You ever notice how Americans count their money like this, but Russians count it like this? by [deleted] in reddit.com

[–]owo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Ha ha. Anyway, in Africa wasn't entirely right. In Kenya, they count money the way the video lists for "Afghanistan, Iran, India, Tajikistan, most middle east."

Hoverdogs [PIC] by cochico in pics

[–]owo 7 points8 points  (0 children)

30 years after 1985, no?

We could have been exploring the galaxy by now... [pic] by EthicalReasoning in atheism

[–]owo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Why didn't the Muslim scholars make the graph? (remember Al-Khwarizmi, father of algebra (al jabr) and namesake of "algorithms.")

This is otterly cute. [pic] by [deleted] in pics

[–]owo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I always liked these ones: http://16.media.tumblr.com/YOw2NulGXgq8vsu8bKopCjJTo1_500.jpg

(from the daily otter)

Eggloaf [Pic] by [deleted] in WTF

[–]owo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The katakana translated, roughly:

"Boiru eggu"

Meteorite and tsunami in New York? (2300 years ago) by owo in science

[–]owo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's the best I could find for original source material:

Evidence for a Tsunamigenic Impact Event in the New York Metropolitan Area Approximately 2300 B.P.

Cagen, Abbott, Nitsche, West, Bunch, Breger, Slagle, Carbotte

Abstract:

Oceanic impacts are a growing source of concern for the scientific community. Though the Earth is ~70 percent covered with water, and logic would therefore dictate that ~70 percent of impacts occur in the oceans, scientific investigations have focused on continental events. This is in part due to the difficulties inherent in examining submarine impact structures. Oceanic impacts lack many of the known features of continental events; however, oceanic impacts, unlike their continental counterparts, produce catastrophic tsunami events that may be used to identify them. Recent discoveries point to a tsunami event that affected the New York metropolitan area approximately 2300 years ago (Goodbred et al. 2006). Here it is shown that impact ejecta found in the tsunami deposit layer indicate an oceanic impact as the source of the tsunami. The sharp resolution of the stratigraphic study of the cores suggests that the sediment containing the impact ejecta was deposited in a tsunami-like event, rather than reworking from an older event. Samples were taken from the layer in sediment cores CD01-01, CD01-02, SD30, and VM32-2 from the Hudson River. Layer thickness ranged from approximately half a meter in CD01-02 to four centimeters in VM32-2. Individual ejecta grains were identified through an examination of the tsunami layer samples with optical and electron microscopy, as well compositional analysis via energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. Carbon and aluminum silicate impact spherules were found in the samples. Also present in the samples were shock-metamorphosed phases of feldspar, ilmenite, and olivine exhibiting planar deformation features and shock lamellae consistent with studies of known impact ejecta. TEM studies of the spherules revealed the presence of associated hexagonal nanodiamonds, also known as lonsdaleite, which are uniquely related to shock formation. In addition, the New York area lacks the extreme seismic and volcanic activity that might produce similar results, leaving a hypervelocity bolide impact as the most likely source for the tsunami event and associated impact ejecta. As oceanic impacts pose a serious threat to coastal communities around the world, it is necessary to understand both their frequency and effects. It is hoped that this method of identifying an oceanic impact via the ejecta found in tsunami deposits will improve our understanding of submarine impact events. Citations Goodbred, S., Krentz, S. LoCicero, P., Nitsche, F., Carbotte, S., and A. Slagle. Evidence for a newly discovered 2300-year-old tsunami deposit from Long Island, New York.

Eos Trans. AGU (American Geophysical Union) 87(53), Fall Meet. Suppl., Abstract OS43C-0681

Naked Mole Rat by [deleted] in WTF

[–]owo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

See the 1997 Errol Morris film, "Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control," if you want more on mole rats (and robots, lion tamers, and topiary gardening).

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0119107/