Neatorama |
- The World’s First Christmas Tree with Electric Lights
- Overture of Overtures
- The <i>Game of Thrones</i> Ice Hotel
- The 6 Human Chronotypes
- Sentences And Words: Which Do We Learn First?
- Baby Beaver Makes Adorable Sounds
- How a 2-Year Old Solves the Trolley Problem
- It’s A Mug Warmer That Looks Like A Giant Oreo
- Hand-Painted Jeans
- School Pictures Gone Wrong
- It’s A Balloon-Like Sea Creature
- Astronauts Smuggle Booze In Space, Apparently
- Dinosaurs in the Snow
- For Those Who Have Some Explaining To Do
- A Second Monolith Appears
The World’s First Christmas Tree with Electric Lights Posted: 04 Dec 2020 09:20 PM PST Once upon a time, Christmas trees were illuminated by burning candles. You can imagine how difficult it was to get candles to stand up on a tree branch, and how much supervision was necessary keep the house from burning down. So it was a real Christmas miracle when electric Christmas lights were introduced. The first Christmas tree with electric light bulbs was displayed in 1882 by Edward Hibberd Johnson in New York City. His tree caused such a sensation that the New York Times wrote about it.
That may seem overly elaborate to you and me. After all, the electric lights alone would warrant a newspaper article. But it wasn't just a family Christmas tree; it was a promotion. Johnson was a vice-president at the Edison Electric Company. They subsequently sold Christmas lights for a price that was equivalent to a week's wages, but in 1882, the electric Christmas tree was to promote the idea of electric light bulbs as a concept that would spread far and wide. Read about those early electric Christmas tree lights at The Bowery Boys. Or listen to the podcast if you prefer. -via Strange Company |
Posted: 04 Dec 2020 09:20 PM PST
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The <i>Game of Thrones</i> Ice Hotel Posted: 04 Dec 2020 09:19 PM PST Every year, the SnowVillage in northern Finland is reconstituted with a new theme. This year, winter is not only coming, but has arrived. The village is now styled after scenes and characters from the Game of Thrones television series. You can sleep peacefully at night as the Night King watches over you, or just visit the hotel to take a tour or dine at the restaurant. You can see more photos of this wondrous facility at its Instagram page. -via Dornob |
Posted: 04 Dec 2020 02:05 PM PST You might have heard of the morning person (also called the morning lark or early bird) and the night owl, but have you heard of the highly active type, daytime sleepy type, daytime active type, and the moderately active type? This is my first time hearing of other chronotypes, too. That's right. This recent research suggests that there are six human chronotypes, not just two. In terms of alertness and energy levels, morning types have high alertness in the morning, which proceeds to dip to medium levels in the middle of the day, then drops to low levels in the evening. By contrast, evening types exhibit low alertness in the morning, which rises to medium levels in the middle of the day, then rises to high levels at night. The four new chronotypes display different patterns: highly active types show high alertness throughout the day; daytime sleepy types start off high in the morning, dip low in the middle of the day, then rise to a medium finish; daytime active types start low, peak at high in middle, then finish the day on middle level alertness; while moderately active types experience low energy levels all day long. Learn more about the research over at ScienceAlert. Which type of person are you? (Image Credit: RUDN University/ ScienceAlert) |
Sentences And Words: Which Do We Learn First? Posted: 04 Dec 2020 02:05 PM PST Young children face two problems when learning a language. One, they need to know which sounds group together to form words, and what these words mean. Two, they need to know how these words go together in sentences. These problems are interwoven, because to be able to acquire the meaning of words the child also needs to know what role they play in the sentence: is the word "teddy" about a thing, or what the thing is doing, or something else? And to figure out what a word's role is, the child needs to already know what it means. Professor Patrick Rebuschat likens these two problems to the chicken-and-egg problem. In this case, "which comes first, the word or the sentence?" To find out, the researchers tested how people learned new words and [sentences] by giving adults an artificial language to learn. They invented a language spoken by aliens and showed people sentences in alien language alongside scenes showing aliens carrying out different actions. Over time, learners were able to acquire the words' meanings and their roles in the scenes — the names of the aliens, their colours, and the actions they were doing. Learners do this by keeping track of all the associations between words and different aspects of the scenes across many learning trials before narrowing down to focus on those associations that are reliable. In other words, we learn sentences and words at the same time. Learn more about this study over at Neuroscience News. (Image Credit: athree23/ Pixabay) |
Baby Beaver Makes Adorable Sounds Posted: 04 Dec 2020 11:43 AM PST Meet Muff. According to a woman who runs a wildlife rehab with her mother, Muff was found "orphaned, cold, and floating down a rushing river by some friendly kayakers who decided to bring him to [them]." For the past two months, the woman and her mom brought Muff back to full health, and since beavers need at least two years of rehab, Muff will be staying with them for a little longer. This video is of the beaver making little noises that sound similar to a human baby. He is not in danger or scared, just simply making little noises, as they do. Cute! (Image Credit: ViralHog/ YouTube) |
