That stuff blows my mind... how quickly the world has changed... that my grandmother who was alive when the smartphone appeared... was also alive well before WWI. Alive when cars like this were new!
F**ked up Facts
I’m too lazy to check but that rings a bell.FujiKiwi wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 10:26 amYes, that’s an astonishing one. There was also a surprising fact about a grandson of one of the very early presidents—was it Van Buren?—still being alive until quite recently. I forget the exact details.
- Torquemada 1420
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Most final salary pension schemes put restrictions in place to prevent just that happening: "Thai-bride clause". I'm pretty sure there has been an instance of someone marrying his daughter not just for that purpose but to avoid Inheritance Tax too. Woody Allen, eat your heart out.
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Not going to look up but that has to be touch and go? Not least because we can't be sure of their full periods of existence: we only know a narrow certainty from the (very incomplete) fossil record.Insane_Homer wrote: ↑Wed Mar 31, 2021 9:31 pm A T-Rex is closer in time to an iPad than it is to a Stegosaurus.
I think I read that she looked after the old fella in his later years and it was during the Depression so they married so she could get his pension as a thank you.Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 11:39 amMost final salary pension schemes put restrictions in place to prevent just that happening: "Thai-bride clause". I'm pretty sure there has been an instance of someone marrying his daughter not just for that purpose but to avoid Inheritance Tax too. Woody Allen, eat your heart out.
Full story: https://wgntv.com/news/last-civil-war-w ... -her-life/She was just 19 in 1936, when she married 91-year-old Civil War veteran James Bolin after volunteering as his caretaker in his final years.
“He asked her to marry him and basically explained that if they were to marry, that when he passed away, that she would be able to draw his pension,” historian Jill Phillips said.
Helen said “yes” and the two married at Bolin’s house. He lived there and Helen continued to live at her parents’ house.
James Bolin died three years later, after which his daughter — who was much older than Helen — learned of the marriage.
“His daughter confronted her after he passed away and threatened her that if you go after… his pension, I will ruin you,” her friend Ruthie Letterman said.
After becoming a widow in her early 20s, Helen Jackson never remarried and decided not to collect that pension, while also not telling a soul.
This is common in exploration, I'd think. Many indigenous North Americans got the name we called them until recently, possibly still do in some cases, because an explorer went: "Who lives over there?" and the people they were with, sometimes foes of those people, went: "We call them the Eskimo, or eaters of raw meat." Most names these people use now (that I know of) simply mean "the people" or "people of a certain thing/location/etc". Where I grew up used to be called Rama, which funnily enough was taken from actual East Indian, I think applied to them by the government, not anything to do with the local culture. They now call their community Mnjikaning, which means "place of the fish weirs", as they used to harvest fish out of the adjacent lake and one of the pre-contact weirs is still underwater in one bay.sturginho wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 9:15 amTypical Brits abroad scenario
Our Heritage Minutes showed one of the most notable mistakes
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Of course, who wouldn't want verifiable facts to get in the way of your uneducated assumptions?Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 12:49 pmNot going to look up but that has to be touch and go? Not least because we can't be sure of their full periods of existence: we only know a narrow certainty from the (very incomplete) fossil record.Insane_Homer wrote: ↑Wed Mar 31, 2021 9:31 pm A T-Rex is closer in time to an iPad than it is to a Stegosaurus.
Last edited by Insane_Homer on Thu Apr 01, 2021 4:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.
“Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that's even remotely true.”
Best way to appreciate the enormous role you individually play in the u niverse:
https://htwins.net/scale2/
There is still waterunder the Sahara.
https://htwins.net/scale2/
There is still waterunder the Sahara.
I’m gonna need evidence or at the very least a web link!
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Not sure being Ptolemaic made her Greek. Next you'll be telling us Victoria was a kraut who embraced all things German.
Oh. Wait.
