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

I'm betting on Jimmy Hoffa's ashes in there...

A Civil War-Era Time Capsule, Hiding Beneath Lee Since 1887. Maybe.​

Virginia historians are confident they’ve located a time capsule beneath a former monument to the Confederate general Robert E. Lee. They are less confident about how to get it out of a 1,500-pound granite rock.

A stone from the pedestal on which a statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee once stood in Richmond, Va., is believed to contain a time capsule from 1887.

A stone from the pedestal on which a statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee once stood in Richmond, Va., is believed to contain a time capsule from 1887. Credit...Jay Paul/Reuters

For about four years, there has been talk in Richmond, Va., that a time capsule from 1887 — rumored to contain a rare photo of Abraham Lincoln in his coffin — was hidden beneath a towering statue of Robert E. Lee.

After a failed attempt to find the time capsule in September, when the statue was taken down, historians are almost certain they discovered it on Friday. What they are less certain about is how to recover the artifact from the 1,500-pound block of granite it is nestled in.

Julie Langan, director of the Virginia Department of Historic Resources, said that the agency’s conservation lab was used to dealing with tiny pieces of pottery or bone or glass, but that it had never had to handle a rock like this.

“It wasn’t difficult to get it to the building and to get it into the conservation lab and set it down, but there it sits,” Ms. Langan said. “And it’s not like you can pick it up and move it easily, so that’s the dilemma.”

Conservators can’t exactly take a jackhammer or sledgehammer to the slab, either. If they do, they could damage the 134-year-old time capsule that may or may not be embedded inside or its contents, an estimated 60 objects, mostly related to the Confederate States of America, according to historical records.

Ann Morton, owner and principal of Morton Archaeological Research Services in Macedon, N.Y., said that even an enormous granite rock like the one in Richmond should have some sort of access mechanism, because the people who created it had to have a way to place it in the rock.

She added that time capsules from the Civil War era were relatively common, because it was a period of major social and political upheaval. “Time capsules were part of creating memory and making that memory permanent by putting something important in the ground and hoping that future generations would look at that material,” Dr. Morton said.

Time capsules have reportedly been found in Confederate statues in Louisiana, Missouri, South Carolina and Texas. In July 2020, the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources opened a time capsule that had been buried in a Confederate monument since 1894.

The journalist and author Dale M. Brumfield, writing in Richmond magazine in December 2017, described finding references to the Richmond time capsule in historical records, including suggestions that it could contain a photo of Lincoln in his coffin.

Believing the capsule was embedded in the northeast corner of the pedestal, state officials gathered reporters and preservationists one day in September. After about 12 hours, the search was called off, the mystery of the time capsule stubbornly intact.

That changed on Friday, when a crew was disassembling the 40-foot-tall plinth the statue had rested on. They chiseled down to the granite slab, which has a lead rectangle on one side. It was discovered at a height of about 20 feet and appeared to be largely undamaged, according to the office of Gov. Ralph S. Northam.

In a small procession down Monument Avenue, a forklift carried the granite slab to the conservation lab.

Ms. Langan said all indications suggested that the lead rectangle was a part of a lead box housing the time capsule, though it was too early to say with 100 percent certainty. She said the lead box could house the time capsule, which is described in the historical records as a copper box.

“You can tap on the lead face plate, so to speak, and you can tell that there is a hollow void beneath it,” Ms. Langan said.

Once the granite slab is chipped down by at least half, it will be put through an X-ray machine to determine the orientation of the box and where its lid is, Ms. Langan said. “It’s going to be a delicate process to reach it and then to open it without doing any damage to it,” she said.

But first, they must wrestle with the granite.
they're gonna need Geraldo Rivera for this one..............
 
I always thought this was a fictional story & not ased on anything other then a writer's imagination...
:oops:


The boy whose case inspired the portrayal of a demon-possessed child in the 1973 horror movie classic The Exorcist has been named.

The US magazine the Skeptical Inquirer named the then 14-year-old boy, previously known as Roland Doe, who underwent exorcisms in Cottage City, Maryland, and St Louis, Missouri, in 1949.

Ronald Edwin Hunkeler died last year, a month before his 86th birthday, after suffering a stroke at home in Marriottsville, Maryland.

In adult life, Hunkeler was a Nasa engineer whose work contributed to the Apollo space missions of the 1960s and who patented a technology that helped space shuttle panels withstand extreme heat.

One of his companions, a 29-year-old woman who asked not to be named, told the New York Post that Hunkeler was always on edge about his Nasa colleagues discovering that he was the inspiration for The Exorcist.

“On Halloween, we always left the house because he figured someone would come to his residence and know where he lived and never let him have peace,” she said. “He had a terrible life from worry, worry, worry,” she added.

Hunkeler eventually retired from Nasa in 2001 after working at the agency for nearly 40 years.

William Peter Blatty, who wrote the 1971 novel and the film based on the same name, first heard about Hunkeler’s apparent demonic possession when he was a senior at Georgetown University in Washington DC.

His professor, Eugene Gallager, who was also a priest at Georgetown, the oldest Catholic and Jesuit university founded in the US, told Blatty about Hunkeler’s reported possessions and subsequent exorcisms.

