Archaeologists Find Evidence That Prehistoric Peoples Ate (and Possibly Hunted) Whales

filed under: Animals, science
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Day Donaldson via Flickr Creative Commons // CC BY 2.0

Early humans may have been more sophisticated and even gutsier than we realized. Researchers examining 4000-year-old trash heaps have identified the genetic remains of several species of whales. The team published their findings in the journal Nature Communications.

The first Greenlanders were the Saqqaq people, who arrived on the frozen continent around 2500 BCE. These were tempestuous times for our planet’s climate and, consequently, for its inhabitants, especially those in extreme habitats. The Saqqaq had to be super-adaptable if they wanted to survive.

Much of what we know about these early Greenlanders has come as a result of picking through their trash. Over the last century, archaeologists have excavated numerous middens (garbage dumps) dating back to the very first Saqqaq settlements. Unsurprisingly, they’ve found a lot of chunks of bone. Bone fragments are super-interesting, but they’re also quite limited in what they can tell us about a given civilization. For one thing, it’s hard to differentiate closely related species by looking at chips of their bones. For another, not every animal skeleton would end up on a trash heap. If the Saqqaq were hunting large animals, it’s unlikely that they would have dragged whole carcasses all the way home.

Fortunately, the middens contained a lot more than just bones.

Researchers collected 34 different sediment samples from settlement sites dating from around 2500 BCE to around 1800 CE. They processed the sediment through a sieve, which left them with piles of midden soil and smaller piles of the parasite eggs that had been living in it. Then they put both dirt and eggs through a battery of DNA tests to identify their origins.

This approach has a number of perks. Genetic testing can pull information from all kinds of organic material, including fat, skin, meat, and claws. And recruiting parasites to the research adds a whole new level of detail, since many parasites are picky and will only feed on certain species. Finding those parasites means there’s a pretty good chance those species were once there, too.

The middens were delightfully diverse in their contents. The researchers found genetic traces of 42 different types of vertebrate animals, including dogs and wolves (which may have been companion animals tethered near the dump), hares, caribou, and seals, and—in the oldest sites—walruses, seals, narwhals, and bowhead whales.

Exactly how the Saqqaq had snagged these massive animals remains to be seen. Whale scavenging was not unheard of in prehistoric times, the authors note, and an unpredictable climate could have caused a surge in whale strandings. But it’s also possible that these prehistoric settlers were out bagging whales. Hunters in other Greenland cultures are known for using poison-tipped spears to immobilize enormous prey; the Saqqaq people may have done something similar.

The discovery that early Greenlanders ate whales is one that “requires re-evaluating maritime history,” the authors write. “Western history has always considered European whaling as the originator and pinnacle of marine exploitation,” yet this study “pushes back the first evidence of whale product usage in the Arctic and can be seen as a logical development of the powers of indigenous observation and ingenuity in the efficient use of a plentiful northern marine energy resource.”

The study is “quite interesting,” says historical ecologist Josh Drew of Columbia University. Drew, who was unaffiliated with the study, recently co-authored a paper on the 19th-century whaling boom’s effect on other species.

The new paper “recognizes the technological acumen of indigenous people,” Drew tells mental_floss, “and shows that they were capable of highly sophisticated hunting techniques (and apparently using biological warfare) to capture whales.”

On top of that, these findings shake up our ideas of a “pristine” baseline for marine ecosystems. “It turns out those populations weren’t so pristine,” he says, “and that our species has a long, tangled, history with Arctic marine mammals.”


November 8, 2016 – 11:00am

Upgrade Your Morning Coffee With This Bargain

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Amazon

Want to brew a better cup of joe at home? If you’re only going to take one step to improve your morning brew, you need a burr grinder. As coffee experts explained to us earlier this year, switching from a cheap blade-type grinder to its burr equivalent will drastically improve the flavor you get from your morning beans. Burr devices grind coffee into uniform particles, which in turn facilitate even extraction of flavors. The end result of this even extraction is a tastier, more flavorful cup. If you’re dropping the money to buy quality beans, you really need a burr grinder to do them justice. 

