Landlubber77
Landlubber77 t1_jegju62 wrote
Landlubber77 t1_jegjcis wrote
Reply to TIL: honeycombs start out circular, and the surface tension of the beeswax pulls them into hexagons as it solidifies, because it is the most energetically favorable conformation. by craigdahlke
So next time someone tells you to mind your own beeswax tell them it's unnecessary because it will achieve the most energetically favorable conformation all on its own.
Landlubber77 t1_jebarr1 wrote
Reply to comment by Dalisca in TIL the milky way was named as such because of Hera's breaskmilk...An infant Hercules tried to nurse from her, and she threw him off. Allowing some milk to splash and creating the galaxy and all its stars... by Themakia
Absolutely, it's aggressive, and even people who don't believe in angels could find it off-putting. But let's be honest...the comment isn't any less true just because it's arrogant.
There's this NFL behind-the-scenes show called Hard Knocks and one year a player on the featured team revealed that he actually believes in mermaids. Here in America he was roundly mocked and ridiculed, and it occurred to me that given the religious makeup of this country, a massive portion of those pointing and laughing at this guy were people who believe in literal Christian hell.
This TIL reminded me of the arrogance of those people, and as the Gospel of Matthew tells us, violence arrogance begets violence arrogance.
Landlubber77 t1_je9ln6m wrote
Reply to TIL the milky way was named as such because of Hera's breaskmilk...An infant Hercules tried to nurse from her, and she threw him off. Allowing some milk to splash and creating the galaxy and all its stars... by Themakia
A very large percentage of people laughing at this believe angels are real.
Edit- See?
Landlubber77 t1_je9euvc wrote
Reply to TIL that the world's largest snowflake on record measured 15 inches wide and 8 inches thick. It fell in Fort Keogh, Montana in 1887 and was reported to be "larger than milk pans." by KodyBerns99
> Larger than milk pans
Americans will use anything but the metric system to measure things.
Landlubber77 t1_je7w2xt wrote
Reply to TIL that tularemia is an infectious disease that can be contracted by “inhaling particles from an infected rabbit ground up [by] a lawnmower”. by krisalyssa
As long as it's not Lupus. Which it never is.
Landlubber77 t1_je4cdfy wrote
Reply to TIL that the official motto of Fall River, Massachusetts was ‘We’ll Try’ from 1843-2017. by Sea_Entertainment754
The motto of neighboring and rival town Westport is "Do or Do Not, There is No Try."
Landlubber77 t1_je0ylnm wrote
It's not surprising then that it is also the country with the most people to accidentally bite into the Nobel Prize thinking it was one of those chocolate coins with a gold wrapper.
Landlubber77 t1_jdv1sxz wrote
Reply to comment by m_Pony in TIL Australian band, Men At Work were sued over their song "Down Under" for similarities to an Australian nursery rhyme "Kookaburra". by El-Hairy
Thinking about the implications
Landlubber77 t1_jdstlgf wrote
Reply to TIL Australian band, Men At Work were sued over their song "Down Under" for similarities to an Australian nursery rhyme "Kookaburra". by El-Hairy
"Somebody served us papers, but Who Could It Beeee Now?!
Landlubber77 t1_jdrr40r wrote
Reply to TIL Jimmy Carter signed the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, the single largest expansion of protected lands in history which more than doubled the size of the National Parks System by Guardax
They wanted to build a massive pipeline through those lands and Jimmy wasn't Inuit and would have Nunavut.
Landlubber77 t1_jdrqtdw wrote
Reply to TIL Stop signs used to be BLACK ON YELLOW by sexyson91
As in you'd better bee stopping here.
Landlubber77 t1_jdok4u9 wrote
Reply to Trip Down Memory Lane by HolyTrinityMusik
I feel like the one with Princess Diana was in poor taste.
Landlubber77 t1_jdmqgyw wrote
Reply to comment by LordoftheLollygag in TIL US & UK shoe sizes is based on the size of a Barleycorn! by VeryPoliteRaccoon
It'll never get better than the Queen of the Damned movie soundtrack.
Landlubber77 t1_jdmq2sx wrote
Reply to TIL: Thanks to poor internal communication at NASA, information about a spacesuit water leak wasn't properly communicated. Later, Astronaut Luca Parmitano almost drowned on a July, 2013 ISS space walk, his helmet filling with several liters of water before they could get him back inside. by OvidPerl
"Okay Luca, we know you're excited about your first trip to space and being chosen to lead the spacewalk, but just some basics before you go. The suits are bulky and can hamper movement a bit, you may feel slightly claustrophobic at first but that tends to pass, and it's awfully hot in there but again, pretty manageable."
"Roger. Anything else?"