Born in 1935 and raised by a middle-class family in Cottage City, Hunkeler began experiencing paranormal activities at 14 when he reported hearing knocking and scratching sounds from behind his bedroom walls.

The Rev Luther Schulze, Hunkeler’s family minister, eventually wrote to the Parapsychology Laboratory at Duke University, in North Carolina, in March 1949 and explained how “chairs moved with [Hunkeler] and one threw him out [of it.] His bed shook whenever he was in it.”

Schulze also explained how the family’s floors were “scarred from the sliding of heavy furniture” and how “a picture of Christ on the wall shook” whenever Hunkeler was nearby.

The family eventually sought the help of William Bowdern, a Jesuit who conducted more than 20 exorcism rituals on Hunkeler in the span of three months. Writing in his diary on 10 March 1949, Bowdern noted how Hunkeler entered a trance-like state as 14 witnesses watched during one of his exorcisms.

There was a “scratching which beat out a rhythm of marching soldiers. Second class relic of St Margaret Mary was thrown on the floor. The safety pin was opened but no human hand had touched the relic. R started up in fright when the relic was thrown down,” Bowdern wrote.

Hunkeler was then relocated to St Louis to be treated for demonic possession. “It seems that whatever force was writing the words was in favor of making the trip to St Louis,” Bowdern wrote.

“On one evening the word ‘Louis’ was written on the boy’s ribs in deep red [scratches.] Next, when there was some question of the time of departure, the word ‘Saturday’ was written plainly on the boy’s hip. As to the length of time the mother and the boy should stay in St Louis, another message was printed on the boy’s chest, ‘3 ½ weeks’. The printing always appeared without any motion on the part of the boy’s hands.”

Hunkeler was admitted to the Alexian Brothers Hospital in St Louis on 21 March 1949. Nearly a month later, Hunkeler “broke into a violent tantrum of screaming, cursing, and voicing of Latin phrases” as Jesuit priests allegedly cast the demon out of his body.

He “has been freed by a Catholic priest of possession by the devil, Catholic sources reported yesterday”, wrote Washington Post reporter Bill Brinkley in an article on 20 August 1949.

Shortly before his death, a Catholic priest showed up at Hunkeler’s home unexpectedly to perform last rites, said his companion.

“I have no idea how the Father knew to come but he got Ron to heaven. Ron’s in heaven and he’s with God now,” she told the New York Post.
 
ET - Phone that satellite!!!

NASA records eerie ‘sounds’ on Jupiter’s moon: ‘It’s the real deal’​

pressherald.com/2021/12/20/nasa-records-eerie-sounds-on-jupiters-moon-its-the-real-deal/

By Mark PriceDecember 20, 2021

NASA has recorded eerie “sounds” coming from one of Jupiter’s moons, and the audio is like something straight out of a 1950s science fiction movie.

This includes chirping, high-pitched whistling and hums. The noise also appears to speed up and build to a crescendo before mysteriously dropping.

“It’s not scifi. It’s the real deal,” NASA officials posted on Facebook.

The radio waves were recorded as NASA’s Juno mission “recently flew through the magnetic field of Ganymede, one of the gas giant’s many moons.”

Juno Principal Investigator Scott Bolton said the audio track was created when Juno’s instruments tuned “in to electric and magnetic radio waves produced in Jupiter’s magnetosphere,” according to a news release. The frequency was then “shifted into the audio range,” so we could “hear” Ganymede, scientists said.

“This soundtrack is just wild enough to make you feel as if you were riding along as Juno sails past Ganymede for the first time in more than two decades,” Bolton said in the release.

“If you listen closely, you can hear the abrupt change to higher frequencies around the midpoint of the recording, which represents entry into a different region in Ganymede’s magnetosphere.”

The radio wave emissions, collected June 7, are considered one of the mission’s highlights, NASA said. The spacecraft “was within 645 miles (1,038 kilometers) of the moon’s surface and traveling at a relative velocity of 41,600 mph (67,000 kph).”

Analysis of the recording is ongoing, and some NASA scientists suspect the frequency changes might be due to the recorder “passing from the nightside to the dayside of Ganymede.”

NASA’s Facebook post announcing the recording has racked up 19,000 reactions and more than 800 comments, including some people who quoted the Bible (Isaiah 40:26). Meanwhile, the actual audio was posted on YouTube and has gotten more than 250,000 listens since Dec. 16.

“Listen. Sounds like a Beatles album,” Rick Tosches wrote on Facebook, referencing the White Album track “Revolution 9.”

“Once again, Star Trek was right!” Michelle Church Guzinski posted.

“I could be completely wrong but the sound seems to have a certain mathematical sequence to it. I have a Math degree,” Hank Mclaughlin wrote.
 

Jaclyn Peiser, (c) 2021, The Washington Post
Mon, December 20, 2021, 6:47 AM

When the police officer entered a room at a southern California care facility last month, he found a panicked nurse performing chest compressions on a patient, body-camera footage shows. The patient was in cardiac arrest, and the staff did not have the proper equipment to help, according to a police report.

