Science Of The Day

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  • sofas0

    "Transgender woman able to breastfeed in first documented case"

    https://www.theguardian.com/scie…

    • https://www.youtube.…sofas
    • how self-absorbed does one need to be in order to put their own child at risk in order to shore up their identityGnash
    • seriously_niko
    • like either of you understand their experience...imbecile
    • isn't the mere act of having children a defining moment for some people? "life begins with kids" that shit, same thing.imbecile
    • like anyone needs to understand the experience of poisoning a kid. but stay woke! cause that's more importantGnash
    • https://www.youtube.…GM278
    • HAHAHAHA SOFAS should have clicked your link.GM278
  • sted7

    How the Universe Got Its Bounce Back

    Cosmologists have shown that it’s theoretically possible for a contracting universe to bounce and expand. The new work resuscitates an old idea that directly challenges the Big Bang theory of cosmic origins.

    https://www.quantamagazine.org/b…

    animation by qbn member davidope

    • you sure he is on qbn?
      where's lolcube?
      uan
    • sup?lolcube
    • This isn't a new concept. From 2006: https://www.theguard…garbage
    • Not knocking the idea, just saying.garbage
    • It's older than that - i was a big believer in universal expansion/collapse when I was in Uni ... 20 years ago *sobs*detritus
    • *note 'believer' :)detritus
    • This theory has been around for awhile though. But it's seems unlikely because the rate of expansion is actually accelerating, not decelerating.twooh
    • The very cyclical nature of... nature would tend to lend weight to this theory.set
    • Looove that animation!!!jagara
    • Me too. I stared at it for about 5 minutesset
    • I believe (!) that an ever expanding u overseas could be 'cyclical' too - once every sub-atom has utterly faded out, a new null state might be achieved..detritus
    • (Ugh *universe, not u overseas, damn phone)
      ..allowing for whatever event precipitates big bangs to happen again
      detritus
  • PonyBoy-8

    Genetically engineered ‘super-horses’ to be born in 2019 and could soon compete in Olympics

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/scien…

    "Genetically engineered horses designed to be faster, stronger and better jumpers will be born in 2019 after a breakthrough by the same laboratory which clones polo ponies."

    • near and dear to my heart (and CALLES')PonyBoy
    • I have mixed feeling about this tech. It's one thing to breed preferred traits over generations, another to do it instantly with genetic finagling...Gnash
    • ... the end result is the same, why aren't both methods equally disturbing?Gnash
    • (I take it by the DV's that most feel that genetic manipulation is bad).Gnash
    • isn't almost everything Genetically engineered these days?GuyFawkes
  • sofas0

    Un-backed random thoughts of the day:

    Is fear of intimacy widespread?
    If intimacy is personal truth, and people are constantly lying because the truth is scary, then I think it's widespread. People are scared of being intimate with themselves and with others.

    In relationships, it seems sex is used to mask it, make it seem as if it isn't present and keep the mind off it.
    Why is it that the first intimate contact between two newly acquainted people who are interested in a long term meaningful relationship, is not an intimate discussion or feeling, but touch and specifically french kissing?
    In no time, they go from strangers to sexually engaged with no intimcay involved.

    It seems as if the more one represses intimacy, the more a yearning for contact manifests in needing touch.
    Also with touch alone, one can continue lying, no words are necessary.

    Interestingly, pedophiles suffer from this, maybe this has to do with circles of violence as the bellow wiki article relates to abuse victims as well -
    "Current studies show that people who have an insufficient amount of intimacy or are lonely are more vulnerable to exhibit sexually offending behaviors.[12]"
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fe…

    Going with this rational, maybe it's not surprising that men, who are supposed to be stoic and fear more than a handshake with other men or talking about their feelings, have more fear of intimacy than women.
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub…
    https://www.psychologytoday.com/…

    I assume that the fear is increasing.