- Torquemada 1420
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Oh really.Insane_Homer wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 4:34 pmOf course, who wouldn't want verifiable facts to get in the way of your uneducated assumptions?Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 12:49 pmNot going to look up but that has to be touch and go? Not least because we can't be sure of their full periods of existence: we only know a narrow certainty from the (very incomplete) fossil record.Insane_Homer wrote: ↑Wed Mar 31, 2021 9:31 pm A T-Rex is closer in time to an iPad than it is to a Stegosaurus.
So, Steg was Jurrasic. 201 to 145 mya.
T-Rex was Cretaceous. 145 to 65 mya.
You do the maths.
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Researchers find DNA can work as a flame retardant (w/ video)
Tyrannosaurus Rex was Late Cretaceous 68-66 million years ago.Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 7:26 pmOh really.Insane_Homer wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 4:34 pmOf course, who wouldn't want verifiable facts to get in the way of your uneducated assumptions?Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 12:49 pm
Not going to look up but that has to be touch and go? Not least because we can't be sure of their full periods of existence: we only know a narrow certainty from the (very incomplete) fossil record.
So, Steg was Jurrasic. 201 to 145 mya.
T-Rex was Cretaceous. 145 to 65 mya.
You do the maths.
You do the maths.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
Ah, sperm. I think we all know that is wet enough to put out a fire.tabascoboy wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 7:55 pmResearchers find DNA can work as a flame retardant (w/ video)
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Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 7:22 pm
Not sure being Ptolemaic made her Greek. Next you'll be telling us Victoria was a kraut who embraced all things German.
Oh. Wait.
She wouldn't have thanked you for calling her Egyptian
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Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 7:26 pmOh really.Insane_Homer wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 4:34 pmOf course, who wouldn't want verifiable facts to get in the way of your uneducated assumptions?Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 12:49 pm
Not going to look up but that has to be touch and go? Not least because we can't be sure of their full periods of existence: we only know a narrow certainty from the (very incomplete) fossil record.
So, Steg was Jurrasic. 201 to 145 mya.
T-Rex was Cretaceous. 145 to 65 mya.
You do the maths.
69 million < 81 millionTyrannosaurus lived during what is referred to as the Lancian faunal stage (Maastrichtian age) at the end of the Late Cretaceous
The Lance (Creek) Formation is a division of Late Cretaceous (dating to about 69 - 66 Ma) rocks in the western United States.
The Hell Creek Formation in Montana ... and has been dated to 66 ± 0.07 Ma old
Stegosaurus
... where they are found in Kimmeridgian to early Tithonian aged strata, between 155 and 150 million years ago, in the western United States and Portugal.
The earliest stegosaurid (the genus Lexovisaurus) is known from the Oxford Clay Formation of England and France, giving it an age of early to middle Callovian.
... the Callovian is an age and stage in the Middle Jurassic, lasting between 166.1 ± 4.0 Ma (million years ago) and 163.5 ± 4.0 Ma
“Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that's even remotely true.”
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FFS. We only know with reasonable surety (assuming our dating methods are accurate) when they existed. We know f**k all for certain when they did not exist outside those margins because the fossil record is incredibly small. Point me to eo-stegosaurus fossils which will tell us when steg, as we know it, evolved.Insane_Homer wrote: ↑Fri Apr 02, 2021 8:05 am69 million < 81 millionTyrannosaurus lived during what is referred to as the Lancian faunal stage (Maastrichtian age) at the end of the Late Cretaceous
The Lance (Creek) Formation is a division of Late Cretaceous (dating to about 69 - 66 Ma) rocks in the western United States.
The Hell Creek Formation in Montana ... and has been dated to 66 ± 0.07 Ma old
Stegosaurus
... where they are found in Kimmeridgian to early Tithonian aged strata, between 155 and 150 million years ago, in the western United States and Portugal.
The earliest stegosaurid (the genus Lexovisaurus) is known from the Oxford Clay Formation of England and France, giving it an age of early to middle Callovian.
