The Daily Croissant

Eclectic Perambulations in the Noosphere

  • Las Piñas Bamboo Organ

    • 21 Sep 2011
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    • 20September11 Historical Musical Instruments National Philippines Pipe Organ Treasure Unique
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    "The Las Piñas Bamboo Organ  in the parish church of Saint Joseph in Las Piñas City, Philippines, is a nineteenth-century church organ made almost entirely from bamboo. Only the horizontal trumpet stops are made from metal.  

    The builder of both the church and its organ was Father Diego Cera de la Virgen del Carmen, a priest under the Augustinian Recollects. A native of Spain, he served as parish priest in Las Piñas from 1795 to 1830. Historians portray him as a gifted man, a natural scientist, chemist, architect, community leader, as well as organist and organ builder.[3]

    Having previously built organs in the Manila area with some organ stops made of bamboo, he chose bamboo for most of this organ: only the trumpet stops are made of metal. The choice of bamboo was probably both practical and aesthetic - bamboo was abundant and used for hundreds of items of both a practical and an artistic nature.

    Fr. Cera began work on the organ in 1816, while the church was still under construction. The church was completed in 1819 and the organ, in 1821, but without the trumpet stops. The organ was finally completed in 1824 after Fr. Cera decided to use metal for the trumpets whose character he cannot reproduce with bamboo."

    via en.wikipedia.org

     

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  • What the hell is a singing bird pistol ?

    • 2 Sep 2011
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    • 01September11 Antiques Automaton Pistols Treasure birds
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    "Christie's recently sold a pair of matching singing bird pistols at auction for $5.8 million . The objects themselves are impressive and nutty." 
    found at stumbleupon.com

    Sent by Stephanie...Thanks !

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  • The Beale Ciphers - Keys to Hidden Gold, Silver and Jewels Estimated at over $65 billion ...

    • 15 Aug 2011
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    • 14August11 Ciphers Hidden Treasure puzzles
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    Beale_papers
    Beale_ciphers

    "The Beale ciphers are a set of three ciphertexts, one of which allegedly states the location of a buried treasure of gold, silver and jewels estimated to be worth over USD$65 billion as of 2010. The other two ciphertexts allegedly describe the content of the treasure, and list the names of the treasure's owners' next of kin, respectively.

    The story of the three ciphertexts originates from an 1885 pamphlet detailing treasure being buried by a man named Thomas Jefferson Beale in a secret location in Bedford County, Virginia, in 1820. Beale entrusted the box containing the encrypted messages with a local innkeeper named Robert Morriss and then disappeared, never to be seen again.

    The innkeeper gave the three encrypted ciphertexts to a friend before he died. The friend then spent the next twenty years of his life trying to decode the messages, and was able to solve only one of them which gave details of the treasure buried and the general location of the treasure. He published all three ciphertexts in a pamphlet, although most of the originals were destroyed in a warehouse fire.

    Since the publication of the pamphlet, a number of attempts have been made to decode the two remaining ciphertexts and to find the treasure, but all have resulted in failure."
    via en.wikipedia.org

     

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  • Family finds $45,000 in new home — then returns it

    • 20 May 2011
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    • 20May11 Human Interest Morals Treasure
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    SALT LAKE CITY — When Josh Ferrin closed on his family's first home, he never thought he'd make the discovery of a lifetime — then give it back.

     

    Ferrin picked up the keys earlier this week and decided to check out the house in the Salt Lake City suburb of Bountiful. He was excited to finally have a place his family could call their own.

    As he walked into the garage, a piece of cloth that clung to an attic door caught his eye. He opened the hatch and climbed up the ladder, then pulled out a metal box that looked like a World War II ammunition case.

    "I freaked out, locked it my car, and called my wife to tell her she wouldn't believe what I had found," said Ferrin, who works as an artist for the Deseret News in Salt Lake City.

    Then he found seven more boxes, all stuffed full with tightly wound rolls of cash bundled together with twine — more than $40,000.

    Ferrin quickly took the boxes to his parent's house to count. Along with his wife and children, they spread out thousands of bills on a table, separating the bundles one by one.

    They stopped counting at $40,000, but estimated there was at least $5,000 more on the table.

    Ferrin thought about how such a large sum of money could go a long way, pay bills, buy things he never thought he could afford.

    "I'm not perfect, and I wish I could say there was never any doubt in my mind. We knew we had to give it back, but it doesn't mean I didn't think about our car in need of repairs, how we would love to adopt a child and aren't able to do that right now, or fix up our outdated house that we just bought," Ferrin said. "But the money wasn't ours to keep and I don't believe you get a chance very often to do something radically honest, to do something ridiculously awesome for someone else and that is a lesson I hope to teach to my children."

    He thought about the home's previous owner, Arnold Bangerter, who died in November and left the house to his children.

    "I could imagine him in his workshop. From time to time, he would carefully bundle up $100 with twine, climb up into his attic and put it into a box to save. And he didn't do that for me," Ferrin said of the man who had worked as a biologist for the Utah Department of Fish and Game.

    Bangerter purchased the home in 1966 and lived there with his wife, who died in 2005.

    After most of the money was counted, Ferrin called one of Bangerter's sons with the news.

    Kay Bangerter said he knew his father hid away money because he once found a bundle of cash taped beneath a drawer in their home, but he never considered his dad had stuffed away so much over the years.

    "He grew up in hard times and people that survived that era didn't have anything when they came out of it unless they saved it themselves," Kay Bangerter, the oldest of the six children, told the Deseret News. "He was a saver, not a spender."

    Bangerter called the money's return "a story that will outlast our generation and probably yours as well."

    "I'm a father, and I worry about the future for my kids," Ferrin said. "I can see him putting that money away for a rainy day and it would have been wrong of me to deny him that thing he worked on for years. I felt like I got to write a chapter in his life, a chapter he wasn't able to finish and see it through to its conclusion."

    © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    via newsvine.com

     

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  • 10 Minerals More Beautiful Than Gold

    • 16 Jul 2010
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    • 7.16.10 Gems Treasure nature
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    Media_httpwwwenvironm_cgffg
    via environmentalgraffiti.com

    "Not only are some of these substances far more beautiful than gold; many of them are also far more valuable because they are so rare."

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  • Chef Dave Crisp discovers largest ever hoard of Roman coins

    • 9 Jul 2010
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    • Historical Treasure archaeology
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    Media_httpidailymailc_ofedr
    via dailymail.co.uk

    Hundreds of the coins - buried in a gigantic clay jar and weighing as much as two men - bear the image of Carausius.

    The discovery was made by hospital chef Dave Crisp using a metal detector

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