35 Burst results for "Million Years Ago"

The Eric Metaxas Show
Stephen Strang Rejects the Lie That Faith & Politics Must Be Separate
"With my friend Stephen strang, it's strange without the E strang. He is a bestselling author, founder of charisma, magazine, the new book of spirit led living in an upside down world. But part of what we're talking about right now, and this is a very central subject for me, is dealing with this lie that we've been dealing with in America that somehow faith needs to be separated from politics, that the two, that is not biblical. And you've been very brave Steven strang, not just in writing your book God and Donald Trump. But the point is, you know, we can challenge people and say, listen, if I'm missing something, help me see what I missing. But when the Holy Spirit gets involved, if you believe in the prophetic, which you and I do, you even write in the book about Kim Clement, the South African prophet who in 2007, which is about a million years before anybody thought Donald Trump might run for president. Gave a famous prophecy. Now, you can either say, I don't believe in prophecy. Kind of just, you know, he got lucky. But you write about that and there's a lot to that he was speaking at bethel church in Redding California, which I just was saying bethel church has started a church here in New York City. I'm thrilled to say, but can you talk a little bit about that? Because I don't think we've ever covered that on this program. What a crazy, amazing thing that Kim Clement, who's now been gone to be with the lord, that he actually got a prophecy in 2007. Well, I got to know him in the early 90s when he hadn't been over here from South Africa very long. I really don't remember what prompted it. I do remember being at a convention once and having a long discussion over a meal. I actually had him come and do a retreat for the men on my staff before he was famous, or he wouldn't have done weekend retreats. And I just kind of watched his career. He had a great gift of prophecy. He was able to administer prophetically. He was a worshipper. He was a musician. And if you're not a Pentecostal, sometimes it's hard for you to understand him. He's all over YouTube. People need to Google him on YouTube, and they can see there were two main ones. And I document them and got in Donald Trump. He was the first of several people profits who said that God was raising up this unlikely businessman like Cyrus. Cyrus was the Persian king. Who originally said Cyrus, who was the first prophetic voice to link or maybe you don't know, but I'm just wondering. Probably Lance walnut claims it, but I would have to dig back to find out who you Cyrus to start with. The idea I'm pretty sure. I'm pretty sure it was I. I'm pretty sure it was right. No, it was not. I think you're right. I think it was Lance will now.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
National Security Leak Could Be Bigger Than the Pentagon Papers
"Byron, let me get to the leak. This is a huge story. I really don't know how to handle it. All I know is it's a terrible blow to our national security and the lights beginning to go on in the media, isn't it? Well, I was listening to your conversation with David drecker about this. And one thing I've been thinking about. Is you were mentioning The Pentagon papers earlier, which is like a million years ago. There have been some extremely serious national security leaks in the past years. That were, if not tolerated, actually cheered on. In late 2016, early 2017 during the Trump transition, there was a leak of Trump's incoming national security adviser Michael Flynn's conversation with the Russian ambassador that leaked to David ignatius set off the Russia investigation basically it was hugely consequential. And intercepted conversations are really some of our most sensitive secrets.

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Caller: Lumping White People Into the Same Group Is Racist
"You just made the point, I think, that I was going to comment on, I'm white, but my grandparents were immigrants from Ireland that came to the United States after their slavery was over. And I guess lumping all the white people in the same category is racist, I think. You know, Henry my great grandparents on my mom's side were from Germany. They fled Germany. They were refugees after World War I. And my grandfather joined the military to fight in World War II, and because my grandparents were actually Germans that had migrated here, they were placed under what was sort of a de facto house arrest. Even though their son was fighting the Germans in World War II putting his life on the line for the country. I don't think in a million years, anybody in our family would have ever imagined to ask for reparations because of that. Interesting. And I suspect that's the way a lot of other people feel around this country is what do you feel like you are owed a reparation because of the way your grandparents retreated? No, I think it's preposterous.

AP News Radio
Space telescope uncovers massive galaxies near cosmic dawn
"NASA's new James Webb Space Telescope is spotted some massive galaxies lead researcher Evo laby and his team were expecting to find little baby galaxies. It was kind of shocking because some of these galaxies were 13 billion light years away. And they had a 100 billion solar masses stars. And so what that means is that we are viewing these galaxies very shortly. We have the Big Bang. About 600 million years after the beginning of the universe. I know it sounds like a lot, 600 million years, but our universe is 13.8 billion years old. The objects were so big and bright that some team members thought they had made a mistake. As opposed to the Milky Way, which is this grand design spiral galaxy like you have seen in pictures with a beautiful spiral arms. This galaxy is 30 times smaller. So all those stars are jam packed. Lapi says in early lesson from the Webb telescope is to let go of your expectations and be ready to be surprised. I'm Ed Donahue

AP News Radio
Hollywood sex symbol Raquel Welch dies at 82
"Active Raquel Welch has died after a brief illness, according to her agent, Welch was 82, a march east are a letter with a look at her career. Raquel Welch had all of three lines in the film 1 million years BC, but it made her a star, primarily because the animal skin bikini she wore in it. Welch told reporters in 2001, it was hard to overcome being a sex symbol. It's not all that much fun, as I was coming up to 40. I was looking for breadcrumbs along the road of sex symbol DOM, you know, okay, now what do I do next? And I couldn't find any that were very positive. While Welch appeared in other lusty roles, she also won a claim for her performances in the three musketeers in the James coco film wild party and in the TV movie right to die.

CoinDesk Podcast Network
Gemini's Winklevoss Calls for Barry Silbert's Removal From DCG
"We've got some fresh drama in the spat between DCG and Gemini. We'll take it away. Our heads are moving, but the wingle vibe wants some heads to roll. See what it did there? Pretty nice, right? The winklevoss came out this morning with a really nice letter at Barry silbert. The CEO of DCG, which also owns coin desk as disclosure, saying, we need this guy out. We need him out. So they wrote this very long letters about four pages long. They posted it to Twitter, just like they did a few days ago. A few weeks ago at this point, a prior letter saying, hey, we need to engage with conversations with DCG in order to rectify the situation for Gemini, earn customers. This morning, the escalated a little bit, saying that the board needs removed. DCG CEO Barry silbert immediately in order to rectify the situation for customers just as a recap back in November, we saw that genesis trading and lending halted withdrawals on its platform due to a hole in balance sheet and liquidity issues. Gemini urn, which has about $900 million under management, had to also withdraw or halt withdraws to its customers because they were using genesis to power their application. So now we're seeing a little more fighting on Twitter, Wendy, I know you love this stuff. You love seeing the Titans of the crypto industry buttheads, what's your take on the story? So, okay, they need to figure things out. I do appreciate the fact that they do want to kind of do this publicly, but again, you guys, at the same time, this is literally like Chase Bank and Wells Fargo, CEOs like going head to head in real life on Twitter. You never see that happen in a million years. So it does make our industry look a little bit crashed. However, I'm here for the drama. I'm a 100% for it. But at the same time, there's people's livelihoods that are going to be impacted by this. I don't understand why Cameron from Gemini is calling for berry to step down from DCG board. It doesn't really make sense to me. I feel like that's kind of like a spectacle esque part of it. I don't think that's necessary. And I don't think that's going to solve the problem. The way to solve the problem is to actually address the problem instead of arguing and whatnot.