Burr grinders can get pricey, and it’s easy to spend over $100 on a mid-range model. But you don’t have to drop big money to see a significant improvement in your mug. Amazon is discounting the Cuisinart DBM-8 Supreme Grind Automatic Burr Mill all the way down to $38.95 today. It’s the same model that baristas recommended to us when we first wrote about burr grinders, and the deal offers a solid savings on a price tag that usually hovers in the $45-50 range. For the price of just a handful of specialty coffee drinks on your way to work, you can drastically improve your coffee experience. Pair your homebrewed goodness with a popular commuter mug like the bargain Contigo SnapSeal Byron 20-ounce for just $8.99, and you’ll find it’s easier than ever to avoid the pricey siren song of the coffee shop. 

Buy at Amazon: Cuisinart DBM-8 Supreme Grind Automatic Burr Mill for $38.95

Buy at Amazon: Contigo SnapSeal Byron Vacuum Insulated Stainless Steel Travel Mug, 20oz for $8.99

Mental Floss has affiliate relationships with certain retailers, including Amazon, and may receive a small percentage of any sale. But we only get commission on items you buy and don’t return, so we’re only happy if you’re happy. 


November 8, 2016 – 10:34am

11 Filibusterous Facts About ‘Mr. Smith Goes to Washington’

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YouTube

While it had its “Capra ending,” Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939) was an otherwise fairly dark film—much like It’s a Wonderful Life would be a few years later. Jimmy Stewart starred as the wet-behind-the-ears interim state senator Jefferson Smith, appointed because the likes of Senator Joseph Paine (Claude Rains) and others in power assume he’ll be naive enough to back a conspiracy to make them richer. Stewart’s character has his reputation ruined by Paine when he threatens to expose them all, culminating in a 23-hour filibuster by Smith to Congress, as suggested by his seemingly one ally, his secretary Clarissa Saunders (Jean Arthur). Not surprisingly, real-life American politicians weren’t crazy about how they were portrayed.

1. IT WAS MEANT TO BE A SEQUEL TO MR. DEEDS GOES TO TOWN.

Initially, director Rouben Mamoulian bought the rights to Lewis R. Foster’s unpublished story, “The Gentleman From Montana” (known elsewhere as “The Gentleman from Wyoming”), for $1500, which he then sold to Columbia Studios chief Harry Cohn at the same price in exchange for the chance to direct another movie. In 1938, Columbia and Frank Capra issued a press release announcing that Capra’s next movie would be Mr. Deeds Goes to Washington, starring Gary Cooper, the lead in Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936). But Cooper was not under contract with the studio, and negotiations to make the film as it was originally envisioned eventually stalled. Capra was able to get James Stewart on loan from MGM, and the title was changed. Capra later said that Cooper was too old to play the naive Jefferson Smith anyway.

2. FRANK CAPRA HAD TO DEAL WITH SOME TECHNICAL ISSUES.

Because he wanted to rely on natural reaction shots in the three-tiered Senate chamber, which was recreated on a sound stage exactly as it was in Washington, D.C., Capra needed to employ what was then a unique multiple-camera, multiple-sound approach so that he could shoot multiple scenes before moving all of the filming equipment somewhere else. “Had we tried to photograph the Senate with the usual single camera, ‘jackassing’ tons of heavy equipment (lights, sound booms, camera platforms) for each single new set-up—we might still be there,” Capra wrote in his 1971 autobiography.

3. JIMMY STEWART CALLED IT “THE ROLE OF A LIFETIME.”

Having declared the part “the role of a lifetime,” Stewart was determined to make sure he completed the film. “He was so serious when he was working on that picture,” Stewart’s co-star, Jean Arthur, recalled. “He used to get up at five o’clock in the morning and drive himself to the studio. He was so terrified something was going to happen to him, he wouldn’t go faster.”

4. STEWART WAS GIVEN PERFORMANCE-DIMINISHING CHEMICALS.

To make his voice hoarse, as if he really had been filibustering for 23 hours, Capra wrote that, “Twice a day Jimmy’s throat was swabbed with vile mercury solution that swelled and irritated his vocal cords. The result was astonishing. No amount of acting could possibly simulate Jimmy’s intense pathetic efforts to speak through real swollen cords.”

