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In my dayes happened that certayn marchau[n]tes were in a ship in Tamyse [the Thames] for to haue sayled ouer the see into Zelande [in Holland] and for lacke of wynde thei taryed atte Forlond [in Kent]. and wente to lande for to refreshe them[.] And one of theym named Sheffelde, a mercer, cam in to an hows [house] and axed [asked] for mete [food], and specyally he axyed after egges[.] And the good wyf answerde, that she coude speke no Frenshe. And the marchau[n]t was angry, for he also coude speke no Frenshe, but wolde haue hadde egges and she understode hym not. And thenne at laste a nother sayd that he wolde haue eyren, then the good wyf sayd that she understood hym wel. Loo, what sholde a man in thyse dayes now wryte, egges or eyren, certainly it is harde to playse euery man, by cause of dyuersite [&] chau[n]ge of langage.
Forsooth, Caxton, thou hast said it.
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Well, thanks to my friend, the brilliant writer Gil Miller, I now have another reason to huddle under my blankie for the rest of the day.
We've dealt here before with a great many cosmic phenomena that you would seriously not want to get too close to. Some of these sound like Geordi-Laforgian technobabble from Star Trek, but I promise all of them are quite real:
From this, you might come to the conclusion that I have a morbid fascination with astronomical phenomena that are big and scary and dangerous and can kill you. This is not entirely incorrect; I would only modify it insofar as to add that I am also morbidly fascinated with geological phenomena (earthquakes, volcanoes, pyroclastic flows, lahars) and meteorological phenomena (hurricanes, tornadoes, lightning, microbursts) that are big and scary and dangerous and can kill you.
Call it a failing.
In any case, thanks to Gil's eagle-eyed facility for spotting cool recent research in science, I now have a new astronomical one to add to the list -- a luminous fast cooler. This one provides the added frisson of being (as yet) unexplained -- although as you'll see, there's a possible explanation for it that makes it even scarier.
The research that uncovered the phenomenon was done by a team led by Matt Nicholl, astrophysicist at Queen's University Belfast, using data from ATLAS, the Asteroid Terrestrial-Impact Last Alert System (speaking of scary phenomena) telescope network in Hawaii, Chile and South Africa. The event they discovered was (fortunately) nowhere near our own neighborhood; it was spotted in a galaxy two billion light years away.
What happened is that a completely ordinary, Sun-like star suddenly flared up by a factor of a hundred billion. The first thought, of course, was supernova -- but this explosion's profile was completely different than that of a supernova, and stars the size of the Sun aren't supposed to go supernova anyhow. Then, as if to add to the mystery, it cooled just as fast, fading by two orders of magnitude in only two weeks. A month later, it was only at one percent of its peak brightness shortly after detonating (still, of course, considerably brighter than it had been).
The first question, of course, is "if it wasn't a supernova, what was it?" And the answer thus far is "we're not sure." So the researchers started trying to find other examples of the phenomenon, and uncovered two previously unrecognized events that matched the recent explosion's profile, one in 2009 and one in 2020.
But that still doesn't tell us how a perfectly ordinary star can suddenly go boom. Nicholl says that the team has come up with only one possible hypothesis -- and it's a doozie.
"The most plausible explanation seems to be a black hole colliding with a star," Nicholl said.
Well, that's just all kinds of comforting.
So it's all very well to say cheerily, "Hey, at least the Sun's not gonna go supernova, and we don't have any Wolf-Rayet stars nearby, and the nearest gamma-ray burster isn't pointed in our direction, and false vacuum collapse is really unlikely! We're sitting here happily orbiting a highly stable star still in the prime of life, in a quiet corner of the galaxy! What could go wrong?"
Apparently, what could go wrong is that a black hole could come swooping in out of nowhere and make the Sun explode.
Now, mind you, there are no black holes near us. That we know of. And chances are, we would, because even though they're black (thus the name), their influence on the matter around them is considerable. The great likelihood is if there were a black hole headed for a crash with the Sun, you'd know about it plenty in advance.
Not that there's anything you could do about it, other than the time-honored maneuver of sticking your head between your legs and kissing your ass goodbye.
So thanks to Gil for making me feel even tinier and more fragile than I already did, which led me to share this delightful discovery with you.
Have a nice day.
