Miss Cellania's Blog Posts

The Town You Can't Drive To



Cities, and even small towns, would be much more user-friendly if we didn't have all this traffic. Cars take up a lot of room, both in the roads we drive on and in the parking lots where we store them. They are dangerous to pedestrians and to each other, and are the main reason we don't walk everywhere and get to know our neighbors. They are also noisy and pollute the air. But we have become so dependent on our cars, how could we ever change this?

Zermatt, in Switzerland, didn't have to change hearts and minds, because the Alpine village never had cars to start with. Now that they have roads, they've decided they don't want gasoline-powered vehicles on their streets. Small, slow, electric vehicles are allowed, but are greatly restricted for use as taxis and for deliveries. And all of Zermatt's vehicles are custom built locally by a ten-man crew! Tom Scott shows us how it's done in a town that knows what it wants.


The Big Ben Word Game

Big Ben is a word search game. You start off with all the letters it takes to spell out the current time, old fashioned style (hence, Big Ben). Then they scramble in some lesser-used letters to make a complete grid of 49 letters. Find as many words as you can by connecting adjacent letters in any direction, even several directions in a word. You rack up points by finding words, and more points by finding longer words. I got 36 points with my first word in the game pictured above! Yes, I can already see "just," "who," and "sex." When you complete a word, all those letters fall off and change the grid. There's no time limit; you end the game when you run out of options, or vowels. As a beginner, I just ran through words as I saw them, but I can see someone calculating how other letters will fall to maximize their score. Either way, it's a fun little distraction for a break in the midst of doing real work.  -via Everlasting Blort


How We Got the First Nuclear Bomber

Seventy-eight years ago today, on August 6, 1945, the US military dropped an atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima from the B-29 Superfortress named Enola Gay. Nagasaki was bombed three days later by another atomic weapon dropped from a Superfortress named Bockscar.

The powerful B-29 bomber had been in the works since 1933, when American war planners contemplated a possible conflict with the Japanese Empire. No bomber at the time could fly far enough to attack Japan. Existing bombers had a range of 650 miles with a payload of 2,000 pounds. Boeing and Martin both went to work to design a plane with a much longer range. Although several were designed, bigger planes had a problem in that they couldn't even fly 200 miles per hour, not nearly fast enough to carry out a bombing mission. Douglas and Sikorsky also got involved, but the funding for a superbomber ran out in 1938. However, Boeing believed in the research they had already done, and continued development at the company's own expense.

When war broke out in Europe, funding was restored and four aircraft companies: Consolidated Aircraft Company, Lockheed, Douglas, and Boeing were recruited to commence developing a plane that could deliver 2,000 pounds of bombs 5,333 miles away at 400 miles per hour. Boeing had a head start, since they never stopped their program. The military was so impressed with Boeing's B-29 design that they ordered it in 1940, even before the prototype was ready, and before the US was attacked by Japan. Read about the bomber program that began in 1933 and the many designs that were tried before the B-29 Superfortress at Military History Now. -via Strange Company


The Sad Saga of Cheetahs in Asia

(Image credit: Ehsan Kamali)

The critically endangered Asiatic cheetah once ranged across many nations from the Arabian peninsula to South Asia. The subspecies Acinonyx jubatus venaticus diverged from African cheetahs somewhere between between 32,000 and 67,000 years ago, according to genetic studies. Rulers in Asia once captured cheetahs to use them as swift hunting dogs. But the cheetah population declined drastically in the 20th century due to habitat loss, hunting, lack of prey, and traffic accidents. The only population of Asiatic cheetahs left in the wild are in Iran, where there are thought to be only nine males and three females left as of last year. 

(Image credit: Azadeh Torkaman)

Cheetahs are notoriously hard to breed in captivity. Attempts to breed the Asiatic cheetah have seen dismal results. The only Asiatic cheetahs born in captivity were three cubs delivered via cesarian section in Tehran, Iran, in 2022. The mother (named Iran) had been rescued from a trafficking situation and was raised in captivity. Iran rejected the cubs, most likely due to the lack of a birth experience, and the cubs had to be hand-fed. Two of the cubs died within their first few weeks. The third, named Pirouz (pictured above) became a symbol of national pride for Iran. However, Pirouz died of kidney failure at the age of ten months.

