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Archive for the ‘Goth’ Category

One year ago today, April 25, 2012, I started writing The Great Dead North.

It is a post apocalyptic journal entry novel on Twitter.

When I blogged about it last year, I called it My Twitter Experiment.

Cdn-zombie-licence

Each entry is no more than 140 characters… the maximum allowed per tweet.

I post daily journal entries from the second year in aftermath of the Zombie Apocalypse.

Only a relative handful of people have survived the first year. Food, vehicles, gasoline, medicine and supplies were relatively abundant during the first year. By the second year, gasoline (a highly refined product) has ‘gone bad’ and vehicles no longer run on it. Most of the ‘easy picking’ supplies have been exhausted. Specialized ‘city folk’ are now forced to exist in a hostile environment. Our world, at best, has been plunged back into the Dark Ages. For some survivors, they have been thrown back to the Stone Age.

Please check it out on Twitter and Follow it, if  you like it.

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Reblogged from Nature Box:

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Spiders, porcupines, lizards and bats. What could they possibly all have in common? Well according to a recent suite of published research, each of these animal groups has a new addition to their ranks.

Scientists working in Sri Lanka have described a new species of tarantula 'as big as your face', in the British Tarantula Society's latest journal. The species has been named…

Read more… 841 more words

THE SPIDER, THE PORCUPINE, THE LIZARD AND THE BAT

by Lydia O'Donoghue

Poecilotheria-rajaei(Spider the size of a dinner plate... or your face)

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Yes, my little geeks and nerdlings, the folks over at ScienceDaily.com have done it once again!

Striped Like a Badger: New Genus of Bat Identified in South Sudan

Researchers have identified a new genus of bat after discovering a rare specimen in South Sudan.

Bucknell University Associate Professor of Biology DeeAnn Reeder and Fauna & Flora International (FFI) Programme Officer Adrian Garside were leading a team conducting field research and pursuing conservation efforts when Reeder spotted the animal in Bangangai Game Reserve.

“My attention was immediately drawn to the bat’s strikingly beautiful and distinct pattern of spots and stripes. It was clearly a very extraordinary animal, one that I had never seen before,” recalled Reeder. “I knew the second I saw it that it was the find of a lifetime.”

striped-bat(Niumbaha superba –  Is this the cutest little thing or what?? [1])

After returning to the United States, Reeder determined the bat was the same as one originally captured in nearby Democratic Republic of the Congo in 1939 and named Glauconycteris superba, but she and colleagues did not believe that it fit with other bats in the genus Glauconycteris.

“After careful analysis, it is clear that it doesn’t belong in the genus that it’s in right now,” Reeder said. “Its cranial characters, its wing characters, its size, the ears — literally everything you look at doesn’t fit. It’s so unique that we need to create a new genus.”

Reeder and her colleagues placed this bat into a new genus – Niumbaha. The word means “rare” or “unusual” in Zande, the language of the Azande people in Western Equatoria State, where the bat was captured. The bat is just the fifth specimen of its kind ever collected, and the first in South Sudan.

Thanks, Dr Reeder, for bringing this adorable little sweetiepie to our attention and giving it the proper classification!

Well done!

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[1] Photo Credit: LeeAnn Reeder, Bucknell University

Research Paper: ”A new genus for a rare African vespertilionid bat: insights from South Sudan”, published by the journal ZooKeys, author:  DeeAnn Reeder, along with co-authors from the Smithsonian Institution and the Islamic University in Uganda.

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If I Am Your Mirror…

(Inspired by Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart”)

A 20-minute animated horror short, written and directed by Garrett DeHart, set in the Civil War Era.

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Ever have one of those mornings?

morphine

Happy Hump Day!

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Just in time for Halloween!

I ran across Marilyn Manson’s video of “Tainted Love”…

A lovely Halloween treat which is, of course, Manson’s cover of the 80′s classic.

For those who like to compare and contrast, I give you the 1981 video by Soft Cell.

But the version by Soft Cell is, in itself, a cover of the song.

Gloria Jones recorded the original version of “Tainted Love” in 1965, which was written and produced by Ed Cobb.

Enjoy!

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There is something about a crypt, tomb or mausoleum that holds my attention as if in a strong iron grip.

(The Crypt at Freising Cathedral, Bavaria [1])

They are often dark, dank, creepily eerie places. Exactly what I adore!

(Crypt in Wola Gułowska, Lublin Province, Poland)

They stir the soul and fire the imagination.

(The cemetery in New Orleans where ‘Interview with the Vampire’ was filmed)

They summon dark visions of a world just outside our vision.

(Skeleton arch support inside a church, Châteauneuf-sur-Loire, France [3])

The connect us to the ghosts of the past.

(Dijon Crypt beneath the church of Saint-Benigne de Dijon, France [4])

In the Western World, mausoleums can be ostentatious monuments to by-gone egos.

(Woolworth Mausoleum,  Woodlawn Cemetery, The Bronx)

Speaking of which, we cannot forget the first and best display of post-mortem ostentation…

(The tomb of King Mausolus at ancient city of Halicarnassus  [5])

Temples to the dead. The best example is probably the Capuchin catacombs in Rome.

(Yeah, those are real skulls and bones. I’m not kidding. [6])

An inscription in the crypt reads…

“Quello che voi siete noi eramo; quello che noi siamo voi sarete”

(Close-up of part of a wall of bones in the Capuchin Crypt, Rome, Italy)

“What you are now we used to be; what we are now you will be.”

