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Sunday 20 July 2014

Bad daygor cryptozoologists

A sudy of hair samples linked to unidentified large primates shows they actually came from known mammals ©Dreamstime There is disappointment for cryptozoologists who like to believe that big hairy humanoids live in places such as the Himalayas (yeti or abominable snowman) and remote parts of the American northwest (sasquatch or big foot). The first reputable scientific study of hair samples allegedly linked to these mysterious apemen has shown that none came from previously unknown primates. Biology: Great apes Some chimpanzees are smarter than others – and about half the variation is down to genetics, according to a study of 99 chimps in captivity by Yerkes National Primate Research Center in Atlanta. Bryan Sykes, genetics professor at Oxford university, undertook the study with colleagues in museums around the world who submitted hair for genetic analysis. The 37 samples were anecdotally associated with unidentified large primates. The results, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, showed that they actually came from a wide range of known mammals including bears, horses, wolves, cattle, deer and modern humans – but no new hominid. The only surprising result was that two Himalayan samples were genetically closest to polar bears, though the hair was brown rather than white. Polar and brown bears are closely related and can hybridise and, since polar bears do not occur in the Himalayas, the researchers speculate that the fur may have come from such a hybrid or from an unknown species very similar to polar bears but with brown fur. Commenting on the study, Norman MacLeod of London’s Natural History Museum says that the negative results do not disprove the existence of yetis and other cryptic primates. “What they do is eliminate certain hair samples from further consideration that such creatures exist,” he says. “The study demonstrates a test whereby [their] existence can be proven in a way that would be considered acceptable to the scientific community.” Photographs: Dreamstime Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2014. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web. ShareClipReprintsPrintEmail ShareClipReprintsPrintEmail EDITOR’S CHOICE SIMON KUPER ©Luis Grañena How to travel: my rules GILLIAN TETT ©Shonagh Rae A peek into the IMF machine MOST POPULAR IN LIFE & ARTS Is Britain closing its doors to talent? Magazine: My friend Louis van Gaal House & Home: ‘Manhattanisation’ of San Francisco Magazine: The Mekong River crisis Lunch with the FT: Zoella LIFE AND ARTS ON TWITTER More FT Twitter accounts MOST RECENT FROM LIFE & ARTS A migrant’s welcome? ‘Vlogger’ Zoella has Lunch with the FT Sleep like a king at Warwick Castle Malevich retrospective at Tate Modern Britain vs the banks Help •Contact us •About us •Advertise with the FT •Terms & conditions •Privacy policy •Copyright •Cookie policy © THE FINANCIAL TIMES LTD 2014 FT and 'Financial Times' are trademarks of The Financial Times Ltd.

