Science!
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Probably can go in here...
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@taniwharugby didn't see that on river monsters! Stink.
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@taniwharugby said in Science!:
Probably can go in here...
That’s sad . Those huge freshwater stingrays will probably be next
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This is bloody interesting...
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=12299751
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I always struggle to comprehend this, makes my head hurt
We analysed the amounts of lead and uranium isotopes in these crystals using mass spectrometry, and found their clocks had been reset 2.229 billion years ago (give or take five million years). That’s when we realised Yarrabubba coincided with a major change in Earth’s climate.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/science/118950798/how-the-worlds-oldest-asteroid-thawed-earth
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@taniwharugby haha yea, timescales like that are too hard for my brain to comprehend
Like that ones about one type of dinosaur being closer in time to us than another type of dinosaur.
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@mariner4life said in Science!:
@taniwharugby haha yea, timescales like that are too hard for my brain to comprehend
Like that ones about one type of dinosaur being closer in time to us than another type of dinosaur.
Yeah dinosaurs existed from 240m years ago to 60m years ago.
So front end dinos existed 180m before the last ones, only 60m years ago.
Only a tiny fraction of the 4.5 billion years earth has existed, or 3.5b years of life.
On a similar note the mammoths and pyramids one gets me.
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@mariner4life said in Science!:
@taniwharugby haha yea, timescales like that are too hard for my brain to comprehend
Like that ones about one type of dinosaur being closer in time to us than another type of dinosaur.
Yeah dinosaurs existed from 240m years ago to 60m years ago.
So front end dinos existed 180m before the last ones, only 60m years ago.
Only a tiny fraction of the 4.5 billion years earth has existed, or 3.5b years of life.
On a similar note the mammoths and pyramids one gets me.
What the Mammoths/Pyramids one?
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@mariner4life said in Science!:
@taniwharugby haha yea, timescales like that are too hard for my brain to comprehend
Like that ones about one type of dinosaur being closer in time to us than another type of dinosaur.
Yeah dinosaurs existed from 240m years ago to 60m years ago.
So front end dinos existed 180m before the last ones, only 60m years ago.
Only a tiny fraction of the 4.5 billion years earth has existed, or 3.5b years of life.
On a similar note the mammoths and pyramids one gets me.
one i read the other day was that the founding of Cambridge University predates the Aztec empire. Which, while not of the same mind-bending time scale, still surprised me
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@mariner4life said in Science!:
@taniwharugby haha yea, timescales like that are too hard for my brain to comprehend
Like that ones about one type of dinosaur being closer in time to us than another type of dinosaur.
Yeah dinosaurs existed from 240m years ago to 60m years ago.
So front end dinos existed 180m before the last ones, only 60m years ago.
Only a tiny fraction of the 4.5 billion years earth has existed, or 3.5b years of life.
On a similar note the mammoths and pyramids one gets me.
What the Mammoths/Pyramids one?
https://www.nationalgeographic.com.au/science/mammother-unearthed-facts.aspx
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@mariner4life said in Science!:
@taniwharugby haha yea, timescales like that are too hard for my brain to comprehend
Like that ones about one type of dinosaur being closer in time to us than another type of dinosaur.
Yeah dinosaurs existed from 240m years ago to 60m years ago.
So front end dinos existed 180m before the last ones, only 60m years ago.
Only a tiny fraction of the 4.5 billion years earth has existed, or 3.5b years of life.
On a similar note the mammoths and pyramids one gets me.
What the Mammoths/Pyramids one?
https://www.nationalgeographic.com.au/science/mammother-unearthed-facts.aspx
Melting permafrost has made it easier to harvest their ivory
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@mariner4life said in Science!:
@mariner4life said in Science!:
@taniwharugby haha yea, timescales like that are too hard for my brain to comprehend
Like that ones about one type of dinosaur being closer in time to us than another type of dinosaur.
Yeah dinosaurs existed from 240m years ago to 60m years ago.
So front end dinos existed 180m before the last ones, only 60m years ago.
Only a tiny fraction of the 4.5 billion years earth has existed, or 3.5b years of life.
On a similar note the mammoths and pyramids one gets me.
one i read the other day was that the founding of Cambridge University predates the Aztec empire. Which, while not of the same mind-bending time scale, still surprised me
The last widow of a US civil war veteran died in 2008 , surprised me to find that out .
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Yeah I still struggle to understand how they can say this happened so many billion years back, when, well, billions of years...yeah yeah, science, but still...guess its easier whan you have such a big window 2.229 billion years, margin of error of 5 million...pfft.
@booboo also time, in terms of light years, some more staggering numbers
A light-year is a measurement of distance and not time (as the name might suggest). A light-year is the distance a beam of light travels in a single Earth year, or 6 trillion miles (9.7 trillion kilometers).
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@taniwharugby said in Science!:
Yeah I still struggle to understand how they can say this happened so many billion years back, when, well, billions of years...yeah yeah, science, but still...guess its easier whan you have such a big window 2.229 billion years, margin of error of 5 million...pfft.
@booboo also time, in terms of light years, some more staggering numbers
A light-year is a measurement of distance and not time (as the name might suggest). A light-year is the distance a beam of light travels in a single Earth year, or 6 trillion miles (9.7 trillion kilometers).
It's likely to be a somewhat more accurate estimate of Earth's age than Bishop Ussher's
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@taniwharugby said in Science!:
Yeah I still struggle to understand how they can say this happened so many billion years back, when, well, billions of years...yeah yeah, science, but still...guess its easier whan you have such a big window 2.229 billion years, margin of error of 5 million...pfft.
@booboo also time, in terms of light years, some more staggering numbers
A light-year is a measurement of distance and not time (as the name might suggest). A light-year is the distance a beam of light travels in a single Earth year, or 6 trillion miles (9.7 trillion kilometers).
Yeah that always makes me feel really small.
The fact the that farthest star is reachable (if still around) if we travel at the speed of light for 9,000,000,000 years.
Even if we could travel at speed of light, the fact that we could do so for a year and not be very far into the universe is staggering.
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Even if we could travel at speed of light, the fact that we could do so for a year and not be very far into the universe is staggering.
Not so smart are we. Man can't travel at the speed of light and we really would need to go faster to get anywhere, yet we can't look after the island that we live on.
Yeah that always makes me feel really small.
Our tiny little lives are but a grain of sand on the beach of the cosmos.
"If you could travel at the speed of light, you would be able to circle the Earth’s equator about 7.5 times in just one second"
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Even if we could travel at speed of light, the fact that we could do so for a year and not be very far into the universe is staggering.
. Man can't travel at the speed of light and we really would need to go faster
Oh, I don't know. I once put on a pair of lined running shorts that had a wasp in them. I think I got those off quicker than that....