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Hey everybody! Looking forward to celebrating the proud Mexican people's day of Independence!? Well that shit ain't 'till the middle of September so you're gonna be dry a long time if that's what you're REALLY looking to celebrate. But let's be honest, that's not why you're excited about Cinco de Mayo. We know it's not why we are. It's because the fifth of May isn't about Mexican independence, hell, it's barely about Mexicans, it's just another American invented excuse to get shit faced and blame it on the calendar!
Cinco de Mayo is no more about Mexican culture than St. Patrick's Day is about Irish culture. The both of them are simply about Drinking culture. Which naturally got us to thinking, we're drunks, we need more excuses for that to be publicly acceptable. And with that in mind Van Full of Candy is proud to present, more vaguely ethnic holiday type events where it's okay to make a gigantic ass out of yourself in the name of wearing a brightly colored t-shirt proudly exclaiming how you are an ethnicity that you clearly aren't. For on these days, we are all brothers, we are all drunken Americans!
April 30th - Casimir the Pole Drunky Day
Poland was established around 700BC, but it wasn’t until the “Piast Dynasty” in 1365 that the first “Polish Joke” was accidentally uttered by Casimir III the Great when he asked “How many damn Poles does it take to polish my scepter?” He got huge laughter from everyone in his royal gold room. So much so that he immediately decreed that to be “the first official Polish joke”. He spake this joke on April 30th, which happened to also be on his birthday, so the celebration is of the birth of the joke and also of the king. The celebration in America consists of wearing one’s favorite red & white apparel in honor of the Polish flag. The drinking aspect of the celebration is all about taking shot upon shot of Goldwasser and coming up with the crudest joke possible until somebody is so offended that a bar fight breaks out. After the brawl everybody hugs and makes up and then throws up.
September 8th - Sir Wallace's Day
To coincide with Braveheart's original UK theatrical release date, we celebrate the life and liver of Sir William Wallace. What surprises me is with as much as the Scots love to drink, how there isn't already an excuse holiday in their honor. I mean, there's a drink named after these punch happy, incomprehensible people! That kind of dedication hasn't been seen on this planet since the nomadic Schnapps tribes of the third century, finally having run out of drink and having to stop to rest their splitting headaches settled upon a plot of land to call their own and changed their name to "Aztec". So why don't we have a drinking holiday celebrating their crazy, drunken culture? Is it because most Americans can't tell the difference between a Scot and a dirty low down swarthy Irishman? Probably, but we'll teach them how! Paint your face, slur something about how they can take your empty, but they can never take away your freedom to buy another round, fall down and be peed on. We're all Scottish today laddie!
December 7th - Super Imbibe Number One Sing Night Go!
Before most people only thought of the Japanese people as dangerously irradiated and damp, they were largely recognized as a quiet, polite, buttoned down people. Of course, they also enjoy the most ridiculous and insane game shows ever devised by asylum inmates, and like their pornography filled with tentacles. The Japanese people are fucking confusing. But one thing is certain, they love Sake. After a hard day at work the Japanese business men will take the train out to the bars, sing karaoke and get absolutely pissed with their bosses. Slobbering drunk and belligerent and then the next day go back into work and resume their quiet work a day roles. The date of Super Imbibe Number One Sing Night Go is an attempt to take back a day that frankly hasn't lived in infamy for quite some time since most of the Greatest Generation is almost gone by now, and really, it's for the best, they've been making all of the rest of us look kind of shitty for a long time. We'll feel much better about ourselves and our singing voices as we turn our ties into head bands, belt out some Bon Jovi and celebrate Super Imbibe Number One Sing Night Go! A day that will live in drinkfamy!
December 21 - Railroad of Death Day
In the year 1941, Japan really really wanted to get to the Malayan frontier probably to call it their own or shoot some shit up. Regardless of their motive, Thailand happened to be in the way.
