• Science

    The Roots of Upright Walking

    By Posted on 4.24.2008 8 Comments

    Scientists have long been trying to figure out why early humans became bipedal, and one popular explanation has now been crossed off the list of possibilities. There was a popular notion that we started walking upright to free up our arms so we could carry objects, and babies—apes don't need to worry about this because their offspring can cling to them using their hands and feet. It's like a built-in Baby Bjorn. But now University of Manchester researchers say the baby-carrying theory doesn't hold, mainly because supporting an infant on your hip or in your arms is too tiring to have been a legitimate factor in the transition to bipedalism.

    5.12.2008 at 06:29pm - Comment by some_random_dude

    I would personally gues that there would be a natural side product of bipedalism. Compared to walking on all 4, this would make you seem bigger to any preditors among all the other benifits such as being able to run backwards while throwing projectiles(rocks and eventually spears, etc)

  • The Environment

    Satellite Images of Devastation in Burma

    By Posted on 5.8.2008 8 Comments

    Tropical Cyclone Nargis slammed the Burmese coast with 130 mph winds and bursts of up to 160 mph—the equivalent of a category 3 or low-level category 4 hurricane. It reportedly led to thousands of deaths, and as of Monday, thousands more were missing. Now NASA has released a set of images that show how drastically the flooding has drenched Burma's coast.

    5.8.2008 at 05:39pm - Comment by some_random_dude

    You may not feel empathy for the junta, but a country is much more than the militant powers that controll it. Your outlook is a little short minded, a lot of families were detroyed and those people would love any help they could get I'm sure. ...And yes, what can be said about the UN. Worthless, would be one word at the top of my list.



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