I had a bat problem this past summer. I turned toward using a blanket to capture and release them. As it turns out, there is a much better solution.
Filed under: Science | Tagged: Bat, Bats, Centipede, Giant Bat-Eating Centipede | Leave a comment »
I had a bat problem this past summer. I turned toward using a blanket to capture and release them. As it turns out, there is a much better solution.
Filed under: Science | Tagged: Bat, Bats, Centipede, Giant Bat-Eating Centipede | Leave a comment »
The only wonderful thing about creationism is that it is based upon ignorance. That is something which can be remedied with a good bout of education to the brain.
So in this vain, I am happy to confess to my ignorance about the Shroud of Turin. I’ve always known what it was purported to be; it is not there that my ignorance lies. It is in the fact that so many people actually believe it is an imprint of the face of Jesus. Such religious lunacy doesn’t surprise me, but I was hardly aware of the value people placed in a raggedy Medieval piece of cloth.
Now it looks like the 13th century creation has been recreated in the 21st century.
Garlaschelli reproduced the full-sized shroud using materials and techniques that were available in the middle ages.
They placed a linen sheet flat over a volunteer and then rubbed it with a pigment containing traces of acid. A mask was used for the face.
The pigment was then artificially aged by heating the cloth in an oven and washing it, a process which removed it from the surface but left a fuzzy, half-tone image similar to that on the Shroud. He believes the pigment on the original Shroud faded naturally over the centuries.
They then added blood stains, burn holes, scorches and water stains to achieve the final effect.
For the rational, this long-closed case just has another nail in its coffin. But we aren’t all rational, are we?
Garlaschelli expects people to contest his findings. “If they don’t want to believe carbon dating done by some of the world’s best laboratories they certainly won’t believe me,” he said.
Filed under: Science | Tagged: Jesus, Luigi Garlaschelli, Recreation, Shroud of Turin | 5 Comments »
There are a bunch of great new fossil discoveries. I’m pretty busy making some Italian herb chicken (is it weird that the recipe calls for “2.5 lbs chicken parts”?), so I’ll have to write more later, but here’s a snippet from the article.
The scientists say 1.2m-high (4ft) Ardi was good at climbing trees but also walked on two feet. However she did not have arched feet like us, indicating that she could not walk or run for long distances.
“She has opposable great toes and she has a pelvis that allows her to negotiate tree branches rather well,” explained team-member Professor Owen Lovejoy, from Kent State University, Ohio.
“So half of her life is spent in the trees; she would have nested in trees and occasionally fed in trees, but when she was on the ground she walked upright pretty close to how you and I walk,” he told BBC News.
The actual peer-reviewed articles can be found here for free.
Filed under: Evidence, Evolution, Science | Tagged: Ardi, Ardipithecus ramidus | Leave a comment »
With musical talent like this, I don’t know what he was doing with all that science-y stuff.
Filed under: Astronomy/Cosmology/Physics, Atheism/Humanism, Misc, Science | Tagged: Carl Sagan - 'A Glorious Dawn' ft Stephen Hawking (Cosmos Remixed), melodysheep | Leave a comment »
Science is real
From the Big Bang to DNA
Science is real
From evolution to the Milky Way
I like the stories
About angels, unicorns and elves
Now I like the stories
As much as anybody else
But when I’m seeking knowledge
Either simple or abstract
The facts are with science
The facts are with scienceScience is real
Science is real
Science is realScience is real
From anatomy to geology
Science is real from astrophysics to biology
A scientific theory
Isn’t just a hunch or guess
It’s more like a question
That’s been put through a lot of tests
And when a theory emerges
Consistent with the facts
The proof is with science
The truth is with scienceScience is real
Science is real
Science is realScience is real
Filed under: Science | Tagged: Science is Real, They Might Be Giants | 2 Comments »
Science is real
From the Big Bang to DNA
Science is real
From evolution to the Milky Way
I like the stories
About angels, unicorns and elves
Now I like the stories
As much as anybody else
But when I’m seeking knowledge
Either simple or abstract
The facts are with science
The facts are with scienceScience is real
Science is real
Science is realScience is real
From anatomy to geology
Science is real from astrophysics to biology
A scientific theory
Isn’t just a hunch or guess
It’s more like a question
That’s been put through a lot of tests
And when a theory emerges
Consistent with the facts
The proof is with science
The truth is with scienceScience is real
Science is real
Science is realScience is real
Filed under: Science | Tagged: Science is Real, They Might Be Giants | 2 Comments »
Apologist after apologist will claim that there is evidence for God. Ya know, if you want to find it. The reasoning for this claim is that those who have found clearly must have wanted it, otherwise they wouldn’t have found it. It’s sort of like how when you find 5 bucks on the ground. You must have wanted to for it, otherwise you would have looked right over it. In the wacky worldview of the religious, scientists don’t want to find 5 bucks.
Of course, it’s all hogwash. There are plenty of ways for science to verify or deny certain claims made by religions. Does faith healing work or is it all a load of horseshit? It isn’t too uncommon a tactic at this point for the religious to use The Ostrich Strategy (TOS). This is where they bury their heads in the sand* and ignore all the evidence against their anti-evidence faith. Jerry Coyne sums it up nicely.
Oh dear dear dear. Russell, I, and others have addressed the idea of science and the supernatural many times before (see here, here, and here, for example), dispelling the soothing idea that “science has nothing to say about the supernatural.” That is, of course, hogwash. Science has plenty to say about the Shroud of Turin, whether faith healing works, whether prayer works, whether God seems to be both beneficent and omnipotent, world without end. Science can, as we’ve repeated endlessly, address specific claims about the supernatural, though it’s impotent before the idea that behind it all is a hands-off, deistic Transcendent Force.
People who deny these facts always engage in TOS. You may say this makes them all a bunch of TOSSERS.
*Ostriches don’t actually do this. At least they don’t do it for reasons that merit the meaning of the phrase “head in the sand”. They do turn their eggs by putting their heads in the sand/ground, but they do not do it to avoid danger or ignore what they don’t like. That may well be a bad survival strategy. Though it is cute when dogs do it under the coffee table.
Filed under: Religions, Science | Tagged: Christian Science, Faith healing, Jerry Coyne, NOMA, Ostriches, The Ostrich Strategy, TOS, TOSSERS | Leave a comment »
Thanks to Carl Zimmer for posting a link on his Facebook page to this.
An artist by the name Luke Jerram has a website/project devoted to glass sculptures based on microbiology. The most beautiful one for me is the HIV sculpture. It’s frighteningly disconcerting to see, and I think that’s some of its appeal.
Filed under: Science | Tagged: Glass sculpture, HIV, Luke Jerram, Microbiology | 1 Comment »