WTOP
"million years ago" Discussed on WTOP
"Camera pilot program. We're doing this to increase safety for some of our most vulnerable road users. That would be a school children and roadway construction workers. Captain Ellen Hansen with the fairfax county police department says the 6 month program will use ten cameras. If successful, it will be extended. Fines will range from $50 to a $100. The plan is to have the program up and running by February 1st, supervisor Walter alcorn. Now we're going to learn a lot from this pilot, but we're not going to be looking to use this as a way to generate revenue. So I'm very happy this is moving forward. Melissa, how will WTO news? Scientists have discovered the oldest known DNA, and it's revealing a drastically different version of Greenland than what exists today. It reveals what life was like 2 million years ago in the northern tip of Greenland, study author esca viller slav, says the previous record was DNA from a mammoth tooth. But this is a recall of an entire ecosystem, right? So both plans and animals. There are 2 million years old. Greenland today is a barren Arctic desert. 2 million years ago, it was a lush landscape of trees and vegetation with an array of animals. We find things like maastricht on which I extinct elephants. And they have never been found in Greenland or that far north before. Researchers were able to get genetic information out of small damaged bits of DNA. The DNA also showed traces of animals, including geese, hairs, reindeer, and lemmings. I'm Ed Donahue. Ten 25 money news at 25 and

WABE 90.1 FM
"million years ago" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM
"Some animals are famous for the sounds they make, birds, and their songs, frogs, and their ribbits. But have you ever heard of a talkative turtle? Well, most turtles were thought to not make sounds at all until researchers went deep, as NPR's Laurel Walmsley reports. To turtles talk, what about other lesser known vertebrates? The answer is yes, according to a new paper in nature communications, presenting evidence that many species thought to be mute, do in fact, vocalize, and the researchers caught it on tape. Here's a southern New Guinea giant softshell turtle. And here's a Sicilian, a limbless amphibian that lives hidden underground. Gabrielle yurkovich Cohen is lead author of the paper, and an evolutionary biologist working on his PhD at the university of Zürich. The project got started after he read about a turtle in the Amazon making sounds. And he started wondering about the little sounds his own pet tortoises made. He got in touch with a researcher at his former university in Brazil. He developed a type of hydrophone, which is pretty much a microphone that goes underwater. And I started recording my own pets, and I actually heard them making a lot of noises. It was on. He traveled to 8 or 9 institutions in 5 countries on a quest to record animal species that were thought mostly to be mute. He recorded 50 kinds of turtles, as well as tuatara's, sicilians, and lungfish, and it turned out none of them were mute. Actually, every single NY recorder made sounds. He says the findings point to a common ancestor, some 400 million years ago. Neil Kelly is a paleontologist at Vanderbilt university. Sometimes it's surprising how much we still don't know about things that aren't necessarily uncommon, but live alongside us. Kelly says the paper's conclusion, mapping these vocalizations onto the evolutionary tree makes sense. He notes there are unique challenges to studying animal sounds, evolutionarily. It's very hard to trace that in the fossil record because sounds obviously don't fossilize. And most vocal equipment is soft tissue based. And it's important to note that sound production and hearing are different things. Snakes, for example, are famous for their hissing sounds, but they aren't thought to be able to hear themselves or each other hissing. And a turtle making sounds doesn't necessarily mean that it's communicating that way, says John Wayne's, an evolutionary biologist at the university of Arizona. I think there's some conflation of making sounds and acoustic communication. Jerkovic Cohen says that while they aren't sure what all the sounds mean. They used several strategies to identify sounds used for communication, such as using cameras to correlate sounds with behaviors that could demonstrate some kind of intention. Weems says the recording of these sounds is an important step toward further understanding. Yeah, you don't record these sounds and report them. There's no reason why anybody would study acute communication. And in those things, right? You don't even know that they're making sounds. The next step he says is figuring

WABE 90.1 FM
"million years ago" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM
"For many New England farmers, irrigation used to be a supplement for relatively regular rainfall. It takes boiling an hour and a half just to set up this giant sprinkler and hose creeps along at a really slow pace. Most days during the drought, he started watering at four 30 in the morning. He shuts it all down around 9 at night. That's after a full day of running a farm. Most summer crop harvests in Massachusetts will be smaller this year at a time when inflation has made supplies more expensive fuel costs and labor are really high, violent and other farmers have had to raise their prices. But heat and drought are also making the peaches sweeter this year, says Ben Clark E clarkdale farm in Deerfield, Massachusetts. In western and central mass, we have been in a pretty severe drought. It's biggest drought in my memory and my father has been farming for 50 years here. And this is the driest summer he's seen. Clark is president of the Massachusetts fruit growers association, which is looking ahead to the apple season, big business in New England, they'll be less to harvest Clark says, but there will be a crop. The trees in his fourth generation Orchard have been stressed, but older trees have deep roots. They find water clerks as. They're bound to do better than the new types of trees, he and other fruit growers are now planting. You know, more efficiency, higher yields, their small trees with a small root system and really need the water. They require an otherwise they won't survive. Some welcome rain fell earlier this week. If there's more of it, it could make all the difference for the winter squash and pumpkins that usually get picked off their vines in the fall. For NPR news, I'm Jill Kaufman in Gran beat, Massachusetts. And I'm Mitch Borden in Marfa, Texas. This week, storms have been passing over the state, providing communities with much needed rain. But that may just be a small reprieve as Texans continue to face the worst drought. The state's seen in over a decade. For state climatologist John Nielsen gammon, the severity of the drought is obvious. So we've seen crop failures, reduced yields, versus water restrictions in place and many areas of the state as aquifers and reservoir levels get low. In West Texas, months with little to no rain have left ranchers like Sarah McKinsey Evans in a tough spot. As we drive around her ranch, looking for cattle, you can see cacti and Mesquite are dying here. Here they are. But they'll move out.

KOMO
"million years ago" Discussed on KOMO
"Great team and the competitive pricing is the reason I went with general steel. Call 8 7 7 25 steel now. And you can get any of our popular quick construction structures, including a 40 by 60 foot building, or a 50 by 100 clear span building fast and easy. Call 8 7 7 25 steel that's 8 7 7 two 5 7 8 three three 5 8 7 7 25 steel. A federal judge is stopping President Biden from preventing any more oil drilling. Well, companies have waited nearly two years for this verdict. Now, no more federal blocks on their oil and drilling permits. Federal judge in Louisiana issuing a permanent injunction, stopping the Biden administration from stopping or delaying oil exploration on public land. The president wanted that hold until his agencies could review if they were necessary. Judge ruling, the president had no authority to pause the drilling the way he did. ABC's Andy field in Washington. Mexico has become the most dangerous country outside of a war zone for journalists. We did Roman is at least the 15th media worker killed so far this year, making 2022, perhaps the deadliest yet. Prosecutors say the host and columnist was gunned down in the capital of the southern state Guerrero. It's not yet clear if he was targeted for his profession, but violence against the press has escalated in recent years. The committee to protect journalists has faulted, quote, an ongoing climate of imputing that it says fuels these attacks. Conor finnegan ABC News, Mexico City. Drought is making history in Texas, dinosaur footprints which date back over a 113 million years have been discovered in the shrinking biloxi river in dinosaur valley state park. The park superintendent says the tracks came from an acrocanthosaurus, the footprints will likely get covered again though as soon as the river fills back up. This is ABC News, and this is northwest news radio 1000 FM 97 7. We check your traffic every ten minutes on the fours. Natalie Melendez has the latest in the tube in law group traffic center. Redmond to Seattle traffic on westbound 5 20. It's definitely looking tough from that collision near 405. It's going to take you 34 minutes and it looks every road south Federal Way and accident approaching two 88 is affecting what looks like both directions of that road, causing a lot of slowdowns and downtown Olympia fourth avenue one laid heading eastbound will be open until 7 a.m.

