All three men are employees at SWEPCO’s Pirkey generating plant. Hanson is an assistant professor of environmental science, director of the LSUS Red River Watershed Management Institute and professor designate of the Don & Earlene Coleman Red River Watershed Management Professorship.


Maberry Centre Pole Bat House

This unusual design for a bathouse was developed by Maberry Centre, a leading innovator in bat house design and manufacture. The design has been used successfully in a number of places, and is certified by Bat Conservation International.


Bat House Project Andrew Brown, Gareth Jones & James Falconer

A strong abstract design with varied potential for use. Good division between cold and warm areas. Modules of different conditions could be used for experimentation.

12 Great Modern Fountains

The point of this list was to find interesting fountain designs that are truly modern, something that is rare, since fountains are luxurious, flowing and decorative by nature.

For example Rome’s Trevi fountain may be a masterpiece, but trying to recreate classical splendor today always looks awful and kitsch. The horrid water display at the Vegas Bellagio is a case in point, opulence without craft. In fairness, its designers, WET design have produced many other much more interesting designs which balance fun with restraint. 

Here are some of our favorite designs, from computer controlled fountains such as the wonderful animated version at Detroit Airport to Chicago’s celebrated screen based Crown fountain.


William Pye - Charybdis Water Vortex Seaham Hall, England

Why we picked this: This is something that is all about execution. If it were too small or the container were badly made it would be uninteresting. But at this scale, in a perfectly made, transparent cylinder, it is fantastic and a perfect example of modernist simplicity.


The sirens Charybdis and Scylla resided in the Sicilian Sea. Homer tells us that because Charybdis had stolen the oxen of Hercules, Zeus struck her with a thunderbolt and changed her into a whirlpool whose vortex swallowed up ships. In Charybdis the circular movement of water inside a transparent acrylic cylinder forms an air-core vortex in the centre. Steps wrap around the cylinder and allow spectators to view the vortex from above. The cylinder was manufactured in Grand Junction, Colorado.

Charybdis is William Pye’s largest vortex water sculpture to date, and he has used for only the second time the clear acrylic polymer he employed in Clearwater Cube. This material has enabled Pye to extend his sculptural language and to explore more ways in which to challenge the wayward element of water. A high level of water filtration is essential for maintaining transparency and thereby expressing the drama of the vortex.









Modernist Fountain within Mexican Silver Mine

Why we picked this: It reminded us of the monolith in 2001 A.D. or The Sentinel, a mysterious, crystaline shape, buried


Spiral Corian fountain by Gwenael Nicolas of Curiosity
Why we picked this: This is our personal favorite, a beautifully made piece of sculpture made out of a material (Corian) that is not considered sexy or luxurious, but clearly can be.

 Jaume Plensas Crown Fountain in ChicagoWhy we picked this:Water and electricity don’t always mix safely. This brings back the idea of water flowing through various bodily orifices with modern billboard like decoration rather than stone sculptures.
The fountain is composed of a black granite reflecting pool placed between a pair of glass brick towers. The towers are 50 feet (15.2 m) tall,[1] and they use light-emitting diodes (LEDs) to display digital videos of Chicago residents, as well as those of natural scenes




Seattle Center Variable Pressure Fountain
Why we picked this: There are many animated fountains that encourage people to play in the jets, however, the hemisphere shape enhances the fact that this is a centerpiece, very well.

This fountain sits in a bowl, its water spraying with varying degrees of force and at different intervals.






Vaillancourt Fountain, San Francisco
Why we picked this: This is the complete opposite of the shallow curved shapes of baroque fountains, a ruthlessly rectilinear pile of dripping concrete pipes. Its a beautiful sewage outlet - fantastic.

Armand Vaillancourt's sculpture « Québec libre ! ». This fountain can be found at the Embarcadero Center in San Francisco, California. It is locally known as the "Vaillancourt Fountain".

It is a huge concrete fountain, 200 feet long, 140 feet wide and 36 feet high

Water Mobile Venus Jardin du Luxemburg

Lotta Hannerz, Water Mobile Venus on display in the Medicis fountain in Jardin du Luxembourg. Why we picked this (nose, har har): Without being all abstract and obviously modernist, the realistic face with its bright colors contrasts perfectly with the worn gray classical fountain.


Detroit Airport, Animated Fountain

Why we picked this: Airports are very modern places where few people complain about ultra modern architecture. This fountain manages to create shapes which compliment the smooth curves of the planes at the gates behind it. It is modernism without right angles.