Reintroducing Cheetahs to India

One response to the drastic decline in Asiatic cheetahs is a program to reintroduce cheetahs to India, where they declared wiped out in the 1950s. Twenty cheetahs from Namibia and South Africa were relocated to Kuno National Park in Madhya Pradesh over the past year. Since March of 2023, six of the original cheetahs and three cubs have died. None of those cheetahs died by human hands, but one succumbed to malnutrition. Prey animals in the park have declined since the cheetah program was proposed. The others died of infections that may have stemmed from poor species management, and have to do with the fact that African cheetahs are genetically and environmentally different from Asiatic cheetahs. These cheetahs grew in their winter coats just as the rainy season began in India, leading to fungal and parasitic infections taking hold around wounds and tracking collars. Cheetah experts in Namibia and South Africa blame inexperienced veterinarians and project mismanagement. They are offering advice, as they know how fragile cheetah populations can be.  

The cheetah reintroduction program in India has had deleterious effects on the human population, too. The Sahariya people who lived in the forests of Kuno before it became a national park depended on harvesting chir, an expensive fragrant resin, from the forest's salai trees. The Sahariya villagers were relocated from the area that became the national park due to a program to reintroduce the Asiatic lion, which never came to fruition. The villagers kept returning to the forest to harvest chir, but the cheetah reintroduction program has made large swatches of the park completely inaccessible to them.     


The Origins of the Mathematical X

The letter X is altogether unnecessary in phonics, and rarely does a word begin with it. But we keep it around because we like it. We end a lot of words with X, and when it's "ex," we begin words with it all the time. It's used to indicate something is wrong in schoolwork. People who can't write their names use an X as a signature. Elon Musk uses it for everything. We leverage its meaning as an unknown with titles such as The X-Files and X-Men and phrases such as "X factor." It's the mathematical use of X for an unknown that lends intrigue to the letter. But how did X become the algebraic symbol for the unknown?

There are several theories for this use of X. Civilizations developed mathematics, geometry, and algebra used different stand-in words for the unknown. Multiple translations may have led the Arabic al-shayun, which means "something," to become an X. These translation stories take different paths. Or it could have been a good supply of the letter X at a printing firm. Read about the different stories of how we got the mathematical X at The Conversation. -via Smithsonian

(Image credit: Lisa Williams)


How Many Buildings Does the US Government Own?



The US government owns a lot of land, and a lot of buildings. Some are grand federal buildings that house offices and crucial services. Others are just there on federal land, some being used for government business, others not so much. And many are miscellaneous buildings that were unclaimed, abandoned, or taken for taxes owed. Estimates of the number of those buildings range between 120,000 and 400,000, but pinning that down to a more accurate number is difficult, if not impossible. The problem is that those properties are managed by widely different agencies, from five branches of the military to the National Park Service to obscure agencies we don't even know about. Efforts to consolidate the information from all those agencies is like trying to herd cats. Half as Interesting explains why the question of just how many buildings the federal government owns will probably never be answered. The last minute of this video is an ad. -via Digg


The Most Relatable Painting in the Pentagon

The Pentagon has 17.5 miles of corridors and 6.5 million square feet of office space. Those many walls feature tons of photographs and artworks of military subjects produced by military personnel. A painting that can be found on the fifth floor, 10th corridor, D ring, went viral on X a few weeks ago. The chosen subject of this painting brought up profound memories shared by veterans.

The painting is titled "Hide Your Head in the Sand." The artist is Harley Copic, an aviation artist with more than 50 paintings hanging in the Pentagon, the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, and the Air Force Museum. The Porta-John depicted stood at Tallil Air Base in Iraq in April 2003.