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"million years ago" Discussed on SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"Style or anything just a few degrees above the for this guy gets to live at. That's jonathan ellie the editor of train sky and telescope magazine. And don't forget if you're having trouble getting your copy strain sky and telescope magazine from your usual retailer. Because of the current lockdown on travel restrictions and always get a print or digital subscription. Have the magazine. Delivered directly letterbox. A inbox subscribing easy just go to sky and telescope dot com dot. Edu that skied telescope dot com dot edu. And you'll never be left in the dark again. And that's the show for now. Space-time is available every monday wednesday.

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"million years ago" Discussed on SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"Just someone just joined the dealt swanson but a couple of things that you can see up in this part of the sky. If you've been married oxides Too distant galaxies now we and on the program about Galaxies you can see only from the southern hemisphere gold. The magic clouds. And i'll get to those bit lighter but there mother galaxy you can see you can just make out with the naked. I if you have a good eyesight and doc adapted. I so i'd say you're gonna let yourself adaptable. Get used to the doctor. And you don't have much more pollution stand on the street or something but if you if you can manage back then you should be able to see just been a little smudge. There's the andromeda galaxy and the triangular them now. Both of these are huge. Galaxies are very lodge and together with the milky wise. I make up three largest galaxies. You know so called local group of galaxies getting a little bit of every day. It's coming towards him very very slowly in human terms but yeah it is a little bit You can just make out these two galaxies of tiny my just now. This might not sound impressive. But these are essentially the two most distant objects that you can ever see with your stars Knee buying space stems. Tens or hundreds of thousands of light is why we're talking. Millions a lot is why now of course tell us you can say much better than that and mississippi professional rock back towards the beginning of the new york times but with just an off. I these galaxies it so if you get yourself a osama or an of some kind you can go out and try and spot. The gal i remember when i saw the andromeda galaxy time i was really quite true because andromeda back in the old is just fiction and drama. There was little not the iranians used to come from so it always had this sort of cash. I about it and i just thought it was just to go out. And just see what's is the little smudge thinking that is furthest thing. I can't that anyone can see just with the united i and it's really quite amazing i think anyway. It's like looking at san francisco. Think well then a section is real. You think that it's in the cash. Hundreds of millions of kilometers away It's it's just amazing. I think anyway give it a try and see if you can spot in the eastern part of the sky because the constellation ryan putting his head over the horizon. We keep writing about this supposed to mention over time. And it's like really is impressive. So have them look at that one down in the south southern hemisphere because the southern cross. Now you can't really say this cross at the moment for most people because it's where it is. is way down south and it's sort of below the horizon for people at this time of year and it's upside down and If you could get really five south should be able to say about the the southern but most people do not on the other hand if you've started watching in the early hours of the morning the medieval early in the morning the full of rotated and the southern cross. We'll have coming to you and then you'll see a long on the left hand side about the way up from the southern colorado's now to the planets are only three bright ones that we can see this month as evening. Twilight comes on. You'd be able to see famous pie. And brighton and you just. It's it's the biggest thing when the sun goes down it's really quite beautiful and spectacular and at least for people who are round the of trade veron sydney why in the southern hemisphere and thereabouts saturn and jupiter a pretty much directly overhead at the moment this month so i'm never used to see as well after venus jupiter. The next thing and sentenced just brought next to the future in space terms. Few degrees away and You shouldn't have any trouble saying that. Mercury one of the other planets you can normally say it's watson the solar gladys hitting around the other side the sign from us so we can't miles has been around the other side of the sun for a while now and at least three three weeks also of nimby still offs into solid rock towards the end of the month. If you're very lucky go good clear. Eastern horizon then just before sunrise. You might be able to put. My eyes is a tiny little red.