World’s largest Mentos and Coke Fountain

1500 students gathered in Belgium to create the worlds largest fountain made from exploding Coke and Mentos. Why we picked this: By having everyone dress in the same outfits, the effect of a fun, temporary activity becomes performance art and looks like a giant figurative fountains, when photographed.


Abstract Sculptural Fountain, Davisville

Why we picked this: Largely because it is an obscure quirky design, and it reminded us of the shapes of Japanese vinyl toy figures.

Kanazawa Station Fountain Clock
Why we picked this: In some ways this is a bit kitsch and gimmicky, but the idea is so perverse that it seems fun.

The WaterBoard

"A large, interactive installation that gives the user a chance to play with flowing water without getting wet. " This not a fountain, per se, but it takes the idea of touch screen interactive displays to the fun of playing with water.






Saturday, February 14, 2009

17 Architectural Light Sculptures

Innovations in lighting design are often gimmicky or merely a case of LED everywhere. This list illustrates where lighting is sculptural and integral to architecture, from a night club made of glowing bricks, Daniel Libeskinds wireframe architectural chandelier, the amazing Lighthive exhibition at the Architectural Association and futuristic light sculptures by Kalle. Our LED example creates a grid of LED points that appear to float in mid air.


Erwin Redl Lighting Projects

SITOOTERIE II
The Anemix
Vortex Light Sculpture by Zaha Hadid
Spirit House Chandelier by Libeskind
kubik modular light brick nightclub
Reception light sculpture, for glass manufacturer Leonardo
Pixel Cloud LED arrays
Antony Gormley, Blind Light

16n Light Sculpture


VOLUME LIGHT INSTALLATION



PET lights, recyling plastic bottles
Oblivion Light Sculpture

Lighthive


Atom by Robert Henke & Christopher Bauder




Football light sculpture by Kalle


OrchadiaOrchadia robotically animated light sculpture

6 Unexpected Uses for Shipping Containers

Hotel



The world’s first hotel built from recycled shipping containers has popped-up in Uxbridge, West London. Each prefabricated container comes fully-equipped with fixtures, furniture, and windows from a factory in China.
The company, called Travelodge, says that constructing a hotel this way is 25% faster and 10% cheaper than the more traditional construction methods. Also, construction is much quicker, because all that has to be done is to fit each container together like it was a giant Lego set.
Travelodge plans to follow up with a 307-room version at Heathrow. They expect to save up to 10 million pounds (18.6 million dollars) a year on hotel development by using this new method.


Office



Perhaps the smartest and most practical of all designs, shipping containers make perfect stackable office space for this warehouse in a design by Clive Wilkinson for a U.S.charity event company.The 47,000 square foot warehouse is filled with shipping containers that have been transformed into modern office spaces. The idea is cheap, simple, maneuverable and saved the company a ton of money on construction costs, and it allowed the entire space to be more open and airy.


House



This stunning home is almost like a piece of art that you can live in. Constructed using 12 recycled shipping containers, the12 container home has all of the modern conveniences of a traditionally built home but with a unique element of style as well. A modern kitchen, huge wide-open floor plan, and gigantic windows that bring in tons of natural lighting are just a few of the great features of this home
, construction costs were relatively inexpensive when compared to traditional construction.


Student housing



These boxes were intended to only be a temporary solution to a student accommodation problem in Holland, but shipping containers provide an effective solution to low-cost student housing.
Containers are home to not only the 1000 units that each have a private balcony, but a cafe, supermarket, office space, and even a sports area. Units are arranged in “blocks,” each block containing a service unit with centralized electricity, internet, and networking systems.


Market



This shipping container shop is another project situated in Europe. The messenger bag shop can be found in Zurich’s industrial quarter, rather appropriately. And this isn’t just a market stall hidden inside a metal box, as you can see these containers are stacked up, hitting 85 feet high. The company continue the ethos of the goods they are selling, using recyclable material to create a retail space that you’d have to have a look around in.


Shopping




In other parts of the world, places like Odessa, Ukraine already have the the biggest shopping mall in all of Europe which uses stacked shipping containers to form alleys throughout the 170 acre site. In Asia, the Dordoy Bazaar in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan is almost entirely composed of empty shipping containers stacked two high and chock-full of inexpensive trinkets and toys. So, in other words, shipping container architecture is nothing new, but it is new when it comes to residential and office applications.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Great Climbing Walls

Climbing walls are both functionally and aesthetically fascinating. They often have beautiful abstract shapes reminiscent of Kurt Schwitters’ Merzbau or are just plain intricate and impressive.