Bigfoot news

. An American black bear, one of the many identities of "Bigfoot." LAELAPS: 4 days ago “Bigfoot” Unmasked by Brian Switek Bigfoot is an all-American monster. The mythical ape – a bastardized version of the Yeti – has supposedly been spotted in every state in the union except Hawaii (because that’d just be silly) and has been co-opted into a spokesape for jerky, pizza, and beer. Americans ripped off an existing tall tale, created hoaxes to bring the fiction to life, and ultimately tapped into Sasquatch’s pop culture appeal to make a quick buck. As far as cryptozoological legends go, Bigfoot is a great American mascot. I’m sure Bigfoot believers are already bridling at this post. There is a very active community of Sasquatch devotees who are certain that there is an as-yet-unrecognized species of ape wandering through North America’s forests. They’d prefer that we forget the multiple hoaxes and turn our attention to personal anecdotes and what they claim as physical evidence for the critter. The most common tangible thread is hair. That would make some sense. A furry ape traipsing through the bushes and briars would have to leave some hairs behind. But are these mystery tufts truly indications of Bigfoot’s reality? Science says no. Earlier this month, in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, Institute of Human Genetics researcher Bryan Sykes and colleagues published the identity of 30 hair samples said to have been shed by “anomalous primates”, including hairs believed to belong to Bigfoot. The team didn’t find any evidence of elusive apes.  Genetic analysis of 18 “Sasquatch” samples – collected from locations from Texas to Washington – turned out to be from much more familiar beasts. The “Bigfoot” hairs, Sykes and coauthors concluded, came from raccoons, sheep, black bears, porcupine, horses, canids, deer, and cows. [Sasquatch isn't real, but the creature's pop-culture cred is good for selling jerky.] Bigfoot isn’t the only legendary ape around, of course. Sykes and colleagues also tested hair samples purported to be from the original mythical hominoid, the Yeti of the Himalayas, as well as the lesser-known Almasty of Russia and Orang Pendek of Sumatra. There was no inexplicable “cryptid” evidence in any of the samples. The Orang Pendek hair came from a tapir, while the Almasty fur originated with bears, horses, cows, and raccoons. But the researchers did find something unexpected. One of the Yeti hairs once grew on a goat-like ungulate called a serow, in line with a previous study, but two of the samples best matched genetic sequences from a polar bear that lived in the Himalayas over 40,000 years ago. This could be a sign that there is an unrecognized species of bear in the Himalayas, of recent polar bears in the area that have a darker hair color to make them look like brown bears, or of hybrids between polar bears and brown bears, Sykes and coauthors suggest. Then again, the mitochondrial genes the researchers zeroed in on weren’t informative enough to distinguish between dogs, coyotes, and wolves in other sampled hairs, meaning that launching a hunt for a new bear species on the genetic evidence along would be a tad premature. Perhaps the odd bear hairs are simply from Himalayan brown bears that have undoubted contributed to the legend of the Yeti. As the Sykes paper and journal commentor Norman MacLeod both point out, the new study doesn’t absolutely disprove the existence of Bigfoot and company. But the paper does add to the crushing pile of non-evidence. With all the alleged sightings out across almost the whole of North America, you’d think there’d be so many populations of Bigfoot that you’d regularly find them raiding garbage in suburban neighborhoods or at least leaving behind some tangible sign of their existence in America’s woodlands. They haven’t. If Bigfoot lives anywhere, it’s in our imagination – a symbol of the wild, the unknown, and how our species is excellent at turning superstition into advertising. For more commentary on Bigfoot and other cryptids, check out my 2012 op-ed in Slate and this interview with KUER’s Radio West. References: MacLeod, N. 2014. Molecular analysis of “anomalous primate” hair samples. Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 20140843. Sykes, B., Mullis, R., Hagenmuller, C., Melton, T., Sartori, M. 2014. Genetic analysis of hair samples attributed to yeti, bigfoot, and other anomalous primates. Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 281: 20140161 Google+ Brian Switek Share on email More » There are 9 Comments. Add Yours. Norbrook July 17, 2014 Not surprising, really. It would be really impressive if there were a Bigfoot, and there would be mass excitement in the scientific community. However, with the decades of not having a body, skin, or bones found yet, the odds of there being one is slim to none. Jerrold Alpern July 17, 2014 Donald Prothero, on skepticblog, also has a recent post on this new study: http://www.skepticblog.org/2014/07/16/bigfoot-and-yeti-dna-results-are-in/#comments . Unfortunately, Bigfooters are devout followers of Hebrews 1:11, “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” Showing them the evidence of things seen is a harder task than that of Sisyphus. At least he reached the top of the hill once every day. David Bump July 17, 2014 Other things for which there is no evidence (or no more than, as with Bigfoot, anecdotes; blurry or suspicious photos and videos, prints, etc.): psychic powers, the exact actual affect of human activities on global climate conditions, UFOs, alien life of any sort, the possibility of a living thing forming under any conditions other than reproduction or engineering (and we have to cheat and borrow from living things for the latter), the course of evolution from stromatolite-forming bacteria to all the major phyla. Any of you people laughing at the Bigfoot believers clinging to belief in any of those? Jerrold Alpern July 17, 2014 David, There is overwhelming evidence from many, many sources and lines of inquiry for both anthropogenic global warming and evolution. Scientists do not “believe” in these, they accept the evidence for them. There is no such evidence for Bigfoot. And scientists do not laugh at Bigfoot believers, they simply demand evidence, which has never been forthcoming. “That which can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence.” – Christopher Hitchens. David Bump July 17, 2014 Well, there’s evidence for Bigfoot in the form of all those people who claim to have seen it, there are all those footprints, there are the blurry photos and videos. Tell me just how much difference there is in believing in something and “accepting the evidence” when the evidence you accept sums up to vague handwaving. The skeptics of AGW (and isn’t the favored phrase now “climate change”?) and evolution simply ask for real evidence — not just that there’s been a warming, but that a significant amount of it is due to human activity. For all I know, it may be, but whenever the controversy comes up there’s more heat than light coming from the proponents, so I have my doubts. As for evolution, the ethos of science since about the beginning of the 19th century has demanded that some form of gradual evolution of life took place, as the only plausible “scientific explanation,” so ALL of the evidence has been interpreted as “for” it, and any permanent lack of evidence was reasoned away in advance by Charles Darwin and all who’ve followed his footsteps. Name one other field of science with that legacy. Jerrold Alpern July 17, 2014 Sorry, David, your “evidence” for Bigfoot is nothing but anecdotes and faked videos. Your criticism of the evidence for evolution and AGW is meaningless without specifics. Describing scientific evidence you don’t like as “vague handwaving” is not an argument. Neither is a meaningless criticism of Darwin and 150 years of scientific confirmation of his theory. The onus is on you to disprove evolution and AGW, not on anyone else to disprove you. David Bump July 17, 2014 We can’t even get anecdotal evidence of the history of evolution, it’s all assumed from imaginary lines of faith connecting fossils or similarities in DNA, and there have been hoaxes and gross errors that were used to support belief in it. As to the handwaving, I was just pointing out that you didn’t offer any specific examples; and in fact, every time I get specific examples from evolutionists, they don’t actually show that