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"million years ago" Discussed on SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"Epsilon gase together with stars mark cab algae neighb- steet and offering dramatically form. The astor ism or pattern of stars known as the great square of pegasus abani of brian. Naked eye stars shape like a huge square in the sky. One of the stars in the constellation is fifty one gase which was the first main sequence star beyond our son to be discovered to host the planet fifty one. Big gase is a satellite star located fifty point. Four five lie is away. Hits planet or more accurately exoplanet mini extra. Solar planet is designated fifty. One begets he. A the planet's discovery was announced in october. The six thousand nine hundred ninety five in the journal nature it was detected using the radio velocity or so-called wobble method with the scope used to detect very slight but regular doppler shift changes in the staff spectral lines caused by the gravitational pull of the planet pulling the style one way and then the other as the planet orbits around fifty one She is about half the mass of jupiter and orbits rabbits host Every four earth days at a distance of just seven million kilometers at the time a gas giant orbiting so closely around the star was something that had never been seen before and this led to the creation of a new category of planets known as hot jupiters a category of gas giants though to a foam further out from their host stars beyond the so called snow line but which then migrated inwards towards their current positions the discovery led to the realize that the gas giant vow solar system jupiter and saturn also migrated inwards closer to the sun during their early formation. Something which explains many of the features of our own solar system including the late heavy bombardment the asteroid belt and some unique characteristics of the ice giants neptune and uranus as well as the mass distribution of the foreign terrestrial world's mercury venus earth mars also visible in pegasus is the m fifteen or seven zero seven eight globular cluster which is located about thirty three thousand six hundred light years away globular class this a tight spheres containing thousands millions of stars all originally formed at the same time in the same molecular gessen. Dust cloud many thought to be the cause of small galaxies that have been cannibalized by larger ones. Our milky way galaxy contains at least one hundred fifty globular clusters. M15 is estimated to be around billion years old making it one of the oldest known globular classes and it contains an estimated hundred thousand stars making it. What are the most densely packed globular clusters in the milky way galaxy. Its core is undergoing contraction known as core collapse and it has a central density cost with an enormous number of stars which appear to be surrounding. What may will be essential blackhall m fifty in oregon dane's at least one hundred and twelve variable stars eight pulsars including one double neutrons assest them and the first ever planetary nebula found in globular kosta. Now if you're away from city lights you may notice a fuzzy patch in the sky. Right next to pegasus and that is the majestic giant spiral galaxy. M thirty one and drama and drama is the biggest galaxy in the local galactic group. It's located some two point. Five million light years away estimates suggest that contains over a trillion stars twice that of the milky way and is some two hundred twenty thousand light years across. If you can't see it too well don't worry. It's getting closer every day you see. The milky way and andromeda galaxy's are expected to collide in about three point seven to four point five billion years from now eventually merging former will be an you giant elliptical galaxy another case of galactic cannibalism in action now based on current students and drummer piece to have more all the stars in the milky way it also appears to have foulis. You stopped production. The milky way the milky way producing about one use solar mass star every year and the rate of supernova in the milky way is also a bad double the rate of andromeda and dromedaries sarabhai a- lodge and massive halo of heart gas estimated to contain about half the mass of the stars in the galaxy. This nearly invisible halo stretches about a million light years from its host galaxy that means that rich is almost halfway out to the milky way now usually a good pair of binoculars or a small backyard telescope. You'll even get to see. The dust lay in andromeda spiral arms. And it sprite central galactic core which contains a monster supermassive black hole now located slightly to the east and south of pegasus. You'll see the anti constellation of sadist. The great whales sea monster beat us city. Oh then it. Caters is the brightest star in the constellation. Seaters it's an orange giant located about ninety six light years away by the way that name didn't chaos well it means the whale's tail one of the other stars in status is mirror the first variable star evidence covered located some four hundred twenty light years away mirror pulsating brightness over a period of three hundred thirty two earth days changing in diameter from about four hundred to five hundred times the diameter of the sun city traditional cord men gather knows is a red hued giant star. Some two hundred and twenty light years away. Now it's actually a double star system with a secondary star ninety three city being a blue watch. Dial some four hundred and forty light is away. Another double star is gamma city. The head of the whale. The primary is a yellow star eighty-two light years from earth while the secondary so blue sta eleven point nine lie is away. The yellow dwarf tau city is the nearest sunlight side of the earth other than the sun. Okay looking south of sita's now and you'll see the brilliant star echina- which means the river's end as it marks. The end of the river danis every dentist is the six largest the modern constellations and the one that extends furthest in the sky from north. To south. echinacea is a binary system and the primary star offer. Kidney actually consists of two stars alpha rodney a in bay located some one hundred and thirty nine light years away off the ten brightest stars in the night sky. Alpha ridden is the hottest in blue collar. That's judah echina- being spectral type b blue main sequence star echina- also has an unusually rapid rotational velocity causing it become a played in shape the second star. The system is a smaller spectra. Tap a what style which orbits the primary at a distance of about twelve astronomical units and astronomical unit is the average distance between the earth and the sun about one hundred and fifty million kilometres or just over eight light minutes now if you follow era danis towards the aced you'll find the constellation. Orion million signposts in the southern summer northern winter skies to the west of iran is the constellation taurus the bull and located intourist his m one the crab nebula. It's the remnant of his style which chinese astronomy missouri exploded supernova back on the fourth of july the eight ten fifty four they recorded the sudden appearance of a new star on this guy shots at exactly the position of the crab nebula their record show the supernova repeated brighter than the planet venus for weeks on end before finally fading from view after about two years is the shock shockwave from the crab nebula supernova explosion is continuing to blast our words expanding at a rate of about five million kilometers per hour at the heart of the nebula is a rapidly spinning neutron star a pulsa rotating at some thirty pulses per second as it rotates it shines a beam like a lighthouse speaking sweeping across the galaxy. This beam emits radiation at all wavelengths from gamma rays and x rays right through ultraviolet optical and infrared even into the radio waves observations indicate the pulsar is slowing down and will full the just half its current rotational rate in the next thousand years november is also a great check at the plate or seven sisters one the nearest open star clusters to worth also known as m forty five. That played is located in the constellation. Taurus the bull at a composed mostly of hot blue white stars now depending on whose measurements you prefer the play. These are somewhere between one hundred eighteen in one hundred thirty seven six away a pass being around three point. Two six lie is the amazing thing about the play. These is that different cultures from vastly different parts of earth have all described the played in the same way as seven women seven sisters and this could possibly be some sort of ancient throwback to early human out of africa civilization just like october. November sees three meteo showers. There's the november orion ed's the towards in the leonids although peaking little tub the orion continuing to sprinkle dadge during the start november and it usually at the best during the wee small house before dawn they generated by the debris trail left behind by the comet halley and appear to radiate out from the direction of the constellation orion the hunter the towards meteo shower a generated by the comment anki and as their name suggests they appear to radiate out from the constellation taurus. The bowl inky and the towards a believed to be the remnants of a lodge comet which disintegrated between twenty and thirty thousand years ago breaking into several pieces and releasing material both by normal cometary ablation and also occasionally by close gravitational encounters with the earth and other planets effect. The comedy strip of material left by anke is the largest in the inner solar system being so spread out the eighth take several weeks to pass through it causing an extended period of meteorology activity compared to the much smaller periods of activity of other media xiao's and further gravitational interactions with jupiter. Have caused that. Towards to be segmented into separate northern seven streams the southern torrance usually lasts from around september the twenty fifth to november the twenty fifth while the northern towards go from october the twelfth to december the second but the towards they downside they quite diffuse usually producing about seven meteors an hour however they are composed of more massive material think of pebbles instead of dust grains and so they tend to produce a high percentage of very bright meteo zone as fireballs purchased as large meteoroid burn through the atmosphere. The southern torres put on their best show just after midnight on november the fifth. Finally there's the lien it's media show which will pick on the eighteenth the leeann. It's usually pretty reliable with fifteen miles an hour. However they have been known to occasionally produce spectacular media storms with showers in nineteen ninety. Nine two thousand and one and two thousand two produc- and amazing three thousand units meteors and our even more spectacular with the leonids mediocre share of nineteen sixty six which generated thousands of meteors per minute falling like illuminated rain. The leonids are usually picked up after midnight with pace carrying just before dawn. They produce by the debris stream from the comet temple title and as the name suggests the leonids radiate out from the constellation. Live the line. The leonids are a fast moving stream which encounter the path of earth at seventy two kilometers per second largely twitter about ten millimetres across canada. Massive half a gram and a renowned for generating bright meteors sinus estimate the annual liens meteo shower deposits between twelve and thirteen tons particles across the planet every year and our the look at the rest of the november night skies on sky watch. We're joined by jonathan alley the editor of strain sky and telescope magazine. Someone just about for in the southern hemisphere days are getting longer and brought her and everything. The weather's getting warmer winter. Of course it's coming up there in the north in the northern much for us at summer we have to contend with dialogue citing which sort of messes up on stock. Guys you get some people It doesn't actually change what you can say but changes the type of guy so anyway we can. We can deal with that. But let's see what's happening in the mid evening sky in november from wherever you go out there and have a look mid evening. The milky way is hugging the garage and particularly hugging the western horizon. So you need to clear sort of you know trees and buildings and houses and things and you'll see pile of scorpius because question school because of course copious just sticking up over the horizon to disappear from view. Scorpius is really year a constellation. That's when you get the best of it so now we're in the end of the year. It's hearing the calculation said deteriorate knicks. Still say that for the moment above the western horizon when you look towards secretary looking in the direction of the center of our milky way galaxy up in the north if you look in the north part of the sky for us in the seventeen this guy in the nova industry that it's still with a bunch of big constellations that don't have many brought stars even talking pegasus pisces. There's cost to mexico saints. Which is the wild aries. Ram you my called arrogance which is just the very long joined. The doctor fairest It's very long thing you mean you wouldn't even know it..

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"million years ago" Discussed on SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"To turn our eyes to the skies and check out the celestial faith in november on sky watch november eleventh and penultimate month of the year in the julian anga. Gory and calendars it. Retained its name from the latin of nine when january and february were added to the roman calendar high in the northern skies of november. Your family constellation. Pegasus the misbehave and the trask mythological winged horse who was born from the blood of medusa the gorgon after she was slain by perseus. The brightest star in pegasus is the orange supergiant. Epson pa-.