5. HARRY CAREY HAD SOME TROUBLE WITH HIS LINES.

Harry Carey was brought in to play the President of the Senate. The 60-year-old kept blowing his lines until Capra cornered him after a lunch break. He asked the actor who he was. “Well, Harry Carey, of course.” “No, you are the Vice President of the United States,” the director told him. It did the trick.

6. THE BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA WANTED NO PART OF THE FILM.

Jefferson Smith helps out the fictitious Boy Rangers, and not the Boy Scouts, because the latter group made it clear to Capra that they didn’t want to be associated with the film. Capra, having already filmed some scenes in which the Boy Scouts were mentioned, had to lose that footage.

7. THE SUICIDE ATTEMPT WAS CAPRA’S IDEA.

Sidney Buchman was the credited screenwriter on Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, but Capra had a big say in the final draft of the script. One of Capra’s contributions, which Buchman hated, was Senator Paine’s suicide attempt.

8. IT ORIGINALLY ENDED WITH A PARADE.

The movie originally ended with Jefferson and Saunders returning to Smith’s hometown, following the filibuster, for a parade in his honor. Smith also visited Paine to forgive him, as well as his mother, to get her blessing to marry Saunders. Test audiences didn’t seem to love this ending, so Capra cut it, though some of the original ending still lives on in the film’s trailer.

9. COLUMBIA PREEMPTIVELY ADDRESSED A PLAGIARISM LAWSUIT.

As Capra was finishing final edits on the film, the legal department at Columbia discovered a Pulitzer Prize-winning play called Both Your Houses (1933) by Maxwell Anderson that was a bit too similar to Mr. Smith Goes to Washington for their comfort, legally speaking. They paid $23,093 for the rights to it so they wouldn’t get in trouble later.

10. ONE SENATOR CALLED IT “SILLY AND STUPID.”

The Washington Press Club screened the film at Constitution Hall with a number of congressmen, senators, and Supreme Court justices in attendance. Capra claimed that a third of Washington’s finest left, in disgust, before the film even ended. Senate Majority Leader Alben W. Barkley described the movie as “silly and stupid” and complained that it “makes the Senate look like a bunch of crooks.”

11. JOSEPH KENNEDY DIDN’T WANT THE FILM TO BE SEEN IN EUROPE.

Joseph P. Kennedy, the U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom (and patriarch of the Kennedy clan) sent a cable to Harry Cohn and Capra claiming, according to Capra, that Mr. Smith “ridiculed democracy” and would “do untold harm to America’s prestige in Europe.” He begged them to withdraw it from distribution in Europe. The two mailed Kennedy favorable reviews of the film, which appeased the ambassador enough that he backed off.


November 8, 2016 – 10:00am

Follow a Research Vessel Into the ‘Hot Tub of Despair’

Image credit: 

Wikimedia Commons // Public Domain

Some of the underwater scenes captured by the Ocean Exploration Trust’s Nautilus research vessel look like they belong on a different planet. Over the summer the expedition live-streamed images of a floating purple orb and a googly-eyed squid. This video recently republished by Nautilus Live depicts something significantly less cute but just as bizarre.

The May 2015 footage shows a large brine pool discovered 3300 feet deep in the Gulf of Mexico. Brine pools form when cold seeps (places where trapped hydrocarbons escape from beneath the seafloor in the form of water columns) collide with deep-sea salt deposits. This creates a highly saline fluid or brine that’s much denser than the sea around it. The brine settles into salty pools, rivers, or lakes that can be toxic to most organisms that wander into them.

The brine pool featured in the video above is especially deadly. Nicknamed the “Hot Tub of Despair,” the 12-foot deep pit boasts a high temperature of 66.2°F in addition to its high salinity content, making it a hostile environment for creatures like crabs.

Though one scientist comments that perhaps animals “just come here to die,” there are a few organisms that manage to thrive in the harsh conditions. Mussels and tube worms were some of the resilient lifeforms the team encountered on their expedition.


November 8, 2016 – 9:00am

Nintendo’s Long-Forgotten Power Line Returns Alongside the NES Classic Edition Launch

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Long before your video game woes could be solved through a quick Google search or YouTube clip, gamers had to use another method to find out how to beat killer bosses and solve maddening puzzles: the Nintendo Power Line. In the ’80s and ’90s, a simple phone call would put you in touch with a staff of Nintendo Game Play Counselors who were ready to help you conquer evil and keep you from hurling your controller through the TV.