Every enlistee in all branches of the US military is very aware of the vast gap between everyday warriors and the officer class, but all who have been deployed over the last 30-something years have used such facilities. Copic's iconic rendition is the symbol that brings service members and officers together

Within a forward-deployed Porta-John’s steamy confines, the scalding stillness of which can make an exterior 125-degree Iraq afternoon feel, at least momentarily upon exiting, like a fall evening in Montana, rank counts for nothing.

The irony is that this painting is in the Pentagon, among the hallowed halls that most enlisted members rarely penetrate. If prints were available, they would sell better than Copic's other artworks, and then be respectfully framed and displayed in veterans' bathrooms across the nation. -via Metafilter

(Image credit: B. A. Friedman)


Everyday Gadgets Play "Thunderstruck"



The Device Orchestra (previously at Neatorama) has gone wireless. Well, I would suppose that electric toothbrushes are already wireless (mine is) and the only other gadget participating in this song is a credit card reader, but it now runs on batteries. In this video, the trio takes on the classic song "Thunderstruck" by AC/DC. What I want to know is how this guy gets those googly eyes to stay on the toothbrushes when they are vibrating, I mean, rockin' so hard.  

We've heard versions of "Thunderstruck" played on cellos, on the Korean gayageum, on the Chinese guzheng, and sung by a baby. You can even do a folk dance to it. I'm kind of enamored with the Finnish bluegrass version. You could say it's a universal song. -via Geeks are Sexy


When Central Park Had a Dinosaur Museum

The word "dinosaur" was coined in 1840, and it wasn't long before the general public was fascinated by the extinct creatures. This popularity was mainly the work of Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins, an artist and naturalist who sculpted dinosaurs for the Crystal Palace dinosaur display in London in 1851. In 1868, Hawkins was commissioned to make more dinosaurs for the proposed Paleozoic Museum in New York City. Hawkins set up a workshop in new York and went to work, which included new research from Drexel University on the latest fossil discoveries.

But before the Paleozoic Museum was ready for the public, political reorganization led to a new board of directors for Central Park. Hawkins was fired, and was never paid for the work he had done. Then in 1871, an order went out for the "old barn, shed, and structures at that place" (meaning Central Park) to be removed. Instead of just being removed, Hawkins' workshop was destroyed, along with all his dinosaur models, smashed to smithereens. The remains were reportedly either buried or dumped into the pond at the park. For 150 years, the destruction of the dinosaur models was blamed on Boss Tweed, the corrupt politician who controlled New York City. At least that's you'd think by reading the sensational newspaper stories of the time. But it wasn't Tweed who gave the orders to get rid of the museum. Read the real story of the short-lived Paleozoic Museum at Atlas Obscura.  -via Strange Company


Weird Ways to Die, for Kings and Queens

It's not always great to be the king. Sure, you have wealth and power, but it comes at a cost. When you look at the many kings and queens in history, they may have had cushy lives compared to their subjects, but they also had to contend with people who were jealous of what they had, or hated them for what they did. Many were killed by enemy kingdoms, citizen uprisings, or those who had a way to take the crown themselves. It was a lucky monarch who died simply from the lack of modern medical knowledge. But in a few royal deaths, the monarch's status actually impeded medical care, as when one young ruler could have been saved by an amputation to stop infection, but his surgeons were each afraid to take responsibility in case something went wrong. And then there are those whose deaths were so weird, they came to be legends. Some of them might even be true!   


How Psychopathic Tendencies Can Lead to Success

Research on psychopathology mostly addresses criminal psychopaths and how we might identify such people. But that research is expanding, because it's very possible, even common, for a psychopath to be law-abiding and hide their psychopathic tendencies, possibly through their entire lives. Psychopathology can be a spectrum, with serial killers on one end, and people who will never be diagnosed on the other end.