The Japanese army did not want to go ALLLLL the way around Thailand to get there so they said "let us cross your land". They didn't say please or anything, so the Thai's took exception to that and said "ummm yeah no", to which Japan said "WAR!!". After the entire 8 hours of the war, Thailand said "You know what? we're done, go ahead and cross. But with one exception. You help us build a railroad across our country." Japan agreed and sent over 200,000 Asian "helpers" and 60,000 POWs, all of which died in the severe working conditions and the beatings that were given by the Japanese. So to celebrate this, America dresses up in railroad prisoner garb and let themselves get "beat" by the proprieters of each bar they attend on their "Bar Railroad Crawl". It’s one of the least popular celebrations due to the pain, but is heralded as the best Thai celebration ever. The popular drink for this day is actually comprised of Thai beer and a shot of sake to signify the two countries coming together for their time of mass slave killing, it’s fittingly called “The Railroad Beating”.Hey everybody! Looking forward to celebrating the proud Mexican people's day of... more
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I had meant this to be my Monday post, but because I was a bit shocked about Darla’s closing I decided to hold off a day. After finishing my part two of Golden Gate Park I saw a tweet about the following “job opening” on craigslist. Click on the photo to read it in its entirety.I had meant this to be my Monday post, but because I was a bit shocked about... more
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I’m not sure how Golden Gate Park slipped off my radar in the past because it’s the largest attraction in San Francisco and houses some of the best places to visit in San Francisco, so today, we’re taking a trip to the park.I’m not sure how Golden Gate Park slipped off my radar in the past because... more
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This is a video I made in support of Japan after the earthquake and devastating tsunami which caused much damage and loss of life in northeastern Japan in the Tohoku region.
Over a couple of days I got Japanese and foreign-residents to show their support and togetherness in dealing with the aftermath. I included footage of various Japanese festivals to showcase Japanese spirit and strength. Many of the festival clips were taken at events in the Tohoku area, the area hit the hardest. The singing is from the World Cup celebrations this past summer.This is a video I made in support of Japan after the earthquake and devastating... more
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I stopped working downtown too soon. It wasn’t my choice, but I missed the first rush of the new sensation that’s sweeping San Francisco and everyone’s smartphone — food trucks. I’m not talking the old beat up taco trucks that you used to see in Oakland, but these are upscale trucks serving upscale food and the best way to find out about where they are in on you smartphone.I stopped working downtown too soon. It wasn’t my choice, but I missed the first... more
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Banking stem cells could save Japan nuclear workers
By Julie Steenhuysen, Reuters
Fri Apr 15, 9:55 AM EDT
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CHICAGO — Health officials should collect blood from workers at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in case they are accidentally exposed to high levels of radiation and need a stem cell transplant, Japanese researchers said on Thursday.
They said gathering blood from the workers would give them a ready source of their own stem cells that could help rebuild their bone marrow should they become exposed to high levels of radiation.
"The danger of a future accidental radiation exposure is not passed, since there has been a series of serious aftershocks even this April," Dr Shuichi Taniguchi of Toranomon Hospital in Tokyo and Dr Tetsuya Tanimoto of the Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research wrote in the Lancet medical journal.
A series of strong aftershocks this week has rattled eastern Japan, slowing the recovery effort at the Fukushima Daiichi plant due to temporary evacuations of workers and power outages.
Tokyo Electric Power Co said this week the situation at the nuclear plant, wrecked by a 15-meter (49.2-foot) tsunami on March 11, had stabilized. The crisis is now rated par with the world's worst nuclear accident, the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, although the total release of radiation at Chernobyl was far greater.
The researchers say transplant teams are standing by in Japan and Europe to collect and store the nuclear workers' cells, but so far the Nuclear Safety Commission of Japan is balking because it would cause a "physical and psychological burden for nuclear workers," the team wrote.
Collecting cells from the workers has several advantages over donated cells, which require finding a matching donor and carry the risk of rejection.
Stem cell transplants from a person's own cells would allow the workers to avoid taking drugs to suppress the immune system, helping them to better resist infections. The cells could quickly restore normal function to the body's machinery for making blood cells.
And the workers' cells could be banked and stored in case they develop leukemia, which could happen years down the road.
But the solution is not perfect, the team admits. High exposure to radiation would also attack cells in the gut, skin or lung -- problems a stem cell transplant could not fix.