But just outside the entrance of the building stood paramedics equipped with possible lifesaving tools. They had refused to cross the threshold, claiming it was against state covid rules, according to the report.

So the officer jumped into action, helping the staff push the bed, which was not on wheels, through the building and out the front door to the first responders from the Rialto Fire Department.

The patient, who has not been identified by authorities, was taken to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead.


===============

I mean really? WTF??!?!??!!!??
:mad:
 
What a DI-K HEAD HE IS

“Given the widespread and often misleading press reports about a recent bootleg case involving a woman in Germany, the following provides clarification to set the record straight.

Germany is one of several countries where sales of unauthorized and usually poor-quality illegal bootleg CDs are rife, which harms both the industry and purchasers of inferior product. Over a period of more than 10 years the German lawyers appointed by Eric Clapton, and a significant number of other well-known artists and record companies, have successfully pursued thousands of bootleg cases under routine copyright procedures.

It is not the intention to target individuals selling isolated CDs from their own collection, but rather the active bootleggers manufacturing unauthorised copies for sale. In the case of an individual selling unauthorised items from a personal collection, if following receipt of a “cease and desist” letter the offending items are withdrawn, any costs would be minimal, or might be waived.

Eric Clapton’s lawyers and management team (rather than Eric personally) identifies if an item offered for sale is illegal, and a declaration confirming that is signed, but thereafter Eric Clapton is not involved in any individual cases, and 95% of the cases are resolved before going to Court.

This case could have been disposed of quickly at minimal cost, but unfortunately in response to the German lawyers’ first standard letter, the individual’s reply included the line (translation): “feel free to file a lawsuit if you insist on the demands”. This triggered the next step in the standard legal procedures, and the Court then made the initial injunction order.

If the individual had complied with the initial letter the costs would have been minimal. Had she explained at the outset the full facts in a simple phone call or letter to the lawyers, any claim might, have been waived, and costs avoided.

However, the individual appointed a lawyer who appealed the injunction decision. The Judge encouraged the individual to withdraw the appeal to save costs, but she proceeded. The appeal failed and she was ordered to pay the costs of the Court and all of the parties.

However, when the full facts of this particular case came to light and it was clear the individual is not the type of person Eric Clapton, or his record company, wish to target, Eric Clapton decided not to take any further action and does not intend to collect the costs awarded to him by the Court. Also, he hopes the individual will not herself incur any further costs.

Eric Clapton Management
22nd December 2021”
 
Awwwww, ain't too proud to beg...

In milestone deal, first Proud Boy pleads guilty in Capitol riot​

pressherald.com/2021/12/22/first-member-of-proud-boy-group-pleads-guilty-in-capitol-riot-conspiracy/

MICHAEL KUNZELMAN and LINDSAY WHITEHURST December 22, 2021

A New York man pleaded guilty Wednesday to storming the U.S. Capitol with fellow members of the far-right Proud Boys, a milestone in the Justice Department’s prosecution of extremists who joined the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Matthew Greene is the first Proud Boys member to publicly plead guilty to conspiring with other members to stop Congress from certifying the Electoral College vote. He will also cooperate with authorities under the terms of his plea agreement.

Greene was arrested in April after a grand jury indicted him in the same case as two other alleged Proud Boys, Dominic Pezzola and William Pepe. They have pleaded not guilty.


A mob loyal to President Donald Trump swarms the Capitol on Jan. 6 in Washington. John Minchillo/Associated Press

Greene traveled from Syracuse, New York, to Washington, D.C., with Pezzola and other Proud Boys on Jan. 5. Prosecutors allege Greene advanced past toppled police barricades and was at the front of a mob when police began using pepper spray and other crowd-control measures.. But prosecutors have said they don’t have any evidence that Greene entered the Capitol building that day.

“After the riot, (Greene) engaged in conversations (on) encrypted messaging platforms admitting to his role in the riot, encouraging others not to give up in a fight to take back their country, and comparing the situation as it existed in the weeks following January 6 to a fourth-generation war,” prosecutors wrote in a June court filing.

More than three dozen people charged in the Capitol siege have been identified by federal authorities as Proud Boys leaders, members or associates, including at least 16 defendants charged with conspiracy. In a key case, four group leaders were charged in March with conspiring to impede Congress’ certification of President Biden’s electoral victory.

Greene is expected to face a maximum of just over four years in prison at a sentencing set for March, and pay a fine of $15,000 to $150,000, along with about $2,000 in restitution. He pleaded guilty to federal charges of conspiracy and obstruction of an official proceeding.

Other extremist group members have been charged with conspiring to carry out a coordinated attack on the Capitol, including more than 20 people linked to the anti-government Oath Keepers.

Graydon Young, 55, of Englewood, Florida, was the first defendant to plead guilty in the Justice Department’s major conspiracy case against Oath Keepers members. At least four others linked to the Oath Keepers also have pleaded guilty to riot-related charges.

Proud Boys members describe themselves as a politically incorrect men’s club for “Western chauvinists.” Its members frequently have engaged in street fights with antifascist activists at rallies and protests. Vice Media co-founder Gavin McInnes, who founded the Proud Boys in 2016, sued the Southern Poverty Law Center for labeling it as a hate group.