Included in our collection here are interactive musical climbing walls, enormous artificial ice towers, surreal climbing forms and a huge climbing wall inside a disused Texan grain silo



New Zealand

Extreme Edge Climbing Wall

This climbing center in Auckland is the largest on the continent. A central, Stone Henge boulder is surrounded by acres of climbing fun.



 Incredible Artificial Ice Climbing Walls

A roundup of various magnificent artificial ice climbing walls around the world.


Picture Frame Climbing Wall
This highly original and fun wall consisting of climbable empty picture frames. It was designed for the Tokyo fitness club, Illoiha.


Calshot Climbing Wall
The Calshot climbing wall in Dorset, England, may not be one of the worlds most impressive climbing walls, technically, but it illustrates perfectly what a stunning architectural form climbing walls can be. It looks like a psychedelic Dazzle Ship and is a match for anything by Daniel Libeskind.


Utah 12 storey sheer climbing wall
“Snowbird is home to one of the largest outdoor climbing walls in the world. Located on the western end of the Cliff Lodge, the climbing wall has been the site of numerous world class climbing competitions and extends from ground level to the roof of the Cliff Lodge, 12 floors up. ”


Bouldering Cave in AntarcticaMany of the scientists who are stationed at the famous McMurdo ice station in Antarctica are into climbing, such that this rather claustrophobic looking bouldering room is one of the popular hangouts.



REI Seattle Climbing Wall

The 65 foot high beautifully sculptured climbing wall at awesome outdoor sports store REI in Seattle


Prague outdoor climbing wall

This massive outdoor climbing wall is in the Czech capital, Prague, and has a very unusual form that looks like an alien ruin.


Ivy Climbing Wall

Part of the Lekker Decadent exhibition in the Netherlands, this is a climbable art piece.


Stoneworks Largest Indoor Climbing Wall in US

Stoneworkds may actually still be the worlds largest indoor climbing wall. Reputedly the basement was excavated by 6 feet to preserve the title from a Japanese gym. Whatever the answer, Stoneworks is a triumph of spirit and imagination, a perfect way way to re-use and preserve one of Americas great landmark building types.

 Gothic Tower Articifical Ice Wall


It appears that this Gothic tower was deliberately cascaded with water to provide a scaffold for a competition ice climb.


 Building Facade Climbing Wall

Another fun wall for kids, where they get to climb up a replica building facade. Unfortunately, because it has to be easy, the facade itself does not provide all the holds.


Cruise Ship Climbing Wall

A climbing wall is not a unique feature on cruise ships, these days. This one is on board the 3000+ passenger Explorer of the Seas owned by the same company that operate the worlds largest cruise ship.


 Kathmandu Climbing Wall

The idea of an indoor climbing gym in the Himalayas may seem like sacrilege, however there are certainly lots of climbers in Kathmandu. I love this type of abstract tile used here.


Digiwall - Interactive musical climbing wall

Less technical climbing walls are great items for kids, and this Swedish interactive wall is the best we found. It emits different tones for different hand holds, becoming a giant musical instrument to explore.

Amazing Guns Made of Paper






























Thursday, February 12, 2009

Threatened Lighthouses

Offer Wadham Island Lighthouse

This lighthouse was replaced as an aid to navigation by an automated light on a skeleton tower. The lighthouse was originally built of brick and stone and was later encased in cast iron; in 1961 the tower was encased in concrete.

Baccalieu Island Light

This lighthouse was replaced as an aid to navigation by an automated light on a skeletal tower. It was originally a brick tower and was later encased in iron.

Little Burin Island Light

This station was established as a fog signal station in 1912; the light was added three years later. After the structure was damaged in a 1977 storm, the light was transferred to a skeleton tower.

Big Tignish Light

White, wooden, square pyramidal tower with red trim.
The lighthouse is on Judes Point Road in the village of Tignish Shore.

Cascumpeque Light

The old tower with attached dwelling that can be seen on the island near the presently active light is the second lighthouse (1899).

Cape Tryon Lighthouse

The Cape Tryon Lighthouse, near French River, was established in 1905.

It will take you some time to reach the Cape Tryon Lighthouse, if you enjoy beautiful scenery. The route to this one is through some of the most scenic countryside on Prince Edward Island.

The lighthouse itself sits at the end of a farm and the approach via the dirt farming road makes it appear to be in the middle of the field.