Yet, with containment and clean-up efforts at the damaged plant expected to drag on for months or even years, Tanimoto and Taniguchi say taking steps to protect the workers' from future harm is paramount.
"The most important mission is to save the nuclear workers' lives and to protect the local communities," the team wrote.
"Such an approach would be the industry's best defense: if a fatal accident happened to the nuclear workers, the nuclear power industry of Japan would collapse."
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago; Editing by Paul Simao)Banking stem cells could save Japan nuclear workers
By Julie Steenhuysen, Reuters... more
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TOKYO — Workers’ desperate struggle to plug a gush of highly contaminated water from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station, using sawdust, shredded newspaper and an absorbent powder, appeared to be failing late Sunday as the radiation threat from the crippled plant continued to spread.
Water containing high amounts of radioactive iodine has been spewing directly into the Pacific Ocean from a large crack discovered Saturday in a 6-foot-deep pit at the coastal Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. After an unsuccessful attempt to flood the pit with concrete to stop the leak, workers on Sunday turned to trying to plug the apparent source of the water — an underground shaft thought to lead to the damaged reactor building — by plugging the shaft with a makeshift putty: more than 120 pounds of sawdust, three garbage bags full of shredded newspaper and about 9 pounds of a polymeric powder that officials said absorbs 50 times its volume of water.
Although the stopgap measure did not appear to be succeeding, workers would keep trying to stem the leak, said Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy director-general of the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.
Experts estimate that about 7 tons an hour of radioactive water is escaping the pit. Safety officials have said that the water, which appears to be coming from the damaged No. 2 reactor at Fukushima Daiichi, contains one million Becquerels per liter of iodine 131, or about 10,000 times levels normally found in water at a nuclear facility.
“There is still a steady stream of water from the pit,” Mr. Nishiyama said, but workers would continue to “observe and evaluate” the situation overnight.
The leak underscores the dangerous side effects of the strategy to cool the plant’s reactors and spent fuel storage pools by pumping them with hundreds of tons of water. While much of that water evaporates, a significant portion also turns into dangerous runoff that has been discovered accumulating in various parts of the plant, endangering workers at the plant and hindering repair efforts. Last week, three workers were injured when they stepped into a pool of radioactive water inside one of the plant’s turbine buildings.
Workers have in recent days tried to clear the contaminated pools, but have struggled to find enough places to store the water. Meanwhile, higher-than-normal levels of radiation have been detected in waters near the plant, raising fears of damage to sea life.
The Tokyo Electric Power Company, the plant’s operator, has said it has little choice but to pump more water into the reactors at the moment, since the normal cooling systems at the plant are inoperable and more radioactive material would be released if the reactors were allowed to melt down fully or if the rods caught fire.
Still, some experts expressed bewilderment at what they called an 11th-hour, improvised bid to plug the leak.
“I’ve never heard of anything like it at a nuclear power plant,” said Itsuo Kimura, Emeritus Professor at Kyoto University and director of the Japan-based Institute of Nuclear Technology. What is really needed, he said, is for the cooling systems to come back online at the plant’s six reactors. Those cooling systems work by circulating water around the nuclear fuel, producing little runoff.
“That is the best way to stop the leakage of radioactive water,” Mr. Kimura said. “But for now, they have to stop the water leaking the best they can.”
Tokyo Electric has come under growing scrutiny for its handling of the nuclear crisis, triggered by the March 11 quake and tsunami. In recent days, reports surfaced that the company, once the largest utility in the world, would be taken over by the government. Tokyo Electric reported that a protesters’ sound truck, presumably sent to heckle the company was blocked from entering the Daiichi plant on March 31.
There are also frequent protests at the company’s headquarters in the Uchisaiwai-cho neighborhood of central Tokyo. On Sunday, several hundred anti-nuclear protestors assembled in front of Tokyo Electric’s offices and then marched to Kasumigaseki to protest in front of the offices of Japan’s nuclear regulators.
The protesters yelled slogans like, “Tokyo Electric, get out of nuclear energy,” and “Compensate the victims.” Others called for the company and government to apologize.