Police arrested the Proud Boys’ top leader, Enrique Tarrio, in Washington two days before the Capitol riot and charged him with vandalizing a Black Lives Matter banner at a historic Black church during a protest in December 2020. Tarrio, who is serving his jail sentence for that case in the District of Columbia, hasn’t been charged in connection with the Capitol siege.

 
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It's about time...

Tesla agrees to stop letting drivers play video games in moving cars.​


Tesla has agreed to modify software in its cars to prevent drivers and passengers from playing video games on the dashboard screens while vehicle are in motion, a federal safety regulator said on Thursday.

The agreement came a day after the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration opened a formal investigation of the game feature, which is known as Passenger Play. The investigation was announced after The New York Times reported this month on the potential safety risks the games posed.

“Following the opening of a preliminary evaluation of Tesla’s ‘Passenger Play,’ Tesla informed the agency that it is changing the functionality of this feature,” the safety agency said in a statement. “In a new software update, ‘Passenger Play’ will now be locked and unusable when the vehicle is in motion.”

Safety experts had criticized Tesla for allowing the games to be accessible while cars were in motion. “There is no argument that can be made that this isn’t dangerous,” said Jason Levine, the executive director of the Center for Auto Safety, a consumer group.

Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.

The federal safety agency is examining other potential safety issues with Teslas. In August, it opened a formal investigation into Tesla’s Autopilot system, which can accelerate and brake a car on its own, after cars using the feature crashed into parked fire trucks, police cars and other emergency vehicles at least 11 times. Those accidents resulted in one death and several serious injuries.

In addition, the safety agency is also reviewing more than two dozen other accidents involving Teslas operating on Autopilot. The agency has said eight of those crashes resulted in a total of 10 deaths since the first occurred in 2016.

While the video game feature is not directly linked to the Autopilot issues, the safety agency on Wednesday suggested it was worried that Tesla drivers could play games while using Autopilot in the mistaken belief that the car was driving itself and that they need not pay attention to the road.

The company instructs drivers to keep their hands on the wheel and pay attention to the road while using Autopilot. But it does little to monitor drivers, and there is mounting evidence that some drivers routinely ignore its advice and warnings.

Tesla has been adding video games to its cars for several years. Most can be played only when the car is in park. But this summer it remotely updated the software of its cars to make available three games that could be played on the large touch screens mounted in the center of Teslas. The games were solitaire; a jet fighter game, Sky Force Reloaded; and a conquest strategy game, the Battle of Polytopia: Moonrise.

A warning that appeared before the solitaire game started indicated Tesla expected it to be played while the car is moving: “Solitaire is a game for everyone, but playing while the car is in motion is only for passengers.” Players were asked to confirm that they were not driving the car, but nothing prevented drivers from clicking through that screen and playing the games.

“The Vehicle Safety Act prohibits manufacturers from selling vehicles with defects posing unreasonable risks to safety, including technologies that distract drivers from driving safely,” the safety agency said.

The investigation the safety agency opened on Wednesday covers about 580,000 cars and sport utility vehicles from model years 2017 through 2022.
 
Well we almost made it through 2021 without any Shark Fatalities...

Man Killed in Apparent Shark Attack Off California, the Authorities Say​

The body of a man who had been on a boogie board was found off the coast of Morro Bay. The death was believed to be the only fatal shark encounter of the year in the United States.

A man who had been on a boogie board off the coast of central California died after he was apparently attacked by a shark near Morro Bay, the authorities said on Friday.

The man, who the authorities did not identify, was found floating and unresponsive off Morro Strand State Beach at about 10:40 a.m. and was pronounced dead at the scene, according to a statement from California State Parks.

If confirmed, the attack would be the first fatal shark attack in the United States in 2021, according to an incident log kept by the Global Shark Attack File, which tracks data on interactions between humans and sharks. The log indicates there have been eight fatal attacks this year worldwide, including three in Australia.

The local authorities have posted shark warning signs within a mile radius of the scene of the attack, as is standard procedure, Adeline Yee, a parks spokeswoman, said in an email late on Friday. Beachgoers are advised to avoid going into the water in that area, near Morro Rock, the landmark volcanic rock that towers over the water, for the next three days, she added.

The exact cause of death was not immediately known and the San Luis Obispo County Coroner’s Office was investigating, the California Parks statement said.

Fatal shark attacks on humans are extremely rare. There were three fatal shark attacks in U.S. waters in 2020: off Bailey Island, Maine; Maui, Hawaii; and near Santa Cruz, Calif. From 2011 to 2020, the United States had just seven fatal shark attacks and 448 nonfatal attacks.

There were 57 unprovoked shark attacks worldwide in 2020 and 39 provoked attacks, resulting in 13 fatalities, according to the International Shark Attack File, another organization that tracks shark data, which is based at the Florida Museum of Natural History at the University of Florida.

Ten of the fatalities were deemed unprovoked, which is above the annual global average of four such fatalities, according to the Florida organization. Annual fluctuations in interactions between sharks and humans are common and long-term trends show a decrease in fatalities, the museum said.

In 2020, surfers and participants in other board sports accounted for 61 percent of shark attacks, the Florida-based shark group stated in its annual report.

