A Sort-of Sharktopus Spotted in Nature

Yes, the sharktopus is a ridiculous fantasy creature from the movies, but strange things can happen between two very different species in real life, too. Do you recall the picture of a weasel riding on the back of a flying woodpecker? That was ten years ago, before we blamed everything on artificial intelligence. Well, now we have a video of an octopus riding on the back of a shark!

This footage was captured in 2023 in the Hauraki Gulf near Kawau Island, New Zealand. The scientists from the University of Auckland saw something unusual on a mako shark and launched a GoPro in the water and a drone overhead to investigate. They tracked the two animals for ten minutes. The sighting was quite a surprise, as octopuses rarely come close to the water's surface. And that's about as close to a sharktopus as we're going to get in real life. -via Damn Interesting


Facial Restoration by Hidden Heroine Anna Coleman Ladd

Every war gives us horrific casualties and medical advances. In World War I, doctors were able to save many soldiers whose faces were permanently disfigured, which led to breakthroughs in plastic surgery pioneered by Dr. Harold Gillies. But plastic surgery was in its infancy, and most veterans with facial disfigurements and missing features couldn't get such reconstruction. Into the void stepped Anna Coleman Ladd. The renowned sculptor leveraged her physician husband's connections in the Red Cross in order to go to France to help soldiers who had lost noses, jaws, ears, and other facial features to the war.

Ladd opened her "Studio for Portrait-Masks" in Paris in 1917, where she custom-made meticulously fitted and painted masks for veterans to wear that gave them a more normal appearance. Many of these men were able to set foot out of their homes for the first time with their masks, and went on to re-integrate with their communities. Read Ladd's story and see some of her work at Danny Dutch. -via Strange Company


What Your Brain Does to Reality

Perception is the way we experience the world. Our perception is made up of the signals that come into our bodies through our eyes, ears, and other sensory organs, but is also made up of our brain's interpretation of those signals. We know that the way light comes into our eyes should be upside-down, but our brains unscramble those signals to match the world around us. That's just the beginning of the ways our brains change the incoming signals to be useful instead of confusing and overwhelming. The brain uses present signals to predict the future, so quickly that we never notice what we are doing. Kurzgesagt explains some of the chores your brain does at the microsecond scale, which is a lot, and it makes us wonder how we ever have time and brain power left over to just think (as we normally think of it) and make conscious decisions. This video is about 9:40- the rest is promotional. -via Geeks Are Sexy


The World's Largest Collection of Two-Headed Calves

Henry Rosenthal counts his cattle by the head, so when he says he has 50 head of cattle, he actually means 25 stuffed calves with two heads each. Those are the ones that have undergone taxidermy treatment. He also has preserved fetuses, skeletal remains, and a ton of ephemera and art devoted to two-headed calves and a few other animals. You can find them at the Two-Headed Calf MOOseum in San Francisco. Rosenthal became fascinated with polycephaly -a condition in which an embryo begins to split into twins, but doesn't fully separate- in his 20s when he saw a two-headed calf, and soon after he got a chance to purchase a stuffed specimen. His collection became a museum, or moo-seum, as the 2020 pandemic was taking off. The stuffed calves were joined by photographs, newspaper accounts, paintings, drawings, and figurines, all portraying calves born with two heads.  

Want to visit the Two-Headed Calf MOOseum? It's only open by appointment, but that's easily arranged if you are going to San Francisco. Or you can see what they have and learn the story behind the collection at Atlas Obscura.


How to Make an Omelet with Iguana Eggs

Iguanas are common on Marco Island off the southwestern coast of Florida. John Johnson, the owner of Down Goes Iguana, specializes in eliminating hundreds of these pests every year. Gulf Coast News in Fort Myers reports that Johnson advocates eating this invasive species--especially the eggs.