"Well no not really, go ahead and strap that harness tight, we're preparing for launch. Oh by the way every now and again the helmet completely fills up with water and we don't have a fucking clue why or how to fix it see you next Thursday!"
slams hatch shut, engines begin to ignite
Landlubber77 t1_jdmpagp wrote
Reply to comment by cardboardunderwear in TIL: Thanks to poor internal communication at NASA, information about a spacesuit water leak wasn't properly communicated. Later, Astronaut Luca Parmitano almost drowned on a July, 2013 ISS space walk, his helmet filling with several liters of water before they could get him back inside. by OvidPerl
He's doing it, he ain't digging it.
Landlubber77 t1_jdmo51s wrote
I have no idea what a barleycorn is and I'm not going to google it. Life is more fun with a little mystery.
Landlubber77 t1_jden38z wrote
Reply to TIL that at the Battle of Aspern-Essling in 1809, one of the French Generals was decapitated, while he was talking to a friend. by VengefulMight
The ol' standing Marie Antoinette.
Landlubber77 t1_jd61c8k wrote
Reply to comment by G7ZR1 in TIL A coal seam in Australia is believed to have been burning for 6,000 years, making it the oldest coal fire. The site's name is Mount Wingen but is commonly called Burning Mountain and the fire is traveling south 1m per year discoloring the ground as it goes. by jamescookenotthatone
Oh I suspect you're mocking me. Here's a shiny. Cheer up.
Landlubber77 t1_jd5xodu wrote
Reply to comment by mdude7221 in TIL A coal seam in Australia is believed to have been burning for 6,000 years, making it the oldest coal fire. The site's name is Mount Wingen but is commonly called Burning Mountain and the fire is traveling south 1m per year discoloring the ground as it goes. by jamescookenotthatone
Depends on who you ask I guess. I encourage anyone to get out there and try to throw endless comments out and see if it gets you to 2 million. There's some dude out there with like 20-something million comment karma, he's probably the one to ask. I used to be 50th on Earth, now I'm barely scraping top-100. I got banned from my main karma sub six years ago, now I just grab a bit here and there.
Landlubber77 t1_jd5n7o0 wrote
Reply to comment by hazeleyedwolff in TIL A coal seam in Australia is believed to have been burning for 6,000 years, making it the oldest coal fire. The site's name is Mount Wingen but is commonly called Burning Mountain and the fire is traveling south 1m per year discoloring the ground as it goes. by jamescookenotthatone
Quality is an oddly subjective thing. The vast majority of my most-upvoted shit is just sorta meh, whereas there are some absolute gems out there that land with a resounding thud and die with three upvotes. I click save on them all the same so I can go back and giggle when I'm bored and/or sad Landlubber.
Landlubber77 t1_jd5jlag wrote
Reply to comment by ApologizingCanadian in TIL A coal seam in Australia is believed to have been burning for 6,000 years, making it the oldest coal fire. The site's name is Mount Wingen but is commonly called Burning Mountain and the fire is traveling south 1m per year discoloring the ground as it goes. by jamescookenotthatone
Their acceptance rate is about 14%, same as my Reddit comments. You don't get to 2 million karma without taking countless thousands of downvotes.
Landlubber77 t1_jd59kd2 wrote
Reply to comment by mdude7221 in TIL A coal seam in Australia is believed to have been burning for 6,000 years, making it the oldest coal fire. The site's name is Mount Wingen but is commonly called Burning Mountain and the fire is traveling south 1m per year discoloring the ground as it goes. by jamescookenotthatone
The same way you get to Carnegie Hall.
Mapquest.
Landlubber77 t1_jd4qa41 wrote
Reply to comment by tossinthisshit1 in TIL A coal seam in Australia is believed to have been burning for 6,000 years, making it the oldest coal fire. The site's name is Mount Wingen but is commonly called Burning Mountain and the fire is traveling south 1m per year discoloring the ground as it goes. by jamescookenotthatone
Fantastic guide.
When I was a kid I used to think the line "trouble in the Suez!" was "trouble in the sewers!" because I was a child and didn't know what the Suez was. Around the same exact time, I walked out into the living room while my mom was watching IT and it was the part where Pennywise was trying to lure Georgie down into the sewer. So I spent an unreasonable amount of time in 1990-'91 thinking there was some epidemic of child-murderers lurking in the sewers.
Landlubber77 t1_jegk9q4 wrote
Reply to TIL that The National Library of Medicine has a Pillbox dataset made up of 8,693 photographs of pills, with an accompanying database of drug information. It was built to help with the identification of unknown pills. by jonkeegan
We had something similar back in the early to mid 2000s, it was a website called DanceSafe that had pictures of all the ecstasy tabs making the rounds, what their chemical composition was and if they were "safe." That safety being relative to the pills whipped up in some asshole's bathtub full of various cleaning solvents.