“This group spends a large amount of time in the surf zone, an area commonly frequented by sharks, and may unintentionally attract sharks by splashing, paddling and ‘wiping out,’” the report stated.

Swimmers and waders accounted for 26 percent of attacks, while the remaining bites were divided among snorkelers, free divers, body surfers and scuba divers.

The risk of being bitten by a shark remains minuscule, the Florida group said in its report.

“The total number of unprovoked shark bites worldwide is extremely low, given the number of people participating in aquatic recreation each year,” the report stated.

“Fatality rates have been declining for decades, reflecting advances in beach safety, medical treatment and public awareness,” the report continued. “This underscores the importance of global efforts to improve ocean rescue, medical care and shark education.”
 
246 Million Years Ago, they were going to need a bigger boat. Nowadays seems that they're going to need a bigger chopper...

This Sea Lizard Had a Grand Piano-Size Head and a Big Appetite​

Scientists have described a giant new species of ichthyosaur that evolved its 55-foot-long body size only a few million years after the lizards returned to the seas.

About 246 million years ago, a sea lizard with a skull the size of a grand piano died in the ancient ocean that is now Nevada. It was an ichthyosaur, and its body was most likely the size of a modern sperm whale.

Although ichthyosaurs and whales are separated by a few hundred million years, they have a lot in common. Both descend from lineages of animals that returned to the sea after stints on land. Both evolved giant bodies that made them the largest creatures in the seas when they lived. Both birthed live young.

But it took whales 45 million years of living in the ocean to evolve their most giant body sizes. This new species of giant ichthyosaur appeared only three million years after the first ichthyosaurs took to the seas, suggesting the sea lizards evolved big bodies at a breakneck speed. This early giant lived before small dinosaurs were common on land; the terrestrial world would not see a giant this size for about 40 million more years, with the emergence of sauropods in the Jurassic.

A group of scientists describe the new ichthyosaur, which they named Cymbospondylus youngorum, and reconstructed its food webs in a paper published on Thursday in the journal Science.

“It is definitely a surprise,” said Benjamin C. Moon, an ichthyosaurus researcher at the University of Bristol in England who was not involved with the research. “It’s not a long time to go from pretty much just in the water to suddenly dominating in such massive sizes.”

The ichthyosaur was first discovered in 1998 in Fossil Hill, Nev. But excavations did not begin until 2011 because the bones rested in steep mountains, making it difficult to transport equipment to the site, said Lars Schmitz, a paleontologist at Scripps College in California and an author of the paper. “It’s very strenuous,” Dr. Schmitz said. “It was a huge effort to get it out of the field.”

To Dr. Schmitz, the fossil’s large size was humbling, even half-buried — the reptile’s humerus dwarfed his rock hammer. “It makes you feel very small,” he said.

An artist’s reconstruction of Cymbospondylus youngorum in the Triassic ocean, present-day Nevada.

An artist’s reconstruction of Cymbospondylus youngorum in the Triassic ocean, present-day Nevada. Credit...Stephanie Abramowicz/Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County

In 2015, the researchers finished excavating all that remained of the ichthyosaur — its skull, shoulder and arm bones — and sent the fossil to be prepared at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. “It was mind-blowing seeing it,” said Jorge Velez-Juarbe, an associate curator of marine mammals at the museum and another author of the paper.

Based on the size of its skull, the authors estimate the ichthyosaur very likely grew as long as 55 feet. Dr. Moon said this might be a slight overestimate and suggested a more conservative 45 to 50 feet. “The same ballpark of modern day whales,” they said. “There was nothing else as big as these things around.”

The ichthyosaur swam in the seas of the Triassic Era shortly after the most severe mass extinction in Earth’s history, which killed off 81 percent of marine life. The researchers had one question: “How did it become so big?” Dr. Schmitz said.

In modern oceans, many giant whales are filter feeders, straining krill and other plankton through the plates of their mouths. But this abundance of modern plankton, which enabled whales to become so large, did not exist when the ichthyosaurs lived, which might suggest those ancient oceans did not have enough energy to support such a large predator.

Eva Maria Griebeler, an evolutionary ecologist at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz in Germany and an author of the paper, examined fossils gathered from the Nevada site to reconstruct the food webs of the ichthyosaur’s ancient seas. She and other researchers consulted teeth and stomach content, as well as size differences between food web members, to understand who ate whom, Dr. Griebeler said. The ichthyosaur’s bluntly pointed teeth suggest it fed on fish and squid, and perhaps even smaller marine reptiles.

“Count the number and size of the predators at the top, and the number and sizes of their prey and see whether these numbers add up,” Dr. Moon said, explaining the model.

Removing the excavated skull fossil required helicopter support.

Removing the excavated skull fossil required helicopter support. Credit...Martin Sander

Dr. Griebeler’s model found that the abundance of ammonites alone provided enough energy to support the giants. They did not feed directly on the ammonites, but they ate other creatures that crushed the shelled cephalopods: a shorter, less diverse food web that still offered the same energy input as modern oceans. “It’s this astonishing thing,” Dr. Griebeler said. “This food web has a completely different structure than extant ones.”

