Scientists Try to Make a Knife out of Frozen Human Poop

Is it possible to make a functional knife blade out of human poop? Researchers at Kent State University tried their best.

They actually had a not ridiculous reason: they were testing a story of an Inuit man who used his own poop, once it had frozen, to butcher a dog. The story has been passed around ethnographic circles for a long time. But until these researchers tried it, none had been so bold as to see if it could be done.

And that's what science should do. So one of the researchers went on a high-fat diet similar to what an Inuit person might eat. S/he collected his poop and offered it to his/her colleagues. Those researchers then used knife molds and their hands to shape the poop into blades. After freezing the poop blades, the researchers tried to cut pig flesh, as you can see in the photo above.

They were unsuccessful, as their article in the Journal of Archaeological Science Reports explains:

We began our cutting experiments with the hide, reasoning that if our knives could not cut hide, then subsequent attempts with muscle and tendons would be futile.
Neither the “knife mold” samples, nor the “hand-shaped knives” could cut through hide (Figs. S5–S6). Despite the hide being cold from refrigeration, instead of slicing through it the knife-edge simply melted upon contact, leaving streaks of fecal matter (Fig. S4).
We repeated the experiment using the fecal samples of another team member (M.R.B.), whose diet was more traditionally Western (see supplementary online materials). The “hand-shaped knives” were subject to the same procedures and temperatures as the first set of knives (Figs. S7–S8). However, these knives also did not cut through the hide. For curiosity's sake, we tried to cut the subcutaneous fat on the underside of the hide. With some difficulty, only the shallowest of slices could be produced, and the knife-edge still quickly melted and deteriorated (Fig. S9).

-via Dave Barry | Photo: Journal of Archaeological Science Reports


Diana Yevtukh's Embroidered Trees

I can find little information about Ukrainian artist Diana Yevtukh. But I'm deeply struck by the mysticism within her embroidered works. This one is captioned "Multitudes of life, hidden in plain sight."

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Pursue a Hot Young Colonel Sanders in a New Dating Simulator

KFC is no stranger to bizarre promotions- remember the prom corsage that included a piece of chicken? Their newest venture is a collaboration with game developer Psyop called I Love You, Colonel Sanders! It includes an anime version of the Colonel as a young man, nevertheless sporting his signature white hair and goatee. The actual young Harland Sanders looked like this. The game involves a lot of chicken, too. A description from Steam includes the game trailer.

I Love You, Colonel Sanders! A Finger Lickin’ Good Dating Simulator follows you, a promising culinary student, as you try to date your classmate, Colonel Sanders. Throughout your journey, you’ll be faced with life-changing decisions that will affect your chances of friendship and love. But be careful! Your choices have real consequences with real animated characters’ feelings at stake.

Do you have what it takes to survive culinary school? Will Colonel Sanders choose you to be his business partner? Or maybe even so much more? Find out in the most finger lickin’ good dating simulator ever created—a game that KFC actually made.

The game will be available for free beginning on September 24. -via Uproxx


Teenager Gets Hired After Rejecting Her Job Rejection

Jessica, an 18-year old Sydney teenager, gets rejected after a job application. She applied as a retail assistant for discount supermarket ALDI and she believed that she had the necessary skills for the position but she was not even given a slight chance for a job interview.

Out of her mixed emotions, she managed to send another email in response to their rejection.

“My skills are on par with your store, with the ability to be exceptionally fast paced to scan items like every ALDI Team Member does.
“I pride myself on my impressive sale skills and can describe myself to be very persuasive and show effectiveness.
She continued: "So persuasive in fact, that I would like to confidentially reject your rejection. Thank you for letting me be a part of the team, I won’t let you down. See you on Monday for my 9-5 shift."

Fortunately, her confidence in herself paid off! She was invited for a job interview at her convenience.

Read Jessica's full email message here.

Image Credit: Mamamia Website


Japanese Incredible Ocean Wave Art Installation Floods the Entire Room

The Roppongi Crossing Exhibition was conducted earlier this year, but the artworks can be seen from the 2019 presentation on Mori Art Museum’s Website.

