Mildly interesting
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wrote on 4 May 2022, 00:02 last edited by
Can we just agree there are no good ways to have acid thrown on your face?
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wrote on 4 May 2022, 00:07 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
Can we just agree there are no good ways to have acid thrown on your face?
Those sorts of extremist views, devoid of nuance, have no place in this discussion.
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wrote on 4 May 2022, 00:08 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
Can we just agree there are no good ways to have acid thrown on your face?
No. No we can't.
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wrote on 4 May 2022, 00:30 last edited by Larry 5 Apr 2022, 00:37
...,.,...
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wrote on 4 May 2022, 00:46 last edited by
The Sodium Tail of Mercury
May 9, 2021: The biggest comet in the Solar System is actually a planet. It’s Mercury. Researchers have known for years that Mercury has an enormous tail. Last week, Andrea Alessandrini photographed it from the balcony of his house in Veroli, Italy:
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The Sodium Tail of Mercury
May 9, 2021: The biggest comet in the Solar System is actually a planet. It’s Mercury. Researchers have known for years that Mercury has an enormous tail. Last week, Andrea Alessandrini photographed it from the balcony of his house in Veroli, Italy:
wrote on 4 May 2022, 00:51 last edited by@mark said in Mildly interesting:
The Sodium Tail of Mercury
May 9, 2021: The biggest comet in the Solar System is actually a planet. It’s Mercury. Researchers have known for years that Mercury has an enormous tail. Last week, Andrea Alessandrini photographed it from the balcony of his house in Veroli, Italy:
Wow that's rad.
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The Sodium Tail of Mercury
May 9, 2021: The biggest comet in the Solar System is actually a planet. It’s Mercury. Researchers have known for years that Mercury has an enormous tail. Last week, Andrea Alessandrini photographed it from the balcony of his house in Veroli, Italy:
wrote on 4 May 2022, 00:56 last edited by@mark said in Mildly interesting:
The Sodium Tail of Mercury
That's just damn cool. We tend to assume that, because we can't see things, they don't exist.
Radio telescopes, FTW!
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@mark said in Mildly interesting:
The Sodium Tail of Mercury
That's just damn cool. We tend to assume that, because we can't see things, they don't exist.
Radio telescopes, FTW!
wrote on 4 May 2022, 13:53 last edited by -
wrote on 4 May 2022, 14:54 last edited by
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wrote on 5 May 2022, 21:54 last edited by
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wrote on 5 May 2022, 22:48 last edited by
That photo is almost too good to be real.
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wrote on 7 May 2022, 15:17 last edited by
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@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
It would be nice to imagine the vomit force being due to a rifling action of the neck, but alas, it's just boring ol' gravity.
As someone who, presumably, has never had someone literally vomit into your (unmasked) face*, you have no standing to comment in this thread, @Horace.
*1993, Sunday afternoon, ICU. Yeah, that was more than special.
wrote on 7 May 2022, 16:08 last edited by@George-K said in Mildly interesting:
@Horace said in Mildly interesting:
It would be nice to imagine the vomit force being due to a rifling action of the neck, but alas, it's just boring ol' gravity.
As someone who, presumably, has never had someone literally vomit into your (unmasked) face*, you have no standing to comment in this thread, @Horace.
*1993, Sunday afternoon, ICU. Yeah, that was more than special.
So I do have standing? Yay me…
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wrote on 9 May 2022, 20:22 last edited by
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Eggs from different breeds of chicken, natural colors of eggshell.
wrote on 9 May 2022, 21:38 last edited by@Ivorythumper and they all taste the same, right?
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@Ivorythumper and they all taste the same, right?
wrote on 9 May 2022, 21:43 last edited by@George-K No idea!
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@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
A “petroglyph” (new word to me) from 8000BC.
As interesting, if not more, is Göbekli Tepe, which has archeologists stumped.
It is a fully formed neolithic temple, which somewhat predates any stone founded city, and has no indication of the sort of human habitation needed to organize, build, and service a temple cultus. It seems to have been built by hunter-gathers (pre village, pre agrarian), who yet had 3 dimensional plastic art form of animals carved out of stone, rather than petroglyphs which were carved into stone.
10,000 year old art -- for reference these are more than twice as old as the Pyramids at Giza.
wrote on 11 May 2022, 01:28 last edited by Ivorythumper 5 Nov 2022, 01:30@Ivorythumper said in Mildly interesting:
@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
A “petroglyph” (new word to me) from 8000BC.
As interesting, if not more, is Göbekli Tepe, which has archeologists stumped.
It is a fully formed neolithic temple, which somewhat predates any stone founded city, and has no indication of the sort of human habitation needed to organize, build, and service a temple cultus. It seems to have been built by hunter-gathers (pre village, pre agrarian), who yet had 3 dimensional plastic art form of animals carved out of stone, rather than petroglyphs which were carved into stone.
10,000 year old art -- for reference these are more than twice as old as the Pyramids at Giza.
Just following this thread... I've been interested in Gobekli Tepe for about 20 years now. Within the past two years, a much larger and much older temple site (1000 or 2000 years earlier) has been uncovered about 30 miles away:
This gentleman holding his gentlemanly tool has been covered since about 10,000 BC
This is "Temple of the Penises" is the oldest know piece of architecture.
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wrote on 11 May 2022, 11:56 last edited by
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wrote on 11 May 2022, 16:56 last edited by