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Sunday, 26 February 2017

We die like brothers”: The sinking of the SS Mendi

A British & African Steam Navigation Company postcard showing the Mendi. In the early hours of 21 February 1917, the British steamship SS Mendi was struck by a larger British ship in thick fog and sank in the English Channel. On board were nearly 900 men – mostly black South African men of the South African Native Labour Corps – who were on their way to support the war efforts on the Western Front. More than 600 lives were lost.
One hundred years after the sinking, Graham Scott of Wessex Archaeology, co-author of a new book We Die Like Brothers, shares the story of the tragedy and tells History Extra how the Mendi became a symbol of the fight for social justice and equality.What kind of vessel was the SS Mendi and can you tell us a little about its history?
The steamship Mendi was a cargo liner, built to carry both freight and passengers and sailing on a fixed schedule. Like many of the world’s ships in the first decade of the 20th century, it had been built on the Clyde, then the world’s greatest ship-building centre. Despite being built in Scotland, the Mendi operated out of Liverpool for Elder Dempster, which was then one of the great Liverpool shipping companies. The city dominated much of the trade between Britain and West Africa, a tradition that originated in the commercial links forged by Liverpool merchants during the iniquitous slave trade and one which had enabled British businesses to exploit the continent’s vast resources of raw materials and foodstuffs, whilst at the same time exporting manufactured goods back to British colonies.-read more

DELETE BAD MEMORIES.

Would you if you could choose to delete any bad memories well  scientists have manged to do this in mice.This was done by discovering that memories are encoded in just a few cells of our brain and they believe to have foud a way of wiping out bad recollections and still keep good ones intact.

Someone keeps giving this bus stop near Plymouth an amazing 'front room' makeover

Is this the world's  best bus stop?Bus shelters have a reputation for being grim, graffiti-covered, litter-filled, grotholes.
A magnet to vandals, these unloved structures often attract feral youths with no place else to go. They can become hotbeds of antisocial behaviour and, if we're brutally honest, they nearly always smell of wee.

Read more at http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/someone-keeps-giving-this-bus-stop-near-plymouth-an-amazing-front-room-makeover/story-30146137-detail/story.html#KYiQJsGByRK6jr9L.99

CAT RESCUE DOG .

A dog called Molly ,springer spaniel is the first dog in the world to be trained as a cat -rescue dog to help track cats in peril .Molly has been trained by Medical Detection dog -charity that teach dogs to to detect cancer.Molly has helped track 100 cats so far which often hide when injured or sick.

PONIES GO BY MOTORBOAT TO MEET THE RELATIVES .

Ponies Albert and Ernie ,Shetland ponies were taken y motorboat to Shetland Islands to meet the their horsey relatives by their trainer.The trainer  Emma Massingale practiced this trip on a lake near home in Holsworthy.

SPACEFLIGHT BILL.

In this bill research on antibiotics for mrsa and salmonella to set up spaceports to battle the bugs and could be viable by 2020,the scheme is due to be launched in April 2017.

PIRACY BEWARE.

Search giants Google and Bing  have joined together to sign a voluntary code of practice to try to make it harder to search for music,films etc.This will mean that links to illegal sites will be quickly removed after notices  from rights holders ad you will only be taken too a bone fide sites.

Barn Sanctuary

Hey COMEDYFRIENDLYZOMBIE, thanks for the follow :) I've just established a new animal sanctuary called Barn Sanctuary. We just rescued two calves and two pigs! It'd be great if you go like the FB page if you have time! -https://www.barnsanctuary.org/-Dan McKernan
@DanMcKernan

Saturday, 25 February 2017

GHOST AIRSHIP WW 2

NAZI OR JUST LIME DISEASE ?

ZOMBIE SQUADRON WW2

army of ape /man army russia ww2

How Ancient Neanderthal DNA Still Influences Our Genes Today

Neanderthal DNANeanderthals may have gone extinct 30,000 years ago, but they still live on inside us. Ever since scientists discovered that Neanderthal DNA comprises roughly 2 percent of the genomes of modern humans of European and Asian heritage, they’ve speculated about how exactly those lingering genes affect us today. Now we’ve found that even though most humans hardly resemble Neanderthals in appearance, their DNA still influences how our genes work


Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/how-ancient-neanderthal-dna-still-influences-our-genes-today-180962285/#J7cUAOiCVBLuEKxS.99
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Goal! Bees can learn ball skills from watching each other, study finds

Bumblebees can learn how to manoeuvre a ball just by watching others carry out the task, researchers have discovered in the latest study to shed light on the insects’ surprising talents.
While bees have already been shown to be able to learn how to pull on strings, push caps and even rotate a lever to access food, researchers say the new study shows that bees are better at problem solving than we thought.
“Previous [research] has found that bumblebees can do complex tasks but those tasks have always been really close to natural behaviour,” said Olli Loukola, first author of the research from Queen Mary University of London, pointing out that bees often have to manipulate different parts of a flower to access nectar. “Now we have shown that they can learn something that is totally unnatural, like moving balls.”-read more

Star's seven Earth-sized worlds set record

Graphic showing the orbits of the seven planets in the Trappist-1 systemAstronomers have detected a record seven Earth-sized planets orbiting a single star.
The researchers say that all seven could potentially support liquid water on the surface, depending on the other properties of those planets.
But only three are within the conventional "habitable" zone where life is considered a possibility.
The compact system of exoplanets orbits Trappist-1, a low-mass, cool star located 40 light-years away from Earth.
The planets, detected using Nasa's Spitzer Space Telescope and several ground-based observatories, are described in the journal Nature.-READ MORE AND SEE VIDEO

ILLNESSES OF ME.