  • face_melter4

    "This week, the scientists and engineers on the Voyager team did something very special. They commanded the spacecraft to fire a set of four trajectory thrusters for the first time in 37 years..."

    https://arstechnica.com/science/…

    • brilliantfadein11
    • amazing—they had to wait nearly 40 hours just to see if Voyager accepted the command (20 hours to get there... 20 hours more to see if it even responded)PonyBoy
    • ... and we bitch about Netflix lagging from time to time... :)PonyBoy
    • ^ hahahamugwart
    • Truly remarkable, even more remarkable is the sad state of affairs 40 years later on the country that launched it. I bet it’s glad to be so far from earth lol_niko
    • lol ponyfadein11
  • dorf4

    the word expanding is incorrect. the proper term would be stretching. the universe is stretching just how a balloon stretches when filled with air.

    imagine that you draw a number of dots on a balloon. as you pump air in, the dots start to separate and the distance between them increases. this scenario is what's currently happening in the universe.

    better explained here:
    http://curious.astro.cornell.edu…

    • what about pre-Great Inflation?detritus
    • from what I've read it could be that the universe was a small dense object held in check by gravity. then a high energy event occurred to overcome gravity.dorf
    • try reading Fabric of the Cosmos by Brian Greene. It's a little dense at times but provides good explanation of concepts.dorf
    • when u chase a rainbow is it expanding. i think our concepts of beginnings/ends are incorrect. we think of the things as static and solid, but they never are.deathboy
    • time and space I always think of as a rainbow. no beginning no end because both are dynamic and relative. tomorrow is yesterday. does it matterdeathboy
    • but i also played with the idea that there was a beginning and an end. which would mean there is no infinite. which might fuck math up. need a symbol that meansdeathboy
    • almost infinite but not infinite in that it might take near infinite decimal spaces but cant be infinite. but how do u measure something near infinite? a superdeathboy
    • computer to run for 1000s year to register a final near infinite number. than their is language and time. many cultures dont have language to perceive timedeathboy
    • i really liked the movie arrival with its focus linguistics and time. How linguistics define time and cultures like hopi see it differently.deathboy
    • perhaps we have used language wrong to give time a now before and after which altars our perception of it and approach. its convenient for dates thoughdeathboy
    • ^ why didn't you just write that in a separate post?dorf
    • more of an off the cuff comment. not really deserving of a post for a thread bumpdeathboy
    • A balloon is 'expanding' when it's blown up. Stretching... Expanding.... Semanticsset
    • I agree with deathboy though. Trying to fit the universe in to our narrow understanding is pretty futile.set
  • Gnash3

    Scientists Have Reversed Brain Damage in a 2-Year-Old Girl Who Drowned in a Swimming Pool
    She was in the water for 15 minutes.


    https://www.sciencealert.com/sci…

    • "she could no longer speak, walk, or respond to voices – but would uncontrollably squirm around and shake her head."Gnash
    • After treatment "still bore a mild residual injury to her brain, but had experienced a near-complete reversal of cortical and white matter atrophy."Gnash
    • amazingGnash
    • if it's the only case of its kind, I wonder of there were other factors at play here. The oxygen therapy seems like it boosts the body's ability to regenerate_niko
    • cells so it must have been something with this girls's unique physiology that helped her pull through where others failed. x-23? :)_niko
    • they're pretty sure it had to do with her age -- the brain is still developing.Gnash
    • likely have no effect on us geezersGnash
    • it's not clear how often this has been tried beforeGnash
    • Interesting. I've read about parts of the young brain taking on another part's job if it's damaged. Crazyset
  • Gnash0

    Human Footprints Found In Greece Almost 6-Million-Years-Old, Could Challenge Theories Of Human Evolution

    A new discovery of early human footprints in Greece doesn’t just stand out because the footprints are said to be close to 6-million-years-old. Instead, it’s because of where the footprints were spotted, as the findings could challenge the accepted theory that humanity began in Africa and didn’t spread out to other continents until millions of years later.

    http://www.inquisitr.com/4473295…

    • lol... wrong pic?PonyBoy
    • ^ yup. supposed to be the man pictured above (or below if you're a philistine)Gnash
    • Paging Sonset
  • Gnash1

    Small Animals Live in a Slow-Motion World
    Time seems to pass more slowly for lighter animals with faster metabolisms

    https://www.scientificamerican.c…

    TIME FLIES (BUT NOT IF YOU'RE A FLY) To a fly, an incoming swat appears to move in slow motion (as many would-be bug killers have suspected all along). That's because flies process about four times more visual information per second than humans do—they see 250 frames per second to our 60

  • Gnash0

    crap. supposed to be this pic. damn clipboard. oops

  • _niko3

    .

    pretend that dot above is the current size of the universe. How far it has expanded from the big bang until now, 13.82 billion years later. Your screen represents the void that it is expanding into.