Some carried placards that said, “Even if we don’t have nuclear power, we’ll still have electricity.”“
“The Japanese people don’t protest usually, but this time, we have to show that we can call for change,” said Masanobu Takeshi, 40, who attended with his wife and son.TOKYO — Workers’ desperate struggle to plug a gush of highly contaminated... more
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Japanese-Brazilian chef and owner of São Paulo’s top Japanese Restaurant - Kinoshita, Chef Tsuyoshi Murakami is in London from 7th to 10th April showcasing his award winning cuisine. Murakami is the pioneer of the Kappo Cuisine in Brazil, a style of high Japanese gastronomy that aims to stimulate diverse sensations through the combination of rare and exotic aromas, textures and ingredients. Tsuyoshi Murakami will be hosting two dinners at Nuno Mendes’ Loft Project on 8th and 9th April (reservations via www.theloftproject.co.uk ). The Loft Project works as a temporary restaurant where chefs from top kitchens around the world are invited to host dinners for guests around one communal table. The Loft Project is located in Unit 2A Quebec Wharf, 315 Kingsland Road, London E8 4DJ.
Chef Murakami has designed a special menu that showcases his passion for Japanese ingredients, illustrating his approach towards Kappo Cuisine but also celebrating his Brazilian-Japanese heritage. At The Loft Project, he will be serving his creations under the Kappo Cuisine ethos like “Oyster Shot” Oyster, salmon roe, Uni and quail egg yolk served in Ponzu sauce; “Sea Scallop Ceviche” Fresh sea scallops marinated in Leche de Tigre and “Chocomoti Coffee Ice Mochi” with a Valrhona Jivara chocolate filling served with white coffee ice cream.
Brazil is home to the largest Japanese population outside of Japan, with around 1.5 million descendants, mostly located in the cultural hub city of São Paulo, so it is not a surprise that this city presents excellent Japanese food at every corner. Kinoshita restaurant was founded in 2008 by Murakami and restaurateur Marcelo Fernandes (Clos de Tapas, Mercearia do Francês and former business partner at D.O.M., ranking on 18th position at World’s 50 Best Restaurants) and since then has won numerous accolades in Brazil. Borrowing the words of Charles Campion on a special feature about Sao Paulo’s restaurants, “if you want a benchmark, think Nobu, and were this restaurant in Europe it would certainly be Michelin starred.” (The Guardian in 2009)Japanese-Brazilian chef and owner of São Paulo’s top Japanese Restaurant... more
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Does anyone really know what is going on at the Fukushima nuclear complex? When problems at the facility first surfaced, authorities promised that no significant amounts of radiation would be released. Then we were told that only those living within 20 kilometers of the complex needed to take precautions. After that we were told that radiation was showing up in many different types of vegetables all over northern and central Japan but that it was not a major concern. Now we are being told that the tap water in Tokyo is unsafe for infants to drink. So what are they going to tell us next? Should residents of Tokyo be preparing for massive radiation exposure from this disaster? Tokyo is only 150 miles away from the Fukushima nuclear complex. If a worst case scenario plays out at Fukushima, exactly what would that mean for the over 30 million people that live in and around Tokyo?Does anyone really know what is going on at the Fukushima nuclear complex? When... more
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Mycoremediation of the Japanese landscape after radioactive fallout:
Nuclear Forest Recovery Zone
Many people have written me and asked more or less the same question: “What would you do to help heal the Japanese landscape around the failing nuclear reactors?”
The enormity and unprecedented nature of this combined natural and human-made disaster will require a massive and completely novel approach to management and remediation. And with this comes a never before seen opportunity for collaboration, research and wisdom.
