DO CHIMPS GRIEVE?

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Look at this photograph and just try to tell me the answer is no.

This incredible image was shot for National Geographic by Monica Szczupider, and shows chimpanzees at the Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Center in Cameroon. They're observing as the body of an elder troop member named Dorothy is taken to burial. She died at 40 years of age, which is pretty old for a chimpanzee.

The photo appears in the November issue of National Geographic Magazine, in the "Visions of Earth" section. [ Thanks, Marilyn Terrell ]

VERRY VERRY KOOL


An Ode To Levi And Bristol

Written about Kate Moss and Pete Dougherty - but Bristol and Levi are welcome to it:

YOU DESERVE A BREAK TODAY


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There are over 13,000 McDonald’s restaurants in the US, or about 1 for every 23,000 Americans. But even market penetration this advanced doesn’t mean that McDonald’s is everywhere. Somewhere in South Dakota is the McFarthest Spot, the place in the US geographically most removed from the nearest McD’s (*). If you started out from this location, a few miles north of State Highway 20 (which runs latitudinally between Highways 73 in the west and 65 in the east), you’d have to drive 145 miles to get your Big Mac (if you could fly, however, it’d be only 107 miles).

TRIPLE LIGHT SHOW







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Comet Between Fireworks and Lightning

Sometimes the sky itself is the best show in town. On January 26, 2007 people from Perth, Australia gathered on a local beach to watch a sky light up with delights near and far. Nearby, fireworks exploded as part of Australia Day celebrations. On the far right, lightning from a thunderstorm flashed in the distance. Near the image center, though, seen through clouds, was the most unusual sight of all: Comet McNaught. The photogenic comet was so bright that it even remained visible though the din of Earthly flashes. Comet McNaught continues to move out from the Sun and dim, but should remain visible in southern skies with binoculars through the end of this month. The above image is actually a three photograph panorama digitally processed to reduce red reflections from the exploding firework.


Credit & Copyright: Antti Kemppainen

Rochus Jacob designed this energy-harvesting rocking chair. It works by storing energy while you rock during the day, then lights up the attached OLED lamp at night. It is a neat concept, however there is no reason to wait for future technologies to build one. Just start with this human-powered fan design, add a small generator and a standard LED, grab your whittling project, and you should be set to go. [via gizmodo]

RITE OF SPRING





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Of the countless equinoxes Saturn has seen since the birth of the solar system, this one, captured in a mosaic of light and dark, is the first witnessed up close by an emissary from Earth … none other than our faithful robotic explorer, Cassini.

Seen from our planet, the view of Saturn's rings during equinox is extremely foreshortened and limited. But in orbit around Saturn, Cassini had no such problems. From 20 degrees above the ring plane, Cassini's wide angle camera shot 75 exposures in succession for this mosaic showing Saturn, its rings and a few of its moons a day and a half after exact Saturn equinox, when the sun/s disk was exactly overhead at the planet's equator. The novel illumination geometry that accompanies equinox lowers the sun's angle to the ring plane, significantly darkens the rings, and causes out-of-plane structures to look anomalously bright and to cast shadows across the rings. These scenes are possible only during the few months before and after Saturn’s equinox which occurs only once in about 15 Earth years. Also at equinox, the shadows of the planet's expansive rings are compressed into a single, narrow band cast onto the planet as seen in this mosaic.

The images comprising the mosaic, taken over about eight hours, were extensively processed before being joined together. With no enhancement, the rings would be essentially invisible in this mosaic. To improve their visibility, the dark right half of the rings has been brightened relative to the brighter left half by a factor of three, and then the whole ring system has been brightened by a factor of 20 relative to the planet. So the dark half of the rings is 60 times brighter, and the bright half 20 times brighter, than they would have appeared if the entire system, planet included, could have been captured in a single image.
Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Amazing Piano Playing Stairs

Swedish designers have made climbing the stairs fun again. There should be more of these great ideas to get people exercising more. What a wonderful idea!

THE HEIGHT OF FRENCH MODERNE





















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Exceptional vanity with three bronze-mounted
mirrors resting on a central console containing
two compartments opening to reveal upholstered
trays,above two pedestal bases, fitted with gilt
bronze figures by Jean Debarre (1907–1968),
each raised on lacquered metal feet

By Jules Leleu (1883-1961)
France, circa 1948
Signed on plaque: J Leleu
Provenance:
Comtesse Douieb de Lonlay


Maison Gerard Ltd G253
East 10th Street,
New York, NY 10003, USA
Telephone 1 212 674 7611
Fax 1 212 475 6314
www.maisongerard.com
email: home@maisongerard.com

THE STARTLING BEAUTY OF NATURE

A short film showing the maiden flight of a South African Blue Crane which began a sudden populatuion decline in 1980 and is now classified as vunerable. It was shot by Christian Leturia in 2008. Music bu Sigur Ros - Hoppypola.