Now, according to Digital Trends, the company is bringing back its forgotten call center for the November 11 launch of the NES Classic Edition, a miniaturized version of the classic console filled with 30 pre-installed games that plugs into your TV. The new Power Line will be operational from the November 11 launch through the night of November 13, from 6:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. PST.

However, you won’t actually get to talk to any authentic game counselors; instead, all of the tips and tricks for your desired game will come in the form of an automated message. Don’t be too bummed out about the impersonal touch, because you’ll also get to listen to behind-the-scenes stories from some of the original Nintendo Game Play Counselors.

If you want to find out how to get the Warp Whistles in Super Mario Bros. 3, need help navigating your way through Metroid, or just want a serving of nostalgia, you can call the Power Line at (425) 885-7529.

[h/t Digital Trends]


November 8, 2016 – 8:30am

10 Fascinating Facts About Alcohol

In the United States, alcohol is everywhere. As a matter of fact, over 87 percent of Americans over 18 say they have drank alcohol at some point in their lifetime. It is also responsible for a large amount of the economy and unfortunately, health risks for many. Here are some interesting facts, for better or worse, about alcoholic beverages. 1. First Alcoholic Beverage Chemical analysis of ancient pottery found in Northern China shows evidence of an alcoholic drink that dates 9000 years back. The drink was likely to contain a fermented mixture of rice, honey and fruit Archaeologists suspect that

The post 10 Fascinating Facts About Alcohol appeared first on Factual Facts.

8 Things You Might Not Know About Vowels

filed under: language, Lists
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iStock

A, E, I, O, U and sometimes Y is not all you need to know about vowels. There’s more to these workhorse members of our linguistics inventory than you might think.

1. ENGLISH HAS MORE VOWELS THAN THERE ARE LETTERS FOR THEM.

A, E, I, O, U and sometimes Y are the letters we define as vowels, but vowels can also be defined as speech sounds. While we have six letters we define as vowels, there are, in English, many more vowel sounds than that. For example consider the word pairs cat and car, or cook and kook. The vowel sounds are different from each other in each pair, but they are represented by the same letters. Depending on the dialect, and including diphthongs, which are combinations of two vowel sounds, English has from nine to 16 vowel sounds.

2. THE MOST COMMON VOWEL IS SCHWA.

The most common vowel sound in English doesn’t even have its own letter in the alphabet. It does have a symbol, though, and it looks like this: ǝ. It’s the “uh” sound in an unstressed syllable and it shows up everywhere, from th[ǝ], to p[ǝ]tato, to antic[ǝ]p[ǝ]tory. You can discover nine fun facts about it here.

3. YOUR SPANISH SOUNDS AMERICAN BECAUSE OF DIPHTHONGS.

In addition to pure vowel sounds, there are diphthongs, where the sound moves from one target to another. American English is full of them. The vowel in the American pronunciation of no is a diphthong that moves from o to u (if you say it in slow motion, your lips move from a pure o position to a pure u position). The vowel in the Spanish pronunciation is not a diphthong. It stays at o, and that what makes it sound different from the English version.

4. SOME SOUNDS CAN BE EITHER VOWELS OR CONSONANTS.

The u sound (pronounced “oo”) is a vowel. It allows an unrestricted airflow through the vocal apparatus. Consonants, in contrast, are created with a blockage of air flow, or point of constriction. A u sound can sometimes serve as that point of constriction, and it that case the u is considered a w. In the word blue, the u is the most open part of the syllable, and a vowel. In want it is the constriction before the main vowel, and thus a consonant. Similarly, an i (or “ee”) can also be a y, which helps explain why is Y a sometimes vowel.

5. MOST LANGUAGES HAVE AT LEAST THREE VOWELS.

Most languages have at least i, a, and u, or something close to them, though it may be the case that the extinct language Ubykh had only two vowels. It is hard to say what the highest number of vowels for a language is because there are features like vowel length, nasalization, tone, and voicing quality (creaky, breathy) that may or may not be considered marks of categorical difference from other sounds, but in general, 15 seems to be a pretty high number of distinct single vowels for a language. The International Phonetic Alphabet has symbols for 34 different vowels. You can listen to the different sounds they represent here.

