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-   -   4/4/2003: Colossal squid (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=3129)

gossard187 07-03-2003 10:48 PM

Can't imagine the smell....

xoxoxoBruce 07-04-2003 01:40 AM

I'm not doing the blind lesbian joke.:p

Leus 07-04-2003 04:20 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Yeah, it's big.

xoxoxoBruce 07-11-2003 11:55 PM

It was really a piece of Sperm Whale. Nevermind;)

zippyt 07-12-2003 12:50 AM

HEEEEEEEE HE SAID SPERM HEEEEEEEEE;)

Chris MC 07-21-2003 03:05 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by xoxoxoBruce
It was really a piece of Sperm Whale. Nevermind;)
Which bit of a sperm whale? ... Looks like 'THE ROCK' in StarTrek original series to me! :D


Chris.

Griff 07-21-2003 07:15 PM

Whale bits?

richlevy 07-21-2003 10:02 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Griff
Whale bits?
Is that anything like Bacon Bits? Yum. :vomit:

wolf 07-22-2003 12:38 AM

I think you would have to have an awfully large salad to use those. I mean even bigger than the ones at Applebees.

chrisinhouston 02-28-2006 12:10 PM

There back!!!

Giant squid grabs London audience
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4756514.stm
There is a video clip, too.

dar512 02-28-2006 01:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wolf
I think you would have to have an awfully large salad to use those. I mean even bigger than the ones at Applebees.

Have you been following the Doonesbury comic at McFriendly's?

capnhowdy 02-28-2006 03:50 PM

This is yet another reason to spend more of our tax dollars exploring what is on our planet instead of others. We don't even know what's here yet. IMO let's learn about Earth amd THEN move on to another star........

dar512 02-28-2006 04:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by capnhowdy
This is yet another reason to spend more of our tax dollars exploring what is on our planet instead of others. We don't even know what's here yet. IMO let's learn about Earth amd THEN move on to another star........

I don't understand the either-or mentality. Why not do both? Scientific investigation allways pays off.

xoxoxoBruce 02-28-2006 08:23 PM

Quote:

The squid now resides in a glass tank, filled to the brim with preservative solution, and is one of 22 million specimens that can be seen as part of the behind-the-scenes Darwin Centre tour of the Natural History Museum.
Seems they make you buy the E-ticket to see this sucker(s). ;)

Electrophile 03-11-2006 01:53 PM

Here's another strange sea-creature that just popped up. My wife thinks it looks like it's wearing chaps.


Also, a quick comment about Juju's old, old post regarding fossil hunters faking data.

The professor was wrong in stating that no one would ever do that; I can think of three cases within the last two months of biologists faking data (one a cloning researcher who submitted fake pictures, one a psychologist(?) who invented a fake population of people and fake answers to questions, and one who lied about some RNAi experiments). The good news is that they were all caught. The proof of science is that other scientists go back and repeat (or in these cases, do not repeat) the experiments. The VAST majority of scientists are honest about their results and have come up with a good system for verifying the work of others to the point of sharing their DNA and cell lines with competitors. Fossil dating is a good example of this. Say you have one fossil which can not be dated except by the soil above and below it. Eventually someone will find another fossil of the same type which can be dated. If the new date is different from the old date, they'll wait until a few more can be dated and a firm conclusion can be reached. Eventually, if corrections are required, they'll be adopted.


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