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Politics : View from the Center and Left -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: koan who wrote (255474)7/9/2014 1:03:27 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Respond to of 542212
 
We're past peak civilized. It's cats-in-a-bag time.

If kindness and comfort are, as I suspect, the results of an energy surplus, then, as the supply contracts, we could be expected to start fighting once again like cats in a sack. In the presence of entropy, virtue might be impossible.
George Monbiot

"No one ever said the word “sex,” or even “vagina,” to me."

How is that any of your business? Are you her mother, or her groom? If you don't want the government telling her what to do with her uterus, quit telling her what she should do about her vagina. That is the real moral position.



To: koan who wrote (255474)7/9/2014 1:39:42 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 542212
 
Herds of Dinos Thrived in ... Alaska?

THOUSANDS OF 'WORLD-CLASS' HADROSAUR PRINTS DISCOVERED IN DENALI

By Jenn Gidman, Newser Staff
newser.com
Posted Jul 9, 2014 12:35 PM CDT

(NEWSER) – Forget seeing Russia from Alaska, scientists have found a trove of tracks left behind by dinosaurs that once roamed our northernmost state—and some of them are pretty big. A paleontology team discovered a "world-class" trail in the northeast corner of Denali National Park that was littered with thousands of footprints from hadrosaurs (more commonly known as duck-billed dinosaurs) of all ages, reports LiveScience. “We had mom, dad, big brother, big sister, and little babies all running around together," says a paleontologist of the tracks, which ranged in length from 5 inches to 2 feet. "Denali was a family destination for millions of years, and now we've got the fossil evidence for it. This is definitely one of the great track sites of the world."

The discovery, published in the June issue of the journal Geology, seems to back up scientists’ claims that the creature often referred to as the "buffalo of dinosaurs," for its herd mentality, stomped its way around the polar regions during the Late Cretaceous Period about 70 million years ago. It’s not the first time there’s been a dino find in Denali: The National Park Service says the first fossil was unearthed in the park by a college student in 2005, and since then, evidence has been found of beaked ceratopsians, flying pterosaurs, and the bizarrely shaped therizinosaurs. But this find was particularly exciting for the team. "On one of the last nights, I woke up to an earthquake in the park," the lead scientist says. "For the first time in my life, I wasn’t worried about a big rock [hitting me]. I was worried about my track site sliding down the mountain."