Home » All posts
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Chimpanzeess wedding ceremony
Chimpanzees celebrate wedding after arranged marriage A pair of chimpanzees have been married in a ceremony at a zoo in China - surrounded by photographers recording the happy occasion.
The happy groom for the day was four-year-old Yangyang, who it turns out is a bit of a toyboy (in chimpanzee years, at least), as his blushing bride Wanxing is six years old.
Admittedly, we don't actually know if she was blushing. We're not entirely sure how you'd tell if a chimpanzee was blushing. Do chimpanzees actually blush? Google isn't much help on this one.
The marriage was actually an arranged one - Yangyang, who was born in Guinea, moved to the wildlife park in Hefei, in eastern China's Anhui province after he was selected as being Wanxing's future hubby in 2009.
It wasn't a traditional white wedding - the bride wore a pink top and fetching multicoloured hat, while the groom wa sresplendant in a green, blue and yellow jumper and a rakish kerchief. Both also sported gigantic red ribbons, of dubious practicality.
The wedding was described as 'symbolic', although we're not entirely sure what it was symbolic of, other than the zoo's desire for the chimps to get it on good style. Which we're wholeheartedly in favour of.
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Bra Life Saving Face Mask
Lingerie Disguises : The bra that can be converted into a life-saving face mask An 'emergency bra' has been created by a Ukrainian scientist that can be turned into a face mask to protect against lethal chemical attacks or biological hazards.
The uplifting garment can be worn as intended then easily removed, separated into two and converted into two face masks that filters out harmful airborne substances - one for the wearer, and for a needy by-stander - or onlooker.
According to the inventor, Ukranian scientist Dr Elena Bodnar, it doesn't matter what your cup size is either as the masks are fully-adjustable to give the same level of protection.
Bosom buddy: Dr Elena Bodnar demonstrates her Emergency Bra at the MIT Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts Litt and separate: Dr. Elena watches as a volunteer demonstrates dividing the two cups in the first stage of mask making
The Associated Press reports that Dr Bodnarm, who's now based in Chicago, initially got her idea after the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster.
She explained: 'If people had had cheap, readily available gas masks in the first hours after the disaster...they may have avoided breathing in Iodine-131, which causes radiation sickness.'
She also claims the brassiere could be useful in the event of biological terrorist attacks.
Explaining how the garment works, she expanded:'To use the bra-mask, the wearer unsnaps the brassiere from under her shirt, which breaks it in two.
'Because each cup has hooks on its side, the strap is wrapped around the head and hooked to the cup, which goes over the mouth.'
Apparently, with practice, the bra can be whipped off and the mask effectively put on in seconds.
She added that bra-mask could be also be used during such disasters as fires, dust storms or a swine flu outbreak.
She said: 'You have to be prepared all the time, at any place, at any moment, and practically every woman wears a bra.'
There might be a 'counterpart device for men', Bodnar added, although it was not clear in what shape or form it would take.
Bra-vellous: The life-saving brassiere is now onsale to well-prepared lingerie fans Red alert: Break bras in case of emergency
The invention was first acknowledged at the 2009 Ig Nobel Prize awards, a spoof of the actual Nobel Prize, which acknowldge 10 scientific achievements that 'first make people laugh, and then make them think'.
It's organized by the U.S. scientific humour magazine Annals of Improbable Research and judged by actual Nobel laureates.
In her Ig acceptance speech, she joked: 'It takes only 25 seconds for average woman [sic] to use this personal protective device. Five seconds to remove, convert and apply your own mask, and 20 seconds to wonder who the lucky man is she is going to save.'
However, it only launched earlier this week after a year firming up 'safety engineering, economical design, and aesthetics'.
Dr Bodnar unveiled her life-saving lingerie at the MIT Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Monday.
Unique sink concept idea to save water
Unique sink concept, designed by Yan Lu, encourages users to save water.
When in use, the level of water in the fishbowl gradually decreases (but never fully drains out); it will go back to normal once you turn off the water. To protect the fish and provide clean tap water, the bowl is connected to its own dedicated pipeline.
Man is Addicted to Eating Live Scorpions
A Chinese man says he has become addicted to eating live scorpions and reckons he's swallowed at least 10,000 over the last 30 years.
Li Liuqun, 58, says he got hooked when he was walking in mountains close to his home in Hunan province, central China, and was stung by a huge scorpion.
