Urban Dinosaurs by Andy Council

Posted by Alex in Art on January 21, 2012 at 12:20 pm

Did I see trafficjamosaurus there somewhere? Designer Andy Council of Bristol, England, created a series of urban dinosaurs in which he imagined prehistoric creatures arising from the urban landscape of skyscrapers and highways.

Link | Andy's blog and Flickr page, where you can find many more neat stuff - via My Modern Met

 
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Ice Skating Dinosaur

Posted by Miss Cellania in Advertising, Video Clips on November 12, 2011 at 8:06 am


(vimeo link)

Ridiculous? Yes. Eye-catching? Certainly! This ad is for the Denver Museum of Nature & Science. -via the Presurfer

 
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T. Rex: Fatso?

Posted by Alex in Science & Tech on October 15, 2011 at 2:22 pm

Ah, T. Rex: Fierce ... ferocious ... fat?

Paleontologist John R. Hutchinson and colleagues led the study that suggested that the king of dinosaur was way plumper than previously thought:

“We knew she was big but the 30 percent increase in her weight was unexpected,” said Makovicky, who works at the museum where Sue has been a major draw since 2000. He added that this figure represents the leanest model, so the famous dinosaur might have been even more corpulent. “Nine tons is the minimum estimate we arrived at using a very skinny body form,” he explained.

The new mass estimates indicate that Tyrannosaurus rex grew twice as quickly as previously thought, packing on up to 3,950 pounds per year during the teenage phase. This staggering rate, coupled with its gargantuan adult proportions, probably meant that Tyrannosaurus rex moved more slowly as it aged, according to the researchers. Large individuals could still have achieved speeds between 10 and 25 miles per hour while running after prey, using their giant tail and hip muscles for propulsion, they said. Not bad for a hulking beast once thought to have weighed as much as a school bus or full-grown elephant—but may actually have verged on a bus with an elephant inside.

Link (Image: Julia Molnar) - via The Week

 
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Dinosaur Breeders

Posted by Miss Cellania in Animals & Pets on August 22, 2011 at 7:26 am

Their motto is “Bringing the past into the future, one egg at a time.” Dinosaur Breeders may remind you of a certain film series from Steven Spielberg, except this company will allow you to take a dinosaur of your own home with you -if you have the proper environment for it and the cash. They offer:

• Physically and temperamentally sound babies, regardless of species
• Proven show-quality specimens
• Fully-licensed and registered documentation of champion bloodlines
• All-inclusive obedience training and care lessons provided on-site

It looks almost serious, until you see the photo gallery and read the customer testimonials. Link -via the Presurfer

 
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Dino Pops Popsicle Mold

Posted by Tiffany in NeatoShop Features on August 4, 2011 at 7:13 am

Dino Pops Popsicle Mold – $16.95

Are you looking for a fun way to beat the heat? You need the Dino Pops Popsicle Mold from the NeatoShop.  This great set includes 4 sculpted dinosaur shapes 3 sculpted dinosaur shapes and 1 flying reptile shape: Brontosaurus,  Stegosaurus, T-Rex, and Pterodactyl Pterosaur. This is the perfect gift for any budding paleontologist.

Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more Mealtime fun!

Link

 
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Fight Nazi Dinosaurs For Free, All Weekend Long

Posted by Zeon Santos in Entertainment, Gaming, Science Fiction on July 30, 2011 at 1:48 am

Dino D-Day wants to show you what the hype is all about by letting you play for free until July 31st on Steam. The indie game has received lots of buzz over the last few months, not only because of its humorous subject matter (Nazi controlled dinosaurs), but also because the gameplay is fast paced and fun, and the graphics are quite good for such a low budget game. Now you have a chance to check it out for yourself and see if slaying Nazi dinosaurs satisfies your craving for virtual blood.

Link

 
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Tea Rex Tea Infuser

Posted by Tiffany in NeatoShop Features on July 12, 2011 at 11:10 am

Tea Rex Tea Infuser – $9.95

Does work have you feeling about 65 million years old?  Maybe it’s time to take a break and make yourself a nice cup of tea with the Tea Rex Tea Infuser from the NeatoShop.  Remember, every ferocious beast needs to take a rest now and again.  You will be back to your  kingly, bone crushing self in no time.

Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more fierce Kitchen Stuff!

