the "Headline That Caught My Attention or the WTF" thread

Taliban freed all prisoners from state prison in Kabul.
E9B1A44A-E843-480E-8B14-474B13C4E80E.webp

Taliban in Presidential Palace.
735F6739-7AD7-4025-9B5A-D84E01627999.webp

100 armored Humvees and MRAP’s taken by Taliban.
658866AB-59D4-4B64-873A-D14C07A88797.webp

Five drones also taken. That’s $20,000,000 right there.

WAY TO GO JOE!
Hey to all you LGBT sympathizers. Guess what and whose laws make it a death sentence?
10B76B91-38BC-4D5E-893E-8AA32CAC0922.webp
 
I wish they would drop the age max. I would have escorted the oldest and went back. I’d have no problem at BT still even being 35 pounds heavier.

Do you see what’s missing in that video I posted above?
There are no women. They are being left to fend for themselves. Imagine being ten or eleven year old girl and today you are now the wife of a dirtbag getting raped. It’s all happening right now today.

He won’t do the right thing. It started last year which we all knew it would come. It was not a good decision but it was made. There was a plan then it was scrapped in January.
Depression is high right now. Glad my guy is busy in Europe and not watching what’s happening today.
 
I wasn’t going to post this chick cause I don’t believe she’s going to survive long. She works for CNN. The Taliban is tolerating her for the moment for one reason. They think they will get fair coverage. Why? Because they view CNN as Anti American news. Go figure.
 

Associated Press

Woman comes face-to-face with snake in Australia supermarket​

ROD McGUIRK
Wed, August 18, 2021, 3:02 AM


CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Helaina Alati was browsing the spice aisle of an Australian supermarket when she came face-to-face with a huge snake.

The head of the 3-meter-long (10-foot-long) non-venomous diamond python emerged through a space in a shelf above the spice jars in the Sydney store.

“I was in the spice aisle just looking for something to put on my chicken that night so I didn’t initially see it because it was curled up way back behind the little jars of spices,” Alati said Wednesday. “I kind of turned to my right and it poked its head out.”

Alati, who coincidently is a trained snake catcher, said the snake's head came to within 20 centimeters (8 inches) of her own.

:oops:
 

It Rained at the Summit of Greenland. That’s Never Happened Before.​

The showers are another troubling sign of a changing Arctic, which is warming faster than any other region on Earth.

It Rained at the Summit of Greenland. That’s Never Happened Before.

The Summit research station, which sits two miles above sea level on the Greenland ice sheet, in 2015.

The Summit research station, which sits two miles above sea level on the Greenland ice sheet, in 2015. Credit...Josh Haner/The New York Times

Something extraordinary happened last Saturday at the frigid high point of the Greenland ice sheet, two miles in the sky and more than 500 miles above the Arctic Circle: It rained for the first time.

The rain at a research station — not just a few drops or a drizzle but a stream for several hours, as temperatures rose slightly above freezing — is yet another troubling sign of a changing Arctic, which is warming faster than any other region on the planet.

“It’s incredible, because it does write a new chapter in the book of Greenland,” said Marco Tedesco, a researcher at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University. “This is really new.”

At the station, which is called Summit and is occupied year-round under the auspices of the National Science Foundation, there is no record of rain since observations began in the 1980s. And computer simulations show no evidence going back even further, said Thomas Mote, a climate scientist at the University of Georgia.

Above-freezing conditions at Summit are nearly as rare. Before this century, ice cores showed they had occurred only six times in the past 2,000 years, Martin Stendel, a senior researcher at the Danish Meteorological Institute, wrote in an email message.

But above-freezing temperatures have now occurred at Summit in 2012, 2019 and this year — three times in fewer than 10 years.

The Greenland ice sheet, which is up to two miles thick and covers about 650,000 square miles, has been losing more ice and contributing more to sea-level rise in recent decades as the Earth has warmed from human-caused emissions of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases.

