Greybottle wrote: » Some of ye don't seem to know that this thread is going downhill rapidly. The city of Munich is called Muenchen in German which translates from old German as 'Monks'. Simple as that.
New Home wrote: » Monaco means the same thing.
mzungu wrote: » In 1518, a dancing plague hit Strasbourg. Roughly 400 people took to dancing for days on end with some collapsing from exhaustion, heart attacks and strokes while a small number died. The dancers were mostly women, and lasted roughly around 6 days with numbers of dancers estimated at roughly around 400. Authorities did not know what to do, but they had ruled out supernatural causes. Instead, they encouraged more dancing and opened two town halls so dancers could keep going. Nobody knows why they danced and to this day remains unsolved. Theories include that participants unwittingly consumed ergot fungi which is a hallucinogen that has also been linked with the Salem witch trials. Although this is not proven. Strasbourg was not a totally isolated incident, there were seven others in the region during the medieval period.
New Home wrote: » Greybottle wrote: » Some of ye don't seem to know that this thread is going downhill rapidly. The city of Munich is called Muenchen in German which translates from old German as 'Monks'. Simple as that. Monaco means the same thing.
david75 wrote: » Something I’m noticing across loads of subsections and topics on Boards the last few weeks. Seemingly new accounts or older&never used but with really low post counts, coming in and just causing arguments for no reason at all about anything. Beginning to wonder are we being troll bombed. Not a reach to wonder is it from Russia either. It’s been established they have ‘troll farms’ disrupting discourse on all sorts of forums and social media globally. Watch out for it in your other subscribed topics.
RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » Well, if you are a true believer, the devil has existed since the dawn of time. The greatest trick he ever pulled was convincing people he didnt exist.
Squall Leonhart wrote: » There was a dog born in Japan in 1923 called Hachikō.
quickbeam wrote: » The basis for the Richard Gere film Hachi. God, I wasn't right for a week after watching that one
Are Am Eye wrote: » Oh, Putin. What a tangled web you weave. :mad:
evolving_doors wrote: » All Drum and Bass (and jungle) originated out of one song 'Amen Brother' by The Winstons . The sample is at 1:26. It's now called the Amen break. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxZuq57_bYM Спасибо Comrades
Fourier wrote: » For the day that's in it, just a couple of posts about Hawking's work.Singularity theorems: These were the focus of his thesis and his early papers.
Wibbs wrote: » On ancient clothing.. The purple pigment used by very rich romans to dye their clothes was worth its weight in gold. It took thousands of a particular shelled mollusc to extract the dye. The colour apparently became better with age and exposure to light and was extremely colour fast so could take years of wear and washing. It was one of the ultimate fashion and status statements. Only one problem... it stank to high heaven of fish.
Candie wrote: » In the Massachusetts Shaker community of the early 1800's, a weaver called Miss Babbitt watched two men work a two-handed saw to cut wood and noted that the cutting action was limited to the forward motion and that the energy expended in pulling the saw back into position doubled the effort involved for half the output. Using her spinning wheel as inspiration, she developed an early prototype of the circular saw and it is that same basic design that is still used in lumber mills across the USA today. In the industrial North of England similar saws were being developed and have been patented, but in accordance with the teaching of the Shakers, Ms Babbitt never patented her invention. She's also credited with inventing a particular kind of timber nail and with improving the design of the spinning wheel, and possibly with an early version of a belt-driven washing machine.
jmayo wrote: » Following on from this. How many people know that the colourant used for red smarties is derived from crushed insects, or at least it was until recently. The bright red colourant is processed from scale insects, in particular the dried body of the female cochineal insect, collected in central America. The colorant is called cochineal, also known as carmine or E120. It is really from the carminic acid that the insects produce to deter predators. Also relating to food and beverages using weird animal stuff.Guinness amongst most other brewers use a product called isinglass to help in the clarification or fining of beers. It is a collagen that was originally sourced from the the dried swim bladders of sturgeons, especially beluga. In later years a cheaper alternative was derived from cod. So technically if you are a vegan you should not drink beer. Ah so that was why they got into the furniture business.