organisms could evolve beyond some minor adaptations such as getting bigger or smaller, changing colors or color patterns, or other minor variations which could never produce dynamically complex new parts, no matter how extreme or how many were combined. The theory has been accepted for 150 years, but please cite what ever actually confirmed that organisms could change much more than has been produced by directed breeding programs. Why should I have to disprove evolution when it’s never been proved? That salt is sodium and chlorine has been proved, that lightning is electricity has been proved, that a machine can carry humans in the air under control has been proved, but nobody has ever confirmed or proved that a microbe could be the ancestor of mankind. Jerrold Alpern July 18, 2014 “Climate Change: Evidence and Causes”, https://royalsociety.org/~/media/Royal_Society_Content/policy/projects/climate-evidence-causes/climate-change-evidence-causes.pdf , is a joint publication of the National Academy of Sciences and the Royal Society, the foremost scientific organizations in the U.S. and the U.K., respectively. It contains 20 Q&A’s documenting AGW. “15 Evolutionary Gems” is a paper from Nature, one of the two foremost scientific publications in the world. It contains 15 empirically validated examples of evolution by natural selection. If you disagree with the specifics of either of these publications, please submit a detailed, point by point refutation, supported by evidence-based research published in peer-reviewed journals. If you will not, or cannot, do this, do not bother with any further postings on this thread. False allegations that science is based on imagination and faith are irrelevant here. You must respond with scientific evidence to the current scientific research in these matters. I repeat, the burden is on you to disprove the science, not on scientists to disprove your claims. Jerrold Alpern July 18, 2014 Sorry. I forgot to include the Nature reference: http://www.nature.com/nature/newspdf/evolutiongems.pdf . Add Your Comments All fields required. YOUR NAME YOUR EMAIL YOUR COMMENTS NOTIFY ME OF FOLLOW-UP COMMENTS BY EMAIL. NOTIFY ME OF NEW POSTS BY EMAIL. RELATED POSTS LAELAPS: 2 days ago Baby Mammoths Yield Hi-Res Details for Paleontologists There’s only one fossil that ever made me cry. Lyuba, a one month old woolly ... Read more1 LAELAPS: 3 days ago Feathery Fossil Gives Flying Dinosaurs a Size Boost Early last week, in the pages of PNAS, paleontologist Dan Ksepka unveiled one of the ... Read more2 LAELAPS: July 2, 2014 The Urvogel’s Old, New Clothes On May 5th, 1877, the German paleontologist Karl Zittel first laid eyes on one of ... Read more3 LAELAPS: June 30, 2014 The Dining Habits of a Jurassic Sea Dragon When I was a fossil-crazed tyke, I used to spend hours flipping through a set ... Read more4 LAELAPS: June 27, 2014 Tracing the Roots of Beautiful Bird Hues Baby flamingos are fluffy and adorably awkward. But they’re not pink. The fuzzy infants start ... Read more4 LAELAPS: June 21, 2014 Europasaurus and a Jurassic Mystery Sauropods had a bad habit of losing their heads after death. Despite the relatively stout ... Read more6 MORE RELATED POSTS » ABOUT LAELAPS Brian Switek is a freelance science writer and author of the critically acclaimed books Written in Stone (2010) and My Beloved Brontosaurus (2013). He has published in Slate, Nature, the Wall Street Journal, Smithsonian, Scientific American, and more. Laelaps is his writing laboratory, dedicated to sifting through today's natural history and remnants of the deep past for tales of evolution, extinction, and survival. http://brianswitek.com e-mail: evogeek [at] gmail [dot] com FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER RECENT MISSIVES Baby Mammoths Yield Hi-Res Details for Paleontologists Feathery Fossil Gives Flying Dinosaurs a Size Boost “Bigfoot” Unmasked The Urvogel’s Old, New Clothes The Dining Habits of a Jurassic Sea Dragon SEARCH THE ARCHIVES SEARCH FOR: POSTING RULES Opinions expressed in blogs are those of the blogger and/or the blogger's organization, and not necessarily those of the National Geographic Society. 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Saturday 19 July 2014

