WAR.
21 posts
Which mythical creature would you want as your side kick?
it would be pretty cool to take cerburus on a walk in tompkins square park
A team of Indigenous Yucuna women in the Colombian Amazon are rescuing and documenting the remaining oral knowledge on bees and their roles in the ecosystem, along with the traditional classification system of diverse bee species. With the help of nine elders, they are documenting and sketching tales and songs to gather bee names, characteristics, behaviors, roles in their crop fields and the places where bees build beehives. […]
Je’chu […]. “He is […] our grandfather,” narrates Carmenza Yucuna Rivas, leader of the Miriti-Parana Indigenous Reserve in Colombia, located in the Amazon Rainforest. […] “Beehives […] give us the opportunity to create chakras [food gardens typically using an agroforestry model with divers plant species] […]. They let us have something to cultivate […] in the first place.”
To rescue and document the remaining oral knowledge of the origin of bees in their culture and their importance to their ecosystems and territory, Carmenza is leading research about these species with 36 women from the 12 communities part of the Indigenous reserve. […]
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Since the second half of 2020, Carmenza and her colleagues have been going to each of the communities and speaking to elders to gather information, such as tales and songs that talk of the origin of the bees. They also draw […]. Each of them has taken the task of sketching the stories on paper to describe the insects.
Their aim is to classify the bees according to the cultural system of the Yucuna-Matapí, Tanimuca-Letuama, and Tuyuca-Macuna peoples, including their names, characteristics, and the places where they build the beehives.
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Carmenza describes one by one the most relevant bees in the territory. The munumunú are the Melipona, that is, the bees that produce honey; the mapa or mapachara are the ones that produce the wax that is used for healing and rituals; the mapakayuna are small and live next to the crops to guarantee their productivity; and the jiñuna “are a great species,” says Carmenza. They live in the Yavarí coconut trees on the river shore where they build huge yellow beehives. […] Carmenza says that even with the research process and its results, the findings and daily learnings keep surprising them. […]
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“We’ll take all this knowledge to schools so that teachers can share it with the kids and show them the tales, the drawings, and the classifications and talk about the value of bees in culture. But also, so that they know that bees aren’t beings without importance,” says Carmenza. “They care for us without realizing it. They, through the pollination of trees and flora, help the world breathe.”
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Headline, images, captions, and all text published by: Astrid Arellano, as translated by Maria Angeles Salazar. “Indigenous women record age-old knowledge of bees in Colombia’s Amazon.” Mongabay. 8 February 2023. [Originally published by Arellano as “El origen de las abejas: la importancia del conocimiento ancestral indígena para salvarlas en Colombia” at Mongabay’s Latam site on 12 August 2022.]
Mỹ mom doing her own Bible study.
Source details and larger version.
Here are all the vintage images I’ve so far encountered that, for one esoteric reason or other, are categorized as “occult.”
So, uh...
90 Seconds to Midnight. Cool. Cool.
Wasn't going to ask to buy it but read the quick story about his father and dying mother.
Daytona 500, one week in n FOX
Did you know you are surrounded by NASA technology? From your apartment building to the doctor’s office, and even in your cellphone camera, there is more space in your life than you think!
In the latest edition of Spinoff, we are introducing dozens of new ways NASA technology could cross your path. Whether you need an extra “hand” on the production line or a weatherproof jacket, check out how to gear up with technology made for space.
Robots are crucial to exploring space and other planets – they could even support astronauts and form the advance party for places humans have yet to reach. But the human machine is hard to replicate.
A collaboration with General Motors helped us build Robonaut 2 – and the design for this robot’s hands has been adapted into a robotic glove that helps manufacturing employees, such as automobile workers, reduce injuries and improve quality control.
The Swedish company Bioservo used the Robo-Glove technology to create the world’s first industrial-strength robotic glove for factory workers who perform repetitive manual tasks.
The Ironhand glove adds force to the user’s grip with artificial tendons and pressure sensors on the palm and the fingers.
The result? Reduced strain on the user’s own tendons and muscles, meaning fewer workplace stress injuries and better comfort for workers.
