Ameisen
Ameisen t1_jdfvy3h wrote
Reply to comment by BobbyP27 in Do insects have "meat" like other animals? I know that grubs, mealworms, etc. are eaten in some parts of the world, but if, for instance, beetles were the size of cows, could you butcher one and make beetle steak? by 9RFCat9
Insects are actually a clade of the crustaceans. Their closest relatives are the remipedes.
That is to say that phylogenetically, all insects are crustaceans.
Ameisen t1_jcxcyfn wrote
Reply to comment by mfb- in What is the ultimate fate of rocky bodies? by spiteful_rr_dm_TA
It's always fascinating to watch orbital systems in simulations that seem stable become chaotic over very long timespans and basically fall apart.
Ameisen t1_jatk04m wrote
Reply to comment by MrMitchWeaver in TIL that the Fuggerei in Augsburg, Germany is the oldest public housing complex in the world, being founded all the way back to the 1510s. by TheMisterClo
I imagine that it changed in 1524 and 1551 when the Imperial gulden was redefined (though they may have charged in Reichsthaler instead), in 1754 when the South German gulden was introduced, 1873 when the Imperial German Goldmark replaced it, 1914 when the Papiermark replaced that, 1924 when the Rentenmark and then the Reichsmark replaced that, 1948 when the Deutsche Mark replaced that, and lastly in 2002 when the Euro replaced that.
Ameisen t1_jajvqo0 wrote
Reply to comment by AnselaJonla in TIL that Crusaders granted safe passage to Mamluk armies to fight Mongols in 1260. by MimirHinnVitru
Germany alone today has tens of thousands of castles (though not as many in the 13th century). It would have been a strange place for the Mongols, especially as the Emperor's orders were to heavily stock the castles and cities, avoid direct engagements, and force the Mongols into sieges.
This AskHistorians reply goes into more detail aa well., including other, more important factors.
Ameisen t1_jajr3u4 wrote
Reply to comment by absolutelyshafted in TIL that Crusaders granted safe passage to Mamluk armies to fight Mongols in 1260. by MimirHinnVitru
Mongols would have had a lot of difficulty with central European terrain, and the sheer density of fortifications - Europe had a lot of castles, forts, and fortified cities, since they were constantly at war. Fortifications in Europe and Asia were also quite different.
It would have been a very difficult campaign for the Mongols.
Ameisen t1_jajd0jl wrote
Reply to comment by absolutelyshafted in TIL that Crusaders granted safe passage to Mamluk armies to fight Mongols in 1260. by MimirHinnVitru
China administered Vietnam from 111 BCE to 967 CE, with a few breaks, and then 1407-1427.
Ameisen t1_jajci2n wrote
Reply to comment by absolutelyshafted in TIL that Crusaders granted safe passage to Mamluk armies to fight Mongols in 1260. by MimirHinnVitru
Hungary defeated the Mongols the second time, and after their initial incursions into Germany, the Emperor put into place fortification plans to beat them, but the Mongols never returned.
Ameisen t1_ja574tw wrote
Reply to comment by TTVmeatce in TIL of the Battle of San Jacinto. Just six weeks after the Texans terrible loss at The Alamo in 1836. The Texans regrouped under Sam Houston, and surprised the Mexican forces and overwhelming defeated the Mexicans. The Texans had 11 soldiers killed and the Mexicans lost 650. by triviafrenzy
Slavery played a part, but the Texan Revolution was a part of a larger, general set of insurrections within Mexico at the time (the Mexican Federalist War) against Santa Anna.
Slavery was absolutely a cause, but the general trigger was the increasing centralization of the Mexican government. It wasn't that they violated the constitution, but that they replaced it with a centralist one in 1835.
Ameisen t1_ja2jc7f wrote
Reply to comment by blakerabbit in TIL Tolkien assisted on the Oxford Dictionary's first edition, focused on 'W' words waggle to warlock. He "learned more in those two years than in any other"; and certain etymologies continued to puzzle him for years, with many pages of notes written later on 'walrus' for a lecture at Leeds by PianoCharged
Yup, probably from Dutch for whale-horse. The native English word was, well, horsewhale (horshƿæl).
Ameisen t1_j8hgf75 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Is it possible that abiogenesis is still happening right now on earth? by dolekanteel
Viruses require, by definition, host replication machinery to reproduce. They are completely inert otherwise. So... they could not have come first... or at least, not vira as we currently understand them.
Ameisen t1_j585zeq wrote
Reply to comment by DrDirtPhD in Why aren't all amniotes classified as reptiles in the current taxonomic groupings? Couldn't we have just called sauropsids "bird-like reptiles"? by [deleted]
The diapsid infratemporal fenestra is homologous to the synapsid single temporal fenestra, so this asserts that the amniote line first developed a single fenestra (the [infra]temporal fenestra) and then later one lineage gained another (the supratemporal fenestra), with this lineage becoming the diapsids while the other being synapsids.
With this in mind, why are the early amniotes who first developed a fenestra not considered synapsids? Is it to maintain synapsida and diapsida as monophyletic that we only consider them synapsids a while after their defining trait developed?