Lene Liebe Delsett, a paleontologist at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History who was not involved with the research, praised the study’s food web model as a “first step” toward understanding the Triassic ocean environment. “There’s still so much we don’t know about these early ecosystems,” she said.

And how did ichthyosaurs manage to balloon in a paltry three million years when whales took 45 million years? Dr. Velez-Juarbe said he could not think of any other marine vertebrates that evolved large body sizes as quickly as the ichthyosaurs did. But the authors offer a number of possible explanations, including that the reptiles’ large eyes and endothermy may have made them better hunters. Or perhaps the mass extinction offered life an opportunity to diversify, reducing the number of competing predators.

Dr. Delsett, who wrote a perspective in Science accompanying the new paper with Nick Pyenson, also a paleontologist at the Smithsonian, believes research on extinct marine giants can offer insight into the conservation of whales.

“They lived through one mass extinction and survived; they lived through climate change,” Dr. Delsett said of the ichthyosaurs. “If you can understand marine evolution, it is easier to take better care of the oceans today.”
 
Why shoot the tiger?? Should have shot the idiot and get him out of the gene pool...

Tiger Bites Arm of Man Reaching Into Enclosure at Florida Zoo, Officials Say​

The man, who worked for a cleaning service, had entered a restricted area at the Naples Zoo, the authorities said. The tiger was shot and killed.

A man who worked for a cleaning service at the Naples Zoo in Florida was seriously injured on Wednesday when a tiger bit his arm after he went into a restricted area and reached into the animal’s enclosure, the authorities said.

The first sheriff’s deputy to arrive at the zoo kicked the tiger enclosure and tried to get the animal to release the man’s arm from its mouth but was “forced to shoot” the Malayan tiger, the Collier County Sheriff’s Office said.

The zoo said that the 8-year-old tiger, named Eko, which it had acquired in December 2019, had died.

The man, who is in his 20s, was taken to a hospital by Collier County emergency medical services, the sheriff’s office said.

A spokesman for Lee Memorial Hospital in Fort Myers, Fla., confirmed on Wednesday that it was treating a patient who had been bitten by a tiger but said he could not release any further information.

The sheriff’s office said the man, who worked for a cleaning service hired by the zoo, had entered an “unauthorized area” near a tiger enclosure after the zoo had closed for the day. The cleaning company is responsible for cleaning restrooms and the gift shop, not animal enclosures, the sheriff’s office said.

“Preliminary information indicates that the man was either petting or feeding the animal, both of which are unauthorized and dangerous activities,” the sheriff’s office said.

Citing “initial reports,” the office said that the tiger had grabbed the man’s arm and pulled it into the enclosure after the man crossed over a fenced barrier and put his arm through the fencing around the enclosure.

Deputies were called to the zoo at 6:26 p.m., the office said. The zoo declined to comment beyond sharing the statement from the sheriff’s office.

In February 2020, the Naples Zoo announced that it had acquired Eko from the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle. The zoo said in the announcement that it had funded efforts to save wild tigers for more than two decades.

Malayan tigers have been classified as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species. Fewer than 200 of the animals remain in the wild, down from as many as 3,000 in the 1950s, according to the World Wildlife Fund.

The fund blamed the decline on loss of habitat because of development, agricultural expansion and hunting.

In its announcement welcoming Eko, the Naples Zoo called the tiger “a great ambassador for his species” and said that when visitors see him, “we hope they fall in love and want to learn how they can do their part to save his cousins in the wild.”

The Naples Zoo, which draws about 370,000 visitors annually, hosts a variety of animals, including African lions, a Florida panther, black bears, a buff-cheeked gibbon and clouded leopards.

Tiger attacks at zoos are rare but not unprecedented.

In 2016, a woman in Beijing was killed by a tiger after she jumped out of a car at an animal park to try to save her daughter from a tiger attack, government officials there said.

In 2007, one person was killed and two others were seriously injured after a tiger at the San Francisco Zoo escaped from its cage shortly after the zoo closed. The tiger was later shot and killed by the authorities, the police said.

The year before, the same tiger bit a keeper at the San Francisco Zoo as at least 50 visitors watched, zoo officials said.

The tiger had reached through the iron bars of her enclosure and grabbed the zookeeper with both front paws shortly after a public feeding, in which keepers typically deliver a meal of fortified horse meat through a small slot, zoo officials said.
 
Why shoot the tiger?? Should have shot the idiot and get him out of the gene pool...

Tiger Bites Arm of Man Reaching Into Enclosure at Florida Zoo, Officials Say​

The man, who worked for a cleaning service, had entered a restricted area at the Naples Zoo, the authorities said. The tiger was shot and killed.

A man who worked for a cleaning service at the Naples Zoo in Florida was seriously injured on Wednesday when a tiger bit his arm after he went into a restricted area and reached into the animal’s enclosure, the authorities said.

The first sheriff’s deputy to arrive at the zoo kicked the tiger enclosure and tried to get the animal to release the man’s arm from its mouth but was “forced to shoot” the Malayan tiger, the Collier County Sheriff’s Office said.

The zoo said that the 8-year-old tiger, named Eko, which it had acquired in December 2019, had died.

