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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Newly Discovered Comet On Its Way To Earth Should Be Visible To The Naked Eye Soon
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Newly Discovered Comet On Its Way To Earth Should Be Visible To The Naked Eye Soon

Eyes on the sky, people: Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan–ATLAS) has a good chance of getting bright enough to be visible to the naked eye in the coming months. It is currently visible only to telescopes, but it is still quite a distance away from the Sun. It has time to get brighter, and could even get as bright as Venus, the brightest planet in the night sky, come October.Its closest passage from the Sun will take place on September 27 and it will be 58.6 million kilometers (36.4 million miles) from our star. That’s a similar distance to Mercury. Then a few weeks after that on October 12, the comet will perform its closest pass to Earth, roughly 70.6 million kilometers (43.9 million miles) away.Maximum magnitude might happen around that time. Some estimates suggest it will be brighter than all but four stars in the sky. An even more optimistic curve pushes it as brighter than Jupiter, and bit less bright than Venus. That would be an extremely bright comet – and it would be visible at sunset, making it a very convenient spectacle if it starts shining as bright as hoped.     The comet was discovered over 15 months ago independently by two observatories. First, by the Zijinshan Astronomical Observatory (Purple Mountain Observatory), but it was very faint and it was lost in follow-up observations. It was then found again by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) South Africa. Following the discovery, it was found in older observations from December 2022.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

A Mourning Mother Chimp Carries Her Dead Baby For 3 Months At Zoo
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A Mourning Mother Chimp Carries Her Dead Baby For 3 Months At Zoo

A grieving chimpanzee has been carrying around her dead baby for months at a Spanish zoo in a tragic demonstration of the species’ intelligence and social complexity.Natalia the chimp gave birth to an infant at Bioparc Valencia in early February 2024, but it died just 14 days later.Although infant mortality is extremely high in chimpanzees, it can prove to be devastating for troops because social ties and group cohesion are so important. The recent death of the infant was all the more concerning as Natalia had lost another infant in 2018.Over three months have since passed, but Natalia is still holding the carcass of her lost offspring.“At the moment, the situation remains the same, as she continues to carry the calf. It should be said that it is a natural behavior perfectly documented in this species and other similar ones, even in other mammals such as whales or elephants,” a communications officer at the zoo told IFLScience.Another recent photograph of Natalia holding her deceased infant.Image courtesy of BIOPARC ValenciaChimpanzees, our closest living ancestor, are one of the few animals that some believe to have an understanding of mortality. Numerous studies have shown that chimps respond to group members' deaths and exhibit behavior that's reminiscent of mourning.The behavior seen at Bioparc Valencia has also been reported in the wild. While studying a wild troop of chimps in southeastern Guinea, researchers noticed that two of the mothers, Jire and Vuavua, were carrying the mummified remains of their dead infants."Chimpanzees are humans' closest evolutionary relatives, and they have already been shown to resemble us in many of their cognitive functions: they empathize with others, have a sense of fairness, and can cooperate to achieve goals," Dora Biro, the lead study author and behavioral biologist who made the observations, said in a statement from 2010."How they perceive death is a fascinating question, and little data exist so far concerning chimpanzees' responses to the passing of familiar or related individuals either in captivity or in the wild. Our observations confirm the existence of an extremely powerful bond between mothers and their offspring which can persist, remarkably, even after the death of the infant, and they further call for efforts to elucidate the extent to which chimpanzees understand and are affected by the death of a close relative or group-mate,” Biro added.“This would both have implications for our understanding of the evolutionary origins of human perceptions of death and provide insights into the way chimpanzees interpret the world around them," Biro explained.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

Book with notes by John Milton found in Phoenix public library
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Book with notes by John Milton found in Phoenix public library