Although the eggs are small, enough of them put together make for a fine omelet. With 49 eggs harvested from his prey, diced ham, peppers, and onions, Johnson creates a unique dish. Johnson says that his iguana omelet "this touches the edge of the Florida man" meme. One local reporter says that despite their exotic origin, the iguana eggs taste like regular chicken eggs.

-via Dave Barry


The Frustrating Lovelife of Jareth the Amorous Rooster

Jareth was found wandering, abandoned, and came into the care of Life With Pigs Farm Animal Sanctuary. He proved to be, shall we say, hormonally blessed. Ryan and Mallory took him in, but he quickly decided that Mallory should be his mate. Not gonna happen, so the couple introduced Jareth to their hen. Jareth was all for that, but the hen didn't want to have anything to do with Jareth. You have to wonder whether the rooster's over-eager behavior was the reason he was abandoned in the first place. Twice shot down, Jareth then made friends with another rooster named Billy, and they were very happy together until Billy died. Poor lonely Jareth was then brought in the house, where he could sleep with the three pigs. Over time, though, Jareth built a new relationship with a rooster named Sebastian, and we hope that he's happy. You can keep up with Jareth and the other sanctuary animals at the Life With Pigs Instagram page.


Japanese World Map of Stereotypes from 1932

X user @Msamlam shares this map owned by the National Library of Australia. It dates back to 1932, when Japan felt quite confident of its ability to be a major power in the world and the dominant power in eastern Asia. The illustrators depict in detail stereotypes of the peoples of the world.

The image of the United States includes a reference to the 1932 Summer Olympics, where Japan did quite well in swimming events.

Continue reading

Delicious and Unclean: The History of the Pig

Wild pigs moved out of Asia and into the Middle East and Europe long, long ago. THe number of pig bones found at archaeological sites indicate that they were eaten by all kinds of people thousands of years ago, although that varied who was domesticating and raising them. Pigs were limited to those who could afford sturdier pens than those required for sheep or goats. On the other hand, pigs presented advantages in cities, since pigs will eat anything, including garbage, and don't need grassy fields. But then, during a period when pork consumption was pretty low already compared to other livestock, the Hebrews enacted a ban on eating pork. Hundreds of years later, Islam also prohibited pork because pigs are considered unclean. Hinduism has no specific restriction on pork, but many Hindus avoid it because of the pig's unclean reputation.

However, these restrictions were never universally observed. And scholars still argue over why the ban on pork was instituted in the first place. Read what archaeologists have discovered about the history of pigs and pork consumption at Archaeology magazine. -via Metafilter

(Image credit: Alexandr frolov)


John Cleese Quickly Illustrates His Legacy

And now for something completely different! Special effects artist Peter Quinn collaborated with Monty Python's John Cleese to create a semi-animated tribute to Cleese's career. I don't know if this had anything to do with the 50th anniversary of the movie Monty Python and the Holy Grail coming up on April 3rd, but the wealth of references to that movie makes me believe it was at least a valid excuse to make this video. Holy Grail fans will laugh at just the hint of the scenes featuring the French Taunter, Tim the Enchanter, and of course, the Black Knight. Monty Python fans will recognize bits from other eras, too, including an obviously dead parrot and that big foot. For the few who have no idea who John Cleese nor Monty Python are, this collage of nonsense will still be funny, in a violent Three Stooges kind of way. -via Laughing Squid


Seven Extremely Weird TV Pilots That Never Became a Series

Imagine, if you will, a science fiction sitcom set in the future (of course), starring a robot with a strange foreign accent. The comedy comes from the robot's inept handling of his job. This was the premise of the 1977 television pilot Stick Around. And it was also the plot of the 1994 pilot LAX 2194. I don't know what else they had in common, but neither one was ever slotted as an actual series. They are two of the seven weirdest TV pilots ever made. Two of them are judged to have been great, but we never got to see the series executed, while the others only have a reputation for being awful. For some reason, Heil Honey I'm Home wasn't included, probably because they actually produced eight episodes before it was canceled after the pilot aired. The seven strange pilots listed at Cracked all have video evidence of one kind or another.    


