Friday, 29 December 2017

Animals That May Soon Be Extinct

British photographer Tim Flach, has spent the more than 2 years to documenting braving their habitats and their brittle existences. Thus, the resulting body of work, Endangered, provides us with a close and exceptional view into the striking lives of Earth's most threatened creatures, and reminds us of everything we should be scared to lose. For most of us, endangered animals are a far-away mystery.

Therefore, from species we are all acquainted with polar bear, snow leopard, cheetah, however to exotic beasts we would only imagine in fantasy films Saiga, Philippine eagle, Olm salamander. So Tim Flach presents a wide spectrum of biodiversity with Endangered, and sheds light on the inimitable challenges each animal faces in order to survive. Thus, some have had their numbers cut down by habitat destruction. While others endure more gruesome ordeals, such as hunting, poaching, and being sold into the black market.
1. Proboscis Monkey


2. Saiga


3. Philippine Eagle


4. Golden Snub Nosed Monkey


5. Ring Tailed Lemur


6. Polar Bear


7. Hacintth Macaw


8. Shoebill


9. Iberian Lynx


10. While Bellied Pangolin


11. Ploughshare Tortoise


12. Yunan Snub Nosed Monkey


13. Pied Tamarin


14. Olm Salamander


15. Green Winged Macaws on Claylick


16. Monarch Butterflies


17. European Honey Bee


18. Red Crown Crane


19. Western Lowland Gorillas


20. Yellow Eyed Tree Frog Eggs


21. Blue Throated Macaw


22. Scimitar Oryx's


23. Scallope Hammerhed Aggregation


24. Beluga Sturgeon


25. Indian Gharial


26. Lemur Leaf Frog


27. Smooth Fronted Cayman


28. Military Macaw


29. Northern White Rhinoceros


30. Kaiser's Newt


31. Egyptian Vulture


31. Egyptian Vulture


34. Arabian Oryx



35. Fireflies


36. Sea Angels


37. Partula Snails


38. Giant Panda


39. Siamese Crocodile


40. Marine Iguana
Tim Flach has regularly stated that he set a goal to reveal the relationships that attach humans to our wilder counterparts. Staring into the eyes of the animals featured in Endangered, it's painful to imagine that any one of them would ever be considered less worthy of life than one of us. So, have a look into the most stunning shots from the series, and vote for the ones that took your breath away.

Monday, 11 December 2017

Scientists Detected Earth’s Mysterious “Hum”

For the first time it has been reported that the Earth makes a strange humming sound, on the ocean floor, which has reported in some zones in the Antarctica and Algeria. However researchers consider they can observe it all around our globe. American Geophysical Union explained a new study of earth vibrating on the floor of the Indian Ocean. An investigator stated that these vibrations, generally called the “hum of the Earth,” sound like the static on an old TV, but reduced down 10,000 times. This doesn’t enable some animals to hear it. Though no earthquake takes place on our planet, hence our earth is continuously moving. The air blows, the water flows, the ground collapses, the temperature changes, and so it goes. Investigators believe some of these movements make the agonizing noise, but they don’t know which one is yet.

Therefore, they’ve hypothesized it might be the repetition of oceans colliding, the atmosphere moving, or the fluctuations born of sea and sky alike. If specialists were able to hear the sound clearer, they could discover numerous secrets hidden inside our planet. So, it could even direct them how to draw a map so aliens can find us. Moreover, a different team of investigators studying the hum in the Antarctica said in 1998 that the fluctuations are always sounding. In 2001, one of them from University of California at Santa Barbara described that these are “constant signals” that wave in a range of 2 to 7 millihertz, thousands of times lower than the range humans can hear. Scientists haven’t cracked the code yet, but this new breakthrough could help them get closer to the source of this mysterious noise.

Nonetheless, somewhat is clear: all of them thought the noise is being caught more evident every time. Spahr Webb, a seismologist at Columbia University, is one of the principal researchers in the 21st century who is centered on learning the cause of the hum. Thus, he overruled that the main reason is the communications between the atmosphere and the ground. In its place, he thought that the primary cause is the ocean waves, which bang on the sea floor “pretty much all the way throughout the Earth.” Further, there are moments that two dissimilar waves collide to one another, sending the vibrations they produce deep down the Earth’s crust. Furthermore, there are also other waves which, instead of shocking between them, they hit the ground with enough force to create a much reaction inside the world. The hum was also pro-posed to be induced by acoustic resonance between the atmosphere and the solid Earth, but this can onlyexplain part of its amplitude.

Wednesday, 22 November 2017

The Massive Spider Webs Created an Ideal Home


On the banks of a creek near Jerusalem Israel, stands a captivated forest, where its trees shrouded by huge cobwebs woven by long-jawed spiders. The Soreq creek covers treated sewage that is full of nutrients that help the proliferation of mosquitoes. These serve as a source of food for improbable web-spinning spiders which then replicate in multitudes, weaving captivating and eerie webs above the water.

It's an exceptional case, as millions of long-jawed spiders shaped the webbing that envelops the forest, a marvel rarely seen in the Middle East. But while spider egg sacs and spider lings are everywhere along the banks of the creek, the future is bleak. Moreover, the colder temperatures will soon cause a radical drop in the mosquito population that sustains the web-weavers. So when the summers end, the spiders mate and the female will lay eggs before dying. The long-jawed spiders are found in clammy or swamp habitats all over the world. They usually have long slim bodies with shiny abdomens; sit in their web or on a close plant and wait for prey to fly into their trap. They feed on flying insects, including moths and leaf-hoppers. Their scientific name is “Tetragnatha”, which literally means four jaws.