Birds -twitter to us

A new software can automatically identity call of vast numbers of birds. This helps towards cracking of dawn chorus closer. Used by recording s of different birds of dawn chorus to identify of each tweet. Links software can decode bird song-bbc science.

Scarce chaser dragonfly visit s u.k

This rare sight was seen at wildlife trust Old Sludge Bed s nature reserve, out shirts of Exeter, Devon. The adult male scarce chaser dragonfly-bright blue abdomen with patches of black-female and juvenile males possess orange abdomen-length 45 mm, wingspan 74mm and is a  species of special  concern making it onr of rarest in Britain.

Friday 18 July 2014

Holy grail

Accessibility links Skip to content Skip to local navigation Accessibility Help BBC iD Sign in BBC navigation News Sport Weather iPlayer TV Radio More… Search term: MID WALES Home World UK England N. Ireland Scotland Wales Business Politics Health Education Sci/Environment Technology Entertainment & Arts Wales Politics North West North East Mid South West South East Newyddion 16 July 2014 Last updated at 15:05 Share this pageEmailPrint ShareFacebookTwitter 'Holy Grail' Nanteos Cup stolen by thieves The Nanteos Cup was stolen from the house of a seriously ill woman while she was in hospital In a real-life search for the Holy Grail, police are hunting thieves who have stolen a religious relic claimed to be the cup from which Christ drank at the Last Supper. The Nanteos Cup, a wooden chalice named after the mansion in Aberystwyth where it was once kept, has been taken. It had been loaned to a seriously ill woman because of its claimed healing properties. Burglars struck while the woman was in hospital. The cup is claimed to have been brought to Britain by Joseph of Arimathea after the death of Christ and then taken to Nanteos Mansion by seven monks from Strata Florida, Ceredigion, during the reign of Henry Vlll. Margaret Powell, from Nanteos Mansion, would give water in the cup to the sick in the late 19th Century The house was then owned by the Powell family and after the monks died, they took possession of it for centuries. Legend says the cup, made of olive wood or wych elm, is sacred and people believed it had healing properties. Owner Margaret Powell kept the chalice locked in a cupboard in a library. The sick travelled to Nanteos to drink from it. Although some experts claim it was made 1,400 years after the crucifixion. It originally measured approximately 12cm by 12cm but now measures 10cm by 8.5cm and is held together by wire staples and kept in a blue velvet bag. After many years it left Nanteos Mansion and came into the ownership of the Steadman family in Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire, who kept it in a bank vault in Wales. But West Mercia Police have said the cup was taken from the home in Weston-Under-Penyard sometime between 7-14 July. A spokeswoman for Nanteos Mansion said the cup had not been kept at the house for some time, they were sad it had been taken but declined to comment further. Anyone with any information about the burglary should call 101, More on This Story From other news sites Western Daily Press Police investigate after priceless Holy Grail Nanteos Cup is stolen from Herefordshire house 20 hrs ago Shropshire Star West Mercia Police seek Holy Grail after raid 21 hrs ago Hereford Times Relic thought to be 'Holy Grail', stolen in burglary 33 hrs ago Wales Online Police operation launched after priceless Welsh relic, thought to be the 'Holy Grail' is stolen 37 hrs ago North Wales Daily Post said to be the mythical Holy Grail. 37 hrs ago About these results Related Internet links Nanteos Country House Hotel The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites Share this page ShareFacebookTwitter EmailPrint BBC Mid Wales New Deepcut inquest to be held A new inquest is ordered into the death of soldier Pte Cheryl James at Deepcut barracks in Surrey. NASA technology helps woman to see Watch 'Freedom to determine time of death' Watch Travel News Latest road incidents, public transport information and live traffic jam cameras near you Weather Sunny Intervals Aberystwyth 26 °C 16 °C BBC Radio Wales Live BBC Wales Sport Top Stories Ukraine rebels 'allow crash access' British plane crash victims named Malaysian plane crashes in Ukraine - updates Live Israel may widen Gaza offensive - PM New Deepcut inquest to be held Features In pictures The lightning strikes that hit Britain captured on camera Calculated risk How often do planes fly over conflict zones? Grill rage The angry backlash against barbecues in parks $250m please The dos and don'ts of pitching for business investment In pictures Falklands residents' photos of their homes Most Popular Shared 1: Storms and warning of heatwave 2: Advice for foreigners on how Britons walk 3: 'Deep shock' over Malaysia jet crash 4: Ukraine rebels 'allow crash access' 5: Malaysian jet crashes in UkraineRead 1: British plane crash victims named 2: Malaysian plane crashes in Ukraine - updates 3: In pictures: Lightning storms hit UK 4: Ukraine rebels 'allow crash access' 5: The people who perished on MH17 6: Storms and warning of heatwave 7: Advice for foreigners on how Britons walk 8: Stewards' fateful shift swap crash 9: Is it anti-social to use barbecues in parks? 10: Jessica Ennis-Hill has first childVideo/Audio 2: Who was on board Flight MH17? Watch 3: Lightning drama filmed in UK Watch 4: Bill and Hillary Clinton's 52-year deal Watch 5: 'We just shot down a plane' Watch 6: Was crashed Malaysia plane shot down? Watch 7: 'We were supposed to be on flight' Watch 8: 'All red lines have been crossed' Watch 9: Malaysian crash - what happened? Watch 10: BBC News Channel Watch Services Mobile Connected TV News feeds Alerts E-mail news About BBC News Editors' blogBBC College of JournalismNews sourcesEditorial Guidelines BBC links Mobile siteTerms of UseAbout the BBC PrivacyAccessibility Help CookiesContact the BBC Parental Guidance BBC © 2014 The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

Try out blogger app

Seems weird going this

UPDATE_LIFE_written by maraines_ghostman

Well what a strange day , laptop taken away to be fix by my go to guy, jason.Then man and his daugther tidied fence and strim grass, and got a tablet to play with.