The man, who is in his 20s, was taken to a hospital by Collier County emergency medical services, the sheriff’s office said.

A spokesman for Lee Memorial Hospital in Fort Myers, Fla., confirmed on Wednesday that it was treating a patient who had been bitten by a tiger but said he could not release any further information.

The sheriff’s office said the man, who worked for a cleaning service hired by the zoo, had entered an “unauthorized area” near a tiger enclosure after the zoo had closed for the day. The cleaning company is responsible for cleaning restrooms and the gift shop, not animal enclosures, the sheriff’s office said.

“Preliminary information indicates that the man was either petting or feeding the animal, both of which are unauthorized and dangerous activities,” the sheriff’s office said.

Citing “initial reports,” the office said that the tiger had grabbed the man’s arm and pulled it into the enclosure after the man crossed over a fenced barrier and put his arm through the fencing around the enclosure.

Deputies were called to the zoo at 6:26 p.m., the office said. The zoo declined to comment beyond sharing the statement from the sheriff’s office.

In February 2020, the Naples Zoo announced that it had acquired Eko from the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle. The zoo said in the announcement that it had funded efforts to save wild tigers for more than two decades.

Malayan tigers have been classified as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species. Fewer than 200 of the animals remain in the wild, down from as many as 3,000 in the 1950s, according to the World Wildlife Fund.

The fund blamed the decline on loss of habitat because of development, agricultural expansion and hunting.

In its announcement welcoming Eko, the Naples Zoo called the tiger “a great ambassador for his species” and said that when visitors see him, “we hope they fall in love and want to learn how they can do their part to save his cousins in the wild.”

The Naples Zoo, which draws about 370,000 visitors annually, hosts a variety of animals, including African lions, a Florida panther, black bears, a buff-cheeked gibbon and clouded leopards.

Tiger attacks at zoos are rare but not unprecedented.

In 2016, a woman in Beijing was killed by a tiger after she jumped out of a car at an animal park to try to save her daughter from a tiger attack, government officials there said.

In 2007, one person was killed and two others were seriously injured after a tiger at the San Francisco Zoo escaped from its cage shortly after the zoo closed. The tiger was later shot and killed by the authorities, the police said.

The year before, the same tiger bit a keeper at the San Francisco Zoo as at least 50 visitors watched, zoo officials said.

The tiger had reached through the iron bars of her enclosure and grabbed the zookeeper with both front paws shortly after a public feeding, in which keepers typically deliver a meal of fortified horse meat through a small slot, zoo officials said.
good morning,,,roccus yes should of shot the ass and let the tiger eat the guy,,,,real sad about the tiger:cry:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,><)))):<
><)))):<
 

Gotta love the Billy Crystal version of the Book of Exodus...


Is That a Burning Bush? Is This Mt. Sinai? Solstice Bolsters a Claim

On the year’s shortest day, hundreds of Israelis ventured deep into the desert to witness a strange natural phenomenon atop an ancient pilgrimage site that some argue is where God spoke to Moses.

The “Burning Bush” phenomenon, occurring on the winter solstice, at Mount Karkom in the Negev Desert in southern Israel.

The “Burning Bush” phenomenon, occurring on the winter solstice, at Mount Karkom in the Negev Desert in southern Israel. Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times

MOUNT KARKOM, Israel — The mountain kept its secrets for centuries, its air of sacred mystery enhanced by a remote location in the Negev Desert in southern Israel.

But one day last week, hundreds of Israeli adventurers headed deep into the wilderness to reach Mount Karkom, determined to get closer to answering a question as intriguing as it is controversial: Is this the Mount Sinai of the Bible, where God is believed to have communicated with Moses?

Mount Sinai’s location has long been disputed by scholars both religious and academic, and there are a dozen more traditional contenders, most of them in the mountainous expanses of the Sinai Peninsula across the border in Egypt.

But Mount Karkom’s claim has gained some popular support because of an annual natural phenomenon that an intrepid group of archaeology and nature enthusiasts had come to witness for themselves.

In 2003, a local Israeli guide and ecologist happened to be atop Karkom’s vast plateau one day in late December around the time of the winter solstice, when he came upon a marvel.

At midday, with the sun low in the sky on one of the shortest days of the year, he peered across a deep ravine and spotted a strange aura of light, flickering like flames, emanating from a spot on a sheer rock face.

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It was sunlight reflected at a particular angle off the sides of a cave, but the discovery soon made its way to Israeli television and was fancifully named “the burning bush.” Perhaps this, some said, was the supernatural fire that, according to the Book of Exodus, Moses saw on the holy mountain when God first spoke to him, and where he would later receive the Ten Commandments as he led the Israelites out of Egypt.

The burning bush, never consumed by the fire, is symbolic in Judaism, Christianity, Islam and other faiths including Baha’i.

But decades before this accidental astronomical discovery, Mount Karkom was already captivating some archaeologists with hints that the site had played an important spiritual role thousands of years ago.

It is actually sunlight reflecting off the sides of a cave.