Therefore, when the male mates the female he has to lock his jaws onto her to stop her from eating him. Like most spiders, they shed their skin as they grow and usually live for less than a year. In 2009, long-jawed spiders made a giant web in a Baltimore Wastewater Treatment Plant.  According to the researchers, the webbing was so heavy it even damaged light fixtures and clumps of web were, in few places, as thick as a fire hose. Source: Charismaticplanet.com










Sunday, 19 November 2017

The Plants You Need in Your Bedroom to Beat Tight Chests, Insomnia and Colds

NASA scientists say, that you need to keep plants in your bedroom to beat different diseases, i.e. colds, tight chests, insomnia. Although plants look very beautiful in gardens but scientists maintain that we can reap plenty of health benefits of plants by bringing them in indoors. The researchers have long preached the benefits of house plants, that popping some greenery on your bedside table can boost your sleep and health. The plants may decrease your anxiety, depression, stress and helps with the removal of airborne pollutants. Elle Decor and The Joy of Plants delved into research from NASA and the American College to determine which houseplants are best suited to your bedroom - and the benefits they provide. Indoor plants can also elicit a number of physical health benefits, including the removal of airborne pollutants, both particulate and gaseous, which lead to better indoor air quality and associated improvements in physical health.
A review of the scientific evidence suggests that workers are more productive when their office is filled with greenery - and hospital patients are even thought to tolerate pain better if there is a plant on the ward. Perhaps most importantly, plants also trap and filter pollutants that are linked to thousands of deaths a year. The experts from the Royal Horticultural Society say that ‘bringing the outdoors inside’ can recreate some of the natural benefits lost in the process. Plants reduce stress levels, improve mood and filter polluted air, they say.  
Here’re top 10 lists of plants which helps to improve your health.
1. Areca Palm: Madagascan areca palm leads the way in efficiency at “mopping up” pollutants. Researchers say that the palm is excellent for anyone prone to colds and sinus problems because it releases moisture into the air. This, in turn, makes it much easier to breathe so will support you nod off quicker.
 2. Aloe Vera: This plant is very easy to keep and aesthetically pleasing in any home, the aloe vera plant has been named as one of the best plants for air purification by NASA. It releases oxygen incessantly throughout the night, making it an ideal bedroom addition. It also fights benzene which is found in detergents and plastics and formaldehyde (in varnishes and floor finishes) so helps keep the air super pure.
3. English Ivy: It is commonly grows up your house is actually perfect for your bedroom. Certainly, researchers at the American College of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology found that English ivy in particular removes 78 per cent of airborne mould in just 12 hours.
4. Dwarf date palm: This plant is hardy, drought-tolerant and long-lived and it's excellent at removing indoor air pollutants - particularly xylene.  
5. Boston Fern: This nice-looking plant has graced indoor landscapes since Victorian times - and for good reason. However, this plant ranks 9th in NASA’s list of 50 air-purifying plants, being particularly adept at removing formaldehyde.
6. Chinese evergreen: This has been dubbed the easiest houseplant because it grows well in low light and areas of the home where other plants won't grow like a dark bedroom. The best part about it is that it removes more toxins as time and exposure continues.
7. Peace lily: This beautiful plant can cleanse air and improve it by 60%. It also absorbs mould spores through its leaves and circulates them its roots to use as food.
8. Spider plant: This houseplant grows super quickly and can remove up to 90 per cent of the toxins from the air in your bedroom in just two days. It's especially great for people with dust allergies.
9. Lady palm: This houseplant is one of the most effective plants at cleansing the air of formaldehyde, ammonia, xylene and toluene.
10. Weeping fig: This houseplant is the best at beating pollutants that are emitted from carpeting and furniture such as formaldehyde, benzene and trichloroethylene.

Friday, 20 October 2017

The Mysterious 400 Stone Structure of Saudi Arabia



The mysterious ancient gates 400 stone structures found on the edge of volcanoes are spotted on Google Earth, but archaeologists are unsure, why they were built, could be thousands of years old in a remote desert area in Saudi Arabia. The stone structure seems like field gate from above. The stone walls purpose remains unknown, the strange cluster 'appear to be the oldest man-made structures in the landscape' and some are up to 1,700 feet long and built across old lava domes.


The stone structures- which were found using Google Earth - have been dubbed the 'gates' built across ancient lava domes, some of these strange features are more than four times the length of a football pitch, and archaeologists be certain of they may be up to 7,000 years old. However, the smallest gates are 43 feet in length while the longest are 1,699 feet long. Archaeologists believe that thousands of years ago this area would have been much more hospitable than it is now.


Hence, there is no certain explanation of why they were built. These gates are discovered almost completely in bleak, inhospitable lava fields with scant water or vegetation, places seemingly amongst the most unfriendly area. The gates are stone-built and the walls unevenly made and low. Moreover, remains of lava flows can be seen on top of some of the gates, suggesting that they are older than some of the lava flows. The odd clusters appear to be the oldest man-made structures in the landscape. Many of the structures have multiple stone walls that form a rectangular design whereas others type gates - have one stone wall with piles of stones at the ends. Hence, most of them were exposed through satellite surveys and no archaeological fieldwork has yet been carried out. Therefore, earlier research has found thousands of stone structures that form geometric patterns in the Middle East.


This includes two wheel-shaped patterns date back some 8,500 years. A number of the designs, found in Jordan's Azraq Oasis, appear to have an astronomical significance, built to align with the sunrise on the winter solstice. Other types of stone structures such as “kites” were used to hunt animals and wheel-shaped objects have also been discovered in the lava fields. They were found on top of the gates - signifying the gates pre-date them. An area mapped that included lava done with gates and other stone structures. It is estimated that some of the gates around the lava domes they looked at were built 7,000 years ago.