Miss Cellania's Blog Posts

An Animated Comparison of Animals in a Hurry

Remember a video from a few months ago in which different species of birds raced to show us how fast they can go? Red Side has made the same type of video for terrestrial animals. They are all shown moving at their species' maximum speed, the way they would only move if their lives were in danger. That means they are all shown running comically fast, one after another, as if it's a race. You won't see any sloths in this video, but it starts with a snail, and there's a turtle near the beginning making tracks like he's on fire. It's weird to see a kiwi being overtaken by a Komodo dragon, like the reptile wouldn't slow down long enough to eat the kiwi. The animals were produced by artificial intelligence, which hasn't quite mastered the way an elephant moves. Still, as funny as the race is, you'll learn about the relative speeds of various animals at their maximum. Meanwhile, if you ever see a critter running this fast in real life, you can be sure something scary is chasing them. Or else they are about to catch lunch.

It only takes about seven minutes to show us all the animals, then it switches and shows them to us again, from the perspective of the running creatures. It's a blur of landscape! -via Laughing Squid


The Cave Villages of France

There are many thousands of caves that nature carved into the limestone of France. Neanderthals found shelter in them a half-million years ago, and later Homo sapiens did the same. In fact, people lived in those caves off and on up until the 20th century! And why not- they were sturdy rock fortresses that kept a habitable temperature year-round. Over time, the residents enlarged them, installed windows, doors, and chimneys, built out the fronts, and added gardens and modern amenities as they became available. There are around 14,000 such cave homes (habitations troglodytes) in the Loire Valley alone, although most are abandoned today.

These caves served as homes, churches, military bases, businesses, monasteries, and emergency hiding places for hundreds of years. One was even used as a secret place for satanic rituals. Now they are mostly empty sightseeing spots, but some have been converted into restaurants, nightclubs, and hotels. Read about the cave homes of France at Messy Nessy Chic.   

 


How Different Nations Teach About World War II



When I was in school, history class was about the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, and World War II, every other year until the sixth grade, when we spent a year studying World War II because my teacher's husband fought in it. And then we found out our other teachers' husbands fought in it, too. But it was all from an American perspective (world history classes in the off years stopped at Columbus). Even today, there are many Americans who believe that World War II began on December 7, 1941. Yet Europe had been in a war for two and a half years already, and Japan had been at war for four years in China. Americans think we won the war, but Russia is pretty sure they did, at least in Europe. And the former Axis powers- how do they teach schoolchildren about what happened in World War II? In this video from Weird History, we get an overview of the perspective from which various nations around the world treat the subject of World War II in their history classes. Finland would like to have a word.


Why Some People Can Navigate the World, While Others Get Lost

We all know at least one person who can magically find their way through an unfamiliar city, and at least one person who get hopelessly lost every time they leave familiar territory. Maybe you are one of those folks. Are people born with a sense of direction -or the lack of one? Do navigation skills depend on some innate talent or can it be trained? Or could a good sense of space and location be genetic? Scientists had trouble pinpointing the source of these skills until recently. GPS and virtual reality equipment have enabled more precise experiments that show why some people manage to get around better than others.

Navigational skill tends to run in families, but that doesn't mean it's genetic. Recent research points to a sense of direction being a matter of upbringing. Maybe you learn navigation from your parents, or possibly the culture itself. Some cultures, like Nordic countries and indigenous people of the Amazon, do better at navigating on average because everyone goes outside and travels from a young age. People who grow up in older and more eccentric European cities navigate better than those in planned cities laid out in a grid because they are forced to learn various methods of getting around. Experience matters. But what does this mean for younger generations who don't roam the neighborhood, depend on GPS, and see no reason to learn map reading or wayfinding? Read about the research into a sense of direction at Knowable magazine. -via Metafilter

(Image credit: Archibald Ballantine)


Cat Shows Her Love Language: Flowers



Aalish started finding flowers that had been left in her home, or near the door. A secret admirer? Her partner didn't know what she was talking about, so it was a mystery until she caught a stray cat in the act of bringing flowers! What a sweet gesture; she liked the camellias, and thought Aalish would like them, too. I am glad that their camellias bear so many blooms, and the cat can only reach so many of them. The couple fed the friendly cat and gradually took her in and named her Fiddy. It turns out that Fiddy really needed a home that appreciated flowers as much as she did. Oh yeah, and for another reason that will become apparent in the video. See more of Fiddy in her beautiful home in Aotearoa (which we call New Zealand) at TikTok and Instagram.