The nuclear fallout will make continued human habitation in close proximity to the reactors untenable. The earthquake and tsunami created enormous debris fields near the nuclear reactors. Since much of this debris is wood, and many fungi useful in mycoremediation are wood decomposers, building the foundation of forest ecosystems, I have the following suggestions:
http://goo.gl/WOJvOMycoremediation of the Japanese landscape after radioactive fallout:
Nuclear Forest... more
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The day before the earthquake and tsunami that sparked Japan's escalating nuclear crisis, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved a 20-year license extension for Entergy's Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Plant in Vernon, Vermont. The plant uses the same GE Mark 1 reactor design as Japan's Fukushima Daiichi plant, which has revived questions about the safety of America's existing nuclear infrastructure—and the efficacy of the nation's top nuclear regulator.
http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/03/japan-nuclear-regulatory-commissionThe day before the earthquake and tsunami that sparked Japan's escalating nuclear... more
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Would a nuclear meltdown of all 6 reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex in Japan mean the end of the world as we know it? Of course not. But it would be a complete and total nightmare. Back in 1986, the Chernobyl meltdown spread nuclear radiation all over the northern hemisphere. According to some estimates, over a million deaths can be attributed to that disaster. Unfortunately, now we are facing a situation that could develop into the equivalent of "many Chernobyls". Radiation levels are rising all over northern Japan and millions of Japanese are trying to figure out what to do.Would a nuclear meltdown of all 6 reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex in Japan... more
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" MONSTROUS OBSESSION " ;
SMU dean shares meaning of GODZILLA with giant beasts biggest fans
The amphibian beast hails from the East, big and green and mostly mean. King of the Monsters, they call him - which is to say that Godzilla is the Elvis of monsters, a hunka-hunka-burnin'-breath who has left countless cities and towns all shook up in his cinematic wake.
Revered and feared, defender and destroyer, he's just a big lug who is misunderstood. For 56 years, this icon of pop culture and Japanese film has conquered imaginations and similarly costumed foes, creating perhaps the world's most prolific movie franchise.
Along his torn-up trail, the menacing brute also has created some major Godzilla geeks. One of them is William Tsutsui, the recently appointed dean of SMU's Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences, whose obsession with Godzilla goes beyond campy special effects.
As he was growing up, his childhood fascination gave way to scholarly interpretation - and Tsutsui came to see the globally recognized monster as cultural ambassador, the therapeutic creation of a postwar Japan.
"I realized there was something more there than just a guy in a rubber suit," said Tsutsui, 47.
Wait - here he comes again, bursting through hillsides, shattering bridges and tearing through power lines, and now hundreds of villagers are fleeing in terror ...
Elvis has crushed the building.
Earlier this month, Tsutsui addressed Godzilla's place in Japanese culture for about 130 people at SMU's Dallas Hall, where his passion and admiration for the big fella was evident in his lecture, sponsored by the Japan-America Society of Dallas/Fort Worth.
"It's really cool," said Lauren Sethney, the group's program director. "He's a top-notch academic, and he's really into Godzilla."
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http://www.dallasnews.com/news/local-news/20101024-SMU-dean-shares-monstrous-obsession-with-7286.ece" MONSTROUS OBSESSION " ;
SMU dean shares meaning of GODZILLA with giant... more
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How much of a threat is the nuclear crisis in Japan? That question is on the minds of millions of people around the globe tonight. Unfortunately, the Japanese government and the mainstream media have both been doing their best to downplay this crisis.How much of a threat is the nuclear crisis in Japan? That question is on the minds of... more
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Merzbow was born in Tokyo in 1981, the bastard son of Masami Akita. Inspired by Dadaism and Surrealism, Akita took the name for his project from German artist Kurt Schwitters' pre-War architectural assemblage "The Cathedral of Erotic Misery" done in his "merz" style-- a confluence of the organic and the geometric. "Merzbau" referred to his houses. Just as Schwitters attacked the entrenched artistic traditions of his time with his revolutionary Avant-garde collages, so too would Akita challenge the contemporary concept of what is called music http://www.makeahistory.com/index.php/album-rewievs/39119-the-beauty-of-noise-merzbow-free-cdsMerzbow was born in Tokyo in 1981, the bastard son of Masami Akita. Inspired by... more
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Japan's Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International (ATR) researcher Takashi Minato displays a human-shaped mobile phone in Tokyo.The human-shaped mobile phone has a skin-like outer layer that enables users to feel closer to those on the other end.
Japanese researchers said Thursday they have developed a human-shaped mobile phone with a skin-like outer layer that enables users to feel closer to those on the other end.