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"million years ago" Discussed on SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"Beijing is denying reports that it's just tested a new hypersonic cruise missile. Instead claiming the test involved a new reusable spacecraft the pentagon claims the missile was launched on a long march rocket before circling the earth in low orbit and then reentering the atmosphere and narrowly missing its intended target however beijing insists that tests simply trout a new reusable spacecraft. Having said that china unveiled st seventeen medium range hypersonic cruise missile in twenty nine teen. It has a range of around two thousand kilometers in can carry a thermonuclear warhead. However this new hypersonic missile. If that's what it was whatever. Foul long range blurring the line between ballistic missiles which fly high space space an opt to reach the targets to sonically and hypersonic cruise missiles which hyper sonically lowered down in the atmosphere potentially reaching their targets before anti missile systems can respond thereby making them difficult if not impossible than we say it. In china alone. Russia recently test-fired. Its new zircon. Hypersonic cruise missile from a submerged submarine and moscow has also been deploying. Its uniquely capable avangard hypersonic missiles into active duty. The evan god can flap to mac twenty-seven changing course and altitude in mid flight..

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"million years ago" Discussed on SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"A new study suggests that the earth may have tipped over on its side. Eighty four million years ago the phenomenon known as true polo wanda till it's planet relative to the spin axis causing the geographic location of the north and south pole to change or wonder it happens. Because the mass distribution of the earth isn't sporadically metric and the earth is three different moments of inertia dominated by the spin axis. So what are we talking about. Will the earth consists of a solid metallic core surrounded by a liquid metallic arkansas and that's encased in a mostly solid mantle with a thin crust on the surface the entire planet spins once every day like a top on its axis through. It's solid in a core that because the albacore is liquid the surrounding mantle and crust can literally slip and slide all around the place dominated by the location of the most amount of mass density and that would normally be subjecting oceanic plates and massive volcano which preferentially hang around ninety degrees to the spin axis. Elwood's around the equator and of course whether in water movements can also induce small changes but scientists aren't sure how often true polo wanda happened to planet earth. Now a new study reported in the journal nature communications suggests the planet underwent true polar wander around eighty four million years ago the findings based on bacteria fossils in limestone samples in central italy's appenine mountains. Dating back to the late cretaceous between one hundred million and sixty five million years ago. These bacteria contain tiny magnetic crystals and they formed chains aligned to the planet's magnetic fields bus providing a record of the planets orientation the researchers found a twelve degree southwards tilt in the italian rocks thus the earth itself iran eighty four million years ago which apparently corrected itself within about five million years. The findings paint a new picture of just how ephemeral the relationship is between the earth spin axis and its moments of nurture this space. Time stole the com- nassar's calling for new players. The flight crew to the international space station and china is denying persistent reports that it's just test that a new hypersonic cruise missile claiming instead the test involved a new type of reusable spacecraft all that most doda come.

Mark Levin
Kentucky High School Male Students Dressed in Lingerie, Gave Staff Lap Dances
"Go Breaking investigation underway after Kentucky high school hosts a drag queen pageant featuring male teens in lingerie giving lap dances to staff Now look I'm not gonna sit here and pretend that when I was in high school some of the football players for Halloween didn't dress up like cheerleaders They did and it was funny And I got it I appreciated the humor This seems to have some of that element but I could never in a million years And I went to north Bergen high school go bruins And I could not imagine mister bot mister wolf all the rest of those guys these are big buff dudes Doing what's in this picture And I'll tweak this out so you could see it At rich valdes on the social media But these guys are clapping while these kids are in their underwear giving them lap dances massaging their abdomens These are students to teachers Now I've got to tell you I have a high school junior If she were to do this to a gym teacher we'd have a huge problem So what's the difference if it's a boy doing it dressed as a girl And we've already seen what happens with boys dressed as girls in Virginia I mean these things are crazy but listen to this This is from today from 6 o'clock I printed it at 6 o'clock Custom made blah blah blah it's an ad Investigations underway after photos surfaced on social media depicting a homecoming event at a Kentucky high school where male students partook in a man pageant The male students seen in photos taken at hazard school's homecoming week festivities on Tuesday were scant clothing including women's lingerie and gave staff members lack dances in the gymnasium occur according to the courier

AP News Radio
66 million-year-old triceratops skeleton, world's biggest, goes for $7.7M
"The biggest Triceratops skeleton in the wild nine is big John has been sold for seven point seven million dollars to a private collector in Paris the enormous skeleton estimated to be over sixty six million years old was found in twenty fourteen in South Dakota big John names off to the owner of the land where it was found is certified by the Guinness world records as the largest documented skeleton of a Triceratops at twenty three feet long the seven point seven million dollar price tag was a record for Europe although it was bought by U. S. buyer who wished to remain anonymous last year a Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton reached almost thirty two million dollars in an auction in New York becoming the most expensive console at the sold I'm

Live on Sunday Nights its Bill Cunningham
NASA Confirms Mars Region Had Thousands of Ancient Volcanic Eruptions
"New evidence shows massive ancient volcanoes erupted on Mars The so called super eruptions occurred in a region of northern Mars called Arabia Terra over a period of 500 million years dating back approximately four billion years. The news was published in a paper in the journal Geophysical Research Letters this summer and said researchers who studied the topography of mineral composition of the region made the discovery. The research said each one of these eruptions would have had a significant climate impact. Patrick Wheelie, a geologist at Nasa's Goddard Space Flight Center, led the Arabia Terra Analysis said to release that it's possible release gas made the atmosphere thicker or block the sun and made the atmospheric holder modelers of bars say they still have work to do to try to fully understand the impact of the volcanoes. Ted Lindner

The Crime Cafe
A highlight from Interview with Crime Writer Mark Edward Langley: S. 7, Ep. 6
"I used to love be booksellers. When did you do there. Oh lord you're going back to nineteen eighty you know my my parents and family moved down there with my dad. Got transferred and It was as close by. I a job there. You know and ended up for the tunnel. Always there Started out in the back room. Receiving the books getting them all the labels and stickers and stuff and putting them out and then got beyond the register in that kind of stuff you know so ended up stocking and working that i love being down there because it was right down the street from the windmill dinner theater and a lot of actors came through doing plays there and a few of my she stop in the store to buy some stuff excellent but i got instilled in reading. Men was watching spenser for hire series on television. And one of the ladies that worked percent if you love the show who should read the books to read in the books and behold from their own. Isn't it interesting. How things often start with television I know that my love's mystery started with watching honey west way back in the day now going back more. Yeah but yeah. It's just funny. I'll have like that. You know when i got into reading rubber parker than but display in john d. Macdonald's just went from there and you know is started loving whatever. I can get my hands on all. Great stuffs well Tell us about arthur nikai. He's an interesting character. An excellent reign of former member of the special ice unit and a native american correct. Exactly how did you come up with this character not to mention his wife. Who's a news reporter. I thought that was interesting. Please tell us more. Sure i mean i. I started thinking about developing i. I took a two week vacation out there. And i traveled the route. That's in the book. So whatever i saw one that way dictated into a tape recorder and came back and transpose. It all down. You know this sort of developing characters and backstories the characters and I stumbled across. I wanted to be different in a lot of ways and other writers out there writing about that and not not as far as police goes or whatever it may be you know. But i developed arthur nikai based on my love for our kalashnikov by the native american flute player. And at the time. One of my friends. Where i worked a million years ago. It seems like now Whose first thing with arthur. So i liked the way that rain together. So i use that they'll to character that As far as his. Wife sharon goes. I actually was texting back and forth in the mornings with one of the local reporters in the nbc station here and chicago and Wanted to ask her some questions about you. Know what you give up to have this life you have. I wanted to make her real and things that happen In their life once you have that job while things you don't get to do You miss a lot of birthdays. Anniversaries you're always on the air doing something you know so. She helped out a lot with that. And i developed that curator of the other ones of jake. Bill cody which is loosely based on my grandfather large barrel chested man. You know With that so i start molding these people into what i i have now needs really interesting the way your travels informed your fiction writing. So yeah i. What was the whole plan to do that. Because you know you can't just look online and find pictures and things and do things and men do searches. you have to be there. And that's what i found out a long time ago. I told on hillerman once at the her father helped me understand the importance of descriptive sentencing. You know surrounding sect place I think robert parker helped me develop a dialogue kind of conversations in books. So i use those along with that. I had to be there. You have the smell that you have to see to taste it and feel the heat feel the cold in order to convey that to the reader in the book and a lot of people who have read my books feel like they're right there in the situation in the area. I love that.