Link

 
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A Dinosaur at School

Posted by Miss Cellania in Animals & Pets, Baby & Kids, Video Clips on April 14, 2011 at 5:07 am


(YouTube link)

One of the dinosaurs from the show “Walking with Dinosaurs” (previously at Neatorama) visited a school in Bondi, near Sydney, Australia. The kids were, shall we say, excited. Don’t miss the foot race! -via reddit

 
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Obscure Words Illustrated by Polly M. Law

Posted by Alex in Art, Book & Literature on March 28, 2011 at 12:30 am

This is fantastic: artist Polly M. Law illustrated 100 odd and obscure words with her unique bricolage style in The Word Project. My favorite is this one above, in which she magnificently illustrated the word "dinomania": (n) irresistible urge to dance. (Yes, the word also also means obsession with dinosaurs).

See more at Brain Pickings: Link

 
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Dino Tails!

Posted by Alex in Crafts on March 12, 2011 at 11:55 am

Don’t let my three-year-old see this, or we’ll never get out of the house today. Jessica of Running With Scissors created these awesome Dino Tails and was kind enough to provide a tutorial on how to make your own – via Craft

 
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The First Dinosaur Ever Discovered Was Called “Scrotum Humanum”

Posted by Minnesotastan in Science & Tech on March 3, 2011 at 1:19 pm

The photo above shows a drawing of a specimen retrieved from a quarry near Oxford in 1676.  It is the end of the femur, and was named by British naturalist Richard Brookes after what he thought it looked like.

It was given the name Scrotum humanum in 1763 but it didn’t catch on; it was renamed Megalosaurus by Reverand Buckland in 1824. The word dinosaur wasn’t coined until sixteen years later.

Found in the “Nutty Nomenclature” subsection of the link at Null Hypothesis, which also includes a small brown moth whose official scientific name is “Eubetia bigaulae.”

It’s pronounced “you betcha, by golly.”  Honest.

Link.

 
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Do Pterosaurs Still Exist on Papua New Guinea?

Posted by Miss Cellania in Animals & Pets on December 29, 2010 at 6:37 am

In Papua New Guinea, natives describe huge flying animals with long beaks, bat-like wings, and razor-sharp teeth and claws. Evidence of gigantic nesting sites have been found in the mountains. Remember, this is the area where previously-unknown species of animals are found almost constantly. Could these creatures be living pterosaurs?

The Ropen or ‘demon flyer’ is a monstrous animal that is said to have terrified the natives of Papua New Guinea for thousands of years. Another smaller animal, known as the Duah, is possibly related to the Ropen, a cryptid creature said to haunts some of the far-flung outlying islands.

The flying animals described are said to “glow” in the dark, as reported both by locals and researchers. It has been hypothesized that the bio-luminescent glow assists the animals’ effort to hunt and catch food in the deep darkness of the tropical night. One of the researchers, David Woetzel, has said that he recorded images of the animals while studying them.

Link

(Image credit: Wikipedia user DinoGuy2)

 
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Great Vocab Didn’t Save the Thesaurus Mug

Posted by Alex in Design, Home & Garden, Pictures on December 13, 2010 at 1:57 pm


Great Vocab Didn't Save the Thesaurus Mug - $9.95 | T-shirt version

Here's the perfect mug for your beloved logophile (lover of words, that is), exclusively available from the NeatoShop: Great Vocab Didn't Save the Thesaurus Mug

More fun items for academics, school-age kids, and overall smartypants:

Link

 
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Azhdarchids: The Largest Flying Creatures That Have Ever Existed on Earth

Posted by Alex in Animals & Pets, Pictures, Science & Tech on November 4, 2010 at 1:22 am


Image: Mark Witton/Darren Naish

What do you get when you combine a bird with a giraffe? The largest flying creatures that have ever existed on Earth:

With wingspans of 40 to 50 ft, the Azhdarchids were pterosaurs as big as some modern aircraft, with incredibly lop-sided bodies. Hugely long legs, beaks and necks adorned unusually small torsos with wings that were, surprisingly, proportionately short. It is thought that they were not able to hunt in flight, but needed to land and scrabble awkwardly for anything that they could swallow whole. Since one of these terrifying monsters stood as much as 20ft tall, it is easy to imagine that man might well have been a prey animal for them, had they lived alongside each other.

Environmental Graffiti has a feature of more less well known, but equally savage prehistoric predators: Link

 
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3D Dinosaur Fossil Pancake

Posted by Alex in Food & Drink, Pictures on October 3, 2010 at 11:18 am

We’ve featured the crazy cool creations of Jim’s Pancakes before on Neatorama, but this one takes the cake (or perhaps pancake): the 3D Dinosaur Bones Pancake. As usual, Jim’s daughter Allie approves: Link – via Great White Snark

 
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Fossiliced Dinosaur Ice Trays

Posted by Alex in Design, Food & Drink, Home & Garden, Pictures on September 19, 2010 at 9:14 pm


Fossiliced Ice Trays (Set of 2) – $15.95

Still using regular ice cubes? Don’t let your sense of party style go extinct! Add fun to your drinks and make ‘em the toast of the party with dinosaur fossil ice cubes.