Included in the presentation is the surreal piece, Contact, that looks just like a real body of water – moving, swelling, and surging towards the viewers. With the additional effect of good lighting from the window behind it, the installation mimics ocean waves perfectly!

Image Credit: Mori Art Museum Website


Dead Reckoning: The Story of the HMS Wager

Before the Panama Canal was built, ships traveling from the Atlantic to the Pacific went around the tip of South America, through the Drake Passage. During the Age of Exploration, they only went through during the Southern Hemisphere's summer months, because the cold storms during the rest of the year gave the rocky passage the nickname the sailor's graveyard. In 1741, the British navy sent the HMS Wager on a mission that was delayed so long that the ship found itself in the midst of the Drake Passage in April.

Aboard Wager, veteran ship’s gunner John Bulkeley was the officer of the watch, overseeing the ship’s navigation in the midst of a violent storm. The sky was a wet, howling tempest, the sea undulated with mountainous swells. Wager’s timbers creaked and her sails thrashed as the air and ocean conspired to smash the ship to pieces. Bulkeley had seen a lot of storms in his day, but nothing like this. One ocean swell—the largest he had ever witnessed—swept over the ship and briefly submerged Wager and her 160 crew in frigid water, washing Bulkeley across the quarter-deck.

Wager had entered the Drake Passage about a month earlier. She had been accompanied by seven other Royal Navy ships, all part of a secret squadron on a wartime mission heading for Patagonia on the west coast of South America. A principle hazard in sailing westward in the Drake Passage is that the winds and currents are powerful, relentless, and moving in exactly the wrong direction. Temperatures are frosty in autumn at such a southern latitude, and precipitation is nearly constant. In the era of sailing ships, the Drake Passage was a perilous venture even for a robust vessel manned by an intrepid crew in the calm season—a collection of characteristics that utterly failed to describe HMS Wager.

Wager’s speed and maneuverability were compromised due to the loss of a mast in the storm. Her captain was dead, her acting captain was bedridden, and many of the men were deathly ill. Wager had lost contact with the other ships of the squadron, having fallen hopelessly far behind. And her crew’s troubles had only just begun.

Everything that could have possibly gone wrong with the mission did go wrong, both before and after the ship wrecked. Yet some survivors made it back to England to tell the story. Read the saga of the HMS Wager in a thrilling account by Alan Bellows at Damn Interesting.


Octopus Turns into a Balloon to Intimidate ROV



The ROV (remotely operated vehicle) Hercules caught wonderful video of an octopus, possibly Cirrothauma magna, putting on a defensive display of puffing itself up to warn off threats. It stretches out, wiggles its "ears," turns into an umbrella, then a tent, then a balloon, then a parachute, all to the delight of the crew watching aboard the E/V Nautilus. This octopus was spotted 1600 meters (one mile) below the surface of the Pacific, near Southwest Baker Island, just north of the equator. -via Laughing Squid


When Pianos Went to War

During World War II, the Steinway & Sons company switched from producing pianos to glider parts for the military. But then the US government asked the company to design a piano that could be used by the troops serving overseas. It would have to be tough enough to drop from an airplane and still play. And there were other restrictions, according to Jonathan Piper of the Museum of Making Music. The company came up with a model called the Victory Vertical.

The company was famous for its pianos, but those finely tuned models weren’t well-suited to where soldiers were stationed, including in the tropics. “While preserving a high level of craftsmanship, Steinway designed a piano that was rugged and durable,” says Piper, and they had to be economical in their use of materials. That started from the ground up: The Victory Verticals didn’t have legs like most upright pianos, Piper says, because they wouldn’t have withstood an airdrop. Other special features included water-resistant glue and anti-insect treatments, keys covered with celluloid instead of ivory, and bass strings wound in soft iron instead of the traditional copper. They were designed to contain only a tenth as much metal as a normal piano. There were also handles placed under the keybed and the back, so that four soldiers could carry the 455-pound instruments. “And beyond all that, the instrument is visually interesting,” Piper says. “Because of its purpose-built design, the Victory Vertical has an elegant simplicity. Then there’s the colors: Unlike the vast majority of pianos that come in a black or dark wood finish, the Victory Vertical was painted in olive green [like the example at the museum], blue, and gray.”

