Neatorama |
- Selfie Cake
- Eye of the Moon
- Why Is Horse Semen The World’s Most Expensive Liquid?
- The DWR Champagne Chair Contest
- Painkiller Cocktail
- It’s Asteroid Time, Baby!
- Pokeball Replica Worth $100 Will Be Available Soon!
- Bomb Purse
- An Honest Trailer for <i>A Christmas Story</i>
- A Chain Just Cut Through A Capsized Cargo Ship Filled With Cars And The Process Is Fascinating
- 'Sistine Chapel Of The Ancients’ Found In The Amazonian Rainforest
- How to Eat a Cake with Wine Glasses
- Santa Claus vs. the Postal Service
Posted: 02 Dec 2020 09:48 PM PST
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Posted: 02 Dec 2020 09:48 PM PST The moon is one of landscape photographer Zach Cooley's favorite subjects. Last October, he nailed his timing when capturing a shot of the moon passing through the opening of a natural arch. With humans resting on the edge, it looks like the eye of a god. |
Why Is Horse Semen The World’s Most Expensive Liquid? Posted: 02 Dec 2020 09:48 PM PST Wow, you'd expect it to be a very old wine hidden in someone's high-end wine cellar. But alas, surprisingly, it's horse semen. Before the 'no nut November' jokes come butting in, wealthy investors are willing to spend over four million dollars just to ensure that the foal they could breed from a proven winner's semen will bring back their investment. Watch Business Insider's piece on the topic to learn more! |
The DWR Champagne Chair Contest Posted: 02 Dec 2020 08:02 PM PST A champagne chair is a dollhouse-sized chair made from the cap, cage, and/or cork from a champagne bottle. We can imagine it originated from partygoers who needed something to do with their hands while listening to drunk conversation, but it has become somewhat of an art form, and as happens to all human activities, it has been turned into a competition.
Read the contest guidelines at Design Within Reach. Find a basic how-to to get you started at Instructables. -via Nag on the Lake |
Posted: 02 Dec 2020 04:49 PM PST It's not exactly a painkiller when you get hungover in the morning, but at least this drink can make you forget the pain of living, temporarily, or whatever alcohol lets people feel besides the massive pain in the morning. If you're looking for a new sparkling cocktail to drown your sorrows with, the Painkiller Cocktail might be the one you're looking for. Check Saveur's full recipe for this boozy concoction. Image via Saveur |
Posted: 02 Dec 2020 04:49 PM PST Scientists have been curious about planets in our solar system for years. Those objects make up a small percentage of the vast unknown space. There's still a lot of other heavenly bodies out there, and it seems that scientists are now focusing their attention on a different celestial object: asteroids: The next round of asteroid missions will try out a bunch of unusual styles of exploration. Lucy will visit the Trojan asteroids that move in the same orbit as Jupiter. The Psyche mission will travel to the asteroid Psyche—a mysterious object that appears to be composed almost entirely of metal. DESTINY+ will head to Phaethon, a "rock-comet" asteroid that appears to be crumbling because it passes so close to the Sun. NEA Scout will use a solar sail to navigate to a near-Earth asteroid. Most dramatic of all, the DART spacecraft will ram full-speed into a small asteroid Dimorphos in 2022. The goal is to test out a technique for deflecting a dangerous asteroid if we discover one coming our way; four years later, the Hera probe will follow up to assess the damage. There are many reasons for this current fascination with asteroids. They contain evidence of how our solar system formed, how Earth got its water, maybe even how life got started here. They are rich, complicated mini-worlds in their own right. They are easy to visit because of their very low gravity. Someday asteroids could even provide useful resources for astronauts or for space-based industry. Image via Discovery Magazine |
Pokeball Replica Worth $100 Will Be Available Soon! Posted: 02 Dec 2020 04:48 PM PST Well, it has to be high-end. Also, it has to come with the Pokemon Company's seal of approval. Which is what this metal replica of the iconic game item is! The Pokemon Company has teamed up with The Wand Company to make an accurate replica of the Poke Ball, Great Ball, Ultra Ball, and Premier Ball, all of which will roll out in 2021. Relive your childhood dreams of catching Pokemon (or not; you could just put them up for display, these are expensive after all) - if you have enough funds to purchase them: The Wand Company's Poké Ball will cost $99.99. It's available for pre-order now and will ship on Feb. 27, 2021 — Pokémon's 25th anniversary. So what does a hundred bucks' worth of Poké Ball entail? According to The Pokémon Company, the die-cast metal replica Poké Ball features proximity-sensing technology. When it detects motion, the ball will glow. Pressing the button on the Poké Ball "changes the light color or starts a Pokémon-catching illumination sequence." It also comes with a presentation case and a stainless-steel ring on which collectors can display the Poké Ball replica. The case itself also comes with a touch-sensitive metal plaque that lights up the ball. (Oh, and batteries are included.) Image via Polygon |
Posted: 02 Dec 2020 04:48 PM PST Are you heading to the airport for some holiday travel? Impress your fellow travelers with your refined sense of fashion with this purse by Etsy seller ConcaveOblivion. It's available in a variety of leather colors and finishes. The timer, which looks delightfully realistic, has a secret compartment that you'll need if people keep staring at your handbag. |
An Honest Trailer for <i>A Christmas Story</i> Posted: 02 Dec 2020 04:48 PM PST
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A Chain Just Cut Through A Capsized Cargo Ship Filled With Cars And The Process Is Fascinating Posted: 02 Dec 2020 11:30 AM PST
See pictures of this huge undertaking and an explanation of how it's done at Jalopnik. -via Damn Interesting |
'Sistine Chapel Of The Ancients’ Found In The Amazonian Rainforest Posted: 02 Dec 2020 10:24 AM PST Archaeologists have found thousands of paintings of animals and humans across cliff faces in Colombia. This newly-discovered long stretch of prehistoric art is one of the world's largest collections of rock art, and hailed as "the Sistine Chapel of the ancients." Experts estimate that the paintings were created at least 12,500 years ago, as the Guardian details: Their date is based partly on their depictions of now-extinct ice age animals, such as the mastodon, a prehistoric relative of the elephant that hasn't roamed South America for at least 12,000 years. There are also images of the palaeolama, an extinct camelid, as well as giant sloths and ice age horses. These animals were all seen and painted by some of the very first humans ever to reach the Amazon. Their pictures give a glimpse into a lost, ancient civilisation. Such is the sheer scale of paintings that they will take generations to study. The discovery was made last year, but has been kept secret until now as it was filmed for a major Channel 4 series to be screened in December: Jungle Mystery: Lost Kingdoms of the Amazon. The site is in the Serranía de la Lindosa where, along with the Chiribiquete national park, other rock art had been found. The documentary's presenter, Ella Al-Shamahi, an archaeologist and explorer, told the Observer: "The new site is so new, they haven't even given it a name yet." Image via the Guardian |
How to Eat a Cake with Wine Glasses Posted: 02 Dec 2020 10:24 AM PST
At your office Christmas party, you may find that you don't have enough plates to serve everyone cake. So, once you have drunk all of the wine, just slip the upended glasses over the cake to slice off a piece. Then you can spoon it into your mouth. Or just be the first person to grab a chunk of cake with your hands, which is my usual approach. -via Born in Space |
Santa Claus vs. the Postal Service Posted: 02 Dec 2020 10:24 AM PST
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