6. SOME LANGUAGES REQUIRE VOWEL HARMONY.

In English, we can add an ending like –ness or –y onto any word and the form of the ending doesn’t change. I can say “the property of vowelness” or “his speech is very diphthongy.” In languages like Hungarian, the vowels of the ending must harmonize with the vowels in the word it attaches to. For example, the multiplicative ending, for forming words like twice, thrice, etc. is –szor when it attaches to a word with a back vowel (hatszor, “six times”), -szer when it attaches to a word with a front vowel (egyszer, “once”) and –ször when it attaches to a word with a front rounded vowel (ötször, “five times”). Other languages with vowel harmony are Turkish and Finnish.

7. TODAY’S ENGLISH IS THE RESULT OF MASSIVE CHANGE CALLED “THE GREAT VOWEL SHIFT.”

Many words we have today were pronounced very differently before the 14th century. Boot sounded more like boat, house sounded like hoos, and five sounded like feev. English underwent a major change in the 14th and 15th centuries. Words with long vowels shifted into new pronunciations. The changes happened in stages, over a few hundred years, but when they were complete, the language sounded very different, and spelling was a bit of a mess, since many spellings had been established during early phases of pronunciation. The change may have been initiated by the volume of French words that entered English shortly before the shift, or by the movement of populations with different dialects during the Black Plague.

8. YOU DON’T NEED ALL THE VOWELS TO WRITE A NOVEL.

In 1969, George Perec, a member of the French experimental literature group known as Oulipo published La Disparition, a 300-page novel written only with words that did not contain the letter e. It was published in English as A Void, also without using the letter e. The Spanish translation, El Secuestro, used no a. Works created with this kind of restriction are called lipograms, explained here in an e-less lipogram.


November 8, 2016 – 8:00am

Election Day

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Kara Kovalchik

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Election Day

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Monday, November 7, 2016 – 11:30

Schedule Publish: 

Morning Cup of Links: Voting for the First Time

filed under: Links
Image credit: 
Funny or Die

Funny or Die Presents: People Try Voting For The First Time. It’s not that difficult!
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This neighborhood crime-fighter says surveillance apps make his hobby super easy. Real-life superheroes are going hi-tech.
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Two Monkeys Go into a Bar. So a scientist studied their drinking habits.
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See the Weird and Fascinating Deep-Sea Creatures That Live in Constant Darkness. And learn about their weird adaptations.
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5 Bizarre Dishes You Won’t Believe Were Eaten by Renaissance Italians. Curdled eggs, anyone?
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A juvenile iguana must outrun dozens of snakes who want him for dinner. A scene from Planet Earth II made more epic with music from Game of Thrones.  
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This Westworld and Back To The Future III mashup is pretty heavy, Doc. Two science fiction Westerns that go great together.
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Nominative Determinism: Yes, That’s His Real Name. Did their names influence their choice of careers, or is it just coincidence?


November 8, 2016 – 5:00am

Introducing an Edvard Munch-Inspired Action Figure

filed under: art, toys
Image credit: 
Figma

Many critics consider Norwegian painter Edvard Munch’s The Scream series (1893) to be one of the ultimate artistic expressions of existential angst. If you, too, seek order in a chaotic, unpredictable universe, Gizmodo reports that Japanese figurine line Figma created an action figure of the artwork’s eerie bald figure.

As we’ve reported before, Figma’s The Scream toy is one of several famous artworks—including Leonardo da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man, the Venus de Milo, and Michelangelo’s David—that the company has rendered in action figure form. You can purchase items from the company’s Table Museum series through online retailer Good Smile Company.

Sadly for Munch fans, The Scream action figure won’t be available for purchase until May 2017, but you can preorder it between November 4 and December 1. When the toy does finally go on sale, it will cost around $50, and will come with a stand and a backdrop of Munch’s famous painting.

All images courtesy of Figma.

[h/t Gizmodo]


November 8, 2016 – 3:00am