    Actually the space in the room that you are in, or the space of the entire planet or the space of the universe itself compared to that dot above represents the infinite space that our universe can expand into.

    Now what's to say that there isn't another dot 1km away, or 100 km away or a million km away. What's to say that there isn't billions of these dots stretching endlessly into the infinite void.

    I've woken up in a cold sweat the past couple of days struggling with the concept of the nothingness before the big bang(s).

    How did energy, gravity and everything else arise from nothingness. If there is time after the big bang, was there time before? how much?

    • btw, here is the universe for scale
      http://scaleofuniver…
      _niko
    • smoke a weed for a month straight, isolate yourself in a room, and ponder these thoughts...will lead to an existential crisishotroddy
    • lol fuck that, I'm having an existential crisis with just a beer and some coffee I'd hate to see what weed would do to me lol_niko
    • go find some lectures on the subject ... online or if you're lucky you can find a live talk at a university or museum seriesmonospaced
    • Seriously awe inspiring stuff that makes you see how insignificant we all are in the big scheme of things. Quite humbling, mysterious and perfect in its nature.monospaced
    • https://www.youtube.…dorf
    • time, space, and matter are inextricably linked. matter compressed to a singularity just means time and space exist in a different form.Gnash
    • Thoughts like these are why I had to stop taking acid way back. Getting lost in infinity isn't anywhere near as cool as it sounds. It's a sickeningly big place.detritus
    • ... much more fascinating and meaningful than religionmonospaced
    • There's not much human-tangible meaning in infinity ... unless you're Numbers Guy and don't understand how much noise there is before value.detritus
    • true, there is no tangible benefit to being able to comprehend the universe we live in, but that comprehension is more valuable (to me) than mere superstitionmonospaced
    • All religion is superstition? Even the better parts of Jesus' teachings? Buddha's?detritus
    • There's a lot more to religion than sky daddy bullshit, irrespective of whether we agnostics agree that bundling morals within is a good idea or not.detritus
    • I didn't say that.monospaced
    • In my opinion, the better part of Jesus', or Buddha's teachings, have nothing to do with superstition at all. They aren't even really religious. My opinion.monospaced
    • In my opinion, the idea that morals are unique to religion is pure nonsense.monospaced
    • I just find the actual universe, the one we learn more about all the time, including infinity, to be amazing and humbling, in an almost spiritual way.monospaced
    • You implied as much, and I didn't say that.
      I sense that you're going to get all reactionary at anything I respond with here, so I'm bowing out.
      detritus
    • https://youtu.be/rlm…mtch
    • Certainly not reactionary, man. I even clarified that it was my opinion about superstition. I shared a thought, you started the arguing. Chillax please.monospaced
    • Go back and read, my friend, we're just having a simple, healthy, discussion, and saying similar things. :)monospaced
    • matter spontaneously comes into existence https://www.scientif… quantum fluctuation for the winimbecile
    • and fuck ben wexler for once again starting shit and blaming his "victim"imbecile
    • dude what is your problem? i didn't start any shit, I was talking about what _niko posted, I didn't say anything antagonisticmonospaced
    • this is at least the 3rd time you've attempted to use my real name here too, and incorrectly I might add, which is super cunty ... why on earth would you do thamonospaced
    • I feel like the universe is amazing, and then he started getting on my case about my views on religion as if I attacked. I don't deserve this kind of response.monospaced
    • I'm literally agreeing with detritus, and he with me, and then you come in and out of nowhere get all weird. You know how fucked up that is? Look in the mirror.monospaced
    • NO REAL NAMES!
      NO REAL NAMES!
      detritus
    • "We are all utterly insignificant in this vast universe, BUT DON'T USE MY REAL NAME"nb
    • But seriously, giving out user's real name while being anonymous yourself is so fucking cowardly.nb
    • https://youtu.be/4F9…autoflavour
    • not sure how this got here, but I was simply relating to niko, and only niko, in the same fucking vein of thought and feeling as niko ...monospaced
    • you get a comfy 'fuzzy wuzzy' feeling in religion that you don't get from 'enlightment'. Enlightment is a mind blowing feeling.hotroddy
    • i can understand why folks want to snuggle up w jeezus.hotroddy
    • mono loses his shitpinkfloyd
    • ;)pinkfloyd
    • :/monospaced
    • i am justin gum
      ben wexler is a fuckwit
      imbecile
    • love,imbecile
    • it goes fuckwit #1 benfal, #2 ben wexler, #3... trolls, then the rest of us fill in the spaces way below the trollsimbecile
    • Attn imbecile:
      Continuing to dox monospaced is going to result in your banning from QBN. Cease now. This is your only warning.
      Moderator
  • Gnash2

