Have you ever looked at a piece of circuitry and said to yourself, 'Hey, I want to eat that'? Well, then, Dean Segovis has pioneered a way for you to do so safely. He's created a scale model (left) of a basic amplifier circuit (upper right) out of gingerbread, frosting and candy.
We dish up more neat food posts at the Neatolicious blog
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There are plenty of amazing things in the universe which are truly mind blowing. Why do we need to distract ourselves with hyperbole, hoaxes and make-believe?
Because there is good money in it, and there is enough gullibility in the world to keep the BS industry going.
#9 They figured it out. We know how it works. It's impressive that they accomplished it so long ago, but then it could simply be an accidental benefit of their process.
#8 Not knowing what happened isn't really the same as mysterious. Evidence points to piracy or mutiny. Boats and people disappear all the time.
#7 All the evidence from one source with zero confirmation? Hoax.
#6 Paint and imagination.
#5 The glacial dam that created the lake melted to the point where water pressure was able to break a hole. The lake drained quickly down river into a fjord and then into the sea. Geologists found the hole and evidence of flooding.
#4 Okay, this one is weird, but idea is Pectinatella magnifica, a bryozoan colony that forms gelatinous masses made of 90% water. Another idea is some naturally occurring polymer crystal.
#3 Uh, helicopters attempting to track someone else? Paranoia?
#2 Folktales combined with occasional hoaxes. Zero actual evidence.
#1 Urban legend retold as true by a TV show.
The Wikipedia article on the Pillar has an explanation, but personally my eyes glazed over after two sentences.
It is not unknown for water to be transported in this way. The rest is not so mysterious.