Read the story of the Victory Verticals, which were shipped all over the world, and see plenty of pictures at Atlas Obscura.

(Image credit: Steinway & Sons Photo Collection/San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive)


Deer Photobombs Wedding Shoot

Photographer Laurenda Marie Bennett accompanied Megan and Luke to the great outdoors to take pictures after their wedding. The bride was carrying a lovely bouquet of roses that apparently smelled good. It drew the attention of a young deer, who was so tempted that he came right up to the happy couple and joined the photo session! Bennet kept shooting, and talked to Bored Panda about the incident.

“The bride wanted photos over in a field on the same grounds as her ceremony and reception, so we headed that way after dinner for their golden hour photos. Well, it was very overcast that day and we didn’t have a true golden hour, but what happened instead trumped that pretty light we were hoping for.”

Read the story and see more pictures from the wedding shoot.

(Image credit: Laurenda Marie Photography)


An Honest Trailer for Aladdin (2019)



Disney made a live-action version of Aladdin, which has already come and gone from theaters. There was a lot of hype before it opened, but then you didn't hear a thing afterward. Sure, it made a lot of money, but reviews were mixed. Screen Junkies holds nothing back in their opinions in this Honest Trailer.


The World's First Tesla Coil Theremin Plays The Theme to Star Trek

To hear Star Trek theme played on Tesla Coil Theremin start at 1:17


The World's First Cheese Conveyor Belt Restaurant

Matthew Carver is on a patriotic mission to revive the British cheese industry, which has been in decline for a century. He began with a food truck which distributed British cheeses at festivals and other public events, then founded The Cheese Bar, a cheese-focused restaurant in London.

Now The Cheese Bar features a conveyor belt which brings cheeses around before the eyes and noses of hungry diners. Carver calls it the "Pick & Cheese." 40 meters of belt rotate, offering 25 different British cheeses. Food & Wine magazine describes how it works:

Cheese novices can choose a pre-selected cheese flight, while connoisseurs and more adventurous eaters can help themselves to a stoneware plate or two (or six, or 10) from the conveyor belt. Each plate is color-coded according to its price, which ranges from a £2.95 ($3.64) cream plate to a £6.10 ($7.54) yellow plate. (There's also an Off-Belt menu that includes the owner's signature Four Cheese Grilled Cheese Sandwich and pan-fried 'Angloumi,' their all-English take on Cypriot halloumi.)

-via Nag on the Lake | Photo: The Cheese Bar


Eggplant Parmigiana Hallelujah

Television writer Jenny Jaffe declared that the 12th verse of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" was an eggplant recipe. Her Twitter followers took that as a challenge, and some of their lyrics are delicious!

Continue reading to see more of them.

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A Simple Solution That Can Help Dementia Patients Tremendously

A team of researchers will be launching a year-long trial that could tremendously help people suffering with dementia when they arrive at a hospital emergency department. The hospital emergency department is a busy and noisy place, an environment which can make a person with advanced dementia frightened and even violent.

QUT nurse researcher Dr James Hughes is about to launch a trial of a deceptively simple method to help make the emergency department experience smoother for dementia patients.
“They’re very simple kits, they have things in them like a puzzle, sudoku and word puzzles, some colouring, some activity devices, we have some music in there that’s generationally appropriate,” Dr Hughes said.
“There’s nothing in these packs that you couldn’t find at your local Woolworths or Big W, so putting them together or even tailoring them to the local population could happen almost immediately.”

More details of this trial over at The Sydney Morning Herald.

(Image Credit: GDJ/ Pixabay)


Cooking Rice With Eggs

A few months ago, Mr. Sato of SoraNews24 experimented with tapioca bubble tea and rice and found out that the combination tasted great. Now, he experimented with rice once again, this time fusing it with eggs. Will it be as good as the previous one?

Find out the answer over at the site.

What are your thoughts on this one?

(Image Credit: SoraNews24)


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