Philosophy

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Woman lives in cage at the Bronx Zoo with Gorilla cellmate.



Djuna Barnes: A Daring Young Woman


                       The Girl and the Gorilla from New York World Magazine, October 18, 1914.


As a young journalist during the 1910s, Djuna Barnes (1892-1982) proved herself fearless. 

In 1914, she spent time in a cage at the Bronx Zoo with a young gorilla named Dinah.

Barnes knew how to turn her phrases to a radical deviation from the normal and she executed her aphorisms like leaps from a trapeze with no safety net beneath her. What saved her articles from superficiality was something that now sounds old-fashioned. Barnes had a tragic sense and although she applied wit to her chosen subjects, they also constitute a catalog of potential misfortunes.



Images: from the exhibition Newspaper Fiction: The New York Journalism of Djuna Barnes, 1913-1919, on view until August 19, 2012 at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for feminist Art, Brooklyn Museum of Art.



Cave Pearls


Pearls are a concentric concretion found in shallow cave pools. They can be spherical, as in these photos, or cylindrical, elliptical, and even cubical (as in the additional photos in the table below. They range in size from barely larger than a sand grain up to golf-ball sized. In the tropics, large beds of them may be found. Grutas de Canicas, a cave recently explored in Mexico, contained pearls esitmated in the millions.
Cave pearls form when water dripping into the pool loses carbon dioxide and precipitates calcite. This precipitate usually forms around a nucleus of sand, bones, or fragments of soda straws or rafts. The typical roundness is due to the uniform growth of the pearl, not to any sort of rotation due to dripping. A sphere allows the greatest amount of deposition for the smallest surface area and is thus most likely, even if the nucleus is highly irregular. The dripping causes vibrations in the pool which may prevent the pearls from cementing (with calcite) to the pool floor, though many pearls are found cemented in. Sometimes excess precipitate will form cups or nests around the pearls, like in the photo on the top.




Saturday, January 28, 2012

Guiness Records

http://news.ca.msn.com/photogallery.aspx?cp-documentid=30621550&page=3

Longest fingernails, Guinness World Records (Guinness World Records/Ryan Schude/)

Christine 'The Dutchess' Walton, a singer in Las Vegas, holds the record for longest fingernails. The nails measure 309.8 centimetres (10 foot 2 inches) on her left hand and 292.1 centimetres (9 foot 7 inches) on her right hand.

Longest tongue; Guinness World Records (Guinness World Records/Ryan Schude)

Measuring 9.75 centimetres (3.8 inches) from tip to top lip, Chanel Tapper from California holds this record.


Dog with the longest ears; Guinness World Records (Guinness World Records/Ryan Schude)

Speaking of longest records, a Colorado coonhound named Harbor holds the one for dog with the longest ears. His left ear stretches to 31.12 centimetres (12.25 inches), while his right measure 34.3 centimetres (13.5 inches).




Most expensive movie; Guinness World Records (Everett Collection)
The most expensive movie made is 'Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End', which came out in 2007. The film's estimated production budget was around $300 million US. If the budgets of films are adjusted for inflation to 2010 dollars, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End would cost $315 million US to make, narrowly beating out the 1963 classic Cleopatra.


Largest afro; Guinness World Records (Guinness World Records/Chris Granger)

Aevin Dugas from New Orleans is the proud owner of the largest natural afro with a circumference measuring 1.32 metres (4 feet 4 inches).
Bing: More on natural afros


Fastest three poles completion, Cecilie Skog; Guinness World Records (Guinness World Records/Richard Bradbury)

Norwegian adventurer Cecilie Skog holds the women's record for the fastest time to complete the three poles challenge. The challenge involved conquering the three extremes of the North Pole, the South Pole and Mount Everest.
Skog also holds the record for fastest unsupported trek to the North Pole by a female. It took her, her husband Rolf Bae and teammate Per Henry Borch 48 days and 22 hours to achieve the feat in 2006.
The recognition seems bitter sweet. Skog decided to stop climbing the earth's most dangerous peaks after her husband's death in 2008 on the slopes of K2, the world's second largest, but most dangerous, mountain.