McNeil Beach Light

This light was made obsolete by the construction of the Seal Island Bridge in 1961. With the help of the Nova Scotia Lighthouse Preservation Society, the lighthouse has been restored in recent years.

Man of War Point

This lighthouse is on the Doomsday List of Nova Scotia Lighthouse Preservation Society. As of July 2001 the lighthouse has been moved and is now in two pieces. A local woman is seeking funding to restore the lighthouse.


Sambro Lighthouse in 1999

Sambro Lighthouse is the oldest standing and operating lighthouse in the Americas. Legislation to establish the lighthouse was passed at the first session of the Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia in 1758

Sable Island West End

This lighthouse has been rebuilt and moved several times. The present structure was discontinued on July 1, 2004.

Pine Island Lightstation

Pine Island is located in the northwest end of Queen Charlotte Strait.

Ontario’s Nottawasaga Island Lighthouse Severely Endangered

Gleaming limestone lighthouse known as one of the six “Imperial Towers” built in the Georgian Bay and Lake Huron in the mid-1800s

Lighthouse Cove, Ontario, Canada

This was one of the first lighthouses built in Ontario, originally used to guide sailing and steam ships into the Thames river.

Boblo Island
Boblo Island was home to a popular amusement park for much of the 20th century. The island is a five minute ferry ride from Amherstburg, Ontario, and 18 miles from Detroit, Michigan. The lighthouse no longer has a lantern; it was destroyed by fire in 1954. The tower has recently been stablized by Parks Canada.

Pelee Island Lighthouse—Monument to Perseverance & Preservation

The Pelee Island Lighthouse as it appeared in the late 1800’s.

Mohawk Island Light

Mohawk Island Light was completed in 1848 to guide ships to Port Maitland and the Welland Canal.

Point Abino Light

The Point Abino lighthouse is considered an important example of Greek Revival architecture, and was one of the last lighthouses in Canada to be automated. It was originally built to replace the Buffalo Lightship, which sank with all hands in a 1913 storm. In May 2001, the town council voted to purchase the Point Abino lighthouse complex from the federal government and maintain it as a historic attraction. The Point Abino Lighthouse Preservation Society is working for the preservation of the lighthouse.

Burlington Bay Main Lighthouse: Ontario’s Forgotten Landmark

Due to the demands of the distressed mariners and area residents, a 54-foot wooden lighthouse was finally constructed along the Pier. This octagonal-shaped structure was built in 1837 by the American, John L. Williams, and was constructed of clapboard set on a stone foundation. Financing of the structure was made possible by way of shipping tolls

Scotch Bonnet Light

This tower has been gradually crumbling since it was discontinued and abandoned in 1959. According to a visitor to this site, the Canadian Coast Guard tried to pull the tower over sometime after 1959, causing much of the damage that can be seen today. Besides the remains of the tower, only two walls of the keeper's dwelling remain. An active skeleton tower stands close by.

Scotch Bonnet Light

This tower has been gradually crumbling since it was discontinued and abandoned in 1959. According to a visitor to this site, the Canadian Coast Guard tried to pull the tower over sometime after 1959, causing much of the damage that can be seen today. Besides the remains of the tower, only two walls of the keeper's dwelling remain. An active skeleton tower stands close by.


In 1959, the light was replaced with a skeleton tower, and the lantern room removed. The building remains lonely and abandoned today.

The Prince Edward Point Lighthouse

The Prince Edward Point Lighthouse (also known as Traverse Point Lighthouse by locals) was built in 1881. The 36-foot tower displayed a red light from 1881 to 1941, and was dubbed "the red onion." The light was changed to green in 1941.

In 1959, the light was replaced with a skeleton tower, and the lantern room removed. The building remains lonely and abandoned today.

Lower Allumette Lake Light

Ottawa River; at the south end of Ïle Lighthouse, in the channel between Ïle Fraser and Ïle des Allumettes, opposite Westmeath, Ontario.

Pointe au Baudet Light

The first lighthouse here was destroyed by fire in 1876. Following the inauguration of the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1959, the second lighthouse was replaced in 1962 by a white, steel skeleton tower. The Department of Transport wanted to demolish the old lighthouse, but two neighboring landowners obtained a 10-year lease on the plot of land on which it was located and cared for the building. Later, the lighthouse was allowed to deteriorate; the lantern and gallery were damaged by a violent storm in 1995 and are now missing. The town of Rivière Beaudette is investigating the possibility of restoring the lighthouse.

