? Who doesn't like dinosaurs? 49% of Britons say they love or like dinosaurs, and while 47% are indifferent, only 3% say they dislike or hate them18-24yr olds: 63% love/like dinosaurs25-49yr olds: 58%50-64yr olds: 46%65+yr olds: 29%Men: 54%Women: 44%… pic.twitter.com/MbSVkDacmR
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They do like dinosaurs - aren't old people all supposed to be Con or Ref?
When I was young I collected the Brooke Bond set of tea cards ‘Prehistoric Monsters’ Fascinated me.
Love a Tanystropheus or an Eryops or a Glyptodon
https://www.thetimes.com/world/us-world/article/presidential-election-results-2024-trump-harris-g2vsjqzh7
Pleased to see brontosaurus still retains a fair bit of popularity, despite having been declared non-existent. I suppose the gap between a dinosaur which lived and died millions of years ago and one which never lived at all is only slight.
Fun fact: the gap in time between Stegosaurus and Tyrannosaurus is significantly larger than the gap in time between Tyrannosaurus and humans.
@SkyNews
Musk hints 80-hour-a-week DOGE job for 'high-IQ revolutionaries' will be unpaid
https://x.com/SkyNews/status/1857450870012604558
Serving beef at a Diwali event would be insensitive, but while some Hindus are dry/vegetarian others are not so having a choice available is entirely fitting with being respectful.
Unless anyone was forcefed non-beef meat or alcohol, it is upto individual choice whether people consume or not so long as there's vegetarian and non alcoholic options available.
I really wish the bbc wouldn't use the adjective "tragic" to describe a horrendous knife attack murder by 4 young thugs on 2 innocent victims of mistaken identity. I prefer the words vicious, murderous, callous and a total and utter waste of the 2 lives.
"In 2024, Kamala Harris did worse among Black voters than Joe Biden did in 2020. She did worse among female voters. She did much worse among Latino voters. She did much worse among young voters.
She did manage to outperform Biden among two groups: affluent people and white voters, especially white men. If there is one sentence that captures the surprising results of this election, it is this one from the sociologist Musa al-Gharbi: “Democrats lost because everyone except for whites moved in the direction of Donald Trump this cycle.” Going into this campaign, I did not have that one on my bingo card."
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/14/opinion/identity-groups-politics.html
Finn Russell and Antoine Dupont targeted as players offered double-your-money to join breakaway league
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/rugby-union/2024/11/15/dupont-russell-targeted-rugby-breakaway-league-money/
To summarise, with apologies for the language: women are being raped at such scale by the RSF that suicide statistics are on the rise as women choose to take their own lives rather than fall into the hands of RSF
fighters. Is it any surprise that people want to migrate away from this?
Of course a reasonable response is that sexual violence is such an incredibly common historical fact that it is the modern western world that is unusual for its relative safety for women. That may be true, but I find it grossly unjustifiable to argue that this relative safety should be open only to those who happen to be born in the right part of the world.
This isn't really an argument for migration - I think it is a really poor solution for everyone concerned - but those who simultaneously argue against migration and against development support for places like Sudan are criminals, in my view.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk_Tuah
(Genius naming, by the way.)
(My youngest's favourite dinosaur, as a kid.)
So for the oldies, dinophilia is strictly for the birds.
But its neck was my favourite slide as a kid!
New evidence suggests it did exist.
*I know they are ALL old, but I'm referring to when they were dug up and named, and possibly others had already named the species.
Synonyms for things are still real and still exist, it's just not the correct scientific name.
But I think now the idea that brontosaurus are apatosaurus is no longer the scientific belief.
At least that's what I thought. But in looking it up, it appears I'm out of date. For over a century, it was thought not to havce existed, but in 2015 it was decided it was different to the apatosaurus after all.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brontosaurus
https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/2014-10-23
Wish I knew where my book was now.
He also has a runner (Protektorat) at Cheltenham tomorrow which would return 140/1 for the double
https://tyrrellmuseum.com/
At Drumheller a few hours north of Calgary in the Canadian badlands. It has two additional great attractions:
1. It hosts the main collection of the Burgess Shale fossils - perhaps the most important and influential assemblage ever found.
2. It has the name Tyrrell - which all Bladerunner fans will of course recognise.
Dinos, Hallucigenia and Replicants. What more could you ask for.
Old fossils of the world unite!
Like determining someone's age from whether they like Ewoks or not. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwAEhhd80SQ
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c5yr22qq5q8o
Blimey.
this context will destroy the ethical basis of our nation states as we take more and more extreme measures to try to stop people arriving here, having escaped from there.
They were largely considered extremely big, lumbering stupid monsters when I was little.
We've learned a heck of a lot more about how varied and superbly adapted they were.
Fave dino fact.
The T Rex lived closer to the present day than they did to the Stegosaurus.
I suppose we ought to be grateful that we didn't get any Flintstone family members or Neanderthals listed.
*that is a neutral observation, based on public understanding of science as mediated by Jurassic Park, and not a personal opinion of mine about that fine and upstanding profession, seeing as I don't want to be kicked off PB*
Were they animals or do they count as birds?
Had a very pleasant visit there earlier this year and a schlep over to Worth Matravers for the pub (more fossils in it, and not talking about us) and the dinosaur footprints in the NT-preserved quarry near by.
How old are you???
Jorie Graham @joriegraham.bsky.social
·
4h
Literacy rate in United States:
•21% of adults are illiterate
•54% of adults have a literacy level below 6th grade
• Illiteracy such a serious pb that 130 million adults are now unable to read a simple story to their children.
•44% of American adults do not read a book in a year
https://bsky.app/profile/joriegraham.bsky.social
https://www.politico.eu/article/crisis-builds-in-dutch-government-after-cabinet-member-resigns/
I was really excited to see that they have now found that, rather than all dying out at the end of the Carboniferous, one branch - Rhabdopleura - which split off in the Cambrian, is still around today.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9SpA-qiJVbs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2epvgjoo1Ws
The full thing has even more Mesozoic mammals and the obligatory fight with at least one dino. (not difficult to find the whole thing on youtube)
"The Demographics of Trump's Victory", by KaiserBauch (13 mins)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3BTT_W0OPw
Even with the handicap of Tyson being retired nearly 2 decades (and past his prime by the time he retired) I'd still expect him to be the better of the two.
I'd respect a retired Tyson more than Paul.
Have been fossil hunting in the Flatlands with Dean Lomax, dinosaur man (before he was famous). Was good fun.
Our local museum had a dusty specimen in a drawer that everyone had assumed was a cast but he took a closer look and it turned out to be a new species of ichthyosaur...
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-31521719
You don't have to run faster than the monster; you just have to run faster than the other person being chased.
On the same basis, I expect older people also have a less favourable view of Jason Vorhees, Leatherface and Xenomorphs.