The Mailman with a 100-Mile Route

John Albert Thompson emigrated from Norway and eventually made his way out to the western US during the Gold Rush, where he was a subcontractor for the postal service for 20 years. Thompson was called "The Viking of the Sierras," but everyone knew him as Snowshoe Thompson, because he delivered mail between Placerville and Genoa, Nevada, on skis, which he called snowshoes. His trips took three days to get to Placerville and three days to get back, a punishing trip over the Sierra Mountains in which he followed snow-covered wagon tracks. Thompson made this trip two to four times a month carrying up to 100 pounds of letters and packages -and silver from the mines.

Today, hikers can get a feel for the endurance Thompson had by retracing his route through the mountains, although there are roads in many of the spots now, plus better clothing and equipment and emergency communications. Read about Snowshoe Thompson and his service to the people of Nevada (which he was never paid for) and about the folks who hiked his route recently, at Atlas Obscura.

(Image credit: Brent Cooper)


How Astronauts Drink From Cups in Space



The latest video from Action Lab gave me new things to think about. Somehow I missed the fact that astronauts on the International Space Station are now drinking out of cups instead of squeeze bottles with straws. How does that work? That's what the video is about. Another question is, why? Well, I am very much aware that drinking coffee or hot tea through a straw does not work because hot liquids need to be introduced to your mouth gradually for safety. But it's mainly because you don't get aroma from liquids that have no contact with air, which dulls the taste. That made me think of all these little kids drinking Capri Suns. Maybe if they were getting the full flavor, it wouldn't need so much sugar and artificial flavors. Be that as it may, the new gravity free cups are pretty clever. It makes you think about how different it must be to live in an environment devoid of something as fundamental to our lives as gravity. The video is only 3:45, the rest is an ad.


Work Secrets of What Sounds Like a Dream Job



You meet someone new, and if you are an American, one of your first questions is what do they do for a living. If it's something that sounds really cool, you might be jealous. But if all you know of that profession is what you see in movies or TV, you might be surprised by the truth. Few jobs are as glamorous as they sound, and you have to remember that if it were really that fun, people would do it for free. Some jobs are downright depressing, even if your own role is relatively simple.

And some are completely misunderstood by those outside the profession. Or at least those who have a limited vocabulary.  



So when you meet someone who has a cool-sounding job, go ahead and ask questions, but save your envy until you understand a bit better. Every job has its ups and downs. See a pictofacts list on the hidden truths of 40 careers at Cracked.


Cat Sings "I Go Meow" with The Kiffness

What do you do when your cat wails as if the world is going to end? Get the camera, capture a video, and go viral! Maybe you'll end up in a remix and indeed become a star. Meanwhile, ahem, your cat is lonely.

An orange cat named Cala will let you know when she needs attention. She's quite vocal, bordering on English sentence structure. Therefore, her calls are catnip to David Scott, also known as The Kiffness (previously at Neatorama). He was inspired to write a little song around Cala's lyrics, such as they are, based on Pachelbel's Canon in D (as are most songs). The completed lyrics are available at the YouTube page. They make plenty of sense, opening doors is what cats want to do more than anything. It's not that they want out, and it's not that they want in. They just want the door open so they can have options when the mood strikes.


Queen Priscilla Found 30 Years Later

The 1994 Australian movie The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, was about three drag queens on a road trip across the Outback, but none of them was named Priscilla. The title character was their bus. After the filming, the three lead actors went on to other roles, and the bus was returned to its owner, and was used as a band's tour bus for a few years. But eventually, Priscilla the bus disappeared. Fans looked into tracking it and found nothing but copies. The History Trust of South Australia wanted to find the original bus for the National Motor Museum, but kept coming up empty.

Then in 2019 a man in the tiny town of Ewingar, New South Wales, proclaimed he had the bus, and was afraid that it would deteriorate further unless someone took care of it. Authenticating that he had the real Priscilla was a tough job, but it turned out to be the real thing. The bus had been through a lot: divorce, death, abandonment, an owner who didn't know what he had, bushfires, and floods. Read the gripping story of the lost and found bus named Priscilla at the Guardian. -via Metafilter


How Legally Realistic Was the Curb Your Enthusiasm Finale?

Curb Your Enthusiasm wrapped up twelve seasons with the series finale last Sunday night. The episode, entitled "No Lessons Learned" was a callback to the 1998 Seinfeld finale, which David wrote. The Seinfeld finale had a huge audience, but left viewers confused and unimpressed. In Sunday's finale, were the "lessons not learned" about David's character in the show, or about Larry David's decision to write the Seinfeld finale the way he did? We cannot know that, because so much of the show itself is ambiguous and about ambiguity itself. The finale had David inadvertently breaking the law, going to trial, and being sent to jail, just like the characters of Seinfeld. But it was done differently. Was it different enough? The finale garnered 1.1 million viewers compared to Seinfeld's 76.3 million viewers for the finale in 1997, but Curb Your Enthusiasm aired on HBO in the age of streaming, so 1.1 million is now considered a successful episode.  