Ile Sainte-Hélène Light

This tower was built as the Ile Ronde Rear Range Light, but the range has been discontinued for many years and the front tower no longer remains. The surviving tower is often the target of vandals and clearly needs some care. It is on the grounds of the La Ronde amusement park managed by Six Flags.

Ile aux Oeufs Light
The keeper's house at this station was demolished in the 1970s. The first keeper here, Paul Côté, was a very religious man and set up the first floor of the lighthouse as a chapel where passing missionaries and priests could celebrate mass and provide religious services to the keeper and his family.


Long Pèlerin Light

The dwelling was demolished in the 1980s but the old tower remains, next to the skeleton tower that replaced it.

Pointe du Sud-Ouest Light

The original lighthouse here (it still stands but has been neglected and is in severe disrepair) was replaced in 1959 by a pyramidal metal tower with an automated light. That second tower was replaced in 1972 by a 50-foot square, skeleton tower, which is still active.

Escarpement Bagot Light

This lighthouse was replaced by a nearby steel tower in 1980. The dwelling was removed by 1989.

Gannet Rock Light

This lighthouse is built on a small, barren, rocky island. The present lantern room was installed in 1967. Since the light was automated in 1996 and the keepers were removed, the tower and keeper's house have deteriorated greatly. A cleanup at Gannet Rock was completed by the Coast Guard in early 2003. Sheetrock was removed from the interior of the dwelling and all trash was also removed. The Coast Guard hopes to do some restoration work on the exterior of the tower in 2004-5.

Grand Harbour Light
This lighthouse was called the "most endangered in North America" by Lighthouse Digest. It is owned by a New York City businessman, Errol Rainess. The American Lighthouse Foundation made a last-ditch effort to save the crumbling structure. Some stabilization was done to the lighthouse before the owner refused to allow anyone on the island. It is doubtful that the structure will last much longer.

St. Andrews Light

The St. Andrews Civic Trust moved this lighthouse away from the seawall where it stood in 2002 for restoration.

Incredible Hotel Atlantis

It's the latest word in Gulf excess - a sprawling $US1.5 billion ($A1.8 billion) resort boasting a $US25,000 ($A30,044.50)-a-night suite and dolphins flown in from the South Pacific, all atop a palm tree-shaped island.


Inspired by the legend of the lost continent, the resort offers "experiences that are new to the Middle East," said its president and managing director Alan Leibman

At Atlantis, this includes water thrills, a marine habitat and more than a dozen restaurants run by world-class chefs including Japanese sushi mogul Nobu Matsuhisa and Michel Rostang of France.


"Aquaventure", a water playground of over 18 million litres of water, is accessible to visitors for prices ranging from A$64 for children to A$75 for adults.


The waterscape features water slides with names such as "Leap of Faith", including two which catapult riders through shark-filled lagoons


Atlantis' marine habitat will be stocked with thousands of marine animals and include a "Dolphin Bay".




The hotel opened on schedule despite a recent fire which ravaged its lobby, though the pomp and ceremony have been put off until the formal inauguration in November



A room with an underwater view ... the interior of a suite at the Atlantis Hotel.
Much of the focus at the Atlantis, modeled on a sister resort in the Bahamas, is on ocean-themed family entertainment.


The hotel's top floor aims squarely at the ultra-wealthy. A three-bedroom, three-bathroom suite complete with gold-leaf, 18-seat dining table is on offer for $25,000 (A$30,000) a night


A few employees work on the computers as the rest listen to their boss at the Kid's Club of the Atlantis hotel.


A water slide made as a historical building, Zigurat, at the Atlantis hotel.


Environmentalists have long criticized both Palm Jumeirah island and some of the features of the Atlantis hotel

For the moment, the Atlantis shares the Jumeira Palm Island only with rows of high-end houses and construction sites. But other international names are set to move in.




















Wednesday, February 11, 2009

The Amazing Iguazu Falls

Iguazu Falls, also known as the Iguassu Falls or Iguaçu Falls, are waterfalls of the Iguazu River located on the border of the Brazilian state of Paraná and the Argentine province of Misiones. The waterfall system consists of 275 falls along 1.67 miles of the Iguazu River. Some of the individual falls are up to 269 ft in height, though the majority are about 210 ft. The Garganta del Diablo (Devil’s Throat), a 269 foot high, 490 feet wide and 2300 feet long cliff, is the most impressive of all, and marks the border between Argentina and Brazil
















Crazy Banyan Treehouse Cafe in Japan

Although this towering concrete treehouse isn’t really green, (unless tree imitation counts as ‘green’), we couldn’t help but be awestruck by its sheer craziness. We thought it worth a post, just for the picture alone. The Naha Harbor Diner in Okinawa, Japan is a life-size rendition of a banyan tree, also known as gajumaru. The aptly-named Banyan Town shopping center near the entrance of Onoyama Park features a twenty foot tall tree with a pan-Asian restaurant nestled amid its branches. Accessible by a spiral staircase around back and an in-trunk elevator, the restaurant specializes in locally grown and organic harvested foods fresh from the farm.