A rare book with handwritten annotations by Paradise Lost author John Milton has been discovered in a public library in Phoenix, Arizona. This is only the third book with Milton’s notes known to survive, and one of only nine surviving books from his library. The notes in two volumes of Holinshed’s Chronicles, a history of England, Ireland and Scotland published in 1587, were spotted by researchers in the Rare Book Room of the Burton Barr Central Library this March. Arizona State University faculty invited four visiting scholars to examine a selection of books collected by Alfred Knight, a real estate magnate, bibliophile and philanthropist who bequeathed his collection of more than 2,300 items, including a wide range of literary output from illuminated manuscripts to cuneiform tablets, Shakespeare folios and rare first editions, to the people of Phoenix in 1958. Knight had two fine first editions Milton’s Paradise Lost (1667–8) and collected prose (1697), but he had no idea that his copy of Holinshed was part of the great author’s personal library. The Holinshed was among the books pulled for the research forum, and two of the visiting researchers recognized the distinctive italic handwriting in the notes as that of John Milton. Dr Aaron Pratt, Curator of Early Books & Manuscripts at University of Texas, was the first to notice that a letter “e” looked a lot like Milton’s “e.” Claire Bourne, the associate professor of English at Penn State who in 2019 had found Milton’s annotations in Shakespeare’s First Folio at the Philadelphia Free Library, compared the Holinshed’s notes to the Shakespeare ones, and found them so similar, she sent photos of the notes to Professor Jason Scott-Warren at the University of Cambridge. He didn’t hesitate to agree that this was Milton’s hand. The researchers found more than 100 annotations in the first volume alone. In one of them he takes umbrage at a passage, striking the entire paragraph with a diagonal line on the grounds that it is “an unbecoming tale for a history and as pedlerly expresst.” “Pedlerly” means junky, like something a peddler would sell. Milton was clutching his pearls over a rather juicy story, to be fair: the conception of William the Bastard, later known as William the Conqueror. In the yéere of Christ 1030, Robert, the second sonne of Richard the second duke of Normandie, and brother to Richard the third duke of that name there having with great honour and wisedome gouerned his dukedome seven yéeres, for performance of a penance that he had set to himselfe, appointed a pilgrimage to Jerusalem; leaving behind him this William a yoong prince, whome seven yéeres before he had begotten upon his paramour Arlete (whom after he held as his wife) with whose beautifull favour, lovelie grace and presence, at hir dansing on a time then as he was tenderlie touched, for familiar utterance of his mind what he had further to say, would néeds that night she should be his bedfellow, who else as wivelesse should have lien alone: where when she was bestowed, thinking that if she should have laid hir selfe naked, it might have séemed not so maidenlie a part: so when the duke was about (as the maner is) to have lift up hir linnen, she in an humble modestie staid hir lords hand, and rent downe hir smocke asunder, from the collar to the verie skirt. Heereat the duke all smiling did aske hir what thereby she ment? In great lowlines, with a feate question she answerd againe; “My lord, were it méet that any part of my garments dependant about me downeward, should presume to be mountant to my sovereignes mouth vpward? Let your grace pardon me.” He liked hir answer: and so and so foorth for that time. So basically, instead of letting Robert I take her shirt off, Arlete tore it off her body Chippendales’ style from neckline to waist. Nine months later, a bouncing baby Conqueror was born. The researchers believe that the discovery opens up new perspectives on his engagement with a major source for his writings, including Of “Reformation “(1641) and “The History of Britain” (1670). He would have been working on both around the time—or shortly after—he was reading the “Chronicles”. Several of Milton’s notes cite other books known to have been in his library. These include John Stow’s “Annales”, another key source of historical information. Milton also marked out Holinshed quoting Giovanni Villani’s “Chroniche di Firenze” (“Chronicles of Florence”), a book which Milton included in the curriculum he developed for his nephews in the 1640s. The notes also emphasize Milton’s interest in continental poetry. Under Holinshed’s assertion that Richard the Lionheart was “not very notorious,” Milton added, “the booke of Provenzall poets numbers him in / the catalogue, telling of his poetrie, and his Provenzal / mistresses.” The researchers believe this book refers to Jean de Nostredame’s “Les vies des plus célèbres et anciens poètes provençaux” (Lyon, 1575), which discusses Richard’s poetry and mistresses.
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