Dolphins Greet Returning Astronauts

NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams had planned to be on the International Space Station for only eight days and ended up stranded in space for nine months when their transportation plans fell through. But on Tuesday, a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft rescued and delivered them home in a spashdown off the western coast of Florida.

When they arrived, USA Today reports, a pod of dolphins surrounded the craft. They splashed about as the retrieval team harnessed the pod to bring it to the awaiting ship.


What Animal Sounds Are Like in Different Languages

As the Bard said:

Dog goes 'woof', cat goes 'meow'

Bird goes 'tweet' and mouse goes 'squeek'

Cow goes 'moo', frog goes 'croak'

And the elephant goes 'toot'

But this is true in only the English language. In other human languages, animal vocalizations are pronounced differently--albeit sometimes only slightly.

Vivian Li of The Pudding has charts with soundboards illustrating the onomatopoeia that express different animal sounds, including cats, ducks, and pigs. She goes into an astonishing amount of detail about the phonetic mechanics involved in making each sound in each language and draws connections between them despite these different languages originating around the world. 

-via Flowing Data


This is Why You Should Never Drink Seawater



Water, water everywhere, and nary a drop to drink. That's the ocean, and it's pretty big. Even if you're stranded out in the middle of the sea, you can't drink seawater, because it's so salty that it can poison your body. Most of the water on earth is seawater, and with climate change, fresh water is getting somewhat scarce in places where people need it. That's why there are more and more desalination plants every year, working to provide fresh drinking water but also contributing to the problem by using fossil fuels. Meanwhile, if you ever find yourself stranded out at sea, this TED-Ed lesson has a few tips on how to obtain fresh water, either from rain or dew, or from the blood and organs of certain sea creatures. To the person who doesn't have it, fresh water is more valuable than anything.   


The Legend Behind the Original White Mana Diner

People will argue about the origins of food, and hamburgers are no different. And if you're looking for the oldest hamburger restaurant in America, the White Mana Diner arguably has the provenance to claim the title. It originated in 1939, not as a real restaurant, but as an exhibit at the World's Fair that demonstrated how one could make a hamburger dinner while standing in one spot, using a huge griddle and a precisely designed system. That was impressive, and in 1946, the building was transported to Jersey City, New Jersey, and became the White Mana Diner. It's been in operation ever since.

But the diner itself is not as interesting as its owner Mario Costa. He began working at the White Mana in 1972 as a teenager, and within seven years bought the business. But he also bought rental houses in the neighborhood, another restaurant with a bar, and a gym. Costa offers the gym free of charge to neighborhood kids so they can box instead of getting in trouble doing something else. He once managed Mike Tyson, and still keeps Tyson's pigeons on his roof. Costa is a community hub unto himself, overseeing all his businesses every day, and making hamburgers at the White Mana Diner. Read a fascinating profile of a young man who made good, and now works to give back to the community, at Eater.

(Image credit: Paul Lowry)


French Fries Are Expensive, and Here's the Reason

You probably noticed the price of, well, everything, going up and up and up. We've heard plenty of explanations, like bird flu for eggs, supply and demand for housing, corporate greed for other stuff, supply chain issues, tariffs, etc. etc. But have we considered monopolies? Sure, monopolies are technically illegal, and so is price-fixing collusion between different companies, but modern technology in the form of algorithms run by third-party services can skip around that and produce the same result. Sam from Half as Interesting explains how that can happen with the example of french fries. He can do this because there is blatant documentary evidence of what's going on to make all our french fries so much more expensive, but this can happen in any industry. And if it happens with America's favorite vegetable, you know it must be going on with other foods and everyday expenses. This video is only 5:55, the rest is an ad.


Email This Post to a Friend
""

Separate multiple emails with a comma. Limit 5.

 

Success! Your email has been sent!

close window
X

This website uses cookies.

This website uses cookies to improve user experience. By using this website you consent to all cookies in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

I agree
 
Learn More