Overlooking the ocean, the Naha Harbor Diner claims to offer “farm-fresh vegetables, juicy chickens and pork” and “native salts.” And as we all know, native and local foods cut down on shipping and packaging costs, reducing our carbon and plastic footprints. In the end its hard to say whether dining in a faux tree will boost your sustainability points, but it sure looks exciting and native ingredients can’t hurt.





Mythic Birthplace of Zeus Said Found

Reverse of Arcadian League silver stater, Zeus Lykaios seated on a throne with an eagle in his left hand. 5th century B.C. Diameter 2 cm

The Chariot of Zeus image is from the 1879 "Stories from the Greek Tragedians" by Alfred Church.

The Greek god of thunder and lightning had Earthly beginnings, and scientists think they finally know where. 

Ancient Greeks first worshipped the omnipotent Zeus at a remote altar on Mount Lykaion, a team of Greek and American archaeologists now think. During a recent dig at the site, the researchers found ceremonial goods commonly used in cult activity and dated at over three millennia old, making them the earliest known "appearance" of Zeus in Greece. 

The discovery challenges the idea that Zeus worship began on the Greek island of Crete, which at least one classical historian names as the god's mythic birthplace. The latest finds on Mount Lykaion, in the mainland province of Arcadia, are as old as the idea of Zeus himself, said the project's senior research scientist David Romano, of the University of Pennsylvania.

"This new evidence strongly suggests that there were drinking (and perhaps feasting) parties taking place on the top of the mountain in the Late Helladic period, around 3,300 or 3,400 years ago," Romano said.

Worship of lightning god unbroken 

Zeus is the most important figure in ancient Greek mythology. He is the supreme ruler of Mount Olympus, the god of the skies and the father of a slew of other deities and mortals, such as Athena, Apollo, Heracles, Aphrodite and Helen of Troy, say the legends.

The heroic figure was born on either the island of Crete or on Mount Lykaion, according to two competing accounts written in ancient times. While the myths are just that — stories — historians and archaeologists have always been interested in discovering what elements of the stories might be at least loosely based on fact. 

Though temples to Zeus, including one of the seven ancient wonders of the world, are found throughout Greece, Zeus' mythic "birthplace" may actually be the spot where Greeks first started to worship him too, the new finds suggest.

Excavating a trench on Mount Lykaion, in an area which ancient Greek historians later called "the ash altar of Zeus," archaeologists found more than 50 drinking vessels, fragments of human and animal figurines, as well as burned sheep and goat bones. All of the artifacts are consistent with cult ceremonies of the Mycenaean people, who settled Greece approximately between 3,000 and 4,000 years ago, historians say. 

A portion of these finds were announced preliminarily by the research team last year. 

Mycenaean mountain-top altars are very rare on mainland Greece, according to archaeologists. The period also coincides with the first historical mentions of the god Zeus in Greek texts, suggesting that the Mount Lykaion ceremonies were to honor the man himself. 

The worship of Zeus, a god traditionally associated with mountains, became popular on Mount Lykaion during classic Greek antiquity, said the team, made up of archaeologists from the University of Pennsylvania, Arizona, and the Greek Archaeological Service.

Younger, higher levels of the trench have yielded silver coins, a bronze hand holding a lightning bolt and petrified lightning in past dig seasons. All are clear dedications to Zeus, indicating that the use of the god's altar on Mount Lykaion was likely unbroken for several millennia. 

Myth and history 

The connection between myth and history doesn't apply solely to ancient Greece. Many ancient cultures worshipped gods that had links to both the spirit and physical worlds. 

Real-world spots mentioned in mythic or sacred texts often become places of worship or temple locations or, like Mount Lykaion, vice-versa. This especially applies to birthplaces or homes of the Gods, such as:

Heliopolis, Egypt: Though largely destroyed and swallowed by the sprawl of modern Cairo, the ancient city of Heliopolis was once the center of the Egyptians' worship