The Fossiliced Ice Trays from the NeatoShop are a set of 2 ice trays (Triceratops and Tyrannosaurus Rex). They add the perfect prehistoric touch to modern day drinks: Link | More Fun Ice Trays | More Fun Party Supplies | More Fun Kitchen Stuff

 
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T-Rex Night Light

Posted by Alex in Home & Garden, Pictures on September 3, 2010 at 11:28 pm


T-Rex Night Light – $16.95

Afraid of the dark? That’s no longer a problem with these awesome porcelain night lights over at the NeatoShop. I’m particularly drawn to the dinosaur night lights, but the entire selection is actually very neat: Link

 
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Bonehead Dinosaur Comb and Brush

Posted by Alex in Fashion on August 29, 2010 at 12:49 am


Bonehead Dinosaur Comb and Brush – $5.95

Does your kid have messy hair? Make that a thing of the past with this fun Bonehead dinosaur folding comb and brush from the NeatoShop. There’s no better way to teach your young Neanderthals that unkempt hair deserves to be extinct: Link | More Fun Bath & Body Stuff

 
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Attack of the Fifty Foot Dinosaur!

Posted by Queuebot in Art, Pictures on August 18, 2010 at 11:32 am

Residents of the quiet English seaside town of Southsea were startled when they discovered they had a new resident.  Towering over them at fifty feet and over seventy in length the reproduction of an Ultrasaurus (which was thought once to have existed but sadly was an archaeological blunder) promises to turn heads all summer.

She is the creation of artists Ivan and Heather Morrison and part of their current exhibition called An Unreachable Country: A Long Way To Go. But what kind of dinosaur is Luna Park? The answer is, she isn’t based on any in the fossil record.

Link

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by taliesyn30.

 
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Dinosaurs Are Older Than We Thought

Posted by Miss Cellania in Animals & Pets, Science & Tech on March 4, 2010 at 12:47 pm

The oldest dinosaur fossil ever found dates back around 230 million years. But the fossils of around a dozen specimens of a new animal called Asilisaurus kongwe, or silesaur, found in Tanzania lead researchers to believe dinosaurs diverged from another evolutionary line around 243 million years ago.

“Back then it was a very large river system, maybe something like the Mississippi today,” said lead author and University of Texas at Austin paleontologist Sterling Nesbitt. During that time, Africa, South America, Antarctica, Australia and India were all one giant continent called Gondwana.

Though silesaurs are very closely related to dinosaurs, they lack the open hip-sockets that are universal in dinosaurs. The Asilisaurus was a small, four-legged creatures with a long tail. Their beak-like jaws and leaf-shaped teeth helped the animals eat the soft, fibrous leaves of the primordial palms, ferns and conifers that were prevalent during the Triassic period. That suggests that, while the animal may not have been exclusively vegetarian, a good portion of its diet came from plants, he said.

The silesaur changes the conventional wisdom that the dinosaur’s closest relatives were predators. Link

 
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“Anaconda” Meets “Jurassic Park”

Posted by Alex in Animals & Pets, Pictures, Science & Tech on March 3, 2010 at 2:18 pm


Sculpture: Tyler Keillor, Photo: Ximena Erickson, Image modified by Bonnie Miljour

When University of Michigan professor Jeffrey Wilson stumbled upon fossilized dinosaur eggs, he discovered something quite remarkable – a death scene best described as "Anaconda" meets "Jurassic Park":

"It was amazing," Wilson recalls, "because we realized that not only do we have an egg, not only do we have a chain of vertebrae, but they are arranged in a coil, and on top of the coil was a skull."

The snake was coiled around the broken eggshell. "Next to that coil, eggshell, skull, was a solid egg, and another solid egg, and then some larger bones," says Wilson.

Those bones belonged to a baby sauropod. Full-grown sauropods were the vegetarian 100-ton giants of the dinosaur world. But the baby was only about a foot-and-a-half long. It had apparently just hatched from that broken egg. The snake, about 11 feet long, had been waiting for the baby to hatch in order to eat it.