And yet, a mausoleum can display dignity and beauty even in death.

(James Munroe’s neo-gothic tomb, Richmond, Virginia [6])

Many years ago, I lived in Hamilton, Ontario.

If you are ever in the area, please go to the Hamilton Cemetery across the street from Dundurn Castle.

If, like me, you share a passion for such places, you won’t regret it.

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The first five photos (including photographer’s comments and copyright information) can be found along with other similar photos at LoveThesePics.com.

[1] The Crypt at Freising Cathedral, also called Saint Mary and Corbinian Cathedral, is a romanesque basilica in Freising, Bavaria Germany.

[2] Crypt in Wola Gułowska, Lublin Province, Poland.

[3] Photo details: Tales from the Crypt by Pierre J.

[4] The Church of Saint-Benigne de Dijon retains in its crypt one of the oldest Christian sanctuaries still to be seen in France. The rebuilding began on 14 February 1001. It was destroyed by the Revolution and much of the rubble was used to fill in the lowest story, which was the crypt. In 1843 this crypt was rediscovered and reinstated.

[5] The structure was so famous that Mausolus’s name is now associated with all stately tombs throughout the world through the word mausoleum. The building, rich with statuary and carvings in relief, was so beautiful and unique it became one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

[6] The Capuchin Catacombs in Rome hold several crypts spread across a series of small chapels beneath the church of Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini.

[7] The James Monroe Tomb, is the burial-place for U.S. President James Monroe in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia, United States. The site is “significant for the execution of its flamboyant and delicate tracery in cast iron, the tomb is a cage over the simple granite sarcophagus of the former President, who died and was buried in New York City in 1831, but was removed to Virginia in 1858.” It has been given the local nickname of “The Birdcage“. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1971. (Wikipedia)

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The folks over at UnitedAcademics.com Magazine pose an interesting question…

Should We Be Optimistic?

If ignorance is bliss, then optimism must be euphoria. Thanks to a mechanism called the optimism bias, humans are pretty much incapable of applying basic risk statistics to their own lives. We know smoking causes cancer, but we don’t expect it to happen to us. We find a lump on our body  and we tell ourselves it’s probably nothing. 

In his 2011 book “Thinking, Fast and Slow”, Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman notes that “people tend to be overly optimistic about their relative standing on any activity in which they do moderately well.” This ‘optimism bias’ generates the illusion of control [1]: the idea that we are in control of our lives. Bad things only happen to others.

You can see where this bright outlook on life can cause trouble. Wearing seatbelts? Not necessary.  Opening a savings account? Maybe later. Being overly optimistic in life puts us at risk. In addition, people who show cheerful, optimistic personality traits during childhood, have a shorter life expectancy than their more serious counter parts. On the other hand, optimists are more psychologically resilient, have stronger immune systems, and live longer on average than more reality-based opposites. So who’s better off in life; the optimist or the pessimist?  And who’s reality comes closest to the truth?

According to the “depressive realism” proposition, people who suffer from (moderate) depression actually have a more accurate perception of reality.  They are less affected by the illusion of control and therefore better capable of estimating their chances in life. In other words, people with depression are not pessimists, they are realists.

(Hey! Looks full to me!)

When you tend to attribute positive events to yourself and negative events to others, that is called a self-serving bias [2]. This is the case for most people. When you believe you are responsible for negative events rather than positives ones, you show a non self-serving bias – something that is often seen in people who suffer from depression.

Humans, apparently, have developed a way to better cope with negative emotions. Their rose-colored glasses cause them to view the world just a little better than it actually is. But without them we would never get anything done, says neuroscientist and author of “The Optimism Bias” Tali Sharot: “Optimism pushes us to take chances – attempt a new job, a new relationship. It also acts as a self-fulfilling prophecy, as believing a goal is attainable makes it more likely to be.”

Being optimistic is necessary in order to get anything done in life. Without the belief we can accomplish anything, we will not even try to do so. Still, holding on to the belief that everything will be OK in the future does not mean that we should ignore the things that are shitty today.

That, I think, is truly being realistic.

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[1] The tendency to claim more responsibility for successes than failures. It may also manifest itself as a tendency of people to evaluate ambiguous information in a way that is beneficial to their interests

[2] The tendency to overestimate one’s degree of influence over other external events.

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OK, I have to admit that I like bats.

(A fellow bat admirer and enthusiast)

This is quite different from having an interest in chiropterology.

Don’t get me wrong… I would totally love to be a chiropterologist

But not because I am devoted or dedicated to the  study of bats. It would be because I like bats and being a chiropterologist would, I suppose, give me an opportunity to watch bats.

Preferably in some clean comfortable setting. Like the bat cave.

(No, not that kind of bat cave. Although, it would be cool!)

Not an actual bat cave in real life which would be dark, dank and uncomfortable.

The problem with real actual caves is that there’s the constant danger of bat guano raining down on you while you’re stumbling around in the dark.

No, I think a bat lab would be much more my speed. Definitely.

I think what I like most about bats is that almost all of them eat insects. And when I say ‘eat insects’, I mean a lot of them. For instance, just one of our local little brown bats can eat up to 3000 mosquitoes each night. You really need no other selling point than that.

And yet, some people think it odd that I have such an infatuation with these wonderful flying sweeties.

Who couldn’t love something with such a cute face!

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