The Daily Croissant

Eclectic Perambulations in the Noosphere

  • Gigantic City-Structures of Paolo Soleri

    • 6 Oct 2011
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    • 05October11 Cities Futuristic Visionary architecture
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    Media_httplh4ggphtcom_wdibk

    Architecture on a dramatic scale... Cities the size of mountains.

    Whatever happened to the future? It's still around, of course, mostly in Europe and Japan, but over the years the Fantastic World of Tomorrow's gotten ... cheaper, simpler, and -- most tragically of all -- the future's gotten too damned small.

    Luckily there are a few visionaries left who aren't frightened of a future that doesn't fit in your pocket, a tomorrow with a vast scope, a monstrously dramatic scale, a time of awe-inspiring dimensions: they've dared to look over the horizon and visualize a truly big tomorrow.

    This article is written by author M. Christian (from "Meine kleine fabrik").

    via darkroastedblend.com

     

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  • The Original Motorcycle Dog

    • 6 Oct 2011
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    • 05October11 Dogs Film Shorts Motorcycles
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    via youtube.com

     Sent by John...Thanks !

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  • Arikara Medicine Ceremony -The Ducks

    • 6 Oct 2011
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    • 05October11 Historical Native American photography
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    Museum of Photographic Arts Collections

    Artist: Edward Sheriff Curtis (1908 photogravure)

    "In previous centuries, the Arikara were a semi-nomadic people who lived on the Great Plains of the United States of America for several hundred years. They lived primarily in earth lodges during the sedentary seasons. They created portable tipis as temporary shelter while traveling from their villages, or on seasonal bison hunts. They were primarily an agricultural society, whose women cultivated varieties of corn (or maize). The crop was such an important staple of their society that it was referred to as "Mother Corn".

    Traditionally an Arikara family owned 30-40 dogs. The people used them for hunting and as sentries, but most importantly for transportation, before Plains tribes adopted the horse. Many of the Plains tribes had shared the use of the travois, a transportation device to be pulled by dogs. It consisted of two long poles attached by a harness at the dog's shoulders, with the butt ends dragging behind the animal; midway, a ladder-like frame, or a hoop made of plaited thongs, was stretched between the poles; it held loads that might exceed 60 pounds. Women used dog-pulled travois to haul firewood or infants. These were also used for meat transport during the seasonal hunts; a single dog could pull a quarter of a bison."

    via flickr.com

     

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  • Dry Season : Everglades National Park

    • 6 Oct 2011
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    • 05October11 Everglades National Parks Seasons
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    Photo © copyright by Paul Marcellini

    "The Everglades has two seasons: wet and dry. in the wet season this area would be covered in a foot of water. The dry earth is protected by periphyton, a mix of bacteria, algae, and other microbes, which forms a spongy material that holds onto any available moisture through the dry season. Here, the clouds somehwhat echoed the shape of the cracked periphyton at sunset in the pinelands."

    via paulmarcellini.com

     

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  • Molecular Expressions: The Birthstone Collection - Garnet

    • 6 Oct 2011
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    • 05October11 Crystals Gems Photomicrography Polarized Light
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    Media_httpmicromagnet_wmhui

    "Garnet is the name for a group of related minerals, common to many regions of the world and often utilized as gemstones or abrasives. As gemstones, garnets appear in just about every color except blue: dark red, tangerine orange, translucent green, soft bluish-pink, and many others. Some garnets change color under different lighting conditions and others exhibit asterism, displaying a four-rayed star in reflected light. Most people, however, associate garnet with the dark red variety of stone that has been mined and worn as jewelry for thousands of years. The name garnet is thought to have come from the word pomegranate. Many ancient pieces of garnet jewelry are studded with tiny red stones that resemble a cluster of pomegranate seeds."

    via micro.magnet.fsu.edu

     

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  • Chickweed Geometer Moth - Haematopis grataria

    • 6 Oct 2011
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    • 05October11 Butterflies Moths
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    Media_httpwwwcirrusim_bbtqf

    "The name "Geometridae" ultimately derives from geometer ("earth-measurer"). This refers to the means of locomotion of the larvae or caterpillars, which lack most of the prolegs of other Lepidopteran caterpillars. Equipped with appendages at both ends of the body, a caterpillar will clasp with its front legs and draw up the hind end, then clasp with the hind end (prolegs) and reach out for a new front attachment, creating a loop, and creating the impression that it is measuring its journey. The caterpillars are accordingly called loopers, spanworms, or inchworms. They tend to be green, grey, or brownish and rely on their superb camouflage to hide from predators.  

    Many Geometrids have slender abdomens and broad wings which are usually held flat with the hindwings visible. As such they appear rather butterfly-like but in most respects they are typical moths: the majority fly at night, they possess a frenulum to link the wings and the antennae of the males are often feathered. They tend to blend in to the background, often with intricate, wavy patterns on their wings. In some species, females have reduced wings (e.g. winter moth and fall cankerworm)."

    via cirrusimage.com

     

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  • U-2 can enjoy the ride...!

    • 6 Oct 2011
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    • 05October11 Aircraft Film Shorts Space Flight U-2
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    "You can see why the U-2 is considered the most difficult plane in the world to fly. Each pilot has a co-pilot, who chases the plane on the runway in a sports car. Most of the cars are either Pontiac GTOs or Chevrolet Camaros — the Air Force buys American. The chase cars talk the pilot down as he lands on bicycle-style landing gear.
     

    In that spacesuit, the pilot in the plane simply cannot get a good view of the runway. Upon takeoff, the wings on this plane, which extend 103 feet from tip to tip, literally flap. To stabilize the wings on the runway, two pogo sticks on wheels prop up the ends of the wings.

    As the plane flies away, the pogo sticks drop off. The plane climbs at an amazing rate of nearly 10,000 feet a minute. Within about four minutes, I was at 40,000 feet, higher than any commercial airplane. We kept going up to 13 miles above Earth's surface.

    You get an incredible sensation up there. As you look out the windows, it feels like you're floating, it feels like you're not moving, but you're actually going 500 mph.. The U-2 was built to go higher than any other aircraft. In fact today, more than 50 years since it went into production, the U-2 flies higher than any aircraft in the world with the exception of the space shuttle.
     

    It is flying more missions and longer missions than ever before — nearly 70 missions a month over Iraq and Afghanistan , an operational tempo that is unequaled in history. The pilots fly for 11 hours at a time, sometimes more than 11 hours up there alone. By flying so high, the U-2 has the capability of doing reconnaissance over a country without actually violating its airspace. It can look off to the side, peering 300 miles or more inside a country without actually flying over it. It can "see" in the dark and through clouds.

    It can also "hear," intercepting conversations 14 miles below. The U-2, an incredible piece of history and also a current piece of high technology, is at the center of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan."  
    Enjoy the ride!
    via wimp.com

    Sent by John...Thanks !

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