The Mason Minute
It Was A Tuesday (MM #3825)
"The NASA minute. With Kevin mason. 20 years ago, our lives changed, a day that will live in infamy, at least for today's current generation. But I heard a stat the other day that just blew my mind. Some of the kids who were killed in Afghanistan towards the end of our occupation there were born after 9 11. They had always lived in a world where we were fighting the Taliban and ISIS and occupying Afghanistan. They didn't know what was like beforehand. Those of us living all remember what happened on that Tuesday morning. And how our lives change and adjusted, and how we all came together for a brief moment. I did a lot of activities with my radio station back then. So I was out and about amongst a lot of people. And we all came together, and now 20 years later, we're further apart than ever before. Somebody said the reason we're all fighting each other right now is we have no common enemy. 20 years ago on a Tuesday we had a common enemy, and now today, the enemies within. For the last 20 years, our lives have changed. How do we go from what we experience then, what we're experiencing now? It may have been a Tuesday, but it feels like a million years ago.

The Mason Minute
It Was A Tuesday (MM #3825)
"The NASA minute. With Kevin mason. 20 years ago, our lives changed, a day that will live in infamy, at least for today's current generation. But I heard a stat the other day that just blew my mind. Some of the kids who were killed in Afghanistan towards the end of our occupation there were born after 9 11. They had always lived in a world where we were fighting the Taliban and ISIS and occupying Afghanistan. They didn't know what was like beforehand. Those of us living all remember what happened on that Tuesday morning. And how our lives change and adjusted, and how we all came together for a brief moment. I did a lot of activities with my radio station back then. So I was out and about amongst a lot of people. And we all came together, and now 20 years later, we're further apart than ever before. Somebody said the reason we're all fighting each other right now is we have no common enemy. 20 years ago on a Tuesday we had a common enemy, and now today, the enemies within. For the last 20 years, our lives have changed. How do we go from what we experience then, what we're experiencing now? It may have been a Tuesday, but it feels like a million years ago.

Everything Everywhere Daily
The Geologic Record: The Phanerozoic Eon
"Fenner azoic is divided up into three eras the paleozoic the mesozoic and the senate zoellick the first period in the paleozoic is the one you might have heard of the cambridge in the cambrian is noted for the sudden appearance of complex lifeforms and animals in the fossil record. This is known as the cambrian explosion. Here's where you'll see many of the trial bites which are really common fossils in fact the appearance of trial bites pretty much defines where the cambrian appears in the geologic record all complex life that we know of in the cambrian was in the see. Nothing yet had come onto land of all the periods. I'll be going over. This is one of the most important to have a grasp on it spans. About fifty five million years from five hundred forty million years ago to about four hundred eighty five million years ago after the cambridge incomes the division period it lasted for forty one million years and went from four hundred and eighty five million years ago to about four hundred forty. Four million years ago it's noted for its continued by diversification fish first appeared during this period and probably the first fish with jaws. These were the first vertebrate animals. There still wasn't any animal life on land yet in order vision that we know of there were lots of volcanoes in meteors during this period as well by some estimates over one hundred times the number of meteor strikes that the earth experiences today the next period is the celerion it goes from four hundred and forty million years ago to four hundred nineteen million years ago what separates the division and the celerion is the or division celerion extinction event. This is the first of the major extinction events in earth's history and the second largest in terms of the number of species that disappeared from the fossil record. The celerion sees the appearance of the very first vascular plants on land as well as the first arthur pod type creatures on land. I should also note that as we get closer to the present the information we have become better the divisions in time become more. Precise and there are more subdivisions. Most of which. I'm not going to be going into. After the slurry incomes the devonian which extended from four hundred nineteen million years ago. Two three hundred fifty nine million years

Newsradio 970 WFLA
"million years ago" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA
"That's all they know. Don't know that photosynthesis requires 20 nutrients. That's a lot. Well, yeah, and I can rattle them off or if you want. No, that's okay. That's okay. Let me read them off. No, no, that's right. There's 20 nutrients. Okay, there's 11 Macronutrients. And nine um Micronutrients. Okay, And these are all mixture of minerals and vitamins. And meanwhile citizen and all kinds of stuff right? But the plants need them if any one of them is missing or if any of them is low. Plant cannot do photosynthesis and the carbon dioxide goes up. And then the fire start well when the fire starts. Okay, the carbon dioxide will burn. That's why it's burning 50 ft above the crown of the trees because it's the carbon dioxide in the air this burning now here's what about global warming? That goes back to the gaming of time, and it's kind of like a parked car in a parking lot with the windows rolled up in the summer day. The Sun's rays go through the windows, but the heat cannot leave. Can't get out so we can't get out. And so it builds up heat in the car, and I'll fry. You're kidding your dog and all that kind of stuff. Okay. The same thing is true with the carbon dioxide. Gas. It farms a sheet over the earth. And so the sun's rays go through it, but it can't get out. And so that's global warming. And so why is the carbon dioxide going up is because Of fossil fuels know how many fossil fuels were there 500,000 years ago. So what's your recommendation? Okay, Well, let me tell you one more thing I said 500,500 million years ago. 500 million years ago, George.