But that's not all that is new in the research. Psychopathic tendencies not only vary by degree, but by dimensions. The traditional models measure traits of meanness and disinhibition. A new trait has been added to the mix, a spectrum called boldness, defined as "a mix of social dominance, emotional resiliency and venturesomeness." Research shows that people with psychopathic traits measured along this axis can be very successful in their careers or business, especially if they have some control over their mean and uninhibited behavior. In fact, some recruiters actively seek candidates that show psychopathic tendencies to fill job positions. Read about how psychopathic traits can lead to success at Smithsonian.


Visualizing the Scale of the Milky Way



You may have learned that the universe is expanding, or maybe it's not. Not that it really matters to people like you and me, because it's already bigger than our minds can comprehend, and may as well be infinite. Toby Lockerbie, also known as Epic Spaceman, is thinking about the Milky Way. It's a tiny part of the universe, but in human terms, it's all there is. In this visualization, he shrinks the Milky Way to the size of the United States, since that's a size we Americans can understand. He also shrinks himself to narrate. While that's pretty mind-blowing in itself, the video is lovely and quite poetic as it explains the relative spaces between very big things. Plus there's a coda at the end to make us feel better about being so small. While we may be small, he assures us that we are far from insignificant. -via Geeks Are Sexy


Golden Lion Tamarins are Rebounding from Near Extinction

Back in the 1970s, there were as few as 200 golden lion tamarins in the wild. That's when efforts began to save the South American primate. Though still an endangered species, the population of the tamarin species in Brazil and other parts of the Atlantic Forest has rebounded to around 4,800 in a recent survey. The Golden Lion Tamarin Association in Brazil tells us that three factors are helping the tamarins.

About three dozen farmers are participating in a program to increase the tamarins' habitat area. One of those farmers, Ayrton Violento, has converted part of his farm to native fruit trees and he also has a nursery to provide trees to others in the reforestation program. Violento happily reported seeing more tamarin families living on his farm in recent years.

Between 2014 and 2019, the tamarin population dropped by more than a thousand individuals due to a yellow fever outbreak. Hundreds of tamarins were inocculated with a vaccine derived from the human yellow fever vaccine, and the outbreak subsided.

Also, the illegal pet trade was rampant in the 1960s, but strict enforcement against poachers has alleviated the problem, at least for tamarins. Read the details of this good news about the golden lion tamarinds of Brazil at ABC. -via Metafilter

(Image credit: Pierre5018)


The World's Fanciest Public Restroom

When a public restroom is this luxurious, you may want to just move in and stay! This sight in Nanjing, China, is the first part you see when you walk into the restroom at the very upscale Deji Plaza shopping mall. The hallway shown leads to a huge lounge packed with comfy seating. From there, you can move into the men's restroom, the women's restroom, a nursing lounge, or a medical room. Both the men's and women's restrooms also have a dressing room. The seven-room facility was designed by Shanghai-based firm X+Living. Notice the plants in the walls, the glossy flooring, and the light fixtures in the shapes of flowers and bees. The facilities are completely accessible, with room for wheelchairs, movable railing, and bidets. All rooms offer wireless phone charging and call buttons for assistance. I read no mention of an entrance fee. See the fancy fixtures and other details in a series of pictures at Architectural Digest. -via Moss and Fog

(Image credit: SFAP)


When Pet Pictures Go Super Creepy

(Image credit: qwer1627)

You might have the cutest pet in history, but things can go wrong when you try to take a picture, because animals don't like to sit still and pose for you. They don't like to smile on command, and they can be downright creepy looking, caught on one frame while in motion. For example, Stanley doesn't always look like Slenderman's dog.

(Image credit: Energylegs23)

And sometimes you have no idea what's going on until you get a good look at the picture you took. The cat below was just looking out the window, and the photographer had no idea there was something looking back, until she saw what the flash illuminated.

(Image credit: elliotgranath)

But these animals have nothin' on Pixel. He always looks like that.

(Image credit: Pixel and Sophie)

Check out a gallery of 50 pet pictures that show how weird and creepy they can be at times, from oddly funny to downright terrifying, in a ranked list at Bored Panda.


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