The Morning Briefing: Leftists Continue to Try and Normalize Deviants and Criminals
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The Morning Briefing: Leftists Continue to Try and Normalize Deviants and Criminals

Top O' the BriefingHappy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Fylgraenth didn't think through how much time he'd have to spend convincing people that his gentlemen goat herding and artisanal…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

Biden’s pier to nowhere
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Biden’s pier to nowhere

Utopian intentions. Naive assumptions. Petty political point scoring. Inept planning. Disastrous outcomes. Those are the hallmarks of every foreign policy decision President Joe Biden has made since taking…
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

The Editors’ Quote of the Day:
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prepping.com

The Editors’ Quote of the Day:

“Christianity started in Palestine as a fellowship of followers; it moved to Greece and became a philosophy of thinkers; it moved to Italy and became the institution of an Empire; it moved to Europe and became a cultural ethos; and it came to America and became a business enterprise.” – Pastor Sam Pascoe The post The Editors’ Quote of the Day: appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

The Survivalist’s Odds ‘n Sods
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prepping.com

The Survivalist’s Odds ‘n Sods

SurvivalBlog presents another edition of The Survivalist’s Odds ‘n Sods. This column is a collection of news bits and pieces that are relevant to the modern survivalist and prepper from JWR. Our goal is to educate our readers, to help them to recognize emerging threats, and to be better prepared for both disasters and negative societal trends. You can’t mitigate a risk if you haven’t first identified a risk. Warrantless Searches by Game Wardens: Unconstitutional Blog reader R.W. suggested this article at Outdoor Life: Tennessee Judges Rein in Game Wardens, Declaring Warrantless Searches on Private Land Unconstitutional. BLM Makes Major … The post The Survivalist’s Odds ‘n Sods appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

A Common Man’s Commo Plan, by Tunnel Rabbit
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prepping.com

A Common Man’s Commo Plan, by Tunnel Rabbit

Introduction Once our cell phones become unusable or useless, only then we’ll we fully appreciate the need for radio communications. I am writing this because I am painfully aware of how vulnerable we are. Please get “radioed-up” ASAP and use your equipment now and regularly to attain a baseline of proficiency. Satellite phones are not a good substitute for reliable old analog radios that are not dependent upon third-party infrastructure. The Plan The commo plan that I lay out in this article is simple, affordable, flexible (adaptable), and provides redundant capabilities and interoperability for the least amount of money.  It … The post A Common Man’s Commo Plan, by Tunnel Rabbit appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

Preparedness Notes for Thursday — May 23, 2024
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prepping.com

Preparedness Notes for Thursday — May 23, 2024

May 23, 1824 was birthday of Ambrose Burnside. He served as the Governor of Rhode Island from 1866 to 1869. During the American Civil War he was a general in the Union Army, where he led successful campaigns in North Carolina and Tennessee, but suffered defeats at the Battle of Fredericksburg and Battle of the Crater. After his period as a governor, he served as a US Senator for Rhode Island from 1875 until his death in 1881, and also had a number of industrial directorships, most prominently on the country’s railroad networks. His distinctive style of facial hair gave … The post Preparedness Notes for Thursday — May 23, 2024 appeared first on SurvivalBlog.com.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

10 Plants Soldiers Looked for During the Civil War
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prepping.com

10 Plants Soldiers Looked for During the Civil War

An estimated 3 million soldiers fought in the US Civil War. This was before the age of robust military logistics and both sides struggled to feed their armies adequately. Generally, soldiers were provided hard and soft bread, salted or fresh meat, beans, peas, rice, cornmeal, vinegar, and molasses when available. Often, this was enough to […] The post 10 Plants Soldiers Looked for During the Civil War appeared first on Ask a Prepper.
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