Random randomness
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- Blackhawk
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Re: Random randomness
Yay. Cicadas. I'm dead center in brood X's range. They're loud enough in normal years, but when one of the huge hatchings happens it drowns out the TV if the windows are open.
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- dbt1949
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Re: Random randomness
We have cicadas but the worst insect for noise is the katydids. There are probably millions on our mountain alone. At night you cannot hold a conversation with someone when you're outside.
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Re: Random randomness
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Re: Random randomness
The good news is that we have three fewer giant trees surrounding the house than we did 17 years ago, all victims of wind. That should cut the local noise down a little.
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Re: Random randomness
I hear there were four of them.
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- ImLawBoy
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Re: Random randomness
I always thought that katydid was a regional alternate name for cicada, but now I know that they're different. This is important information to be learning at 49.
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- Daehawk
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Re: Random randomness
I thought that my entire life until a few years ago.
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- stimpy
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Re: Random randomness
I will always associate katydids as these....
I told my little sister they were chocolate covered cicadas and have them all to myself.
I told my little sister they were chocolate covered cicadas and have them all to myself.
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Re: Random randomness
OR, .96/lb tomatoes.
- Holman
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Re: Random randomness
Stewart Brand (founder of the Whole Earth Catalogue, the WELL, the Long Now Foundation, etc) is moving ahead with his project of bringing back the Woolly Mammoth.
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- Daehawk
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Re: Random randomness
Has he asked "Should we?"
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- Holman
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Re: Random randomness
They have a few similar projects in the works, but the Mammoth is the attention-getter. They're going to try to bring back the Passenger Pigeon, for example.
As for whether we should, I'm not sure why we shouldn't. It isn't Jurassic Park, after all, and both the Mammoth and the Passenger Pigeon went extinct as a result of human activity. The science yield of such projects would also be good.
As for whether we should, I'm not sure why we shouldn't. It isn't Jurassic Park, after all, and both the Mammoth and the Passenger Pigeon went extinct as a result of human activity. The science yield of such projects would also be good.
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- dbt1949
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Re: Random randomness
I killed about twenty woolly mammoths and giants yesterday.
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- Jaymann
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Re: Random randomness
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- Sudy
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Re: Random randomness
Unless the plan is to set them loose in Central Park, resurrecting wooly mammoths I don't have a problem with. Human cloning on the other hand, let's tread carefully.
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Re: Random randomness
I think the baseline ethical responsibility is that we become responsible for the welfare of cloned species until some future time when they are viable and well-provided for by the natural environment. The mammoth project talks about cultivating and maintaining a huge preserve that matches the mammoth's original habitat as closely as possible.
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- Blackhawk
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Re: Random randomness
After which the ecosystems have been rearranging themselves around the new normal for 4,000 years. Reintroducing long extinct species could have impacts comparable to introducing invasive species. What species have expanded to fill those species' niches? What happens to those species when the extinct creatures are reintroduced? What happens to predators who have either adapted to hunt the new species that is now forced out, or if the predators capable of controlling the extinct species' populations are extinct themselves? Do we reintroduce saber-toothed cats to the northern wild, too?Holman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 12:25 pm They have a few similar projects in the works, but the Mammoth is the attention-getter. They're going to try to bring back the Passenger Pigeon, for example.
As for whether we should, I'm not sure why we shouldn't. It isn't Jurassic Park, after all, and both the Mammoth and the Passenger Pigeon went extinct as a result of human activity.
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- Holman
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Re: Random randomness
When we brought the bison back from the edge of extinction, we didn't breed more wolves and grizzlies to compensate. In the case of mammoths, we'd need to protect them the way we protect any highly endangered species.Blackhawk wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 12:38 pmAfter which the ecosystems have been rearranging themselves around the new normal for 4,000 years. Reintroducing long extinct species could have impacts comparable to introducing invasive species. What species have expanded to fill those species' niches? What happens to those species when the extinct creatures are reintroduced? What happens to predators who have either adapted to hunt the new species that is now forced out, or if the predators capable of controlling the extinct species' populations are extinct themselves? Do we reintroduce saber-toothed cats to the northern wild, too?Holman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 12:25 pm They have a few similar projects in the works, but the Mammoth is the attention-getter. They're going to try to bring back the Passenger Pigeon, for example.
As for whether we should, I'm not sure why we shouldn't. It isn't Jurassic Park, after all, and both the Mammoth and the Passenger Pigeon went extinct as a result of human activity.
As for passenger pigeons, they've only been extinct for a century. We probably could just release them in Central Park with no ill effects.
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Re: Random randomness
Im thinking more along the lines of diseases. new ones old ones mutated ones.Holman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 12:25 pm They have a few similar projects in the works, but the Mammoth is the attention-getter. They're going to try to bring back the Passenger Pigeon, for example.
As for whether we should, I'm not sure why we shouldn't. It isn't Jurassic Park, after all, and both the Mammoth and the Passenger Pigeon went extinct as a result of human activity. The science yield of such projects would also be good.