Link

 
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The Art of Passing Gas

Posted by Alex in Bathroom Reader on March 1, 2010 at 12:38 am

The following is an article from The Best of The Best of Uncle John's Bathroom Reader. The Papal Belvedere by Lucas Cranach the Elder (1545), showing German peasants farting at the pope. It used to be that no one talked about farts … now, it's no big deal. You can't get away from it. Which is fine by us. Here we honor people who have made an art out of passing gas. (By the way - if this is your favorite part of the book, we recommend a tome called Who Cut the Cheese, by Jim Dawson.) Honorees: Simon Brassell, Karen Chin, and Robert Harman Notable Achievement: Finding a way to discuss dinosaur farts without making people laugh True Story: In 1991, the three scientists published a paper proposing that millions of year's worth of dinosaur farts may have helped make the Earth more hospitable for humans and other mammals. How? The methane gas passed by dinosaurs during the Cretaceous period, they suggested, "may have been a contributor to global warming." Honoree: King Louis XIV of France Notable Achievement: Turning a fart into a compliment True Story: "It is said," Frank O'Neil writes in The Mammoth Book of Oddities, "that Louis XIV expressed his admiration for the Duchess of Orleans, by doing her the honor of breaking wind in her presence." Honoree: Randy Maresh, an employee at an Albertson's supermarket in Gresham, Oregon Notable Achievement: Making someone so mad at his farting that they sued him True Story: In the mis-1990s, Tom Morgan sued co-worker Randy Maresh for $100,000, claiming in court papers that Maresh "would continually and repeatedly seek out the plaintiff on the premises of Albertson's [supermarket] while plaintiff was engaged in his employee duties. That defendant, after locating plaintiff, would position himself in the proximity of plaintiff so as to direct his 'gas' toward plaintiff." (In his written response to the suit, Maresh's lawyer argued that farts are "expressive behavior," and as such, are protected by the First Amendment.) No word on the outcome. [Note by editor: Case was dismissed] Honoree: Dr. Michael Levitt of Minneapolis, Minnesota Notable Achievement: Inventing a Breathalyzer-type test that can detect propensity for excessive farting True Story: Dr. Levitt's test checks for elevated levels of hydrogen in a patient's breath. If it's there, the patient is likely to be gassy. (Not everyone is impressed with Dr. Levitt's scientific breakthrough: "If Levitt is checking his patients' breath for flatulence," Jeffrey Kluger writes in Discover magazine, "I wouldn't even ask how he's propose to conduct dental work.") Honoree: Canelos Indians of Ecuador Notable Achievement: Turning a fart into a supernatural experience … and a free meal True Story: "The Canelos Indians," Eric Rabkin writes in It's a Gas, "are particularly scared by their farts because they believe the soul escapes the body along with the smell. They have developed a ritual to counter this escape. When in a group someone breaks wind, one of the rest, the quickest, will clap him on the back three times and say, "Uianza, uianza!' The meaning of this word is unknown but it does signify a feast by that name which the person who farted is obliged to prepare ... Alternatively, he can discharge his obligation by rewarding the clapper's kindness with three big clay vessels of manioc beer." Honoree: Ned Lowenbach, assistant district attorney in Tuolumne County, California Notable Achievement: Using farts as a legal strategy True Story: In 1988 a defense attorney appealed his client's conviction, protesting that Lowenbach had disrupted trial proceedings by passing gas. "He farted about one hundred times," the attorney said. "He even lifted his leg a few times." __________ Reprinted with permission from The Best of the Best of Uncle John's Bathroom Reader. The Bathroom Reader Institute handpicked the most eye-opening, rib-tickling, and mind-boggling articles from everything they have written over the last ten years and carefully crammed them into 576 pages of the book. Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute has published a series of popular books containing irresistible bits of trivia and obscure yet fascinating facts. Check out their website here: Bathroom Reader Institute.

 
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Disappearing Civil Liberties Mug

Posted by Alex in Food & Drink, Home & Garden, Politics on February 25, 2010 at 4:18 am

This clever "Disappearing Civil Liberties" mug features the complete text of the Bill of Rights that disappear (thanks to the Patriot Act) as you add hot beverage. From the Neatorama Shop: Link

More disappearing mugs:

 
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Dinosaurs Looked Like Giant Chickens

Posted by Alex in Animals & Pets, Pictures on February 5, 2010 at 12:03 pm

If you think that dinosaurs looked like giant lizards, you’d be forgiven as that has been the depiction in stories, movies, and even in school textbooks. Scientists, however, have recently reached a different conclusion: dinos actually looked like giant chickens!