    First object teleported to Earth's orbit

    Chinese researchers have teleported a photon from the Gobi desert to a satellite orbiting five hundred kilometres above the earth.

    This is achieved through quantum entanglement, a process where two particles react as one with no physical connection between them.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/av/scien…

    • this is great and all but wouldn't we be better off if we stood on corners wearing a fez angrily yelling shit about a glorious past that never happened?_niko
    • seriously, who needs scientific progress or any kind of progress when we can just dig up obscure non-factual shit that we read on the internet and break..._niko
    • ...everyone's balls about it._niko
    • https://darrenjamese…pablo28
    • haha, nikoGnash
    • you can't even enjoy science anymore niko. lay off this atheist attitude a bit man. And fez is a fashion item, let's not mix it into this.Beeswax
    • ^ he's referencing a 'moors' discussion happening elsewhere, bees -- not about god, about pseudo-scienceGnash
    • What gnash said. I might break balls about religion in general but I'd never insult the fez! ;)_niko
    • as an aside, the fez was originally Greek, ya knowGnash
    • The Fez was originally a Greek hat (fesi) the Ottomans adopted in the early 19th Century as part of their efforts to modernize w/ their European counterpartsGnash
    • :)Gnash
    • interesting. The dude on that video appropriates a greek head dress and dreads which the greeks also rocked thousands of years ago lol._niko
    • lulz.Gnash
  • Gnash3
    • we're number 1!_niko
    • Greece, bitchesGnash
    • http://e.snmc.io/lk/…Gnash
    • woohoo, another thing we invented! mankind!!! lol_niko
    • Greek is https://en.wikipedia…sonnde
    • well, not really. Greeks were already messing the Phoenician alphabet in the 8th c.BC. Punic was a Phoenician dialect that evolved around the same time.Gnash
    • but I get your point.Gnash
    • but the greeks were already speaking porto-greek, they just 'appropriated' the phoenician letter forms to illustrate their wordsGnash
    • you said something about gentrifying?sonnde
    • did I?Gnash
    • I'll let you figure that one out.sonnde
    • linguistic evolution ≠ gentrificationGnash
    • social engineering via connotative linguistics = gentrification ... you said appropriate, if greeks are so dope why not invent something ... they are childrensonnde
    • https://assets2.ello…sonnde
    • I'm not familiar with connotative linguistics - i'll look it up. I only put 'appropriated" in quotes because of the recent social memeGnash
    • greeks invented tons of stuff -- including HUMANITY! hence the initial post!Gnash
    • Ya, not sure why they riffed on Phoenician letters instead of making new. perhaps was just easier since it was already somewhat knownGnash
    • Yeah easy breezysonnde
    • I do believe that, Easy Breezy, in the anthropological term for thatGnash
    • *is theGnash
    • Don't feed the troll, there is no connection between Greeks and Punic no matter what son of ham claims. He's trying to say black people rule_niko
    • Even though carthigeans and phoneceans werent black. Then he has the audacity to question the contributions of Greeks to the world? L o fucking L_niko
    • Plus clearly the phonecean alphabet is older than the Greek but it was invented by a Greek living in phoenecia at the time :)_niko
    • and the phoenecians borrowed from the egyptians, who borrowed from someone else all the way down the line to the first people 7.2 million years ago in Greece._niko