How a 2-Year Old Solves the Trolley Problem Posted: 04 Dec 2020 11:42 AM PST The Trolley Problem is an ethical dilemma. A train is heading down the tracks toward five people. If you do nothing, those five people will die. If you switch the tracks, the train will kill only one person. What do you do? Exploring this conundrum is what Dr. E. J. Masicampo, a social psychologist at Wake Forest University, does for a living. He enlisted the assistance of his two-year old son Nicholas, who offers a unique and fresh solution that had never occurred to me before. -via Born in Space |
It’s A Mug Warmer That Looks Like A Giant Oreo Posted: 04 Dec 2020 11:42 AM PST If you're the type who drinks coffee during work, then it's likely that you prefer to have a warm cup of coffee by your side as you work. Novelty gift maker Just Mustard might just have the thing for you: a mug warmer that looks like a giant Oreo cookie. But while the device looks like the iconic cookie made by Nabisco, the embossing says "Mustard." This mug warmer, which is USB-powered, is available over at Amazon for only $18. Yum! (Image Credit: Just Mustard/ Technabob) |
Posted: 04 Dec 2020 11:42 AM PST Now isn't that a pretty sight? Etsy seller Anna Robinson of Wales paints Bob Ross-inspired landscapes and other images on jeans. People will definitely appreciate the fine arts as you strut down the street in these pants, enjoying every detail of the scenic view you offer. -via So Super Awesome |
Posted: 04 Dec 2020 11:22 AM PST (Image source: wrud4d) When you take your child to a photographer's studio, they spend the time necessary to get pictures you're happy with. On picture day at school, a photographer sets up and may have 500 kids to photograph before the day is over. There will be children who don't know how to smile on command, or don't feel like doing so. There will be children who are used to mugging for selfies. And there will be children who wear the same color as the green screen behind them. But you have to have a sense of humor about it. The parents of the boy pictured above still have the photo framed and on display twenty years later. In the images below, a little girl puts out her very best effort, but doesn't quite have it down.
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It’s A Balloon-Like Sea Creature Posted: 04 Dec 2020 11:22 AM PST Back in 2015, researchers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) spotted three of these weird sea creatures in the underwater canyons of Puerto Rico, near the seabed of roughly 13,000 feet (over 3,960 meters). Their bodies are small — about the size of a golf tee (just over 2 inches, or 6 centimeters, long) — but they're vibrant; when the creatures move and pulse, rows of tiny hair-like cilia refract light into a prism of shining colors. Recently, the researchers identified these blobs as a new species of carnivorous comb jellies, with the scientific name Duobrachium sparksae. While their wee bodies and shimmering cilia are traits commonly shared among the 100-plus known ctenophore species, the Puerto Rican party blobs still represent an exciting first in marine biology. According to the researchers, this is the first underwater species NOAA researchers have ever described from pictures alone; the team had no access to physical samples for their new study. Learn more about them over at Live Science. Nature sure is weird. (Image Credit: NOAA/ Live Science) |
Astronauts Smuggle Booze In Space, Apparently Posted: 04 Dec 2020 11:22 AM PST Astronauts are human, too. And because they're human, they are not immune to enjoying a good drink, and that is why some of them smuggle alcohol aboard the International Space Station. Astronauts are good at smuggling that kind of stuff, too. According to a new book, a lot of astronauts have done the same thing. Routinely! According to a phenomenal rundown of the history of booze in space on Supercluster, astronauts are saucing in orbit all the time. For example: "NASA will tell you there is no alcohol aboard the ISS," NASA astronaut Clayton Anderson told [2019's "Alcohol in Space" author Chris Carberry]. "As a person who lived there for five months, I'll tell you that's bogus." But it's not just for fun that they smuggle alcohol in space. For one thing, learning about the way booze behaves, at a chemical level, in a zero-g environment informs the scientific development of it down here (and there have been several cargo payloads containing alcohol used for experiments that've already made it into orbit). What are your thoughts about this one? (Image Credit: Openpics/ Pixabay) |
Posted: 04 Dec 2020 11:22 AM PST
Read about the study of dinosaur environments and how they coped with cold weather at Smithsonian. |
For Those Who Have Some Explaining To Do Posted: 04 Dec 2020 11:22 AM PST If you're someone who always has to explain something to someone, then this class might be helpful to you. If I were to take a guess, this class is like debate class or course, but way friendlier. Well, what do you think? Image via Engrish.com |
Posted: 04 Dec 2020 11:22 AM PST Or maybe it's the same monolith that inexplicably appeared, then disappeared, in Utah last week. The construction of this monolith on Pine Mountain in Atascadero, California is definitely cruder, suggesting that's an imitation of the original alien object. Atascadero News describes it: The three-sided obelisk appeared to be made of stainless steel, 10-feet tall and 18 inches wide. The object was welded together at each corner, with rivets attaching the side panels to a likely steel frame inside. The top of the monument did not show any weld marks, and it appears to be hollow at the top, and possibly bottom. Unlike its Utah sibling, the Atascadero obelisk was not attached to the ground, and could be knocked over with a firm push. The Atascadero News estimates it weighs about 200 pounds. The material appeared to be stainless steel, similar to a hood above the stove in a commercial kitchen. So it's more likely to be from pranksters rather than our actual alien visitors. -via Celine D. Ryan | Photo: Atascadero News |
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