The Sea Is Screaming

Posted by John Farrier in Video Clips on February 10, 2012 at 5:00 am


(Video Link)

Ice floes on the Black Sea are scraping past each other, creating weird noises. If you couldn’t see the video, what would you guess is making the sound?

-via The Presurfer

 
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Stopcicle

Posted by Miss Cellania in Pictures on February 2, 2012 at 8:50 am

This picture was taken yesterday in Mirabel, Quebec. There was some discussion of its location at reddit, where we are assured that in France, stop signs say “Stop” instead of “Arret.” Link -via reddit

(Image credit: benim ergani)

 
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The Icy Beach of Iceland

Posted by Alex in Photography, Travel on January 15, 2012 at 7:37 pm


Image: Ivan Meljac

Where else but Iceland would you expect to find big chunks of ice on the beach, instead of sand? Behold the (brr!) beautiful beach of Jökulsárlón as photographed by French photographer Ivan Meljac, and featured in Quiet Moments in Iceland's Landscapes by Fotopedia.

 
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Fishing Under Ice

Posted by Miss Cellania in Video Clips on January 4, 2012 at 6:08 am


(YouTube link)

Have you figured out yet what’s weird about this video? Everything is upside down! The fishermen are standing on the underside of the ice, “weighed down” by buoyant suits that have air in them. Notice how their air bubbles “sink.” -via Geekosystem

 
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Icy Steps

Posted by Miss Cellania in Video Clips on December 21, 2011 at 7:03 am


(YouTube link)

There are so many things wrong with this scene. People who live in climates where they might encounter ice occasionally should learn a few commonsense skills.

1. Don’t use ice-covered steps if there is any alternative route.
2. If they are your steps, use salt or other chemicals to melt the ice. If it’s too cold, you can use sand or ashes or maybe even block access.
3. Use the handrail. That’s what it is for.
4. Watch where you are going.
5. Take your hands out of your pockets. You may need them to regain balance or break a fall.

-via Arbroath

 
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Eisriesenwelt: The Largest Ice Cave in the World

Posted by John Farrier in Living, Travel on December 19, 2011 at 1:00 am

The Eisriesenwelt is an enormous cave system south of Salzburg, Austria. It’s forty-two kilometers long, the first kilometer of which is covered in wondrous ice formations. The cave is open to visitors during the summer, so visit if you’re in the area. Check out more pictures at the link.

Link -via American Digest | Official Website | Photo: Eisriesenwelt GmbH

 
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Quebec City’s Hotel of Ice

Posted by John Farrier in Living, Travel on November 18, 2011 at 5:24 pm

No, the room heater isn’t broken. It’s just that cold. Every year, the Hôtel de Glace is erected in Quebec City, Quebec out of 500,000 tons of ice and 15,000 tons of snow. It includes up to thirty-six rooms that guests can rent as well as a combination dining room and chapel.

Link -via My Modern Met | Official Website | Photo: Luc Rousseau

 
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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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Han Solo in Carbonite Ice Tray

Posted by Tiffany in NeatoShop Features on November 10, 2011 at 6:37 am

Han Solo in Carbonite Ice Tray – $9.95

Do you fear that your Thanksgiving meal is doomed? Don’t surrender to the dark side. Use the force and the Han Solo in Carbonite Ice Tray from the NeatoShop to distract your guests from your terrible cooking.

The Han Solo in Carbonite Ice Tray is made from food-safe silicone. Do or do not make other things in this Ice Tray. Mmm. Make Han Solo in Carbonite butter patties, I will.

Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more fantastic Star Wars and cool Ice Trays.

Link

 
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Chill Pills Ice Tray

Posted by Tiffany in NeatoShop Features on July 31, 2011 at 1:02 pm

Chill Pills Ice Tray – $7.95

Is the summer heat starting to get to you? Chill out with the Chill Pills Ice Tray from the NeatoShop.  Forcing yourself to calm down and relax has never been so refreshing.

Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more cool Ice Trays!

Link

 
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Cool Shooters Ice Tray

Posted by Tiffany in NeatoShop Features on July 25, 2011 at 8:40 pm

Cool Shooters Ice Tray – $7.95

Are you looking for a great way to beat the heat? You need the Cool Shooters Ice Tray from the NeatoShop.  This fabulous ice tray makes 4 picardie-style shot glasses.

The Cool Shooters Ice Tray is perfect for your next hot summer party.

Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more cool Ice Trays.