The surface of the ice sheet gains mass every year, because accumulation of snowfall is greater than surface melting. But overall, the sheet loses more ice through melting where it meets the ocean, and through the breaking-off of icebergs. On average over the past two decades, Greenland has lost more than 300 billion tons of ice each year.

This year will likely be an average one for surface accumulation, said Dr. Stendel, who is also coordinator of Polar Portal, a website that disseminates the results of Danish Arctic research. Heavy snowfall early in the year suggested it might be an above-average year for accumulation, but two periods of warming in July and another in early August changed that by causing widespread surface melting.


merlin_158894094_e8629c42-2c7a-4621-90fd-550343edc910-articleLarge.jpg

Meltwater carved a canal into the Greenland ice sheet near the Sermeq Avangnardleq glacier in 2019.Credit...Sean Gallup/Getty Images

The warming that accompanied the rain last Saturday also caused melting over more than 50 percent of the ice sheet surface.

Dr. Mote said that these melting episodes were each “one-off” events. “But these events seem to be happening more and more frequently,” he said. “And that tells the story that we are seeing real evidence of climate change in Greenland.”

Last Saturday marked the first time since satellite monitoring began in 1979 that melting has occurred over more than half of the surface in mid-August, Dr. Mote said. Normally peak melting occurs in mid-July, as it did in 2012, when there was a huge melting event.

“By the time you get to the middle of August, you’re usually seeing a rapid retreat of melt activity and a decline of temperature,” he said.

Dr. Tedesco said the rain at Summit would not contribute directly to sea-level rise, because the water drains into the ice rather than to the ocean. “But if this is happening at Summit, the effect at lower elevations will be more violent,” he said. “And that ice is actually going to the ocean.”

Dr. Tedesco described the rain at Summit as “worrisome,” because it shows that even a little warming can have an effect in the region.

“Half a degree of warming can really change the state of the Arctic because you can go from frozen to liquid,” he said. “This is exactly what we’re seeing.”

The rain and melting last Saturday occurred when the jet stream, rather than flowing in its normal pattern from west to east, dipped southward over northeastern Canada. That brought low-pressure air over warmer waters, where it picked up heat and moisture.

The jet stream then looped back northward, bringing that air to southwestern Greenland from where it swept over the ice sheet. The warm air and even the moisture-laden clouds themselves caused temperatures to rise at Summit and the precipitation to fall as rain rather than snow, Dr. Mote said.

Some scientists have linked jet stream disruptions such as this, often referred to as “waviness,” to climate change in the Arctic, although that is still a subject of debate. But they are occurring, and are also creating so-called blocking patterns that can stall high-pressure air over a region.

That’s what occurred in the earlier melting episodes this summer. High-pressure air that stalled over the ice sheet led to clear skies that allowed more sunlight to reach the surface, melting more snow.
 

It Rained at the Summit of Greenland. That’s Never Happened Before.​

The showers are another troubling sign of a changing Arctic, which is warming faster than any other region on Earth.

It Rained at the Summit of Greenland. That’s Never Happened Before.

The Summit research station, which sits two miles above sea level on the Greenland ice sheet, in 2015.

The Summit research station, which sits two miles above sea level on the Greenland ice sheet, in 2015. Credit...Josh Haner/The New York Times

Something extraordinary happened last Saturday at the frigid high point of the Greenland ice sheet, two miles in the sky and more than 500 miles above the Arctic Circle: It rained for the first time.

The rain at a research station — not just a few drops or a drizzle but a stream for several hours, as temperatures rose slightly above freezing — is yet another troubling sign of a changing Arctic, which is warming faster than any other region on the planet.

“It’s incredible, because it does write a new chapter in the book of Greenland,” said Marco Tedesco, a researcher at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University. “This is really new.”

At the station, which is called Summit and is occupied year-round under the auspices of the National Science Foundation, there is no record of rain since observations began in the 1980s. And computer simulations show no evidence going back even further, said Thomas Mote, a climate scientist at the University of Georgia.

