Tag Archives: scientific

Hayden Panettiere is a Midget in a Dress of the DAy

Hayden Panettiere looks pregnant, but maybe she just let her massive Russian fighter boyfriend cum inside her and hasn’t squeezed it out yet, like the bitch I just spent 10 minutes watching in some creampie porn, as a reference point, to see if my scientific theory actually makes sense….then again, she is kind of a midget, and maybe she’s just eaten a jelly bean or some shit and her little midget stomach looks round and full, or maybe she’s got fat, but I prefer thinking it’s caused by her circus freak show sex….

See the rest here:
Hayden Panettiere is a Midget in a Dress of the DAy

Hayden Panettiere is a Midget in a Dress of the DAy

Hayden Panettiere looks pregnant, but maybe she just let her massive Russian fighter boyfriend cum inside her and hasn’t squeezed it out yet, like the bitch I just spent 10 minutes watching in some creampie porn, as a reference point, to see if my scientific theory actually makes sense….then again, she is kind of a midget, and maybe she’s just eaten a jelly bean or some shit and her little midget stomach looks round and full, or maybe she’s got fat, but I prefer thinking it’s caused by her circus freak show sex….

Read this article:
Hayden Panettiere is a Midget in a Dress of the DAy

Hayden Panettiere is a Midget in a Dress of the DAy

Hayden Panettiere looks pregnant, but maybe she just let her massive Russian fighter boyfriend cum inside her and hasn’t squeezed it out yet, like the bitch I just spent 10 minutes watching in some creampie porn, as a reference point, to see if my scientific theory actually makes sense….then again, she is kind of a midget, and maybe she’s just eaten a jelly bean or some shit and her little midget stomach looks round and full, or maybe she’s got fat, but I prefer thinking it’s caused by her circus freak show sex….

Follow this link:
Hayden Panettiere is a Midget in a Dress of the DAy

How Much Is Left? The Earth’s Resources made Interactive

Explore the world's resources and our role in the future with this cool interactive map from Scientific American! “If the 20th century was an expansive era seemingly without boundaries—a time of jet planes, space travel and the Internet—the early years of the 21st have showed us the limits of our small world. Regional blackouts remind us that the flow of energy we used to take for granted may be in tight supply. The once mighty Colorado River, tapped by thirsty metropolises of the desert West, no longer reaches the ocean. Oil is so hard to find that new wells extend many kilometers underneath the seafloor. The boundless atmosphere is now reeling from two centuries’ worth of greenhouse gas emissions. Even life itself seems to be running out, as biologists warn that we are in the midst of a global extinction event comparable to the last throes of the dinosaurs. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=interactive-how-much-is-left added by: DeliaTheArtist

Today on Planet 100: The Scientific Sex (Video)

The rest is here:
Today on Planet 100: The Scientific Sex (Video)

10 Strange New Frog Species (Slideshow)

Image credit: Paul Hamilton / RAEI Around the world, frogs are in peril. Threatened by pollution and habitat loss, changing climates and epidemic disease, the outlook for many species is dire—with conservationists locked in a fatal race to uncover the key to frog survival. Every year, however, new species are discovered and frogs long thought to be extinct are found again.

Read more:
10 Strange New Frog Species (Slideshow)

Ryanair Boss: Scientists Have "Nearly Always Been Wrong"

Image credit: Flight.org Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary may come close to rivaling arch-climate skeptic Lord Monckton when it comes to craziness. Having ranted and raved about eco-loonies in the past , he’s now laying firmly into the scientific community—labeling man-made climate change as “horses**t”, and claiming that the scientific community… Read the full story on TreeHugger

More:
Ryanair Boss: Scientists Have "Nearly Always Been Wrong"

Recent News on BP Spill Dispersants Reminiscent of Russian Toxic Rain Prediction

Image: Craig Anderson, Flickr Earlier this summer, when the BP Oil Spill was still at the top of the headlines everywhere, Russian predictions of a toxic rain consequent to the BP oil spill were generally dismissed by the scientific community. But the cultural meme, as well as an underlying level of anxiety for Gulf residents, was planted. Now, reports are appearing that raise the spectre of the Russian prediction. Are people living … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Go here to read the rest:
Recent News on BP Spill Dispersants Reminiscent of Russian Toxic Rain Prediction

Sloppy Reporting as Symbol Of Why Getting Climate Legislation Passed Has Been So Tough

photo: Jason Kuffer via flickr Referring to the newly-formed iceberg four times the size of Manhattan which broke from Greenland over the weekend, John Rudolf over at the New York Times writes, in a piece titled Iceberg as a Metaphor for Inaction , 
”Despite the scientific uncertainty, Mr Markey used the image of the ice island as a logjam of Republican opposition to climate change legislation… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read more:
Sloppy Reporting as Symbol Of Why Getting Climate Legislation Passed Has Been So Tough

Longevity Genes Predict Whether You’ll Live Past 100

“Using a specific set of genetic markers, scientists predicted with 77-percent accuracy whether someone would live to a very old age. The findings do not mean that lifestyle factors, such as healthy diet and exercise, are not important for long life. Indeed, 23 percent of the time the genetic markers didn't predict longevity. So those long-lifers without the centenarian genes might have practiced healthy habits that allowed them to lead a longer life. But they do suggest our genes play an important role when it comes to living well past the average lifespan. With more research, one day people might be able to determine whether they have the genetic potential to become a centenarian. Additionally, learning more about how centenarians ward off diseases, including dementia, heart disease and cancer, well into their elder years, might help the rest of us delay disease. “I'm very hopeful that understanding how and why centenarians are able to do that will lead to strategies and therapies, including screening and figuring out who could be helped by whatever therapies [there] are down the road,” study researcher Tom Perls, of Boston University School of Medicine, said in a press briefing Wednesday about the study. ” http://www.livescience.com/health/longevity-genes-centenarians-100701.html added by: DeliaTheArtist