Or, rather, why are diapsida not considered a clade of synapsida given that the common ancestor of both lines already possessed the infratemporal fenestra? It would seem sensible to me to put them both in a clade specifying a single fenestra ("monapsid"?) with the synapsids just being those more closely related to [insert synapsid here] than to diapsids.
Ameisen t1_j1wh5rz wrote
Reply to comment by manifold360 in TIL that the Curiosity rover, currently on Mars, is 10 feet long and 7 feet tall, "about the size of a small SUV." by DukeMaximum
12 yards long, 2 lanes wide;
65 tons of American pride!
Ameisen t1_j15axbw wrote
Reply to comment by womens_motocross in Court ruling: High earners can't prevent media accessing their tax data. by FINCoffeeDaddy
Do not cite the 1337 magic to me, witch; I was there when it was written.
Ameisen t1_j15732q wrote
Reply to comment by tetoffens in Court ruling: High earners can't prevent media accessing their tax data. by FINCoffeeDaddy
> out of date leet joke
What do you mean "out of date"?
Ameisen t1_j0ww8mz wrote
Reply to comment by ColtChevy in TIL Antarctic Circumpolar Current, which flows around Antarctica in a clockwise direction, is the largest ocean current in the world. by impartial_syntax99
The water is already rotating with the Earth. There is no sudden angular acceleration.
Ameisen t1_j0wbqeg wrote
Reply to comment by ColtChevy in TIL Antarctic Circumpolar Current, which flows around Antarctica in a clockwise direction, is the largest ocean current in the world. by impartial_syntax99
The oceans rotate with the Earth. They're a part of it.
Ameisen t1_j01fj12 wrote
Reply to comment by Guide_Worth in TIL Western music traveled to China in the 80s through these cracked cassette tapes. Once discarded as trash, and shipped to China's black market from abroad, they were purposefully destroyed by labels to prevent resales. And these tapes influenced a generation of musicians in China. by fangz_fabricated
Who lost the superb owl?
Ameisen t1_j00akt1 wrote
Reply to comment by malepitt in TIL after a mine tore off the bow of the Greek destroyer Adrias, it successfully sailed 730 nautical miles from Turkey to safely reach Alexandria harbour by HeStoleMyBalloons
Thompson's Teeth: The only teeth strong enough to eat other teeth.
Ameisen t1_iysghb6 wrote
Reply to comment by MaliTheMinecraftCat in Did the impact from the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs change the earth’s orbit? by phoinex711
I'm failing to see how such an impactor could meaningfully change Earth's orbit given how utterly small it was relative to the Earth.
Ameisen t1_iyjr04h wrote
Ameisen t1_ixk0ngl wrote
Reply to comment by DaemonRai in TIL: The formal name for the Imperial system's measurements of weight (pounds/ounces) is the Avoirdupois system by NPC8705
And those freedom units are a part of the USCS.
And the US doesn't use Imperial still. Imperial was only used in the Empire and Commonwealth.
Ameisen t1_ixiemvo wrote
Reply to comment by YouNeed2GrowUpMore in TIL: The formal name for the Imperial system's measurements of weight (pounds/ounces) is the Avoirdupois system by NPC8705
> A. It's "The United States of America", not "America" that uses the the ridiculous system
The colloquial name of the United States of America in English is 'America'.
The only people who care about this are people who originate in cultures where a continent model is used that doesn't distinguish North and South America as continents (and thus really shouldn't care about what it's called in English), or people who want to be edgy. There is zero ambiguity in English - nobody refers to 'America' as a continent because there is no single continent in the system English-speakers use. They use 'North American' or 'South American'.
> B. The USA actually uses the metric system (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SmSJXC6_qQ8&), and converts dumbwards to freedom units
I find it utterly bizarre that anyone ever posts YouTube videos as evidence of anything when you can literally just link to the US Code instead. You're not wrong, but your argument is dumb... and you provided the stupidest source possible.
But what can be expected from someone who wrote A?
Ameisen t1_ixie4e3 wrote
Reply to comment by link_ganon in TIL: The formal name for the Imperial system's measurements of weight (pounds/ounces) is the Avoirdupois system by NPC8705
> Many people in the US think they do not use imperial at all.
Because they don't. The US never adopted Imperial measures, which are adopted in Britain 50 years after the American Revolution.
The United States customary units are similar to Imperial measures, and in many places identical, but only because they are both based upon earlier English units. There are significant differences between the systems.
(unless you mean that people in the US think that the British don't, and that's just untrue - we regularly make fun of them for using 'stone')
Ameisen t1_ixidv8y wrote
Reply to comment by DaemonRai in TIL: The formal name for the Imperial system's measurements of weight (pounds/ounces) is the Avoirdupois system by NPC8705
No, they are not. The US uses US customary units (technically, it doesn't have a name - the code simply specifies it as "traditional systems of weights and measures".
There are significant differences between British Imperial and USC.
Ameisen t1_jdlpxn2 wrote
Reply to comment by ProfessionEuphoric50 in Xcel Energy to power down Monticello nuclear plant early after more radioactive water leaks out by VaccumSaturdays
More than 50% of my state's energy comes from nuclear.