 - Last login: 4 days agoMrBreeze9999
- Larry is a married guy from North Wales, Pennsylvania, USA.
- Likes 2,554 pages, 203 videos, 54 photos • 100 fans • Received 32 reviews
- Member since Dec 27, 2006
Science and history buff -
Musician - guitar and keyboards -
Songwriter -
Computers -
The Internet -
Book lover -
Political junkie -
Thinker of an occasional deep thought -
Part-time nice guy -
Absolutely, insanely in love with cats...
BEWARE STUMBLERS: StumbleUpon is like falling into a deep well of infinite experience...One of the Internet's best repositories of TOO MUCH INFORMATION(TMI)...but that's a good thing!
Favorites » His Blog

-
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Humans almost became two species
-
Apr 25, 5:16am
9 reviews
anthropology
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7358868.stm
-

WE DID SPLIT IN TWO - CONSERVATIVES & PROGRESSIVES!

-
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Solar Systems look-alike found
-
Apr 7, 11:29am
10 reviews
astronomy
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7333155.stm
-

Astronomers have discovered a planetary system orbiting a distant star which looks much like our own.

-
Meteorites Delivered the Seeds of Life - Space - redOrbit
-
Apr 7, 10:59am
1 review
science
http://www.redorbit.com/news/space/1330031/meteorites_delivered_the_seeds_of_...
-

Meteorites Delivered the 'Seeds' of Life
Posted on: Monday, 7 April 2008, 09:35 CDT
Flash back three or four billion years -- Earth is a hot, dry and lifeless place. All is still. Without warning, a meteor slams into the desert plains at over ten thousand miles per hour. With it, this violent collision may have planted the chemical seeds of life on Earth.
Scientists presented evidence today that desert heat, a little water, and meteorite impacts may have been enough to cook up one of the first prerequisites for life: The dominance of "left-handed" amino acids, the building blocks of life on this planet.

-
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Cosmic treasure trove revealed
-
Mar 11, 9:18am
3 reviews
astronomy
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7288463.stm
-

A Nasa space probe measuring the oldest light in the Universe has found that cosmic neutrinos made up 10% of matter shortly after the Big Bang.
Five years of study data also shows that the first stars took over half a billion years to light up the Universe.
WMAP launched in 2001 on a mission to measure remnants of light left over from the Big Bang.
Scientists say it is collecting a "treasure trove" of information about the Universe's age, make-up and fate.
The Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy probe (WMAP) is mapping the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation in the sky. This is the oldest light in the Universe, shifted to microwave wavelengths as the Universe expanded over 13.7 billion years.
How the first stars switched on was a long, drawn-out process that took half a billion years
Dr Joanna Dunkley
Scientists say the Universe is bathed in this afterglow light, and its patterns across the sky contain details about the history, shape, content, and ultimate fate of the Universe.
WMAP provides new evidence that a sea of cosmic neutrinos flows throughout the Universe.
Dr Joanna Dunkley of the University of Oxford, UK, and Princeton University, US, is a member of the WMAP team.
She told the BBC News website: "We see patterns in light, light that has been travelling for billions of years, affected in the early infancy of the Universe by whatever the Universe was composed of at that point.
"We expected to see neutrinos. It's a nice piece of evidence that they are in the Universe at large and affecting the light signals we see."

-
Dilbert Comic Strip Archive - Dilbert.com - The Official Dilbert Website by Scot…
-
Feb 2, 2:48pm
9 reviews
humor
http://www.comics.com/comics/dilbert/archive/dilbert-20080201.html
-

-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7203186.stm
-
Jan 25, 11:43am
6 reviews
science
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7203186.stm
-

Synthetic life 'advance' reported
By Helen Briggs
Science reporter, BBC News
Mycoplasma bacteria (Image: Science Photo Library)
M. genitalium has one of the smallest known genomes
An important step has been taken in the quest to create a synthetic lifeform.
A US team reports in Science magazine how it built the entire DNA code of a common bacterium in the laboratory using blocks of genetic material.

-
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/profile/1456
-
Jan 13, 7:41am
1 review
politics
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/profile/1456
-
A good way to look at the "vast right wing conspiracy" that only fools believe doesn't exist.

-
Linkinn - Funny Cats Album
-
Jan 8, 12:47pm
17 reviews
cats
http://www.linkinn.com/_Funny_Cats_Album
-

-
Press TV - Largest galactic diamond found
-
Jan 8, 12:37pm
32 reviews
space-exploration
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=36910§ionid=3510208
-

Largest galactic diamond found
Sun, 30 Dec 2007 22:04:41
Lucy, the space diamond
Harvard astronomers have discovered 'Lucy' the largest diamond in the galaxy located at a distance of 50 light years from the Earth.
According to Scientists 'Lucy' is the heart of an extinct star that used to shine like the Sun, and weighs at least ten billion trillion trillion carats.
This is while the largest diamond on Earth which was found in South Africa weighed 546 carats.
"You would need a jeweler's loupe the size of the Sun to grade this diamond," said Travis Metcalfe, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Astronomers added that Lucy is a crystallized white dwarf, the remaining hot core of a star after its death.
They claim that in five billion years, our Sun will also die and turn into a similar diamond which will forever sparkle in the center of the solar system.
|