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Showing posts with label COMEDY FRIENDLY ZOMBIE PRODUCTION. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COMEDY FRIENDLY ZOMBIE PRODUCTION. Show all posts

Thursday 1 March 2018

I AM GOING TO COLLECT LOCH NESS MONSTER

Forget the annual Easter egg hunt, eager coin collectors will be sifting through their change in 2018 with the hope of collecting a full set of brand new 10p designs.
However, to collect the full set may take some work - with 26 new ten pence pieces entering circulation from today.
The Royal Mint told This is Money that the coins, which feature an A-Z of what makes Britain great, will only be handed out in change in the Post Office's 11,500 branches. 
The new coins: There are 26 coins in total, one for every letter of the alphabet
A is for Angel of the North, B for Bond - James Bond, C for cricket, D for doubledecker bus, E for English breakfast
The designs start from A, the Angel of the North, to Z, the Zebra Crossing, ticking off each letter of the alphabet. It comes as numismatics - collecting coins - has boomed in popularity in recent years.
A contributing factor in this collecting surge happened after This is Money revealed the coins that can turn up in your change worth a pretty penny, which has been read millions of times since being published in 2016 and copied by our rivals.
The 10p coin hunt will be similar to the London 2012 Olympics 50p set. Some of these 50p coins are now sought after as people look to complete their collections.
The scarcest Olympics coin, depicting the football offside rule, now regularly sells for 20 times its face value online.
Anne Jessopp, chief executive at The Royal Mint told This is Money at the launch event yesterday in London that many have asked the organisation when a similar collection to the Olympics would happen 'highlighting the popularity of coin collecting.'
We have been told that around 2.6million of the 10p coins will be minted - or around 100,000 of each 10p - but this could be higher, depending on demand. Many of the coins are likely to be saved by the public and taken out of circulation, meaning more could be made.
The low mintage figures mean some of the 10p coins could become collectors items in the future, considering that the rarest 50p coin - featuring the Kew Gardens pagoda, minted in 2009 - had a run of 210,000 and now sell for £70 upwards online.
F is for fish and chips, G is for Greenwich Mean Time, H is for House of Commons
I is for ice cream, J is for Jubilee, K is for King Arthur

What's on the coins?

Featuring on the new 10p designs are a cup of tea, fish and chips, cricket, and the Loch Ness monster.
The 26 coins map out the A-Z of what makes Britain great after a public vote. It asked for example, what the most iconic British food is - 52 per cent voted for fish and chips, beating sunday roast and cream tea.
Cricket was voted most British sport at 48 per cent, beating football with 29 per cent and rugby six per cent.
James Bond was voted favourite character from British fiction and film with nearly half the vote, beating Harry Potter, Del Boy and Miss Marple. Yes, the public missed out on putting Derek Trotter from Only Falls and Horses onto a coin.=Read more
Royal Mint unveil 26 new 10p coins to be released this year
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Read more: http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/news/article-5446027/Royal-Mint-reveals-26-new-10p-coins.html#ixzz58VVsPaFq
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Friday 23 February 2018

Red Handfish

Off the coast of island of Tasmania dwells a colony of  Red Handfish of 20 to 40 in number the only other one know is exists a couple of Miles away.The Red Handfish can walk along seabed using its flippers shaped like hands.It is among the world's rarest fish.

Big Nose get a the ladies if your Proboscis Monkey

Male Probocis Monkeys who have the largest noses also have the largest harem of the female of the species .The Large noses or snouts serve as form of advertising to females to help them select the best male also a bigger body and testes help.Theses  suggest a deli and social dominate male.

Barker people Ty to the Sun newspaper for article

Jump directly to the content
BEAK TO REALITY 

How the first Britons were wiped out by boozy Beaker people who invaded the UK and their blood STILL runs through us today

Groundbreaking DNA tests showed the mysterious Beaker people - so named because of their favourite drinking vessel - quickly spread across Britain
ANCIENT Brits were wiped out by immigrants from mainland Europe — who introduced booze to our shores for the first time.
The newcomers, known as the Beaker people due to their favourite drinking vessels, replaced at least 90 per cent of the original population within a few hundred years, groundbreaking DNA tests have shown.
 The reconstructed face of Ava, a woman from the Beaker clan
UNIVERSAL NEWS & SPORT (EUROPE)
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The reconstructed face of Ava, a woman from the Beaker clan
The light-skinned and blue-eyed Beakers first arrived in Britain around 4,500 years ago and quickly spread their culture — and their taste for honey mead — across our island.
They had already spent the previous few centuries moving across Western Europe and now their true impact on British culture has been uncovered for the first time.
Analysis of hundreds of skeletons found Brits who lived shortly after their fabled pots appeared here have very different DNA to those before.
The old inhabitants of Britain - who built monuments like Stonehenge and took part in basic farming - were outmatched by the Beaker's love of metal work.
 The Beaker people spread across western Europe from Spain and reached Britain 4,500 years ago
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The Beaker people spread across western Europe from Spain and reached Britain 4,500 years ago
 The Beaker people are known for their distinctive bell-shaped cups
JUNTA DE CATILLA Y LEON, ARCHIVO MUSEO NUMANTINO
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The Beaker people are known for their distinctive bell-shaped cups
Their arrival heralded the beginning of the Bronze Age and the decline of ancient Neolithic Brits possibly through new disease rather than violence.
Prof Ian Armit, of the University of Bradford who took part in the research by 144 European and US scientists, said: “The available evidence doesn’t necessarily suggest a violent invasion.
“There might have been environmental problems which caused a population decline or the Beaker migrants could have brought new diseases with them.”
Co-author Professor Mark Thomas, an evolutionary geneticist at University College London, said: "The sheer scale of population replacement in Britain is going to surprise many, even though the more we learn from ancient DNA studies, the more we see large-scale migration as the norm in prehistory."
 The Beakers replaced about 90 per cent of Britain's native population in just 500 years
JUNTA DE CATILLA Y LEON, ARCHIVO MUSEO NUMANTINO
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The Beakers replaced about 90 per cent of Britain's native population in just 500 years
 The remains of beaker people next to one of their cups
DAVE WEBB / CAMBRIDGE ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNIT
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The remains of beaker people next to one of their cups
Such is the impact of the Beakers - who originally came from the steppes of Ukraine and Russia - that many modern Brits can claim a direct heritage.
Prof Armit said: "Anyone who's got British ancestry going back a couple of hundred years will have a predominance of steppe ancestry.
"Once it's here, that's essentially the ancestry of the British population".
Dr Tom Booth, an archaeologist from the Natural History Museum, said: "This spectacular transformation of Britain, with such a large number of Beaker people coming here is the opposite of what experts have thought for the last 10 to 20 years.
"The textbooks need to be ripped up."
Cheddar Man, ​who lived in Britain over 10,000 years ago, was recreated thanks to DNA analysis


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