    • so suck it, lol :)_niko
    • ehehe. /threadGnash
    • Good luck w that theory, plus we have more https://www.ted.com/…sonnde
    • You holding on to 1 of nothingsonnde
    • Caucasians are dark skin not pale, you are not original anything, Original people from Ireland? Briton? SWARTHY!sonnde
    • https://en.wikipedia… You're not even original Greek. Shove it!sonnde
    • ^ that's a romanGnash
    • Its called Greco - Roman for a reasonsonnde
    • https://assets2.ello…sonnde
    • ^ supposed to be ari and al?Gnash
    • Aristotle tutors Alexander the Great. From Animals and their Uses/Kitab na't al-hayawan wa-manafi'ihi by Aristotle, this edition by ibn Bakhtishu'sonnde
    • http://68.media.tumb… "but he was white??!!" lolsonnde
    • skin colour has nothing to do with race. unless you're a redneck in which case you think Sicilians are black._niko
    • race has nothing to do with nationality, you're the one saying 'white' ... https://siciliangodm…sonnde
    • Italy = Etruscan ... At least this lady can see it http://68.media.tumb…sonnde
    • ^^^ that's socrates, not ari.Gnash
    • didn't say it was, you're confusing images, aristotle was in the other image. keep up buddy. http://68.media.tumb…sonnde
    • point is 2 for me none for yousonnde
    • I know, I said Ari and Al before you posted. You keep dropping random shit, hard to keep up.Gnash
    • Interesting thoughGnash
    • Socrates sure was an ugly fucker, thoughGnash
    • fight tooth and nail for a crumb thats not yours https://consequenceo… = uglysonnde
    • "Interesting" I'm sure it issonnde
    • ^ not an attractive lot there, eitherGnash
    • bottom line -- humans arose out of Greece.Gnash
    • mankind not mansonnde
    • still. greece.Gnash
    • oh cause you say so? i get it eh? okee then aw geezsonnde
    • 'cause scienceGnash
    • i see where trump gets it from ... btw who actually voted for him? hmmm...sonnde
    • not sure how much you see, actually, you don't display much insight.Gnash
    • The secret (i.e., “Sacred”) religion arose from the natural and insuperable difficulty of communicating the great truths of astronomy to the ignorant ...sonnde
    • ^ The guy who wrote that, while a decent musician, was intellectually, a child. you should choose smarter influences.Gnash
    • I'm sure you were at the cool table and he was drooling somewhere, I'm sure.sonnde
    • don't be surprised that you can't see too far when your standing on the shoulders of midgetsGnash
    • you're* g'dammitGnash
    • "don't be surprised that you can't see too far when your standing on the shoulders of midgets". f'lol gnashdetritus
    • the masses ... them assessonnde
    • the moorons, the mooronsGnash
    • wrong spelling, geez get an education you beast https://en.wikipedia…)sonnde
    • Maroons were Africans who had escaped from slavery in the Americas and formed independent settlements. The term can also be applied to their descendants.sonnde
    • spelling is correct
      http://i.imgur.com/n…
      Gnash
    • oh yeah, i forgot grunts and squeaks, okey dokey!sonnde
  • Gnash4

    Secret of how Roman concrete survived tidal battering for 2,000 years revealed

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/scien…

  • sonnde0

    "In an announcement sure to spark a firestorm of controversy, researchers say they’ve found signs of ancient humans in California between 120,000 and 140,000 years ago—more than a hundred thousand years before humans were thought to exist anywhere in the Americas."