... the Callovian is an age and stage in the Middle Jurassic, lasting between 166.1 ± 4.0 Ma (million years ago) and 163.5 ± 4.0 Ma
I know such quotes sound clever but too often they are based on kindergarten usage of the science or make gratuitous assumptions of certainty and rigidity for stuff we are largely guessing at.
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you're very pissy when you're wrong, taking France fcuking up the Grand slam a little hard? relax.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science- ... -65556840/
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science- ... -65556840/
“Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that's even remotely true.”
There are more stars in the visible universe than there are grains of sand on all of the beaches on Earth.Insane_Homer wrote: ↑Wed Mar 31, 2021 9:29 pm There are more atoms in the tip of your index finger than there are stars in the universe.
The vast vast majority (99.999999+%) of almost everything, is nothing!
*Neutron stars and black holes excepted.[/size]
If you were to line up every single virus instance (phage) on Earth so that it formed one very thin but very long line, that line would be 120 million light years long.
(The Milky Way Galaxy is only about 100,000 light years across)
My great grandmother was evicted from her home as a child by red coats. One of the soldiers went back into the burning house as she had left her little dolly thing inside. He also gave her her first boiled sweet.
She always said that you could find a nice Englishman, but that as a race they were cunts (my word, not hers)
Yep - that ties into one of my favourite weird facts. ‘Don’t Stop Believing’ has the line ‘born and raised in South Detroit’, but there isn’t a South Detroit. Where it would have been is Windsor, Ontario.
It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.
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John Tyler (1790 - 1862), 10th POTUS, still has one living grandson.GogLais wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 10:59 amI’m too lazy to check but that rings a bell.
Ceterum censeo delendam esse Muscovia
Was this in the early 1800s? Do you mean ‘khaki coats’?PornDog wrote: ↑Fri Apr 02, 2021 6:13 pmMy great grandmother was evicted from her home as a child by red coats. One of the soldiers went back into the burning house as she had left her little dolly thing inside. He also gave her her first boiled sweet.
She always said that you could find a nice Englishman, but that as a race they were cunts (my word, not hers)
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Eastern Canada is much more skewed than memory suggests. I just read a book set along the Eastern states and when I looked up the towns on a map, it didn't gel at all
British army had redcoats as service uniforms into the late 19th century. Three generations plus the age of the poster can easily take us to that period.Niegs wrote: ↑Sat Apr 03, 2021 1:24 amWas this in the early 1800s? Do you mean ‘khaki coats’?PornDog wrote: ↑Fri Apr 02, 2021 6:13 pmMy great grandmother was evicted from her home as a child by red coats. One of the soldiers went back into the burning house as she had left her little dolly thing inside. He also gave her her first boiled sweet.
She always said that you could find a nice Englishman, but that as a race they were cunts (my word, not hers)
And the British army was still being used to clear people of land in Britain in that time period, as well as in the colonised lands.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
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Love this sort of thing. Here’s something similar - the only area of land on earth that no country claims to own. Egypt and Sudan both say it doesn’t belong to them, because claiming it would mean accepting a border that gives something else they do want to the other one.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bir_Tawil
It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.
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The last time that all humans were on Earth (or more accurately, within the Earth's atmosphere) was last century.
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Think there used to be a bit of India which was within Bangladesh which was within India which was within Bangladesh, a third order exclave or somesuch. Then India ceded their territory after a time.Yr Alban wrote: ↑Sat Apr 03, 2021 9:57 amLove this sort of thing. Here’s something similar - the only area of land on earth that no country claims to own. Egypt and Sudan both say it doesn’t belong to them, because claiming it would mean accepting a border that gives something else they do want to the other one.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bir_Tawil
Russia has a land border with Finland, and also one with North Korea.
Vladivostok, in eastern Russia, is due East of China and only 425 miles from Pyongyang.
Vladivostok, in eastern Russia, is due East of China and only 425 miles from Pyongyang.
It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.