Above-freezing conditions at Summit are nearly as rare. Before this century, ice cores showed they had occurred only six times in the past 2,000 years, Martin Stendel, a senior researcher at the Danish Meteorological Institute, wrote in an email message.

But above-freezing temperatures have now occurred at Summit in 2012, 2019 and this year — three times in fewer than 10 years.

The Greenland ice sheet, which is up to two miles thick and covers about 650,000 square miles, has been losing more ice and contributing more to sea-level rise in recent decades as the Earth has warmed from human-caused emissions of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases.

The surface of the ice sheet gains mass every year, because accumulation of snowfall is greater than surface melting. But overall, the sheet loses more ice through melting where it meets the ocean, and through the breaking-off of icebergs. On average over the past two decades, Greenland has lost more than 300 billion tons of ice each year.

This year will likely be an average one for surface accumulation, said Dr. Stendel, who is also coordinator of Polar Portal, a website that disseminates the results of Danish Arctic research. Heavy snowfall early in the year suggested it might be an above-average year for accumulation, but two periods of warming in July and another in early August changed that by causing widespread surface melting.


merlin_158894094_e8629c42-2c7a-4621-90fd-550343edc910-articleLarge.jpg

Meltwater carved a canal into the Greenland ice sheet near the Sermeq Avangnardleq glacier in 2019.Credit...Sean Gallup/Getty Images

The warming that accompanied the rain last Saturday also caused melting over more than 50 percent of the ice sheet surface.

Dr. Mote said that these melting episodes were each “one-off” events. “But these events seem to be happening more and more frequently,” he said. “And that tells the story that we are seeing real evidence of climate change in Greenland.”

Last Saturday marked the first time since satellite monitoring began in 1979 that melting has occurred over more than half of the surface in mid-August, Dr. Mote said. Normally peak melting occurs in mid-July, as it did in 2012, when there was a huge melting event.

“By the time you get to the middle of August, you’re usually seeing a rapid retreat of melt activity and a decline of temperature,” he said.

Dr. Tedesco said the rain at Summit would not contribute directly to sea-level rise, because the water drains into the ice rather than to the ocean. “But if this is happening at Summit, the effect at lower elevations will be more violent,” he said. “And that ice is actually going to the ocean.”

Dr. Tedesco described the rain at Summit as “worrisome,” because it shows that even a little warming can have an effect in the region.

“Half a degree of warming can really change the state of the Arctic because you can go from frozen to liquid,” he said. “This is exactly what we’re seeing.”

The rain and melting last Saturday occurred when the jet stream, rather than flowing in its normal pattern from west to east, dipped southward over northeastern Canada. That brought low-pressure air over warmer waters, where it picked up heat and moisture.

The jet stream then looped back northward, bringing that air to southwestern Greenland from where it swept over the ice sheet. The warm air and even the moisture-laden clouds themselves caused temperatures to rise at Summit and the precipitation to fall as rain rather than snow, Dr. Mote said.

Some scientists have linked jet stream disruptions such as this, often referred to as “waviness,” to climate change in the Arctic, although that is still a subject of debate. But they are occurring, and are also creating so-called blocking patterns that can stall high-pressure air over a region.

That’s what occurred in the earlier melting episodes this summer. High-pressure air that stalled over the ice sheet led to clear skies that allowed more sunlight to reach the surface, melting more snow.
read that yesterday - scary
 

  • Two children steered their vehicle off a freeway after their dad was fatally shot while driving.
  • The boys, 6 and 8, steered the SUV to a nearby parking lot to get help, according to reports.
  • Police said the boys did not suffer injuries, but their father died on the scene.

A spokesperson for the Houston Police Department, John Cannon, told CNN the incident happened around 11 p.m. Police said the father, 29, was driving in an SUV with his sons on Interstate 10 in Houston, Texas, when a bullet struck him.
 
A kinder, gentler, and more discriminating T. rex???

T. Rex Was Fearsome but May Have Been a Picky Eater​

The jaw of the Tyrannosaurus Rex had sensitive nerves that may have allowed it to differentiate between parts of its prey, a new study found.