"The mobile phone may feel like the person you are talking to," the Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International (ATR) said in a press release, describing the gadget as a "revolutionary telecom medium".
The project is a collaboration between Osaka University, the mobile telephone operator NTT DoCoMo and other institutes.
They hope to put it into commercial production within five years by adding image and voice recognition functions.
The prototype, slightly bigger than the size of a palm, features an outer coating that feels like human skin, ATR officials said.
A speaker is installed in the head of the doll-like gadget and a light-emitting diode in its chest turns blue when the phone is in use and red when it is in standby mode.
The body resembles a human being but its design is so blurred that it could be taken as either male or female and young or old, the press release said.
(c) 2011 AFPJapan's Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International (ATR)... more
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“Junko’s Shamisen” is a super-stylized samurai tale by Canadian filmmaker Sol Friedman. The short film is an exquisite chanbara mini-epic of revenge, suffused with manga and kabuki theater. “Junko’s Shamisen” flawlessly integrates traditional cell animation, 2D “cut out” style set animation, comic book dialogue bubbles and even some stop-motion to round things out. All of this is woven into the live action base of the film, which leaps off the screen with vivid color, depth and texture.
Set in the dark and densely-forested, rural backwoods of feudal-era Japan, “Junko’s Shamisen” is the quiet story of a young peasant girl named Junko living with her blind grandfather, who plays a three-stringed instrument called a shamisena. One day, Junko returns to their simple home to discover that her grandfather has been brutally murdered. Devastated and filled with despair, Junko, accompanied by a mystical fox spirit, abandons her old life and sets off for the village in search of better fortunes. While she goes begging from house to house, young Junko inadvertently encounters the ruthless Samurai Lord Yamamura, who was responsible for killing her grandfather. Emboldened by the influence of the fox spirit, Junko breaks out of her petite and non-threatening shell and avenges her grandfather through an act of gruesome poetic justice.
This piece presents a number of colorful photographs, as well as the exquisitely designed short film.
http://disembedded.wordpress.com/2011/03/03/junkos-shamisen-a-mini-epic-of-poetic-revenge/“Junko’s Shamisen” is a super-stylized samurai tale by Canadian... more
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Ok so this takes the kissing and the old "pass the drink by kiss" game to a whole new level. Salmonella anyone?Ok so this takes the kissing and the old "pass the drink by kiss" game to a... more
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The Japanese jewel beetle has been a prized ornament since ancient times, and now researchers have revealed the secret to its scintillating good looks.
Brilliant metallic purples and greens run the length of each beetle's body. Each color band corresponds to varying numbers of stacked chitin layers in its wing covers. These nano-scale layers scramble light and reflect an iridescent sheen, reported a team from the Netherlands and Japan in the Mar. 12 issue of The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.
“This surprises me. I’ve always assumed they had the same number of layers throughout the body,” said Dave Kavanaugh, curator of the insect collection at the California Academy of Sciences, who was not involved with the study. “It makes the color change much less accidental.”
For many iridescent insects, color seems incidental, a quirk of the cuticle surface. In the insects Kavanaugh studies, surface ridges cause visible iridescence, but their primary job is to deflect water or mud. Many are active at night, when their colors can’t be seen. But the Japanese jewel beetle's surface is smooth, and the study's authors suspect that iridescence helps these insects recognize each other and find mates.
If you find yourself in Japan, on a summer walk through the woods, you might find one yourself. If you can’t make it to Japan, enjoy these photographs.
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/02/jeweled-beetle/The Japanese jewel beetle has been a prized ornament since ancient times, and now... more
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Japanese pop for and from future .... Sayonara Records release by FoOd that tries to cut next generation's pop open IN JAPAN by the wide approach such as a song thing , dance music, pop chips, and guiter-pop finally reach. However, it is not only wide but also mysterious at the same time consistency is seen, and the possibility to coming, JAPANESE pop music seems to be open in the extension . It will be one of the pop artists who want to expect both in the future. http://www.makeahistory.com/index.php/poplo-fi/32326-foodJapanese pop for and from future .... Sayonara Records release by FoOd that tries to... more
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