Science and Souls (for geeks and spiritual explorers)

grokit

well-worn member
Courtship display of the Coastal peacock spider (Maratus speciosus).


Hard to believe, but there is no footage of this species yet in any wildlife documentary.
It inhabits coastal dune habitats near Perth in Western Australia.
 

Nooky72

Dog Marley
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fBXx2Ri.png
 

Snappo

Caveat Emptor - "A Billion People Can Be Wrong!"
Accessory Maker
Courtship display of the Coastal peacock spider (Maratus speciosus).


Hard to believe, but there is no footage of this species yet in any wildlife documentary.
It inhabits coastal dune habitats near Perth in Western Australia.
There are, however, a whole series of these via youtube.com. Just follow the link to youtube and it'll take you to a thumbnail list, I think #'s 1-9.
 

grokit

well-worn member
Bigfoot Hunter Rick Dyer Claims He Killed The Hairy Beast And Will Take It On Tour
By Lee Speigel Posted: 01/05/2014 10:50 am EST | Updated: 01/06/2014 12:28 pm EST

o-RICKDYERBIGFOOT-570.jpg

Hunter Rick Dyer says he shot and killed a Bigfoot, and
is now preparing to take its body on a tour of America


It's kind of a step up from the boy who cried wolf. In this case, it's a man who cried Bigfoot.

There's one big difference between this story and the many others where people claim to have seen the dubious tall, hairy creature that allegedly roams the forested regions of many countries. Dyer has previous Bigfoot-related credibility problems.

According to KSAT.com, Dyer has finally released an image of a beast he claimed to kill near San Antonio, Texas, in September 2012.

The only prior evidence Dyer has ever released until now about this incident was a short, grainy video that he claims shows a Bigfoot standing right outside of his tent near a wooded area on the outskirts of San Antonio. His website contains a haphazardly written account of the alleged Bigfoot encounter and subsequent killing of the animal. In fact, the date of the report is carelessly listed as "September 6, 20102."

Perhaps it's really about some distant future Bigfoot encounter.

In an interview from February 2013, Dyer said, "Bigfoot is 100 percent real. There's no question about that. I'm going to go down in history as the best Bigfoot tracker in the world," reported San Antonio's KSAT-TV.

Dyer baited that San Antonio Bigfoot.

"I nailed ... pork ribs from the WalMart down the street to the side of the tree, and low [sic] and behold, he came and started eating the pork ribs off the tree," Dyer said.

It was while the creature was allegedly feasting that Dyer supposedly grabbed his cell phone and videotaped him/her.

MORE, including the video here.
 

Bob Loblaw

Astralnaut
Bigfoot Hunter Rick Dyer Claims He Killed The Hairy Beast And Will Take It On Tour
By Lee Speigel Posted: 01/05/2014 10:50 am EST | Updated: 01/06/2014 12:28 pm EST

o-RICKDYERBIGFOOT-570.jpg

Hunter Rick Dyer says he shot and killed a Bigfoot, and
is now preparing to take its body on a tour of America


It's kind of a step up from the boy who cried wolf. In this case, it's a man who cried Bigfoot.

There's one big difference between this story and the many others where people claim to have seen the dubious tall, hairy creature that allegedly roams the forested regions of many countries. Dyer has previous Bigfoot-related credibility problems.

According to KSAT.com, Dyer has finally released an image of a beast he claimed to kill near San Antonio, Texas, in September 2012.

The only prior evidence Dyer has ever released until now about this incident was a short, grainy video that he claims shows a Bigfoot standing right outside of his tent near a wooded area on the outskirts of San Antonio. His website contains a haphazardly written account of the alleged Bigfoot encounter and subsequent killing of the animal. In fact, the date of the report is carelessly listed as "September 6, 20102."

Perhaps it's really about some distant future Bigfoot encounter.

In an interview from February 2013, Dyer said, "Bigfoot is 100 percent real. There's no question about that. I'm going to go down in history as the best Bigfoot tracker in the world," reported San Antonio's KSAT-TV.

Dyer baited that San Antonio Bigfoot.

"I nailed ... pork ribs from the WalMart down the street to the side of the tree, and low [sic] and behold, he came and started eating the pork ribs off the tree," Dyer said.

It was while the creature was allegedly feasting that Dyer supposedly grabbed his cell phone and videotaped him/her.

MORE, including the video here.
@Tweek ? :uhoh: :ko: :cry: :rip:
;)

http://themindunleashed.org/2014/01...0-sealed-ecosystem-watered-just-53-years.html

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Vicki

Herbal Alchemist
*taps foot* and just when were you on MARS, young lady? Wait until M&D hear about this one!
and, hey, is that my good camera you just borrowed for that? You will NEVER see the croc handbag again. *Bwahahahahahaha!*

I was there visiting a friend, on my way back to Earth. What camera? :p :dog:
 

Crohnie

Crohn's Warrior
"All matter originates and exists only by the virtue of a force that brings the particle of an atom to vibration and holds this most minute solar system of the atom together. We must assume behind this force the existence of a conscious and intelligent mind. This mind is the matrix of all matter."

Max Planck, the Father of Quantum Physics
 
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grokit

well-worn member
Wheaties cereal found to contain so many metal
fragments that they can be levitated with magnets


Wheaties-magnetic-metal-fragments.jpg


(NaturalNews) Wheaties breakfast cereal, manufactured by General Mills, has been found to contain so many microscopic fragments of metal that individual flakes can be lifted and carried using common magnets, a Natural News Forensic Food Lab investigation has found and documented. Photos of the microscopy investigation are posted now at labs.naturalnews.com

A video demonstrating Wheaties flakes clinging to magnets has also been posted at YouTube:


The metal bits are added to Wheaties cereal to enhance the nutritional profile and claim a higher iron content on the label, but lab director and food scientist Mike Adams is skeptical of the formulation. "Adding shards of metal to a cereal is not nutritionally equivalent to nutritive minerals formed during the growth of grain-producing plants," he explains. "Bioavailability is vastly different."
:goat:
 
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