Link

 
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The Beatles Yellow Submarine Ice Cube Tray

Posted by Tiffany in NeatoShop Features on June 22, 2011 at 9:01 pm

The Beatles Yellow Submarine Ice Cube Tray – $10.95

After much crying, waiting, and hoping summer is finally here.  Are you planning your next backyard come together?  Why not make it Beatles themed!  All you need is love and  The Beatles Yellow Submarine Ice Cube Tray from the NeatoShop to throw a fantastic party.

Be sure to check out all the awesome Ice Trays available at the NeatoShop.

Link

 
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The Surprisingly Cool History of Ice

Posted by Miss Cellania in Mentalfloss on June 16, 2011 at 5:04 am

Until two centuries ago, ice was just an unfortunate side effect of winter. But in the early 1800s, one man saw dollar signs in frozen ponds. Frederic Tudor not only introduced the world to cold glasses of water on hot summer days, he created a thirst people never realized they had.

(Image credit: Flickr user Jau Kay Kiang)

In 1805, two wealthy brothers from Boston were at a family picnic, enjoying the rare luxuries of cold beverages and ice cream. They joked about how their chilled refreshments would be the envy of all the colonists sweating in the West Indies. It was a passing remark, but it stuck with one of the brothers. His name was Frederic Tudor, and 30 years later, he would ship nearly 200 tons of ice halfway around the globe to become the “Ice King.”

Ice Man Cometh

Nothing in Tudor’s early years indicated that he would invent an industry. He had the pedigree to attend Harvard but dropped out of school at the age of 13. After loafing for a few years, he retired to his family’s country estate to hunt, fish, and play at farming. When his brother, William, quipped that they should harvest ice from the estate’s pond and sell it in the West Indies, Frederic took the notion seriously. After all, he had little else to do.

Frederic convinced William to join him in a scheme to ship ice from New England to the Caribbean. Tudor reasoned that once people tried it, they’d never want to live without it. During the next six months, the brothers pooled their money and laid out plans to ship their product to the French island of Martinique, where they hoped to create a monopoly on ice.

No one believed the idea would work. In fact, no ship in Boston would agree to transport the unusual cargo, so Frederic spent nearly $5,000 (a big chunk of the seed money) buying a ship of his own. On February 10, 1806, The Boston Gazette reported, “No joke. A vessel with a cargo of 80 tons of ice has cleared out from this port for Martinique. We hope this will not prove to be a slippery speculation.”

It did. Although the ice arrived in Martinique in perfect condition, no one wanted to buy it. Tudor desperately explained how the cold blocks of ice could be used in the stifling Caribbean heat, but islanders weren’t convinced.
more …

 
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Weedrobes: Prom Dress Created from Yucca Plant

Posted by Stacy in Art on May 15, 2011 at 6:37 pm

Photo link

Who knew invasive plant species could be so gorgeous? Artist Nicole Dextras scoured her backyard (and her neighbors’) for wearable weeds to comment on environmental issues in the fashion industry, such as the need for sustainable materials. This prom dress was made from Yucca plants found in her neighbor’s backyard. Dextras said she was stunned to find that her neighbor found the plants to be a nuisance.

Nicole’s ice typography is pretty amazing too.

Link via Yahoo!

 
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Siberian Stray Dog Saves Drowning Boy

Posted by Miss Cellania in Animals & Pets, Baby & Kids on February 9, 2011 at 10:43 am

Four-year-old Andrei Pavlov was feeding ducks near his home in Krasnoyarsk, Russia, when he fell through the ice into the freezing water of a pond. A stray dog named Naida immediately began barking frantically.

“She’s not just a dog,” Tatiyana Balashova told Komsomolskaya Pravda. “She’s not a pure bred, but she’s still very special.”

Balashova who usually feeds stray dogs in Krasnoyarsk was the person who reacted to Naida’s alert.

“I heard Naida barking on the pond bank, like she was calling for help. She saw me, ran up, looked at me and ran back to the pond…”

Balashova quickly realised that a child had fallen into the water and rushed to find help from utility service workers, who were luckily close at hand.

“Because of the fact the boy was taken out of water pretty quickly and due to medics’ professionalism, this story had a happy end for Andrei, without any serious consequences,” Vladimir Fokin, the chief doctor at the hospital Andrei was admitted to, told KP.

