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Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Hobbits becomes a new Species

By Will Dunham

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The tiny woman dubbed the Hobbit who lived 18,000 years ago on a remote Indonesian island deserves to be deemed a new human species and not a deformed modern human as skeptics assert, researchers said on Monday.

In the latest salvo in a heated scientific shootout, an international team led by Florida State University anthropologist Dean Falk compared the Hobbit's skull to those of nine people with microcephaly, a rare condition in which the head is abnormally small due to improper brain development.

They concluded the 3-foot-tall (1-meter) adult woman had a highly evolved brain, unlike that of a microcephalic person, confirming she belongs to the proposed extinct species Homo floresiensis, closely related to modern Homo sapiens.

"Lo and behold, it doesn't look anything like a microcephalic. In fact, it's antithetical," Falk said in an interview, rebutting scientists like primatologist Robert Martin of the Field Museum in Chicago who suggest the skull came from a person with microcephaly.

A previous study by Falk had been criticized because it compared the Hobbit, with a brain a third the size of modern people, to just a single microcephalic skull.

Martin remained unconvinced. "My gut feeling is what they (Falk's team) did is just played around with the measurements until they got something that suited them," Martin said.

Martin said the new study was flawed, questioned whether Falk's team knew enough about microcephaly and insisted the question of a separate species is unresolved.

The study appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Michael Morwood, part of the group that discovered the remains, is a co-author.

WONDROUS PLACE

Scientists in 2003 found the bones in a cave on the island of Flores east of Bali, contending they were a previously unknown species living at a time the species Homo sapiens was thought to have been the world's only human inhabitant.

These little people -- bones from several other individuals also were found -- lived in a wondrous place populated by strange animals like pygmy elephants and large rodents. In this isolated locale, evolutionary forces stemming from limited resources may have pushed some inhabitants toward dwarfism and others toward gigantism.

Tools and evidence of fire were found near the bones of the adult female, dubbed the Hobbit after the small people in the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien.

Falk's team compared three-dimensional, computer-generated reconstructions of the brain of the Hobbit to those of nine microcephalics from all over the world and 10 normal people.

Two features in the frontal lobes and a structure called the cerebellum separated the two groups, with the Flores woman fitting in with normal humans, not microcephalics, the study found. But she was unlike modern humans in four other features distinguishing her from Homo sapiens, crying out for recognition as a separate species, the researchers said.

Falk said the origin of this new species is now the key question, adding she is open to the possibility it descended from Australopithecenes, ape-like human ancestors, or was a dwarf form of the extinct species Homo erectus.

Martin said it is possible it is a new species. "But the other strong possibility is that this is actually just a pathological modern human," Martin added.

"At the end of the day, hopefully, the truth will come out," Martin added. "And I'm not mad enough to think I'm right about everything. But there are ways of doing it and ways of not doing it."

Hair Theft is the Unkindest Cut of All

IN a new twist in Rio de Janeiro's crime files, scissor-wielding thieves have clipped off the long, flowing locks of a 22-year-old Brazilian woman as she rode in a city bus.

"We got on at the same stop and they sat behind me,''"sales assistant Mirna Marchetti says.

"Then all of a sudden I felt someone pulling my hair. My friend tried to help me but they just cut it off, right at the base.''

Marchetti's hair was dark, straight and reached down to her waist.

Police suspect the thieves hope to sell the hair to a hairdresser or beauty salon, which can charge more than 500 reais ($320) for top-quality hair extensions.

"This is a new kind of crime," said a police officer at the station where the report was filed.

"They really did mean to steal her hair."

Why I wear glasses...

A Chinese man had to have his contact lenses surgically removed after he did not take them out for a year.
Liu, 40, started to wear contact lenses a year ago and never took them out because he found it difficult.
"I only have some eye drops for when they feel uncomfortable," he told Chutian City News.
Liu recently felt his eyesight was getting worse, so he bought another pair of lenses and wore them on top of the old ones.
But when his eyesight still didn't improve, he took another startling decision.
"I put a pair of used disposal contact lenses over the other two pairs in my eyes. By then, I was wearing three pairs of lenses," he said.
By the next day, Liu's eyes had reacted badly to his DIY eyecare and he finally sought medical attention.
A doctor was shocked to find the first lenses had grown into his eyes and surgery was needed to take them out. - Ananova.com

Ok Miss America #6


Congratulations, Miss Lauren Nelson. And major congratulations to all Oklahomans! We are the prettiest state! This is the sixth Miss America we have produced, and certainly not the last.