The subject of the new study—the 155-million-year-old Anchiornis huxleyi—turns out to have looked something like a woodpecker the size of a chicken, with black-and-white spangled wings and a rusty red crown [...]

The color patterns on Anchiornis’s limbs are "quite similar to the silver-spangled Hamburg chicken, a domestic breed of ornamental chicken," said ornithologist Richard Prum of Yale University.

Link

 
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Axe Cop

Posted by Miss Cellania in Baby & Kids, Comics & Cartoons on January 28, 2010 at 7:52 pm

Combine the imagination of a five-year-old with the talent of a professional comic artist and you get Axe Cop. Malachai Nicolle comes up with the stories and his 29-year-old brother Ethan Nicolle {wiki} draws them. The result is wonderful! Anyone who’s ever had, or ever been, a five-year-old storyteller will get a real kick out of this. Link

 
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Dinosaur Ballet

Posted by Miss Cellania in Comics & Cartoons, Video Clips on January 26, 2010 at 11:23 am


(YouTube link)

Ross Butter has a fine grasp of an odd idea. His explanation: “I got in touch with my inner child. He made me do this.” -via Buzzfeed

 
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Sleep Peacefully in the Jaws of a Dinosaur

Posted by John Farrier in Architecture, Baby & Kids on December 10, 2009 at 6:22 pm

The Murphy Family home in Jupiter, Florida features a child’s bed shaped like a dinosaur mouth. Bonnie Murphy, a muralist, did the painting and her husband did the carpentry. Can you imagine anything more soothing?

Link via Geekologie | Photo: 3 Murphys

 
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Dinosaur Built (and Named) Like a Tank

Posted by Miss Cellania in Science & Tech on November 1, 2009 at 2:49 pm

Paleontologists Bill and Kris Parsons of the Buffalo Museum of Science in New York found a dinosaur skull in Montana in 1997. In the years since, they’ve excavated the rest of the skeleton of a new dinosaur called Tatankacephalus cooneyorum.

“These were big dinosaur versions of a Sherman tank,” Bill Parsons said. “They were armored and they withstood whatever came at them, and they just kept going.” T. cooneyorum was about 15 to 20 feet (4.5 to 6 meters) in length.

And this dinosaur had its share of protection, with two sets of stubby horns, one on the cheeks and the other around its eyes, two thick domes at the back of the skull and thickened areas around the nasal region.

Bill Parsons suspects T. cooneyorum was covered with hundreds or even thousands of bony plates equipped with spikes and a tail tipped with a club, similar to other ankylosaurs. Such protection, along with a swinging clubbed tail, would have kept at bay any of the small dinosaurs around at the time, Parsons said.

T. cooneyorum dates from around 112 million years ago. Link -via the Presurfer

(image credit: Bill Parsons)

 
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Darwinopterus, the New Flying Reptile

Posted by Miss Cellania in Animals & Pets, Science & Tech on October 14, 2009 at 11:59 am

Fossils of flying reptiles come in two versions: the older long-tailed pterosaurs and the more recent short-tailed versions. The fossil gap between the two was a mystery until 20 skeletons of a new species were discovered early in 2009 in northeast China. The new pterosaur was named Darwinopterus in honor of the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin’s birth.

“Darwinopterus came as quite a shock to us,” explained David Unwin part of the research team and based at the University of Leicester’s School of Museum Studies. “We had always expected a gap-filler with typically intermediate features such as a moderately elongate tail – neither long nor short – but the strange thing about Darwinopterus is that it has a head and neck just like that of advanced pterosaurs, while the rest of the skeleton, including a very long tail, is identical to that of primitive forms”.

The discovery lends credence to the theory that evolution is not an even process, but contains periods of rapid evolution. Link -via Digg

(image credit: Mark Witton, University of Portsmouth)

 
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Dinos Burrowed Underground In Cold Weather

Posted by Queuebot in Animals & Pets on July 19, 2009 at 2:12 am

The world’s oldest known dinosaur burrow, recently discovered on the southeast coast of Australia, suggests that some dinos went underground to escape extreme weather.

110 million years ago, when this burrow was dug, the southeastern coast of Australia was adjacent to Antarctica.

The burrow is strikingly similar to another one found in Montana in  2005, which held the remains of a 96-million-year-old dinosaur family.

Illustration by James Hays, Fernbank Museum, via National Geographic News

“Right now burrowing dinosaurs might look like an exception to the rule,” he said. “But I wouldn’t be surprised if more species [dug burrows]. Ten years from now it might be considered commonplace.”
–Emory University paleontologist Anthony Martin

Link – via news

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by Marilyn Terrell.

 
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