Hiatus

Dear friends and loyal readers,

As I am currently in Indonesia, this blog will be on temporary hiatus. I may randomly update it with Indonesian-related stories throughout the year.

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Star spews jets of water into space

750 light years away, there is an interstellar fire hydrant. And it’s open to full blast. From Popsci.com:

Researchers looking for signs of life elsewhere in the universe often start by looking for one key ingredient necessary to complex life as we know it: water. And just 750 light-years away, they’ve  found quite a bit of it spewing from the poles of a young, sunlike star that is blasting jets of H2O into interstellar space at 124,000 miles per hour.

[T]he water droplets are essentially bullets of water moving something like 80 times faster than the average round fired from a rifle. And there’s a lot of them. The amount of water ejecting from the star is equal to the amount that flows through the Amazon every second, researchers say.

Some astronomers are speculating that this is “something every protostar goes through” – which would suggest that water might be found throughout space. You can read more here.

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“The Hum” bedevils tiny English town

It’s enough to drive a man mad. It’s only audible at night, apparently, and only distantly so – faint enough that the source remains indeterminable, but loud enough to be certain it’s not one’s imagination. It’s been heard elsewhere, too, and speculations abound as to the cause. And it’s been bothering residents of the English village of Woodland for at least two months. From Time:

Known as “the hum,” the freaky noise hits the town of Woodland in
County Durham every night. And, no, this isn’t some lousy B-list horror
flick plotline (although, it very well may turn into one).

Every night for the past two months the noise resembling the hum of a
car engine has seemingly moved through the air, flooding the entire
town’s population of 300 with the annoyingly undetectable sound.
Sometimes it gets so strong it shakes beds. Sometimes it grows louder in
different parts of the same home. But no matter how loud, it’s entirely
a mystery.

Apparently, this isn’t this isn’t the first time “the hum” has troubled an English town. And similar phenomena have occurred elsewhere in the world, too. Wikipedia explains that

Hums have been reported in various geographical locations. In some cases a source has been located. A Hum on the Big Island of Hawaii,
typically related to volcanic action, is heard in locations dozens of
miles apart. The local Hawaiians also say the Hum is most often heard by
men. The Hum is most often described as sounding somewhat like a
distant idling diesel engine. Typically, the Hum is difficult to detect with microphones, and its source and nature are hard to localize.

The Hum is sometimes prefixed with the name of a locality where the problem has been particularly publicized: e.g., the “Bristol Hum”, the “Taos Hum” or the “Bondi Hum”.[1]

You can read more here and here.

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The road where seatbelts are prohibited

… is a 16 mile long ice road in the European nation of Estonia. This road has a number of unique rules:

On this particular road, it is forbidden to wear a seatbelt: you
might have to make an unexpected and speedy exit from your car.

You
can’t drive here after sunset, or with a vehicle over 2.5 tonnes. And
it is strictly illegal to travel at between 25 and 40km/h (16-25mph). At
those speeds, your car tyres will create dangerous vibrations that
could crack the surface of the road, sending you and your vehicle to a
watery grave.

You can read more – and see some pictures – here.

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42 foot statue unearthed in Egypt

(Relatively) fresh off the wire from AP:

Archaeologists unearthed one of the largest statues found to date of a
powerful ancient Egyptian pharaoh at his mortuary temple in the
southern city of Luxor, the country’s antiquities authority announced
Tuesday.

The 13 meter (42 foot) tall statue of Amenhotep III was
one of a pair that flanked the northern entrance to the grand funerary
temple on the west bank of the Nile that is currently the focus of a
major excavation.

We’ll keep an eye out for follow-up stories about mysterious calamities befalling the archaeologists involved in this excavation. More details here.

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The waterfall with no bottom

Devil's Kettle water falls at Judge C.R. Magne...

Image via Wikipedia

In Minnesota’s Judge C. R. Magney State Park, there exists a strange and mysterious waterfall known as The Devil’s Kettle. What’s so strange about this cascade?

Apparently, according to Wikipedia, the river splits in two at the head of the falls. The “eastern flow goes over a two-step, 50 foot waterfall and continues downstream,” no different than any other waterfall, but the “western flow surges into a pothole, falling at least 10 feet (3.0 m), and disappears underground.” The water’s outlet has “never been located,” despite scientists’ best efforts:

Researchers have dropped brightly colored dyes, ping pong balls, and other objects into the Devil’s Kettle without result.[12]
There is even a legend that someone pushed a car into the fissure, but
given that the Devil’s Kettle is wholly inaccessible by road, most
commentators dismiss this as hyperbole.[5][13]
Not only is the outlet unknown, but there is currently no satisfactory geological explanation for the Devil’s Kettle.[7]:57 Certainly riverbed potholes are known to form from rocks and grit swirling in an eddy
with such force that they eventually drill a vertical shaft in the
bedrock. How the flow is conducted away laterally, however, remains
enigmatic.

It’s certainly not a place I’d like to go swimming, at any rate. You can read more here.

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AT&T predicts the future, circa 1993

Check out this compilation of AT&T advertisements from 1993-1994. Unlike previous predictions we’ve featured (1, 2, 3) a lot of these hit pretty close to the mark (although several we’re still waiting on, and others will likely never happen – namely, video pay phones). Pretty interesting either way.

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Whale “pop songs” spread across the ocean

Our traditional spring hiatus has reached its end, my loyal adverblians. Let the march of interesting oddities resume!

We bring you this intriguing story from ScienceNow:

A new study reveals that, just like humans, humpback whales in the South Pacific follow musical trends
that change by the season. Moreover, these songs always move from west
to east across thousands of miles of ocean–from the east coast of
Australia to French Polynesia–over the course of a year or two. The
authors say it’s one of the most complex and rapid patterns of cultural
evolution across a region ever observed in a nonhuman species.

You can find further details here!

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Yukon shipwreck yields Gold Rush tunes

This sounds like an interesting find:

Archeologists have found new clues about the music early Klondike
stampeders were listening to during the Yukon Gold Rush, thanks to
recordings found aboard a 110-year-old shipwreck.


The three records and a gramophone were discovered last summer in the
A.J. Goddard, a sternwheeler that sank in Lake Laberge, north of
Whitehorse, in October 1901.

You can read more here (where you can also hear the music!).

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Mysterious tiny doors appearing around San Francisco

mysterious_tiny_door.jpgSan Francisco artist Jeff Waldman recently installed the first of twenty tiny doors that will soon uncannily adorn the streets of San Francisco. His description of the project:

The idea is to install small doors, unexplained portals, throughout the
city. To start, in San Francisco. These doors would be scaled down to a
size that is cognitively possible but whimsically improbable. Tiny ones.
Like, Alice Through The Looking Glass, maybe 15-25 inches or so. I
don’t imagine them to be operable, but the more detailed in appearance
the better.

You can read more here. (Via LaughingSquid.) 

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