Andrei spent a few days in the hospital recovering, and is now in satisfactory health. Naida has been adopted by a family that lives 500 km away. The canine adoption was arranged before the near-drowning incident, and the new owners are particularly proud of Naida’s heroism. Link -via Arbroath

 
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Artisanal Ice Cubes

Posted by John Farrier in Food & Drink, Living on January 21, 2011 at 7:04 pm

What? You’re still using ordinary ice from a freezer? How gauche! Proper people only drink cocktails mixed with gourmet ice. Fortunately, there’s a who slew of companies that now prepare and sell luxury, hand-crafted ice:

Gourmet ice, often heavily filtered and hand-cut to guarantee the optimal amount of dilution, has officially become part of cocktail culture. Sasha Petraske, who in 2000 reinvigorated the New York bar scene with his speakeasy Milk & Honey, is considered by many to be the father of designer ice in the U.S. Since then, bars around the country, from Bar Agricole in San Francisco to Philadelphia’s Franklin Mortgage Investment Company, have followed suit, creating cocktails that feature market-fresh ingredients, small-batch bitters, and large blocks of beautiful ice.

Link via Althouse | Photo by Flickr user Kyle May used under Creative Commons license

 
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Cold As Ice

Posted by Miss Cellania in Video Clips on January 10, 2011 at 6:29 pm


(YouTube link)

Street art made possible by snow, with just a few seconds of eerie animation, inspired by a drain grate. The artist is Cem Ulucan. -via Laughing Squid

 
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The Ice Caves of Mt. Erebus

Posted by Miss Cellania in Environment, Pictures on December 31, 2010 at 6:20 pm

A volcano in Antarctica called Erebus is home to a network of ice caves. Hot gasses from the volcano carves through the thick ice to leave channels where ice crystals then grow. Dr. Kayla Iacovino wrote about visiting one of them called Warren Cave, and included more photographs. Link -via The Dystenium Science Daily

Previously: Ice Fumarole in Antarctica

 
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Ohio Lighthouse Covered in Ice

Posted by Alex in Travel, Video Clips on December 18, 2010 at 10:21 am

[YouTube Link]

Brrr! Is it cold where you are? Well, probably not as cold as inside this Ohio Lighthouse on Lake Erie, which is covered in ice.

Melissa Bell of The Washington Post’s blogPOST has more: Link

 
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Sheet of Ice Becomes Touchscreen

Posted by John Farrier in Everything Else on November 18, 2010 at 7:00 pm


(Video Link)

Researchers at Nokia’s laboratory in Tampere, Finland, developed a touchscreen interface that can be used on blocks of ice:

A near-infrared light source mounted behind the “screen” bathes it in invisible light, and an array of near-infrared cameras, also behind the wall, are focused on the front surface. A hand placed on the ice reflects the light towards the camera array and the signal each camera receives helps a nearby PC establish the hand’s position, size and motion. The PC is also connected to a projector, which uses the data to project imagery – such as flames – beneath the user’s hand.

Link (registration required) via DVICE

Previously: Water-Based Touchscreen

 
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Cool Shooters

Posted by Alex in Home & Garden, Pictures on July 18, 2010 at 3:44 pm


Cool Shooters Ice Tray - $7.95

Phew! Is it hot here or what? The country may be baking under the hot sun, but you can keep your cool with these awesome ice trays from the NeatoShop. Best of all, most of them are under $10: Link

     

 
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Frazil Ice

Posted by Queuebot in Science & Tech, Video Clips on May 29, 2010 at 3:37 am


[YouTube - Link]

In as odd phenomenon at Yosemite Falls, the mist generated from the waterfall forms ice in the upper, cooler atmosphere at night and falls with the water making a slushy mixture called frazil ice. This slush causes some dynamic changes in Yosemite creek mimiking lava flows in that it flows, blocks up, and then spreads around. Nature is such a beautiful and mysterious thing.

- via wimp

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by sshuggi.

 
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Brain Freeze Ice Tray: Brain-Shaped Ice Perfect For Mad Scientists

Posted by Alex in Food & Drink, Gadgets, Hacks & Mods, Home & Garden, Pictures on May 19, 2010 at 2:51 pm


Brain Freeze Ice Tray – $7.95

What do mad scientists use to chill their beverage? Now you can make your own diabolical ice brain (or is it brain ice?) with the Brain Freeze Ice Tray from the NeatoShop: Link | More wonderful and unusual ice trays

 
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Asteroid Could Reveal the Source of Earth’s Water

Posted by Queuebot in Science & Tech on May 6, 2010 at 10:17 am

In the asteroid belt lies a 125 mile wide hunk of rock called 24-Themis that is covered in ice and organic material. Scientists discovered this by analyzing the reflected sunlight and finding that it is consistent with the properties of water and various other organic materials.
 

Finding ice on the surface of the asteroid was a surprise because it would have been expected to evaporate quickly.