    • http://news.national…sonnde
    • Graham Hancockfadein11
    • Love all this stuff. used to love Michael Cremo's talks but man his voicemugwart
    • Biblios Heliotechsonnde
    • what's going on here? Son posting a credible source? Son posting text that isn't embedded in images? Son getting up-votes? whhaaaaat??? lol_niko
    • he hasn't polluted it with his derp ideology yet. give it timeGnash
    • https://scontent.fap…sonnde
    • dna's out and you're outta luck. stick to your MadE uP mYtholoGyGnash
    • get well soon kiddo ... sounds like hay fever mr rhesussonnde
    • no allergies at all, no "intolerances either. How's the sickle cell and lactose intolerance, fellow simian?Gnash
    • wouldn't know, we're disease & rh freesonnde
    • lactose intolerant??? did i just fucking read that? so ... you're a baby cow now?? lmfaosonnde
    • it's in your blood, doesn't matter how much pot you smoke. you're stuck with it :)Gnash
    • just like you and i have differences on drinking from an animal, same w disease, no telling someone who thinks sick is the normsonnde
    • here goes one for you, my blood is DOMINANT, yours is RECESSIVE ... hows that for blood you fuckin idiotsonnde
    • Your 'dominant' blood seems weak and polluted with disease. perhaps you don't know what dominant means. check your word app.Gnash
    • and I have not drank milk since I was a child.Gnash
    • 'seems'sonnde
    • you all still don't know how to keep rhythm - so i can see how things may SEEM to you, your vision is blurred, you think getting sick is healthy, stupid!sonnde
    • For Anyone Who Has Been Triggered By The Milkers, Don't Let The 'Tolerant' Tease You. https://saveourbones…sonnde
    • does camel milk count?
      http://xawaash.com/w…
      Gnash
    • http://i.dailymail.c…Gnash
    • http://www.ancient-o…Gnash
    • Anyone telling you milk does the body good is probably sick and senile. Just ignore them nature will do the rest inevitably.sonnde
    • http://www.patientna…Gnash
    • More information for the original inhabitants of the land: http://68.media.tumb…sonnde
    • Even more: http://68.media.tumb…sonnde
    • sorry but science... *sad trombone*Gnash
    • Thing is 'these people' are actually MY FAMILY lol ... http://68.media.tumb…sonnde
    • ^don't be ashamed, sometime people in prison are innocentGnash
    • https://instagram.fa…sonnde
  • sonnde-3

  • plash1

    The CRS-11 will be the 100th launch from historic LC-39A (of Saturn V and Shuttle program fame) at Kennedy Space Center. Following stage separation, the first stage of Falcon 9 will attempt to land at SpaceX’s Landing Zone 1 (LZ-1) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida.

    • Launch Scheduled for June 1 at 5:55 p.m. EDT/ 21:55UTCplash
    • This will be the first time that a Dragon spacecraft will be reused and should help scale back the production line and shift focus to Dragon v2.plash
    • 10 billion dollars spent on research and development. 10 dollars spent on graphic design._niko
    • Lol niko, I was going to say this mission will be remembered as the 1st time humans put truly awful graphic design into space.fadein11
  • Gnash2

    This 3,500-Year-Old Greek Tomb Upended What We Thought We Knew About the Roots of Western Civilization

    http://www.smithsonianmag.com/hi…

    • 'Minoans and Mycenaean Greeks would surely have spoken each other’s languages, may have intermarried and likely adopted and refashioned one another’s customs'Gnash
    • In other words, it isn’t the Mycenaeans or the Minoans to whom we can trace our (western) cultural heritage since 1450 B.C., but rather a blending of the two.Gnash
    • (^ from the article)Gnash
  • sonnde-3