MILD SMALL VESSEL DISEASE-
  • Confusion
  • Disorientation-sudden headache, difficulty walking,LEANING TO ONE SIDE  
  • Trouble speaking or understanding speech-BLANKS.O.C.D-
  • The presence of obsessions, compulsions or both
  • The obsessions and compulsions are time-consuming or cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning-

    Symptoms of Cervical Radiculopathy

    The main symptom of cervical radiculopathy is pain that spreads into the arm, neck, chest, upper back and/or shoulders. A person with radiculopathy may experience muscle weakness and/or numbness or tingling in fingers or hands. Other symptoms may include lack of coordination, especially in the hands.-ULNAR NEUROPATHY-The following situations, where the elbow is bent, can make the sensations of ulnar nerve compression worse: holding a telephone, resting the head on the hand, crossing the arms over the chest, curling the arm under the body at night, holding the hand on top of a steering wheel and using the computer for long periods of time.
    A general weakening of the motor function of the hand may make it easy to drop things or make it difficult to open jars. It may be difficult to coordinate the fingers while typing or playing the guitar, piano, or violin. The problem usually worsens with activities or occupations that are practiced over an extended period of time.-ARTHRITIS-
  • Fatigue.
  • Joint pain.
  • Joint tenderness.
  • Joint swelling.
  • Joint redness.
  • Joint warmth.
  • Joint stiffness.
  • Loss of joint range of motion.-ANXIETY-
  • Feelings of panic, fear, and uneasiness.
  • Problems sleeping.
  • Cold or sweaty hands or feet.
  • Shortness of breath.
  • Heart palpitations.
  • Not being able to be still and calm.
  • Dry mouth.
  • Numbness or tingling in the hands or feet.-DEPRESSION-
  • Difficulty concentrating, remembering details, and making decisions.
  • Fatigue and decreased energy.
  • Feelings of guilt, worthlessness, and/or helplessness.
  • Feelings of hopelessness and/or pessimism.-PLUS HISTORY OF THALAMIC STROKE AND diabetes mellitus-O.C.D -HAVE SET ROUTINE AND A SEVERE ANXIETY OF CHANGE

Sunday, 19 February 2017

Fall aid

 A system has be created that can predict falls up to 3 weeks before their happen.The wall mounted movement detectors measure walking speed and length of stride and alert medics to any changes only in america at moment.

Rare chickens brought back from the brink of extinction by Edinburgh University

Surrogate chickensR
are chickens such as the ‘Scots Dumpy’ which was used by the Picts to warn of the approach of the Roman Army, could be brought back from the brink of extinction by Edinburgh University.
Scientists have genetically engineered chickens which can act as surrogates and lay the eggs of other rare breeds.
The surrogates themselves are sterile and so cannot produce their own offspring. But when the stem cells from rare chicken breeds are implanted into their reproductive tissue, they go on to produce eggs and ultimately chicks from the threatened species.-read more

Woolly Mammoths could be 'de-extinct' in 2 years

This whole nostalgia thing is getting out of control because scientists are about to bring back the woolly mammoth, the Guardian reports.
Harvard professor George Church—who New Scientist calls a "maverick geneticist"—is leading a "de-extinction" team that says it's about two years away from creating a hybrid embryo combining mammoth traits with Asian elephant DNA.
Woolly mammoths went extinct about 4,000 years ago due to human hunting and warming temperatures. But in the past few years, Church and his team have managed to splice 45 mammoth edits into Asian elephant DNA, including ones that control for a mammoth's shaggy hair, small ears, fat layers, and more.
While Church and his team believe they can have a "mammophant" embryo in two years, it will be much longer before anyone sees one in the wild. The team wants to grow mammophants completely in a lab in order to not mess with the reproduction of endangered Asian elephants, and that technology doesn't exist -read more

Backyard Worlds: Join Search for Planet Nine, Nearby Brown Dwarfs

A NASA-funded website called Backyard Worlds: Planet 9 lets everyone participate in the search for the hypothetical Planet Nine and ‘failed’ stars in the solar neighborhood by viewing brief movies made from images captured by NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE).“Backyard Worlds: Planet 9 has the potential to unlock once-in-a-century discoveries, and it’s exciting to think they could be spotted first by a citizen scientist,” said Dr. Aaron Meisner, a researcher at the University of California, Berkeley, who specializes in analyzing WISE images.
The new website relies on human eyes because we easily recognize the important moving objects while ignoring the artifacts. It’s a modern version of the technique astronomer Clyde Tombaugh used to find Pluto in 1930.
On the website, people around the world can work their way through millions of ‘flipbooks,’ which are brief animations showing how small patches of the sky changed over several years.
Moving objects flagged by participants will be prioritized by the science team for follow-up observations by professional astronomers.
Participants will share credit for their discoveries in any scientific publications that result from the project.
“There are just over 4 light-years between Neptune and Proxima Centauri, the nearest star, and much of this vast territory is unexplored,” said Dr. Marc Kuchner, an astrophysicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.”-read more