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Sunday, July 31, 2016

The Shape of Snails

“the conceptual world of pre-eighteenth-century zoology must
have accorded little importance to the orientation of a
shell”. We will refer to this as the ‘Gould hypothesis’.
-from: From a ‘domestic commodity’ to a ‘secret of trade’: snails and shells of land molluscs in early
(mainly 16th and 17th century) visual arts 

"chirality" is the direction in which the snail shell is oriented







Friday, July 29, 2016

Monday, July 25, 2016

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Donald Duck as a Nazi

A film featuring Donald Duck has only recently become legal to share in Russia. See the full story by Atlas Obscura.


Syndrome K: A fake disease that saved Jewish lives

See the fully story HERE


Saturday, July 23, 2016

Saucy Northern Renaissance Images

See Niklaus Manuel HERE and a pinterest collection of Adam and Eve getting frisky HERE.

Niklaus Manuel Deutsche

See HERE for Holbein's Maiden and Death


While you're at it, just look at ALL THE PICTURES. And even more, just on the theme of Death and the Maiden. 

And

The Importance of Poop Sticks

This story rehashes the main points of an article which revealed signs of infectious disease on "hygene sticks"


Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Butt Monsters


"If drowning children sounds brutal, then consider the preferred object of [the kappa's] thievery: the human liver. As river dwellers, kappas were thought to lurk beneath the old fashioned toilets that overhung the river and to use that vantage point to truly invade people's private space. By reaching through the anus, kappas could snatch the internal organs of an unsuspecting toilet-goer. Collateral damage in this transaction was a mythical organ called the shirikodama, a little globe that was believed to plug the anus."

Before silicon implants in 1961, oil, ivory, glass, rubber, ox cartilage, wool, fruit, plastic & sponge were all trialed as breast fillers.

from Whores of Yore

Sunday, July 17, 2016

Stop-Motion Skeletons

A very cool story about Ray Harryhausen's work in animation and film--and all the creepy things he made to move.