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[T]he genetic makeup of northern Europe was shaped by migrations from Siberia that began at least 3500 years ago. This Siberian ancestry was subsequently admixed into many modern populations in the region, particularly into populations speaking Uralic languages today. Additionally... [the] ancestors of modern Saami inhabited a larger territory during the Iron Age.The coolest part is that this lines up brilliantly with what we know about languages spoken in the area:
The Finno-Ugric branch of the Uralic language family, to which both Saami and Finnish languages belong, has diverged from other Uralic languages no earlier than 4000–5000 years ago, when Finland was already inhabited by speakers of a language today unknown. Linguistic evidence shows that Saami languages were spoken in Finland prior to the arrival of the early Finnish language and have dominated the whole of the Finnish region before 1000 CE. Particularly, southern Ostrobothnia, where Levänluhta is located, has been suggested through place names to harbour a southern Saami dialect until the late first millennium, when early Finnish took over as the dominant language. Historical sources note Lapps living in the parishes of central Finland still in the 1500s. It is, however, unclear whether all of them spoke Saami, or if some of them were Finns who had changed their subsistence strategy from agriculture to hunting and fishing. There are also documents of intermarriage, although many of the indigenous people retreated to the north... Ancestors of present-day Finnish speakers possibly migrated from northern Estonia, to which Finns still remain linguistically close, and displaced but also admixed with the local population of Finland, the likely ancestors of today’s Saami speakers.
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We've had both our dogs DNA tested -- purely for our own entertainment, not because we have any concern about "pure breeding" -- and both of them gave us results that were quite a shock.
First, there's Guinness, whom the rescue agency told us was a black lab/akita mix. You can see why:
Then there's Rosie, who we thought sure would turn out to be fox terrier/beagle:
I'm not sure that it's reasonable to expect a fifty-dollar mail-order dog DNA test to be all that reliable, mind you. In Guinness's case, though, there are features that do make sense -- the ebullient disposition and square face of the AmStaff, and the curly tail and thick, silky undercoat of his husky/chow ancestry. Whatever its accuracy, though, it's fascinating that any signal of ancestry at all shows up in a simple saliva test.
Especially given that just about every dog breed in existence traces back to wild dog populations in only a few thousand years. That's an extremely short time to have any evolutionary divergence take place. But genetic testing has become sophisticated enough that we can now retrace the steps in dog evolution -- creating a family tree of dog relationships encompassing 321 different dog breeds (including several sorts of wild dogs).
A team of geneticists led by Jeff Kidd of the University of Michigan, Jennifer R. S. Meadows of Uppsala University, and Elaine A. Ostrander of the NIH National Human Genome Research Institute did a detailed study of two thousand different DNA samples containing over forty-eight million analyzable sequences. They identified three million SNPs -- single nucleotide polymorphisms, or "snips" -- that were characteristic of certain breeds.
"We did an analysis to see how similar the dogs were to each other," Kidd said. "It ended up that we could divide them into around twenty-five major groups that pretty much match up with what people would have expected based on breed origin, the dogs' type, size and coloration."****************************************
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The main character of Haruki Murakami's brilliant and terrifying short story "Sleep" is a perfectly normal middle-class woman living in Tokyo. Her husband is a dentist, and they've got a lively, cheerful five-year-old son. Everything about her life is so ordinary that it's hard even to describe.
Then, in one instant, all that changes.
One night, she awakens -- or thinks she has -- to a terrifying vision that even afterward, she's not certain was real or a hallucination during sleep paralysis. A dark shape is huddled by the foot of her bed, and unfolds itself to reveal the figure of an elderly man, dressed in black, staring at her with an undisguised malevolence. She attempts to scream, and can't. After a moment, she forces herself to close her eyes, and when she opens them, the man is gone. She's drenched with sweat, so she gets up, showers, pours herself a brandy, and waits for morning.
But after that moment, she is completely unable to go to sleep. Ever.
The remainder of the story could be a teaching text in a fiction writing course lesson about how to create a believable Unreliable Narrator. She returns to her ordinary life, but everything starts seeming... off. Some senses are amplified, others dulled into nonexistence. Everyday objects appear surreal, as if they've changed subtly, but she can't quite tell how. One evening, she watches her husband as he's sleeping, and realizes that his face suddenly looks ugly to her. She takes to going out driving at night (once her husband and son are asleep) and meets people who may or may not be real. Her progressive slide into insanity reaches its apogee in the wee hours of one night, after seventeen days with no sleep, when she drives farther than she has ever driven, and ends up in an empty parking lot overlooking the ocean. Dark figures raise themselves on either side of her little car, grab it by the handles, and begin to rock it back and forth, harder and harder. She's thrown around by the motion, slamming against the door and steering wheel, and her last panicked thought is, "It's going to flip over, and there's nothing I can do to stop it."
An apt, if disturbing, summation of what is happening to her mind.
Sleep is an absolutely critical part of human health, but even after decades of research, it is unclear why. Just about every animal studied sleeps, and many of them seem to dream -- or at least undergo REM sleep -- the same as we do. (I know my dogs do; both of them bark and twitch in their sleep, and our sweet, gentle little dog Rosie sometimes growls as if she was the biggest meanest Rottweiler on the planet.)
Now, a team at the Binzhou Medical University's Shandong Technology Innovation Center has found one reason why sleep is so critical. Sleep-deprived mice stop producing a protein called pleiotrophin, which apparently has a protective effect on the cells of the hippocampus. Reduced pleiotrophin levels lead to cell death -- impairing both memory and spatial awareness. Pleiotrophin decline has also been implicated in neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's.