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Re: Random randomness
I cant believe this as its just mid March but my yard could use a mow. I think its usually a late April early May start but not this year. I went out to look today after we got a 5" rain yesterday...it must have sprouted 2"s. Im not ready for this at all.
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- A nonny mouse
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Re: Random randomness
I've never heard of people calling cicadas Katydids. Huh. I learned something too.
People actually called cicadas "locusts" - which they are not either - Locusts are a type of short-horned (short antennae) grasshoppers. Katydids are a totally different group, but closely related to grasshoppers.
I also have a problem with everyone calling everything a "bug"
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- TheMix
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Re: Random randomness
+1A nonny mouse wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 3:32 pm I also have a problem with everyone calling everything a "bug"
Another peeve is "seagulls".
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Re: Random randomness
or every illness the 'flu'A nonny mouse wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 3:32 pmI've never heard of people calling cicadas Katydids. Huh. I learned something too.
People actually called cicadas "locusts" - which they are not either - Locusts are a type of short-horned (short antennae) grasshoppers. Katydids are a totally different group, but closely related to grasshoppers.
I also have a problem with everyone calling everything a "bug"
or every soda a 'Coke'
- Jaymann
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Re: Random randomness
Jonathan Livingston would like a word with you.TheMix wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 3:38 pm+1A nonny mouse wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 3:32 pm I also have a problem with everyone calling everything a "bug"
Another peeve is "seagulls".
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Re: Random randomness
I don't think cloning brings that risk. You're not unfreezing an ancient mammoth from a glacier but growing a new one from an embryo.Daehawk wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 1:30 pmIm thinking more along the lines of diseases. new ones old ones mutated ones.Holman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 12:25 pm They have a few similar projects in the works, but the Mammoth is the attention-getter. They're going to try to bring back the Passenger Pigeon, for example.
As for whether we should, I'm not sure why we shouldn't. It isn't Jurassic Park, after all, and both the Mammoth and the Passenger Pigeon went extinct as a result of human activity. The science yield of such projects would also be good.
The real danger is that they would be susceptible to all of our world's diseases, not vice-versa.
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Re: Random randomness
I'd generally agree, which is why I specified, "long extinct species" in my comment.
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Re: Random randomness
Oops..I mistook Cheetos Cheddar Popcorn as Chesters Cheese Puffcorn. Where the latter is awesome and tasty and soft and full sized...the former is tasty yes but also small kernels and tough with a lot of hulls in it. Its like bad cheap popcorn covered in cheese powder. Ill not make that mistake again.
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- Kraken
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Re: Random randomness
It will be an elephant-mammoth hybrid, anyway. Unless they can reconstruct an entire mammoth genome, they're going to have to do a lot of filling-in. Odds are they'll use an elephant surrogate mother as well, rather than try to grow a test-tube mammoth. At best, they're likely to get a reasonable facsimile.Holman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 3:59 pmI don't think cloning brings that risk. You're not unfreezing an ancient mammoth from a glacier but growing a new one from an embryo.Daehawk wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 1:30 pmIm thinking more along the lines of diseases. new ones old ones mutated ones.Holman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 12:25 pm They have a few similar projects in the works, but the Mammoth is the attention-getter. They're going to try to bring back the Passenger Pigeon, for example.
As for whether we should, I'm not sure why we shouldn't. It isn't Jurassic Park, after all, and both the Mammoth and the Passenger Pigeon went extinct as a result of human activity. The science yield of such projects would also be good.
The real danger is that they would be susceptible to all of our world's diseases, not vice-versa.
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Re: Random randomness
Elephant-mammoth hybrid?? Great! What if as some kind of unintended consequence, they get really big, or really strong? They could trample the tundra!
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Re: Random randomness
At least they're all packed and ready to go.
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- Holman
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Re: Random randomness
I did see that!
I'm mainly interested in the Mammoth possibility because I love what we would learn and I assume that we could figure out how to care for and support them. I certainly wouldn't endorse bringing back every extinct species we can think of.
The good thing about Mammoths is that it's really unlikely that they could ever reach "invasive" status. Assuming they're like elephants, they'll take 18-22 months to gestate a single calf, so the population will never grow rapidly without our noticing.
Maybe we could train them to stomp cane toads?
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Re: Random randomness
Yes, but you're overlooking the pivotal question: just how good does mammoth steak taste?Holman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 5:47 pmI did see that!
I'm mainly interested in the Mammoth possibility because I love what we would learn and I assume that we could figure out how to care for and support them. I certainly wouldn't endorse bringing back every extinct species we can think of.
The good thing about Mammoths is that it's really unlikely that they could ever reach "invasive" status. Assuming they're like elephants, they'll take 18-22 months to gestate a single calf, so the population will never grow rapidly without our noticing.
Maybe we could train them to stomp cane toads?
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- Holman
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Re: Random randomness
It depends. How long are your sabre teeth?Anonymous Bosch wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 6:21 pmYes, but you're overlooking the pivotal question: just how good does mammoth steak taste?Holman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 5:47 pmI did see that!