"I was so angry I picked it up and bit its head off. It tasted sweet and nutty and I never looked back. To me, they're delicious - like fried beans," he explained.
Now Li will eat 20 or 30 of the live beasts in a single sitting and seems to be immune to their venom, which can paralyse and kill humans in large enough doses.
"I still get stung but they have no effect on me," he said.
Medics say Li has probably become addicted to the venom, which is used in small doses in traditional Chinese medicine to relieve the pain of rheumatism.
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Farmer Grows 3 Million Pumpkins
A British farm has harvested Europe's largest crop of pumpkins in time for Halloween despite our changeable summer weather.
The three million pumpkins growing at David Bowman Ltd farm in Spalding, Lincs., have been baked by heatwaves and battered by torrential rain.
But they have reached their autumnal orange ripeness the perfect time and 100 staff are now working around the clock to finish harvesting them before October 31st.
Seasonal workers at the farm have to process a staggering 100,000 pumpkins every day during the 30 day harvest.
Farmer David Bowman, 62, who has 37 years' experience growing pumpkins, admitted that he 'can't wait' for the harvest to end on November 1.
He said: 'It's been a very average year in terms of the pumpkin crop because the weather was either too dry or too wet over the summer.'
'But we still expect to harvest around three million pumpkins which is a marvellous crop for an average year.'
'We are so busy at the moment getting everything for Halloween and I will just be glad when it's all over on November the first.'
'When you are carving out your pumpkin this year think about us harvesting in the wind and rain.'
David sells some of his crop abroad in Holland and Spain but the majority of his pumpkins go to supermarkets across Britain.
His crop is the largest in Europe with three million pumpkins at his 500-acre farm.
Anime characters made out of paper for adults
Our hero creates anime characters out of paper , and then mocks them , torturing , killing , just like in horror movies . Look carefully, too much violence over the paper , for adults only
Monday, September 27, 2010
Flying Video Camera
A Chinese man used a Flying Video Camera Remote Controlled, spy cameras wireless model plane to record his friend's wedding.
Lao Wu, from Wuhan, spent 30,000 Yuan (nearly £3,000) buying parts ahead of the big day.
The plane, named UFO, weighs 1kg, has four propellers and landing legs, and is capable of flying as high as 10 stories.
Wu, an amateur plane designer for more than 20 years, said: "Half a year ago I read news on the internet that some foreigners tried to build a UFO, so I tried myself.
"The initial trails didn't have good video pictures until I installed it a shock absorber.
"It's very convenient, as I can remote control the plane to shoot at any angle, while I adjust its flying track through the wireless monitor on hand."
Source : Clipmarks
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Edward Gorey House Museum
Morbid Anatomy Joanna Ebenstein recently visited the Edward Gorey Museum in Yarmouth Port, Massachusetts.
The home has, sadly, largely been cleared of Gorey's legendary clutter--though a few tantalizing fragments from his private collection can be found scattered about--and transformed into a compact house-museum dedicated to the man's life and work.
Part of me wishes they had simply left the place as it was at Gorey's death, and allowed visitors the opportunity to wander around the famously idiosyncratic environment in which the man produced so many of his iconic works. However, I was quickly won over by the museum's small-town- quirky charm, and the pretty great displays, which included original drawings and half-finished inked works, reproductions of his sketchbooks, amazing ephemera and souvenirs from Mystery and his Broadway production of Dracula, one of his raccoon fur coats, many of his Doubleday book covers, a number of his handmade stuffed animals, many coveted rare works such as his fantastic peepshow, and scores of other artifacts. The gift-shop was also seriously incredible--with scores of Gorey-themed souvenirs I had never seen before--and the folks running the museum were lovely to talk to, knowledgeable and passionately devoted to the man and his work.
Source : Morbid Anatomy
Dodgeball Games Set World Record
The world's biggest Dodgeball Games Team has taken place in the California with more than 1,700 students hurling rubber balls at each other.
well-known form of team sport with modified rules that is often played in physical education classes and has been featured in a movie
Students came up with the idea for the game because they wanted to Organise a mass-participation event and thought they may as well break a Guinness record while they were at it.
After looking at the record books, the student from the University of California decided the dodgeball record - which stood at just 1,198 - was easily beatable.
For anyone who wasn't subjected to ritual humiliation by dodgeball, the aim of the game is to hit all the members of the opposing team by throwing the ball at them.
Source : Newslite Via University of California
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)