Spacesuits need major insulation and temperature control to protect astronauts on extravehicular activities, aka spacewalks. To help solve this, we created a phase-change material with help from the Triangle Research and Development Corporation.
With funding from a NASA Small Business Innovation Research contract, Triangle incorporated the material into a fabric glove insert that could maintain a steady temperature by absorbing and releasing heat, ensuring it feels just right.
While the invention never made it to orbit, it did make it into the driver’s seat.
Outlast Technologies exclusively licensed the material from Triangle and has incorporated it into outdoor gear, bedding, and now – auto racing suits with help from Cambridge, England-based Walero.
Due to extreme temperatures in the cockpit, drivers in almost every major racing championship wear Walero for its cooling properties. Cristiana Oprea (pictured) wears it while driving for the European Rally Championship. Credit: Walero
The race undergarments, bonded with fire-retardant material for added protection, help drivers maintain a lower core temperature and heart rate, which means fewer mistakes and better lap times.
The suits have been sold to both amateur racers and professional NASCAR drivers.
The superinsulating material that makes up space blankets is one of our most ubiquitous spinoffs. Found everywhere from inside the walls and roofs of buildings to cryogenic tanks and MRI machines, radiant barrier technology was first created to insulate spacesuits and spacecraft. And now this NASA spinoff can be found in weatherproof jackets as well.
Inspired by her passion to run following a series of surgeries to help correct a life-threatening injury, Hema Nambiar launched her Larchmont, New York, start-up company 13-One. To create her jacket, she worked with Advanced Flexible Materials Inc.’s brand Heatsheets. The brand was already marketing products like the space blankets traditionally distributed after races to prevent dangerous drops in temperature.
The 13-One jackets are designed to be warm and weatherproof, but their thin, reflective lining lets them also be lightweight and easily portable. Credit: Lourenso Ramautar, Out of New York Studio
The resulting line of jackets has a black exterior and a lining to reflect body heat. They weigh less than a pound, are wind- and water-resistant, and easily pack into a small, built-in pouch.
Want to check out more NASA spinoffs? Be sure to find us on spinoff.nasa.gov and on Twitter.
Interested in licensing your own NASA technologies? Check out the NASA Technology Transfer program at technology.nasa.gov.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space!
Via George Takei, who adds: "Overheard: 'Not all heroes wear capes. Or tops, it seems.'"
"Release CCA 2.5.0 · ThePacielloGroup/CCA-Win · GitHub" https://googleweblight.com/sp?hl=sq&geid=NSTN&u=https://github.com/ThePacielloGroup/CCA-Win/releases/latest
Anti behavir scientist. Thought leaders, stay true.. ex
Okay, hi guys! Here is how many followers each driver has gained through the offseason so far. In parentheses, I will put how many spots a driver has gone up or down since I posted the last update.
Lewis Hamilton: +188,122 followers (+-0)
Charles Leclerc: +150,858 followers (+-0)
Daniel Ricciardo: +73,644 followers (+-0)
Carlos Sainz: +61,150 followers (+-0)
Sergio Perez: +53,784 followers (+-0)
Sebastian Vettel: +41,395 followers (+-0)
Lando Norris: + 33,374 followers (+2)
Logan Sargent: +32,290 followers (-1)
Oscar Piastri: +31,613 followers (-1)
Valtteri Bottas: +31,004 followers (+11)
Pierre Gasly: +28,350 followers (-1)
Yuki Tsunoda: +23,520 followers (+1)
Nyck Devries: +21,504 followers (+3)
Nico Hulkenberg: +21,115 followers (-3)
Max Verstappen: +20,720 followers (-1)
Mick Schumacher: +19,442 followers (-4)
George Russell: +18,979 followers (-2)
Esteban Ocon: +15,010 followers (-1)
Fernando Alonso: +13,190 followers (-1)
Zhou Guanyu: +12,093 followers (-1)
Kevin Magnussen: +9,246 followers (-1)
Alex Albon: +7,856 followers (+-0)
Lance Stroll: +6,388 followers (+-0)
Nicholas Latifi: +3,310 followers (+-0)
If you have any information contact Jack Crawford at: 1800-WhereTfDidIGoWrong-666