Most expensive manmade structure (NASA/The Canadian Press)

That would be the International Space Station. Its final cost will tally over $100 billion US.
The station, which marked its 10th anniversary last year, is about the length and width of a football field. Just over 200 individuals have visited the station, which has orbited the earth a whopping 57,361 times.

Largest violin; Guinness World Records (Ranald Mackechnie/Guinness World Records)

This violin is 4.28 metres (14 feet) tall and 1.45 metres (5 metres) wide, weighing more than 100 kilograms. Violin-making masters from Markneukirchen, Germany took up the task and completed the record-breaking instrument in 2010. It takes three people to play the fiddle: one to press the strings and two to hold the giant bow.
Pictured: Left To Right: Udo Kietcschmaun, Klaus Schlegel, Frank Schlegel, Ekkard Seidl

Longest journey by skateboard; Guinness World Records (Shinsuke Kamioka/Guinness World Records)

New Zealander Robert Thompson began his skateboard journey in Leysin, Switzerland and finished almost 15 months and 12,159 kilometres (7,555 miles) later in Shanghai, China.


Most dogs skipping the same rope


Most dogs skipping the same rope; Guinness World Records (Shinsuke Kamioka/Guinness World Records)
The most dogs skipping rope - in unison - is 13, achieved by Uchida Geinousha's Super Wan Wan Circus in Japan.
Bing: More on the rope-skipping dogs


Youngest to climb the seven summits; Guinness World Records (Guinness World Records)
Samantha Larson, of Donner Lake, Nevada, holds this record. The Seven Summits are the highest mountains on each of the world's seven continents. The mountains include Kilmanjaro, in Tanzania; Elbrus in Russia, Aconcagua in Argentina, Carstensz in Indonesia, Denali in Alaska, Vinson in Antarctica, and Everest in Nepal.
Larson was 18 when she finished scaling the last of the seven mountains with her father, David.
On the flip side, the oldest man to climb Kilimanjaro is U.K.-born George Solt, who reached the summit at the age of 82 years, 289 days, on July 14, 2010.



 
 
A tiger is seen at the Bronx Zoo after a snowstorm in the Bronx borough of New York City.

$1.4 Billion House

People look at the Aztec Maiden, a Philippine-registered freighter, off a Dutch beach in Wijk aan Zee. The Philippine cargo ship ran aground off the Dutch coast on Friday after breaking its anchor, Dutch media reported. (© Robin van Lonkhuijsen/United Photos/REUTERS)

 
 
Artist Frank Buckley sits on the toilet of the house he has built out of 1.4-billion decommissioned euro notes from the Central Bank's mint. Bricks of money make up the walls and shredded bills carpet the ground on the first floor of the empty office building in Smithfield, Ireland, where Buckley has set up camp. He has been building for 12 hours every day, and living on-site since Dec. 1, 2011.

Californian Condor


SURPRISE!

Student's Textbook Order from Amazon Includes Cocaine
Talk about getting more than you bargained for.

A student ordering a textbook from Amazon received the book, plus a bag of white powder.

Sophia Stockton, who ordered a book on terrorism for one of her classes at MidAmerica Nazarene University in Kansas, received the Amazon shipment and discovered a bag of cocaine that fell out of the pages of the book.

Her initial reaction was that it was Anthrax, so she took it to the authorities -- turns out, she had been shipped $400 worth of cocaine, MSNBC reports

Stockton, who is a junior in college, ordered a copy of Understanding Terrorism: Challenges, Perspectives and Issues from Amazon.com.


































Classic Scene of the Movie "2001 A Space Odyssey" - YouTube

Classic Scene of the Movie "2001 A Space Odyssey" - YouTube:
http://youtu.be/QSxI0OOjR0Y



Uploaded by on Dec 6, 2009

This scene sequence shows the begin of the "thinker human". The first time the human modified the nature to your own benefit. The first tool and his use for hunting and make war.
We'll never knows exactly how it really happened.

'via Blog this'




























Apolo y Dafne es una escultura realizada por el italiano Gian Lorenzo Bernini entre los años 1622 y 1625. Pertenece al estilo barroco. Se trata de una estatua a tamaño real de mármol, expuesta en la Galería Borghese en Roma.





TERESA DÍAZ CHICOTE.



























Album:Carlos Regazzoni