Friday, July 27, 2012

A Roman couple have been holding hands for 1500 years!

        Not only that, but they were probably buried looking into each others’ eyes. The couple were from the town of Mutina, now known as Modena, and were buried around the year 500 AD.  
        The bodies were found positioned next to each other with the male on the left and the female on the right. They are holding hand and the female’s skull faces towards where the male’s would be, however his skull is badly damaged.   
        Not much is known about the couple, except that they were married and, due to where and how the bodies were buried, were probably not very wealthy. The remains will go on display in a local museum later this year.   The eternal lovebirds weren’t the only ones found at the site. 3 mutilated skeletons were also excavated. One was a teen.  
      Some of the archaeologists say they were slaves executed by their master, however others believe they were murder victims due to the slash wounds they were found to have

Friday, July 20, 2012

Twenty years ago a Japanese farmer created cubed watermelons!

         People love watermelon, but their shape is a pain. They roll around in the fridge or on the counter. People have been struggling with the problem for years. Attempting to cut the watermelon can be dangerous and difficult, if you haven't learned proper watermelon cutting techniques.
         An innovative farmer on the island of Shikoku off the southwestern coast of Japan came up with a solution to the watermelon dilemma. He came up with the idea to make cube shaped watermelons that would easily fit in the refrigerator and be stored. Farmers grew the watermelons in glass boxes and the fruit automatically assumed the same shape.  
       Today the cubed melons are grown, hand-picked, and shipped all over Japan. The special melons are more partial to the wealthy and fashion conscious citizens of Tokyo and Osaka, Japan.
        Each melon sells for 10,000 yen, which equals to about $83 per watermelon! It is double or triple the amount of a normal watermelon in Japan.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Bored and lonely parrots go crazy and pull out their feathers!

   An estimated 50 percent of pet birds engage in “over-preening”, but certain species of parrots are significantly more prone to this problem. Those at particular risk are birds that travel in large flocks when they live in the wild.   
     These birds get lonely without a lot of social interaction.  Without another bird, or at least a person, to keep them company, they behave like a lost wild animal. They get anxious, develop behavioural problems, and yes, pull out their feathers and even pick at scabs. More nomadic bird species like Amazon parrots or macaws are at less risk of this.

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

There was a prehistoric horse that was the size of a small dog.

          

                Eohippus aka hyracotherium lived between 55 
and 45 million years ago. They averaged 60 cm in length and weighed around 36 pounds. This prehistoric animal has actually been classified in the palaeothere family, which makes it not only an ancestor of modern horses, but also early relatives of rhinoceroses and tapirs.  

           Later on another, now extinct, descendant of hyracotherium called propalaeotherium came about. These animals were even smaller, some only 30 cm (less than 1 foot) in length! These tiny, cat-sized horse-like animals have no modern descendants.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Elephants actually talk to one another

          Elephants actually talk to one another, yet their frequency is so low humans can't hear it.
          This form of communication is called infrasound. Scientists have discovered that these signals from elephants can travel for miles, but humans can only detect them with special equipment. They have also been working on translating the messages from the elephants by using a spectrograph.

Monday, July 2, 2012

A four-year-old has her own art exhibition in New York City!

        This fact will definitely reignite the debate about what art really is - does the product of a kid playing with paint really constitute fine art? The parents of 4-year-old Aelita Andre definitely think so. The precocious Australian artist has reportedly been toddling around on canvases since she was 9 months ago! Now that she’s all grown up at the age of four, 3 of her paintings have sold for $27,000!

        She also has her own art show, “The Prodigy of Color”, at the Agora Gallery in NYC. The twenty-four works on display are priced anywhere from $4,400 to $10,000 a piece. The gallery’s director, Angela Di Bello, actually chose her artwork before she knew the painter’s age! She thought the pieces displayed “great colors, great movement, great composition, and were very playful”, then she found out they had been produced by a child!