I'm mainly interested in the Mammoth possibility because I love what we would learn and I assume that we could figure out how to care for and support them. I certainly wouldn't endorse bringing back every extinct species we can think of.
The good thing about Mammoths is that it's really unlikely that they could ever reach "invasive" status. Assuming they're like elephants, they'll take 18-22 months to gestate a single calf, so the population will never grow rapidly without our noticing.
Maybe we could train them to stomp cane toads?
Much prefer my Nazis Nuremberged.
- Anonymous Bosch
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Re: Random randomness
Well, our ancestors certainly seemed to enjoy eating 'em sans sabre teeth. So, woolly mammoth steak would make for a significantly more authentic Paleolithic diet than currently available 'Caveman Diets'. And realistically, if woolly mammoths turn out to be exquisitely delicious, it would almost certainly guarantee their future going forward considering the omnipresence of beef cattle.Holman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 6:26 pmIt depends. How long are your sabre teeth?Anonymous Bosch wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 6:21 pm Yes, but you're overlooking the pivotal question: just how good does mammoth steak taste?
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- Blackhawk
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Re: Random randomness
I'm not entirely against the idea, but I do think there are some major issues that haven't been addressed. I'd be very hesitant about releasing them into the wild and it's potential impact on the ecosystem. I don't like the idea of animals bred into captivity, either. Something in between, like a fenced preserve? Maybe, but we'd have to track each and every animal and have contingencies in place for escape. And then there are issues like ownership - are they wild animals, or owned? By their creators? The nation they're released into? Sponsors? Are we ready to settle issues of copyrighting living things? What about commercial exploitation? And then there are other issues, like how are mammoths raised to be mammoths if not by other mammoths? We're creating orphans, after all, and nobody is entirely sure how mammoths are raised. For context, elephants stay with their parents for ~16 years learning to be elephants, how to swim, how to find food, how to avoid dangers, etc.
And that's just scratching the surface. We're protesting masks, storming capitols, electing lunatics throughout the world, starting wars, and committing atrocities while profiting on human life while others starve. I don't think we're ready to be The Creator quite yet.
And that's just scratching the surface. We're protesting masks, storming capitols, electing lunatics throughout the world, starting wars, and committing atrocities while profiting on human life while others starve. I don't think we're ready to be The Creator quite yet.
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Re: Random randomness
Ask one of these folk if any are around.Yes, but you're overlooking the pivotal question: just how good does mammoth steak taste?
The Time 250,000-Year-Old Mammoth Was Served For Dinner
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Re: Random randomness
Good points all.Blackhawk wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 6:58 pm I'm not entirely against the idea, but I do think there are some major issues that haven't been addressed. I'd be very hesitant about releasing them into the wild and it's potential impact on the ecosystem. I don't like the idea of animals bred into captivity, either. Something in between, like a fenced preserve? Maybe, but we'd have to track each and every animal and have contingencies in place for escape. And then there are issues like ownership - are they wild animals, or owned? By their creators? The nation they're released into? Sponsors? Are we ready to settle issues of copyrighting living things? What about commercial exploitation? And then there are other issues, like how are mammoths raised to be mammoths if not by other mammoths? We're creating orphans, after all, and nobody is entirely sure how mammoths are raised. For context, elephants stay with their parents for ~16 years learning to be elephants, how to swim, how to find food, how to avoid dangers, etc.
And that's just scratching the surface. We're protesting masks, storming capitols, electing lunatics throughout the world, starting wars, and committing atrocities while profiting on human life while others starve.
I think the Stewart Brand project involves a carefully managed preserve maintained by the Long Now Foundation but under Canadian oversight. I would guess that the baby mammoths will be raised to be hairy elephants, although studying how mammoth instincts and innate behavior differ will be part of the science.
Obviously we have bigger problems than the absence of mammoths in our ecosystem. But this kind of science is aimed at increasing our investment in advanced ecological stewardship, and I believe that the future of humanity depends way more on that orientation than on sending a few scientists to live in a hole on Mars.
We've been The Creator since somewhere before the Industrial Revolution, and so far we're doing a botch job of it. My interest in this kind of project is that it asks us to confront the responsibility directly.I don't think we're ready to be The Creator quite yet.
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Re: Random randomness
I'm attending a wedding on Zoom this weekend.
The couple has stated that this will be a casual low-key affair with no emphasis on ceremony. They're about 50, but I believe this is the first marriage for both. The groom seems like a great guy, but though they've been together for about five years we've never met him, as they're on the opposite coast. We've been friends with the bride for 25 years.
I intend to put on a jacket and a loose tie. I suppose I should wear pants because there might be dancing?
The couple has stated that this will be a casual low-key affair with no emphasis on ceremony. They're about 50, but I believe this is the first marriage for both. The groom seems like a great guy, but though they've been together for about five years we've never met him, as they're on the opposite coast. We've been friends with the bride for 25 years.
I intend to put on a jacket and a loose tie. I suppose I should wear pants because there might be dancing?
Much prefer my Nazis Nuremberged.