This is the first panel of the Calvin & Hobbes comic strip published on 7 July 1986:
What do you think the odds are that this would have made it into the papers in 2011? And, if it did, can you imagine the letters to the editor?
This is the first panel of the Calvin & Hobbes comic strip published on 7 July 1986:
What do you think the odds are that this would have made it into the papers in 2011? And, if it did, can you imagine the letters to the editor?
I hope this will help. I have one thing left to do at work today and I cannot get to it until I vent about this headline from boingboing:
I guarantee that William Strunk, Jr.’s zombie is crawling out of its grave right now in pursuit of Xeni Jardin‘s BRAAAAIIINNNSSSS!*
Just to make me happy (and delay the zombie apocalypse), let’s get rid of the words that are strongly implied by other words in this title. Continue reading “Giant swarming schools of squid cause zombie apocalypse”
I can understand why some people don’t want to have public and detailed discussion about community standards about the appropriateness of an incident, rather than just gossip about it. They wind up looking like total assholes.
In a previous post about Raptorex kriegsteini I expounded upon Jack Horner’s suggestion that Raptorex is not an example of the Tyranosaur body pattern evolving before gigantic size. Now, Horner and colleagues have published the data behind their critiques in PLoS One:
The recently described small-bodied tyrannosaurid Raptorex kreigsteini is exceptional as its discovery proposes that many of the distinctive anatomical traits of derived tyrannosaurids were acquired in the Early Cretaceous, before the evolution of large body size. . .These findings are consistent with the original sale description of LH PV18 as a juvenile Tarbosaurus from the Upper Cretaceous of Mongolia. Consequently, we suggest that there is currently no evidence to support the conclusion that tyrannosaurid skeletal design first evolved in the Early Cretaceous at small body size.
Today is the 153rd anniversary of the theory of evolution by natural selection. Continue reading “Natural Selection Day”