1629746918430.webp

The T. Rex likely did not eat blindly, according to a study. It had keen senses that may have allowed it to recognize different parts of its prey. Credit...Sven Kaestner/Associated Press

Was the Tyrannosaurus Rex a foodie?

The dinosaur, fixed in the popular imagination as a ruthless predator that chomped on whatever unfortunate creature crossed its path, actually had a jaw bristling with nerve endings that made it a more judicious eater than previously known, according to paleontologists in Japan who published their findings in Historical Biology on Monday.

While it might not have been a truly discerning gastronome, the T. Rex had a sophisticated mandible comparable to the jaws of modern-day crocodiles and tactile-foraging birds, like ducks, according to the scientists from the Institute of Dinosaur Research at Fukui Prefectural University, who conducted the study.

In other words, T. Rex very likely did not eat blindly, according to the study. It had keen senses that might have allowed it to recognize different parts of its prey and to chew on them differently depending on what it was munching on.

“The jaws of Tyrannosaurus were powerful enough to crush bones,” Soichiro Kawabe, one of the authors of the study and a paleontologist at the institute, said in an email. “However, in situations where food was plentiful, they may have used their sensitive snouts to eat the more nutritious parts of their prey selectively. The diet of Tyrannosaurus may not have been as crude as we imagine.”

The study does not say how discriminating the T. Rex was or whether it could recognize the difference between bone and flesh.

“These speculations are pretty imaginary and not within the scope of what we can scientifically derive from our research results,” Dr. Kawabe said.

The significance of the study is that it reveals the complex development of nerves within the mandible of the Tyrannosaurus, he said.

“Based on the morphology of the mandibular nerve of Tyrannosaurus, we were able to clarify that the jaw tip of Tyrannosaurus was most likely a pretty capable sensor,” Dr. Kawabe said.

Dr. Kawabe and another scientist, Soki Hattori, an assistant professor at the institute, used computed tomography, or CT scanning, to analyze and reconstruct the canal structure of the jawbone through which nerves and blood vessels would have passed. They studied the fossil of a T. Rex found in the Hell Creek Formation in Montana.


merlin_177186045_660a8ff1-efbc-41f8-91e4-c51640102d83-articleLarge.jpg

The study used CT scanning to analyze the canal structure of the jawbone.Credit...Spencer Platt/Getty Images

The fossil was well preserved, allowing the researchers to study the canal structure, he said.

The sensitive jaw tips also give clues to how the Tyrannosaurus may have parented.

Crocodiles have sensitive snouts, which help them detect prey in water but also give them such a finely tuned sense of touch that they can carry their young in their mouths without crushing them with their powerful jaws.

“Tyrannosaurus may have done the same,” Dr. Kawabe said.

The study underscores “the sensitive side of the T. Rex,” said Jack Tseng, a paleontologist at the University of California, Berkeley, who read the report.

“We’ve been really obsessed with the forces that the T. Rex could possess rather than its finesse,” he said. “This gives us a sense of its finesse.”

The report gives “another dimension” to a creature that the general public has obsessed over but rarely perceived as anything more than a monster, said Dr. Tseng, who has analyzed the bite of teenage Tyrannosaurus.

“They were not blockheads that were chomping down on anything they saw moving,” he said.

Still, Dr. Tseng said the study’s findings underscore the need for more fossil evidence to show how the dinosaur’s sensitive mandible was used. Analyzing coprolites, or fossilized feces, “could be another way to understand how sensitive their palate was,” he said.

The authors of the report acknowledged that their findings are limited: They did not analyze the full mandible area of the dinosaur or use other dinosaur fossils for comparison.

“Ideally, this study can be continued with a variety of additional types of dinosaurs, to see if Tyrannosaurus was truly exceptional, or just a run-of-the-mill carnivorous dinosaur,” said Thomas R. Holtz, a paleontologist at the University of Maryland who read the study. “But even this smaller scale study helps us better understand dinosaurs as living, feeling animals.”
 
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