The reviews of the episode were great, and audiences considered it a step up from the Seinfeld finale it spoofs. But how accurate was it legally? Jill Harness gets a lawyer's opinion on the courtroom drama in the final episode that will show us how Larry David may have learned some lessons about TV writing, but maybe not so much about legal procedures.


New Species of Gecko Named for Vincent Van Gogh

A group of biologists from the Thackeray Wildlife Foundation in the field in Tamil Nadu, India, have discovered a new species of gecko with a unique look. The male of the species is dark blue with light blue spots on its body, swirls on its head, and a slim ring of yellow around its neck. Researcher Ishan Agarwal was impressed by the coloration that reminded him of the iconic painting The Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh. That was in 2022. A new paper has recently been published to describe two new species of gecko, and this one was named Cnemaspis vangoghi, in honor of the painter.

The group thinks they will have identified 50 new species by the time their research is complete, but Cnemaspis vangoghi stands out because everyone recognizes Starry Night when they see it. -via Bored Panda

(Image credit: Akshay Khandekar 


Miniwood is Like a Little Toy Hollywood



You will recognize quite a few of your favorite Hollywood films in this movie tribute from Yeti Pictures animation studio, even though they only take a few seconds each. These vignettes have a tilt-shift look, making the sets look even smaller for the toys used in recreating the movies as we watch twisted scenes from The Exorcist, King Kong, Jurassic Park, The Addams family, Kill Bill, and Terminator 2. You might think this is stop-motion animation using miniatures, but you'd be wrong. Miniwood is entirely digital! It does seem a bit strange to use computer generated graphics, which can do anything, to recreate the labor-intensive yet unrealistic style of stop motion, but you can't argue that too much because the result is downright adorable. Yeah, stop motion is not realistic, but we like it, even when it is digitally created. -via Nag on the Lake   


The Solar Maximum Makes for Astonishing Auroras

Justin Chambers spent nine years as a chef at Mawson Station, Australia's Antarctic research station, and ten years photographing the Aurora Australis. However, it's been eleven years since we've experienced the cyclical solar maximum, which is going on now. As the sun reaches its maximum activity, Chambers has witnessed -and photographed- the best auroras of his life. The photo above captured a rare pink color, which only happens during maximum solar activity. Chambers has also captured photographs of red, green, purple, orange, and blue in the aurora. Physicist Andrew Cole says the period of high solar activity should last most of the rest of this year, but the best time to observe aurora is near the spring and fall equinoxes. In Antarctica, that means sunrise and sunset. Read about how solar activity affects the light show in the Antarctic skies, and see more of Chambers' Aurora Australis photographs at ABC. -via Metafilter 

(Image credit: Justin Chambers)


How Dangerous Would It Be to Swim in a Nuclear Storage Pool?

A nuclear storage pool is also called a spent fuel pool. They are used for cooling used fuel assemblies from nuclear reactors, and they are at least 40 feet deep. But with the nuclear stuff at the bottom, I wouldn't even think of swimming in one. You shouldn't, either, because you would probably be arrested. But how dangerous is it? In the latest episode of his What If? series (previously at Neatorama), Randall Munroe collaborated with Henry Reich of MinutePhysics to look into this hypothetical question. You may be surprised at what they learned about nuclear storage pools as they researched this question from a reader. It turns out that people have to go in the water on a pretty regular basis to do their jobs, but they know what they are doing. This video ends with consequences that go beyond being arrested, so maybe you shouldn't consider swimming in spent fuel pool at all. -via Laughing Squid


Email This Post to a Friend
""

Separate multiple emails with a comma. Limit 5.

 

Success! Your email has been sent!

close window

Page 134 of 2,618     first | prev | next | last

Profile for Miss Cellania

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


Statistics

Blog Posts

  • Posts Written 39,269
  • Comments Received 109,507
  • Post Views 53,095,914
  • Unique Visitors 43,670,055
  • Likes Received 45,726

Comments

  • Threads Started 4,980
  • Replies Posted 3,725
  • Likes Received 2,678
X

This website uses cookies.

This website uses cookies to improve user experience. By using this website you consent to all cookies in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

I agree
 
Learn More