News, Traffic and Weather
Fossil Leaves May Reveal Climate in Last Era of Dinosaurs
"Clues about how our planet responded to climate change. In the past, researchers are using the Smithsonian's collection of gingko leaves. They say pores in leaves contain information about the atmosphere 100 million years ago, and they're most interested in so called hothouse periods when they believe carbon levels and temperatures were significantly higher than today. And that includes the last era of the dinosaurs before most species became extinct. Alright, let's check

Science Friction
You Can't Handle the (Scientific) Truth!
"I am in the very fortunate position of being able to set the scene for tonight's debate and that's actually very easy. Because the scientific truth is forty-two diet nari according to date thought a supercomputer in douglas adams's hitchhikers guide to the galaxy that spent seven and a half million years competing the answer to the ultimate question of life the universe and everything the answer to that question and therefore the ultimate scientific truth is forty two so i mean i think we don russ semi point obvious. Is that often. The truth is not very helpful tight. The ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter. That's mathematical constant. It's a scientific truth. And when it's expressed in decimal form it has an infinite number of decimal places but but the question is actually how are an infinite number of decimal places useful to us an approximation of twenty two seven three point. One pfoa is what we can actually use in practice. We don't need a want the truth. We want something we can apply to achieve what we need to solve problems to build things to ensure the well being of our children so tonight ice with my esteemed colleagues greta and jack we will convince you that the scientific truth is not helpful to humanity particularly now and arguably more than any other time in human history. The truth is not useful for tackling the global challenges that we currently face. Greta will show you how without optimism and hype in our scientific messaging about climate change. People retreat from the truth. They feel disempowered and helpless. Jack will round out argument by showing how the relationship between science and society is changing

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
Astronomers Zero in on Source of the Impactor That Wiped out the Dinosaurs
"A new study claims the impacter belief to a wiped out seventy five percent of life on earth sixty six million years ago including all the non avian. Dinosaurs most likely came from the other. Half of the main asteroid built between mars and jupiter. The findings reported in the journal lakers came as a surprise to scientist as it's a regional space previously not thought produced. Many earth impact is however computer modeling from the southwest research institute in san antonio texas has shown that the process is that the large asteroids to earth from that region occur at least ten times more frequently than previously thought. They've also found that. The composition of these bodies does match. What scientist snow about the dinosaur. Killing impacter researches combined computer models of asteroid evolution observations of known asteroids to investigate the frequency of so-called chicks lube events over sixty six million years ago a body estimated to be around ten kilometers wide. Signed into what. He's now mexico's yucatan peninsula for me. One hundred and fifty kilometer wide crater known these days as the chicks solid greater and it was this huge blast which triggered the mass extinction event that ended the reign of the dinosaurs. The last few decades much has been learned about the chicks lube event. every advance is latina questions. One of the study's authors william bucky from the southwest research institute says too critical questions remain unanswered. Firstly what was the source of the impacter and secondly how often do such impact events occur on earth to probe that sheikh salah be impact jealous examined sixty six year. Old rock samples found on land and within drako's the results indicate the impact that was similar to carbonaceous contract meteorite that some of the most pristine material in the solar system.

Poker With Presence
How to Use Fear to Your Advantage at the Poker Table
"At hyper. Speeds is what kept us alive knowing that the tiger was there and sensing that and then running away much faster than usual or fighting off some other animal who was attacking her child. Those were the things that kept the species going before we had all this technology and we developed much easier ways to live and so the programming. These days is very much the same as it was one million years ago we are wired to always seek out and look for what's wrong. It's why quite often when you're having a really good session you might start to think. Oh i wonder when. I'm going to start running back or maybe i should go ahead and lock up the win because you're programming your evolution as a human being is looking for the possible dangers. That could take away the fruit. The money that you have collected so far in the session so one thing to know about fear is that you can't make it go away. If anybody tells you that they can make your fear completely go away. They're lying to you. It's not possible because it's wired so deeply into who you are as a person that that's just never going to be a thing now what you can do though as you can learn how to be okay with it. Accept it for what it is recognized that it's happening and then do things that will allow you to relax more completely into the moment knowing that it's just fear. It's just my physiological body response to something that i'm experiencing around what could possibly go wrong. And so once you get more friendly once you start to accept that into play with fear as something. That is a part of you rather than as the enemy that you need to get away from. Now you're creating a system now you're creating a structure where you can go with it. You can move through it. You stop resisting and you make fear. Be something that you can actually use to your advantage so what you can do eventually is get to a point where you can bring enough presence acceptance and self love to your own experience of fear and how your body and your nervous system are taking care of you when you can create that structure of really accepting that this is an essential part of you will now. You can take that energy you can get on top of almost like a surfer riding a wave and you can channel that energy into even higher levels of awareness higher levels of performance than you. Otherwise would without that energy without that fear and the key is recognizing that it's there because the worst thing that can happen to you at the poker tables for you to be scared free to be experiencing fear and have no idea that that's what's happening. That's when you start to make those bad bluffs. That's when you start to get to pass it. That's when you start to go into all of your old patterns and you have no idea that it's all triggered by the fear but once you can become a person who recognizes instantly. That fear is part of the equation is part of your experience right now. You can work with that. You can work around it. You can start to do things to bring presence in connection to go with the fear and make your way through the game and navigate really cleanly so those of you who resist emotion. Those of you who resist that feeling. Fear is a part of your natural process. You're always going to keep bumping up against this issue. You're always going to keep going into your patterns and not knowing it until later when you look back and say oh man wish. I hadn't done that. Oh i can see now. That i was scared. So the skill that you're going to need to learn if you wanna be somebody who is very high level in terms of your ability to perform under the highest amounts of stress is simply recognizing that you're scared

AP News Radio
Oldest Fossils of Animals May Be in Canada Rocks, Study Says
"Also discovered in Canada maybe the earliest record of animal life on earth in a report published in the journal nature a geologist who's been excavating in the remote northwest territories of Canada discovered rocks that contain three dimensional structures believed to be ancient sponge skeletons the rock layer eight hundred ninety million years old it's three hundred fifty million years older than the oldest undisputed sponge parcels that were previously found other researchers will be vetting the findings of geologist Elizabeth Turner but experts say it's a stunning fine they could greatly improve our understanding of early animal evolution it would show that the first animals involved before a time when there was enough oxygen to reach a level scientists once thought was necessary for animal life I'm Jennifer king

Artificial Intelligence (AI Podcast) with Lex Fridman
"million years ago" Discussed on Artificial Intelligence (AI Podcast) with Lex Fridman
"I knew my students really well and they would ask questions about this and they were always curious because heather and i seem to have a good relationship and many of them knew both of us so they would talk to us about this. If i was advising somebody i would say. Do not bypass the possibility that what you are supposed to do is find somebody worthy somebody who can handle it. Somebody who you are compatible with. And you don't have to be perfectly compatible. It's not about dating until you find the one. It's about finding somebody who's underlying values and viewpoint are complimentary to yours. Fish that you fall in love if you find that person opt out together get out of this damn system. That's telling you what sophisticated to think about love and romance and sex. Ignore it together right. That's the key and are believe you'll end up laughing in the end. If you do it you'll discover. Wow that's a hellscape that i opted out of and this thing i opted into complicated difficult worth nothing that's worth. It is ever not difficult so we should. We should even just skip the whole statement about difficult. Yeah all right. I just i wanna be honest. It's not like oh it's you know it's nonstop joy now. It's frigging complex but But worth it no question in my mind. Is there advice outside of love. The can give the young people. You were a million years ago. A professor is there advice you can give to young people high schoolers college students up about career about life. Yeah but it's not. They're not going to like it. It's not easy. The operational is so and and this was a problem. When i was a college professor to people would ask me what they should do. Should they go to graduate school. I had almost nothing useful to say because the the job market and the market of you know pre job training and all of that. These things are so distorted and corrupt that. I didn't wanna point anybody to anything right. Because it's all broken and i would tell them that but i would say that results in a kind of a meta level advice that i do think is useful. You don't know what's coming you don't know where the opportunities will be. You should invest in tools rather than knowledge right to the extent that you can do things. You can repurpose that no matter what the future brings to the extent that you know if you as a robot guy right you've got the skills of a robot guy. Now if civilization failed and the stuff of robot building disappeared with it you'd still have the mind a robot guy and the mind of a robot. Guy can retool around all kinds of things. Whether you're you know forced to work with the you know new fibers that are made into ropes writing. Your your mechanical mind would be useful in all kinds of places so invest tools like that that can be.

