The Hear Heres is a sculpture installation by Studio Weave on the grounds of Kedleston Hall in Derbyshire, England. It consists of four giant ear trumpets that you can listen to! Each amplifies the sounds of nature around it, whether it's the wind, wildlife in a tree, or the gentle sounds of a lake. One has two receiving ends, so that people can talk to each other through it. Link -via Laughing Squid
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Co-incidence?
i like that "6th planet furthest from our sun" pretty sneaky universe.
Science isn't about knowing everything, it's about a ton of hard work and often finding out all your previous assumptions were crap every time new data presents itself. NASA, not being staffed by wizards and psychics, is not the end all be all of astronomical science. Why do people freak out when scientists admit they don't know everything? Scientists never pretend they do. Is this some kind of lingering resentment over the discovery of germs? Do people just hate bathing?
Although I'm sure you just thought you were being clever in casting your aspersions. Don't let me spoil your fun with my reason and logic.
But I will stay with my idea of there could be something there. It is always more interesting.
http://news.softpedia.com/news/Rotating-Water-Gives-Rise-to-Geometric-Figures-23640.shtml
Actually, I presume he's talking about still-camera lens flare or the apparent shape of points of light in unfocused areas of a photo, but I wanted to make sure before explaining that such phenomena are due to the shape of the aperture.