THE COLORS OF THE 2ND DECADE


Neon Family Values, originally uploaded by Darwin Bell.

A San Francisco family walks past the Macy's Unioon Square window for Louis Vitton. Another of the second decade trend on design color!

A TIFFANY FOR A SONG...in the key of 3G


















Twilight', a leaded and plated glass window designed

by Tiffany Glass & Decorating Company, 1897.

Overall size, excluding frame: 134 1/4" x 123 1/2"

Signed: Tiffany Glass & Decorating Company New

York, Copyright 1897. Provenance: (Commissioned

by Mrs.Sarah Cochran). Literature: Kitazawa Museum

of Art, Art Nouveau Glass: Collection of Kitazawa

Museum of Art, 1992, pp. 103-104.


REF# UA73 SV $2.6 Million

*Please contact any of our showrooms for more

information. *Tiffany Window can be viewed at our

Bridgehampton Showroom.


New York | Bridgehampton | Boston | Chicago

www.urbanarchaeology.com

Balcony? What balcony? I don't see a balcony...

We don't see many transforming-house models around here, and its a shame. Anyone ever try making something like this? It would be perfect for places that have seasons (who needs a balcony in the winter?), or for playing tricks on your would-be Romeo. [via core77]

NO OFFICER, I WASN'T ON MY CELL PHONE















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1920 Accident in Baltimore during an icestorm.

Transportation safety has steadily improved in the United States for many decades. Between 1920 and 2000, the rate of fatal automobile accidents per vehicle-mile decreased by a factor of about 17. Except for a pause during the 1960s, progress in reducing fatal accidents has been steady. Safety for other types of U.S. passenger transportation has also improved substantially, but long-term statistical data are not as readily available.





THE DEEPEST MOST GORGEOUS CAVE IN THE WORLD

Lechuguilla Cave is part of the Carlsbad Caverns Natural Park in New Mexico and is regarded as one of the most beautiful caves, with some of the most unique geography, in the entire world.

You can't visit.

Because of the delicacy of many of the formations, the cave is only open to scientists and the explorers who are still figuring out what all is down there. Nobody else is allowed in. Or, rather, nobody else but David Attenborough.

This video from the Planet Earth TV series takes you down into Lechuguilla for some amazing sights and fascinating commentary on the chemistry and biology that make this cave so strange and lovely. Even more impressive, nobody knew it was there until 1986.

THE AUTUMN SCENES BEGIN













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Fall foliage meets with an early snow in Franconia, New Hampshire on Thursday, Oct. 1,2009. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)














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Growers stand by their giants during the annual Giant Pumpkin Contest at the Topsfield Fair in Topsfield, Massachusetts on October 3rd, 2009. The contest was won by Bill Rodonis (center) from Litchfield, New Hampshire, weighing in at 1471.60 pounds. (John Tlumacki/Globe Staff)

CHASING RAINBOWS PUZZLE

26924342_b8a663e572 - online jigsaw puzzle - 24 piecesClick on image to play

See if you can complete it in under 10 minutes!

SOLID GOLD



A Pair of White Marble and Parcel Gilt Eagle Consoles
Enland
English, 1820
The variagated white marble top resting on a molded frieze mounted with florets all supported by a magnificently carved eagle with outspread wings perched on gilt rock-work bases on a rectangular solid gilt plinth.

Price
$110,000

Condition
In fine antique condition.

Measurements
height: 33 in.
depth: 18 in.
width/length: 32 in.

Specifications
Number of items: 1
Creator: unknown

Photography
provided by 1stdibs

Location
Guy Regal Ltd.
223 East 60th Street
New York, NY 10022
USA

Phone: 212-888-2134

E-Mail:
phoebe@guyregalltd.com

Ref. : 0908278287447

NEWEST NONSENSE


I really couldn,t believe this fashion show! Will this "Little Orphan Afro" look make it to the street?... and they thought the 1960's were weird.

THE HEART OF DARKNESS



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Some of the coldest and darkest dust in space shines brightly in this infrared image from the Herschel Observatory, a European Space Agency mission with important participation from NASA. The image is a composite of light captured simultaneously by two of Herschel's three instruments -- the photodetector array camera and spectrometer with its spectral and photometric imaging receiver.
The image reveals a cold and turbulent region where material is just beginning to condense into new stars. It is located in the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy, 60 degrees from the center. Blue shows warmer material, red the coolest, while green represents intermediate temperatures. The red filaments are made up of the coldest material pictured here -- material that is slightly warmer than the coldest temperature theoretically attainable in the universe.