What's unclear, though, is what direction the causation points. Does the decline in pleiotrophin from sleeplessness cause the neurodegeneration, or does the neurodegeneration lead to insomnia and a drop in pleiotrophin levels? The current research suggests the former, as the mice in the study had been genetically engineered to experience sleep disturbances, and the pleiotrophin loss seems to have followed as a consequence of the sleep deprivation. Then, the question is, if pleiotrophin decline does trigger neurodegeneration, could the damage from Alzheimer's be prevented by increasing the production of the protein?
Uncertain at this point, but it's intriguing to find one piece of a puzzle that has intrigued us for centuries. It seems fitting to end this musing on the power of sleep with the famous quote from Macbeth:
Methought I heard a voice cry ‘Sleep no more!
Macbeth does murder sleep,’ the innocent sleep,
Sleep that knits up the ravell’d sleave of care,
The death of each day’s life, sore labour’s bath,
Balm of hurt minds, great nature’s second course,
Chief nourisher in life’s feast.
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Well, I just ran into the single stupidest conspiracy theory in existence.
Don't even try to convince me there's a dumber one, because I don't want to hear it. HAARP controlling hurricanes and tornadoes to target enemies? Pshaw. A global network of Illuminati in league with Reptilian aliens to control major world governments? Amateur hour. Big Pharma putting mind-control microchips in our meds to turn us all into soulless automata? Little League.
Because now we have: the COVID vaccine is "installed with payloads" of the Marburg virus, which will be activated in October by a signal broadcast from 5G networks, triggering the zombie apocalypse and killing billions, starting with all of the people who were foolish enough to get vaccinated. This will result in the Evil Democrats winning (for that, read stealing) the 2024 election.
*brief pause for you to regain your equilibrium*
Okay, some background first.
Marburg virus causes a deadly hemorrhagic fever similar to the better-known (and related) Ebola virus. It's a bad one; there's no vaccine yet, and even with treatment the mortality rate is somewhere between sixty and eighty percent. It's endemic in certain parts of Africa, and seems to be carried by bats and monkeys. It's considered to be of significant concern with regards to epidemics, given how contagious it is.
However, there is no way to (1) put it into some kind of Trojan horse in a vaccine, and (2) activate it using a 5G signal (or any other kind of signal). In order to believe this, you have to know essentially nothing about viruses, vaccines, or 5G.
Which is apparently the case with Todd Callender, who seems to have been the origin of this particular lunacy back in 2022. He appeared in an interview with Jeffrey Prather on his program The Prather Point, and we're assured that Callender isn't "some hare-brained fringe theorist" because Prather vets all of his guests and he says so.
So that's good to know.
"A broadcast from 5G cell towers at 18 MHz, for a specific duration and sequence, will cause affected cells to rupture," Callender said, "unleashing Marburg payload bioweapons into the blood of those who took the mRNA injections. This, in turn, would instantly unleash a Marburg pandemic and produce a sudden rush of symptoms including bleeding out (hemorrhagic fever isn't pretty), cardiovascular deaths, seizures and more. Some of the symptoms that could appear would even resemble classic zombies as depicted in pop culture; biting, loss of cognitive function, aggression, confusion and extreme alterations in the appearance of skin and eyes, among other similarities."
The ultimate outcome is that the Democrats (who, of course, engineered all this) will swipe the 2024 election. "If this theory pans out, the obvious timeframe for the powers that be to release the binary weapon would be before the [next election]... With a whole new pandemic hitting the scene -- with far more serious symptoms and a higher death rate compared to COVID -- the elections could either be cancelled or altered into a universal vote-from-home format which would favor the highly organized vote rigging and ballot counterfeiting of the Democrats (who are only in power because they stole the last election, of course)."
For all the doubters in the studio audience, we're told to stop being KoolAid-drinkin' sheeple. "Critics might say this all smacks of science fiction. But we are living through a science fiction dystopian scenario right now, with extreme censorship, an Orwellian global cabal trying to exterminate the human race, the rise of the robots and the mass injection of billions of people with exotic nanotechnology that seems to have a rather nefarious purpose, far from merely offering 'immunity.'"
The last bit reminds me of the wonderful quote by Carl Sagan: "The fact that some geniuses were laughed at does not imply that all who are laughed at are geniuses. They laughed at Columbus, they laughed at Fulton, they laughed at the Wright brothers. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown."
In any case, we don't have long to wait, since the latest intel is that this is all going down in October. Me, I'm kind of bummed by that, because my birthday's in October, and I was rather looking forward to having a nice quiet celebration with my wife, and not having to stumble around the village bleeding from the eye sockets and looking for brains to eat.
But I'll return to my original point, which is that if there is a stupider conspiracy theory out there, I don't want to know about it. Writing about all this made me long for the good old days when the antivaxxers were content to inject bleach and swallow horse dewormer.
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