    • writings of a mad man. and the re-posting of one too. hehe_niko
    • yeah cause i'm sure you have done tons of research and writing of your ownsonnde
    • well, since "the continent of America" was never "one and the same" as Egypt, this entire theory falls apart completelymonospaced
    • yeah great research, great facts, good job on solving that one bozosonnde
    • besides, mankind was not even around at the time when the continents of north america and africa were unitedmonospaced
    • man and mankind are different. dominant vs recessivesonnde
    • good job posting something so easy to disprove, quality B+ trolling, sonmonospaced
    • good job not disproving something so easy to disprove losersonnde
    • lol, nobody said they were the same, derpmonospaced
    • the very idea that north america and egypt were the same place while mankind existed is patently false ... sorrymonospaced
    • also, this isn't science, nor is it scientificmonospaced
    • not the same place, one came before the other, ever heard of a satellite egypt? of course you haven't, cause you're a genius!sonnde
    • "at that time Egypt and the continent of America were one and the same"monospaced
    • but you say not only were they NOT the same, they weren't at the same time, which directly contradicts the text you posted, twicemonospaced
    • are you speaking on inception or rediscovery, clearly you're confused, not mesonnde
    • I'm saying that Memphis, Egypt was never one with the continent of America, and that America isn't the source of ancient symbolism that the middle east adoptedmonospaced
    • That's what the text you posted claims, and I'm not confused about what it's saying. I'm simply saying that it's insanely wrong.monospaced
    • satellite dweeb ... one meaning it was 'like' 'similar' ... yes, egypt was here first then made there ... more pyramids here than theresonnde
    • aah, glorious.inteliboy
    • you been to Egypt son?inteliboy
    • wow, a paragraph with no attribution on the internet. must be fact!scarabin
    • its actually directly linked to someone who you mention in opening prayer. but yeah, lets go with the credibility thing, yeah, that'll get em!sonnde
    • this isn't scientific in any way, everything about it requires us to believe continents were in different places, and that's just not truemonospaced
    • riiiight, nothing ever shifts, plates don't equators don't, there was never one mass.sonnde
    • not while our species walked the earth, which is why this is 100% fake and unscientificmonospaced
    • Do yourself a favor. Look up these two periods of time: when the planet was one supercontinent, and when homosapiens emerged. Then report back.monospaced
    • Atlantis & Lemuriasonnde
    • Potatomonospaced
  • sonnde-3

    • WTF is this?utopian
    • insufferably smug as always.inteliboy
    • oh shit, i thought maybe you could read itsonnde
    • the study of the physical features of the earth and its atmosphere, and of human activity as it affects and is affected by these, including the distribution ofsonnde
    • populations and resources, land use, and industries.
      the nature and relative arrangement of places and physical features.
      sonnde
    • This is not a 'study'. I hope you can see that. Claiming that the 'Americas' was the first born continent is a little bit of a waning bell. The first two...Morning_star
    • ..words of the article itself is enough evidence to conclude that this is worthless. To top it all, you seem incapable of offering any context or opinion tin...Morning_star
    • ...(in) justifying your posts.Morning_star
    • all moot, anyway. since it's been established now that Greeks created mankind!Gnash
    • Adam and Eve were Greek?Morning_star
    • duh, yaGnash
    • I mean it does have footnotes.sonnde
    • nothing about this is scientificmonospaced
    • Geography.sonnde
    • what about it?monospaced
    • See Definition Abovesonnde
    • That's not the definition of Geography, and that's not scientific in any way shape or form.monospaced
    • Geography (from Greek γεωγραφία, geographia, literally "earth description") is a field of science devoted to the study of the lands, the features ...sonnde
    • like I said, your post has nothing to do with science, let alone geographymonospaced
    • tldr; is this flat earth intel?ArchitectofFate
    • illegible, too small to read.utopian
    • *factssonnde
    • don't mind that guy over there yelling at the wall, he does that.sonnde
    • i like small type sorry grampssonnde
    • still not science nor scientific in any way conceivablemonospaced
    • right cause geography is too deep for you, here go, H20 means water. fun right?sonnde
    • here *you go
      *H2O
      i corrected myself, see, now correct yourself and never post again
      sonnde
    • I"m not wrong, the text you posted is. Geography isn't what is being discussed in the text, nor is it approached from a scientific point of view.monospaced
    • Masonry is Science. Too bad you're not in the know of 'self' ... this describes 'earth' - geography accomplished get a fucking life.sonnde
    • I have a great life, and I don't need to believe in some random interpretation of what "knowing of oneself" is today either. Sounds like you have no life.monospaced
    • carry on with your unwanted trolling ... really makes this place funmonospaced
    • sounds masochisticsonnde
    • yeah, you're fucking weirdmonospaced