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Puppy Love

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Phone Calls

Allright everyone. I have my new phone. But they were unable to transfer all the numbers to it because the Cingular Store had burnt out the cord to do so, so I'm trying to answer all the phone calls I get so I can figure out who is calling. It's the same number, so feel free to call... between the hours of 6:30pm and 10pm. Remember, folks, I work from 9-6, and won't be answering it then. Sorry. Try and leave a message, but this phone is kind of screwy right now in getting to my voice mail (it won't let me, and when it does, there's nothing there). It's best to text, and add your number in there somewhere, because I get those. Talk to you all soon.

Stolen McDonald Statue

Ronald McDonald Statue Reported Stolen
Email this Story

Jan 16, 4:13 PM (ET)

STEWARTSTOWN, Pa. (AP) - A broken Ronald McDonald statue brought home by a McDonald's assistant manager, repaired, and used to decorate her family's lawn for 20 years has vanished.

"It was a holiday today," Thomas Grieger II said Monday. "I think the kids came and got him."

State police were seeking information about the cement statue that Grieger estimated must weigh about 300 pounds.

The statue originally sat outside the Shrewsbury McDonald's where Grieger's wife, Joy Grieger, was assistant manager. Someone tried to steal it, breaking off a hand and cracking a foot before giving up on the attempt.

McDonald's did not want it back, so the Griegers took it home, patched it up and have used it as a lawn mascot ever since.

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Information from: York Daily Record, http://www.ydr.com

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Name Calling

I think I've figured out a name for my little one: Pixie. Full name: Tinkerbell Pixie Goodness Rano. Long name for a little pup, but Pixie seems to fit, I think, and it's a name that will work when she gets bigger without being weird (like Little Bear or Munchkin if she ends up being part Lab... or bigger). I Like the name Tinkerbell, but so does trashy socialite Paris Hilton, who has already named her pet chiwawa (I know my spelling is terrible) that. I'm not big on copying her. And I think Pixie thinks her name is Goodness because she has that "Kennel Cough" and every time she would sneeze or cough I would say "oh, goodness." or "goodness, girl." So in trying to find a more appropriate name Pixie seems to work.
It's hard to say her name and Tiras. It ends up one of them getting called Trixie.
It's still early, so if anyone has suggestions I'm welcome to try them. As of now, Pixie is doing well and her cough is being medicated. She and her aunt, Tira Masu, are getting along wonderfully.
I better go, Pixie's looking at me like "why aren't I in bed yet?"... and I'm thinking the same thing.
Night folks!

Monday, January 08, 2007

Too Cute A Story to Let Slide By

You don't foal anyone pretending to be a dog
by ANDREW LEVY Last updated at 10:35am on 8th January 2007



Just like his labrador friends, he wags his tail, fetches sticks and rolls on his back to have his tummy tickled.

But the hooves and mane give away his real identity - as a Shetland pony.

Eight-week-old Rory picked up his canine traits after he was befriended by dogs at the Essex Horse and Pony Sanctuary in Pitsea.

Owner Sue Allery said: "In 18 years I've never seen anything like it. When vets visit us they can't believe it either."

Rory was rejected by his mother after he was born in Colchester on Friday the 13th of October. After arriving at the sanctuary he became ill and spent all his time being nursed in the office - attracting the interest of labradors Alfie and Millie, owned by stable manager Sam Edwards.

"Rory would be lying in my lap with his little hooves sticking out and Alfie would come up and wash them,' said Mrs Allery.

"And when he was left with a white moustache after drinking milk, Alfie would clean that too. Despite all that, Rory ended up being closer to Millie because she is nearer to his size."

Shetland pony expert David Hodge said: "They are a herd animal by nature which means they learn by copying other ponies. So if you put them with another animal, they'll copy them."

Saturday, January 06, 2007

My Newest Addition



This little girl is unnamed right now. She's a cocker mix we got from the humane society, and she is adorably cute. Just a baby at 6 weeks, Tira is a little jealous and unsure of what to do with it. They'll be friends in no time.

Thursday, January 04, 2007

Phone

A Phone is on it's way!!! I got one, finally and it's in the mail! YEAH
You'll be able to call me soon enough, for now just call through Chris. Thanks!