It is actually sunlight reflecting off the sides of a cave. Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times

More than half a century ago, Emmanuel Anati, a young Italian archaeologist, found an extraordinary concentration of thousands of rock carvings and rock circles as he surveyed the plateau of Mount Karkom, about 2,500 feet above sea level. Among the rock drawings are many of ibexes, but also some that have been interpreted as depicting the tablets of the commandments or other references from the Bible.

At the base of Mount Karkom, named in Hebrew for a desert crocus, there is evidence that ancient migration trails converged here and that cultic rituals took place in the area. Mr. Anati identified what he thought was a sacrificial altar with the remains of 12 pillars of stone that could conceivably correspond to the one described in Exodus 24 that Moses built, representing the 12 tribes of Israel.

In his writings, Professor Anati said he had not set out to look for Mount Sinai. But after years of fieldwork and exploration, he proposed in the early 1980s that, on the basis of topographical and archaeological evidence, Mount Karkom “should be identified with the sacred mountain of the biblical narrations.”

But aside from usual difficulties of desert archaeology — nomads tend to leave few permanent traces — and the whole question of whether any archaeology could be tied to the biblical story of the Exodus at all, Professor Anati’s theory posed a problem of chronology.

Israel Finkelstein, a professor emeritus of archaeology at Tel Aviv University and an early critic of Professor Anati’s theory, said that most, if not all, of the datable sites around Mount Karkom are from the third millennium B.C.

The Exodus, if it happened, is generally dated to sometime around 1600-1200 B.C.

“So there is more than one millennium gap between the reality at Karkom and the biblical tradition,” Professor Finkelstein said, adding that since the evidence is vague, and identifying such sites as cultic is a matter of interpretation, “It is perhaps safer not to speculate.”

However heated the academic debate, the air was chilly when a convoy of sturdy jeeps with four-wheel drive set out for the mountain through jagged terrain at dawn on the day of the winter solstice.

Access to Mount Karkom is usually limited to weekends and certain holidays because it requires passing through a military firing and training zone. A paved road that helps shorten the hourslong journey, much of which takes place on dirt tracks, has mostly been closed to civilian traffic in recent years because of the fear of cross-border attacks by Islamic militants from the Sinai.

This year, in a midweek first, the military opened the paved road and allowed passage through the firing zone for the Burning Bush seekers.

As the group arrived in the parking lot at the foot of Mount Karkom, there was an unexpected bonus: Professor Anati, now in his early 90s, was sitting in a deck chair, holding court and promoting his books.

In the search for Mount Sinai, Professor Anati said, some insist for political or nationalistic reasons that the site must be within the borders of Israel, not in Egypt. Others, for religious reasons, say it must be outside the borders, to comply with the tradition of the Israelites wandering in the desert for 40 years before reaching the Promised Land.

“None of these approaches is correct; one must seek the truth,” Professor Anati said. “I bring all the opinions and evidence and let the reader decide for themselves,” he said, adding of the mountain’s treasures, “This is the story of the history of humankind.”

After a steep climb up the side of Karkom to its windy plateau, scores of people fanned along the ridge and peered across the ravine at the distant window in the cliff to spy the “burning bush.”

Without binoculars or biblical vision, it was possible to make out a strange, if faint, glow, though some visitors expressed disappointment that the aura around the cave mouth was not more fiery.

But stumbling across the rocky plateau, it was thrilling to come across pieces of ancient rock art, the images chipped into the dark brown patina of stones, exposing the light limestone below.

Shahar Shilo, a researcher who manages the Negev Highlands Tourism cooperative, spoke of the importance for ancient peoples of being able to measure the seasons for agricultural purposes, and the holiness imbued in those who could identify with precision the shortest day of the calendar.

Mr. Shilo also had a more prosaic explanation for why Mount Karkom had drawn people there in the distant past: the ready supply of quality flint that was crucial for anything from hunting to household tools. Even after much of humanity had advanced into the Bronze and Iron Ages, he said, the desert dwellers here still depended on stone.

Whether this is Mount Sinai and the winter solstice phenomenon the burning bush “is in the eye of the beholder,” Mr. Shilo said.

“But,” he added, “it’s a great myth, you have to admit.”
 
One would think that PRC would have better things to worry about. Maybe they should "outsource" this to Hans and Franz??

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BEIJING — China is facing serious challenges on multiple fronts: Great power competition with the United States. Trade disputes. The future of Taiwan. But that doesn’t mean it’s too preoccupied to escalate a battle of another sort on the home front.

The Chinese government, you see, has been fighting what state news outlets have called a “masculinity crisis” for the past few years, with one top official warning that “effeminate” men in popular culture were corrupting “a generation.” The Chinese Communist Party mouthpiece decreed that young men need to have “toughness and strength” and censors have blurred out male celebrities’ earrings in television and online appearances.

That campaign has now taken a harsher turn. In recent months, the government has dialed things up into a full-blown culture war against unorthodox masculine expression, policing it in earnest.

In a slur-laden directive, television regulators in September banned “sissy men and other abnormal aesthetics” from appearing on television. Then in late November regulators cracked down on celebrities’ online profiles, their fan groups and advertising, citing “abnormal aesthetics” and threatening to shut down the online accounts of those who failed to fall in line.
 
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