Lex Fridman Podcast
"million years ago" Discussed on Lex Fridman Podcast
"I knew my students really well and they would ask questions about this. And they were always curious because heather and i seem to have a good relationship and many of them new of us so they would talk to us about this. If i was advising somebody i would say. Do not bypass the possibility that what you are supposed to do is find somebody worthy somebody who can handle it. Somebody who you are compatible with. And you don't have to be perfectly compatible. It's not about dating until you find the one. It's about finding somebody who's underlying values and viewpoint are complimentary to yours. Fish that you fall in love if you find that person opt out together get out of this damn system. That's telling you what sophisticated to think about love and romance and sex. Ignore it together right. That's the key and are believe you'll end up laughing in the end. If you do it you'll discover. Wow that's a hellscape that i opted out of and this thing i opted into complicated difficult worth nothing that's worth. It is ever not difficult so we should. We should even just skip the whole statement about difficult. Yeah all right. I just i wanna be honest. It's not like oh it's you know it's nonstop joy now. It's frigging complex but But worth it no question in my mind. Is there advice outside of love. The can give the young people. You were a million years ago. A professor is there advice you can give to young people high schoolers college students up about career about life. Yeah but it's not. They're not going to like it. It's not easy. The operational is so and and this was a problem. When i was a college professor to people would ask me what they should do. Should they go to graduate school. I had almost nothing useful to say because the the job market and the market of you know pre job training and all of that. These things are all so distorted and corrupt that. I didn't wanna point anybody to anything right. Because it's all broken and i would.

RiYL
"million years ago" Discussed on RiYL
"I haven't gretz about that sharing that story now. When i when i think about it i like maybe i should have not shared it. Because maybe my father and my mother wouldn't have wanted me to share it so yeah. I thought that it was interesting. Story to tell. But now. I regret it now. I feel like maybe i should have kept to myself so i think maybe across the line. No one told me that no one has said this to me. That crossed the line. But i feel now that maybe i said too much. Some maybe too much about someone else's story that was someone else's story that i was telling in. Maybe it was not my place to tell this particular story about the harpsichord. What was that process of writing that book like a really telling revealing some things about yourself in a way that that you hadn't really before it feels like a million years ago in and it took me a really long time to write it. Initially it started as just a tour diary and it was. I took very detailed notes on a tour thinking that i would make it into a book. And that was my. That was my plan. Just the tour diary. And then when i Gonna publisher my editor. There wanted me to try weaving in these stories from my past and my career. And so that's when i started to think of all of the things that i could talk about and i don't know now i just think like maybe my initial idea was was the better idea. It may be the purity of the tour. Diary would have been a better idea. And i i do. I have mixed feelings about how the book shaped up to be what it is. I maybe i did say too much. It's kind of cliche but but probably cliche for reason. Do you find your own. Songwriting to be kind of a form of therapy of the way of channelling and dealing with some of these more complex personal issues. I think san writing. Stay away from me to try and figure out what's going on inside of me. Because i i'm not really in touch with my feelings. I don't i don't understand.

WNYC 93.9 FM
"million years ago" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"And they lock the respiratory system into place And this is called so a bird lung is really elaborate. Every part is separated, Spread out. And super specialized and the blood air barrier that oxygenating membrane. It's protected by special ribs and bolted to the spine, which means it can be center and therefore transfer oxygen into the blood more efficiently. Emma has found that dinosaur lungs were structured in a similar way. So returning to dinosaurs. That's direct evidence that they had the infrastructural framework to send the blood air barrier and having lungs like that, like birds would basically mean that in the low oxygen environment of the Triassic what 220 million years ago, dinosaurs would have had a huge advantage. Yes, so the advantage of having the thin Good air barrier is that oxygen can more easily cross the membrane and then dinosaurs could breathe under the low oxygen environment of the Triassic. And being able to breathe more easily means they get hunt more easily run around more easily reproduced more easily and ultimately just survive more easily in the Triassic period, and they could out compete mammals, potentially lizards and everybody else that they live with, and not environment. So lungs might be the key to understanding how dinosaurs dominated the Earth. Kind of amazing. I mean, I'm guessing that we humans, though, would never have.

KQED Radio
"million years ago" Discussed on KQED Radio
"They lock the respiratory system into place. And this is called so a bird lung is really elaborate. Every part is separated, spread out and super specialized. And the blood air barrier that oxygenating membrane. It's protected by special ribs and bolted to the spine, which means it can be center and therefore transfer oxygen into the blood more efficiently. And Emma has found that dinosaur lungs were structured in a similar way. So returning to dinosaurs, That's direct evidence that they had the infrastructural framework to send the blood Arab area And having one's like that, like birds would basically mean that in the low oxygen environment of the Triassic what 220 million years ago, dinosaurs would have had a huge advantage. Yes, so the advantage of having the thin Blood air barrier is that oxygen can more easily cross the membrane and then dinosaurs could breathe under the low oxygen environment of the Triassic. And being able to breathe more easily means they get hunt more easily run around more easily reproduced more easily and ultimately just survived more easily in the Triassic period, and they could out compete mammals, potentially lizards and everybody else that they live with, and not environment. So lungs might be the key to understanding how dinosaurs dominated the earth. It's kind of amazing. I mean, I'm guessing that we humans, though, would never have made it back then. So I think if a human was in the Triassic, we would not last longer than perhaps a few seconds. That's paleontologist Emma Shatner. She researches and teaches animal anatomy and you can find her full talk at Ted. Come on. On the show today, ideas about the power of breath. I'm a new She's.

Deeply Upsetting
"million years ago" Discussed on Deeply Upsetting
"Consider rephrasing any possible way besides just. Don't my god me googling. Beautiful teenage actress. No i'm actively part of the problem. And now i'm also thinking about the fact that i guarantee that you looked up on your computer. The research for our last minnesota are minor upset about armie hammer like ethical cannibalism ideal. Be weird like if like reason history. They look they're gonna find ethical. Cannibalism group like. I'm searching for my people. And then also weird penises kind. He should have been fired like fucking yesterday million years ago. I just i'm desperate. I am desperate that if for some reason you have to get fired. Obviously don't want you to get. Don't want that for you. But i am desperate that if you do happen to get fired you come into your boss's office and there's a print out of your cups i would never ever get over that. I think i would die on the spot. Like i would just transcend and like fucking leave this mortal coil. I think i would. Then i mean i would accept it. There would be no arguing. That we i would like gas an email out with the links to those episodes as i was packing up my stuff and like walking out and walking into the ocean into the done done for. Do you explain that. Like what do you really wanna use the company as a reference rate. Oh oh yeah you mean the weird animal pitas guy and he's great great worker. Don't let them your computer. Also let him near a young boy between you're on a watch list for sure. I'm just looking at my future at some point being written up like in the police station getting written up on the sex offender list and then being just like look like no okay. I know that it was just like this is a technicality that you're on the list and we'd be like i know a good officer if i may being on back. My pitch up is really a mental exercise. I beg you to actor between twelve and fifteen without googling it you can't you don't know their names using the bathroom. And then he gets you see him getting arrested coming out. I was just looking..