‘This implies that ice is quite abundant in the interior of 24 Themis and perhaps many other asteroids,’ Dr Emery added.

‘This ice on asteroids may be the answer to the puzzle of where Earth’s water came from.’

Link

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by sshuggi.

 
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1848: Niagara Falls Stopped

Posted by Miss Cellania in History on March 30, 2010 at 10:41 am

On March 30, 1848, the roar of Niagara Falls went silent as the river ran dry. No one knew what happened to the water. Factories shut down for lack or power, fish died, and everyone freaked out.

Thousands of people filled the churches to attend special services. They prayed for the falls to start flowing and the world to continue, or for salvation and forgiveness of their sins as the Last Judgment approached.

No one knew why the falls had stopped. The telegraph was still a new invention. Railroads served towns on both sides of the river, but the tracks were unreliable, and Buffalo — the nearest big city — was three hours away even when the trains ran on schedule.

But it was from Buffalo that word eventually arrived that explained the bare falls and dry riverbed. A strong southwest gale winds had pushed a huge chunks of lake ice to the extreme northeastern tip of Lake Erie, blocking the lake’s outlet into the head of the Niagara River. The ice jam had become an ice dam.

On the evening of March 31st, a great wall of water flowed down the riverbed and things were back to normal. Link

 
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The Science of Hair Ice

Posted by Jill Harness in Everything Else, Pictures, Science & Tech on January 20, 2010 at 3:33 pm

Hair ice, also called silk frost, is a type of ice formation that looks like silk and seems to only appear on woody, barkless materials on the ground. The ice structures tend to grow out of a small pore in the wood, sort of like hairs on the human head. Dr. James Carter has more on the phenomenon (and more photos too) on his site.

Link

 
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Harbin Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival

Posted by Queuebot in Everything Else on January 9, 2010 at 12:04 pm

The Big Picture has a bunch of beautiful pictures of this year’s International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival in Harbin, China. Buildings made of ice blocks are illuminated both inside and outside, creating a magical effect.

Link

(image credit: REUTERS/Aly Song)

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by tsevenut.

 
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Glacier Audio Records Made From Glacier Ice

Posted by Johnny Cat in Art on December 6, 2009 at 3:30 am

Photo: Katie Paterson

This is popping up everywhere, and it’s pretty neat.  Katie Paterson is an artist who recorded natural sounds from Iceland’s glaciers, then collected natural ice melt from the glaciers.  She then pressed three records made of the refrozen ice with the audio transferred.  It took each record two hours of continuous play to melt, but you can hear a sample of what it sounded like here.  via todayandtomorrow

 
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Flammable Ice

Posted by John Farrier in Science & Tech, Video Clips on October 29, 2009 at 3:47 pm


(YouTube Link)

High school science teacher “Mr. Kent” has a YouTube channel full of neat chemistry demonstration videos. In this one, he sets ice on fire. Here’s how:

Ice is added to a dry Pyrex bowl. When the Ice melts the water reacts with the calcium carbide (place on the bottom) to produce acetylene gas and calcium hydroxide. The acetylene gas then explodes into flames when a match is place on top. It will continue to burn even as the ice melts because it keeps producing acetylene until the calcium carbide runs out.

via Urlesque | Mr. Kent’s Chemistry Page | YouTube Channel

 
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Antarctica Time Lapse: A Year on the Ice

Posted by Ali S. in Science & Tech, Video Clips on July 12, 2009 at 4:47 pm

[YouTube - Link]

Last year we had posted a really cool time lapse video “The Southern Lights” filmed by Anthony Powell who works at a base in Antarctica which really wowed us all. Now allow me to present to you folks another time lapse video which is just a sample of a larger video that Anthony and his wife Christine (who also lives in Antarctica) are working upon together.

Time-lapse video filmed in Antarctica, in and around McMurdo Station and Scott Base. Each year the sun is below the horizon for 4 months in the middle of winter, and above the horizon for 4 months in summer. During the couple of months in between we have more-or-less normal days.

Includes shots of auroras and the very rare polar stratospheric nacreous clouds, which form when ozone depleting gases crystallize in the upper atmosphere in the intense cold.
Summer population is about 1200 people, winter about 200.

This is just a small sample of an ongoing project to collect time-lapse imagery of Antarctica. I have taken over 1,000,000 individual photos and worn out a number of cameras that make up the collection of footage I have gathered so far over the last 6 years.

Anthony’s Pictures and Video Clips – “Antarctic Images
His blog regarding life in Antarctica which is very interesting! – “Frozen South

 
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