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Leon Einstein posted:Or ever really. The common notion that the Titanic was called unsinkable by the White Star company isn't true. You're right, but it's a little bit more complicated than that: http://www.snopes.com/history/titanic/unsinkable.asp
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 17:25 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 22:30 |
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Hello, thread, thanks for carrying on for this long! First thread I have ever made. I for one support a shift from serial killers back to disasters, at least for a while. A serial killer is a bad person who does terrible poo poo to a few people on purpose, a (man-made) disaster can often be traced to one or a small group of people making innocent mistakes or irresponsible choices that can kill hundreds, or impact millions of lives! The RMS Titanic is a good example of making something big and not anticipating big problems in might create (and taking shortcuts to save time). There's a lot of 'if only's that stacked up - bad conditions, mistaken identities, just plain bad luck, which made for a lovely night for people sailing aboard her and a lovely week in Halifax when they tried to sort through what they could of the dead. As a child, I loved the stories of The Thinking Machine, and was grealy saddened when I discovered that the author died on the Titanic. I was six or seven, the Titanic had just been rediscovered and subsequently visited by the Alvin so it was fresh in my mind, and it was the first time I put the people who put words on the page as people who had lives and died, if that made any sense. Also I was kind of dumb and thought the Thinking Machine were modern stories, so I was mostly sad that there wouldn't be anymore. Also that there was an unpublished Thinking Machine story that went down with the ship. But Jacques Futrelle's wife made it on a lifeboat while he stayed behind so Mr. Futrelle owns. Lastly most unnearving and scary this the DSV Alvin is still in service after all these years and several refits. Scary awesome. Keep exploring the deep, little buddy. See what you can see.
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 18:08 |
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Leon Einstein posted:Or ever really. The common notion that the Titanic was called unsinkable by the White Star company isn't true. "God Himself couldn't sink this ship, and we dare Him to try!"
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 18:56 |
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I remember reading about the Kursk as it happened and feeling the oddest sense of relief when they revealed that the sailors died six hours in and didn't linger for six days slowly starving and gasping for breath in an underwater tomb.
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 19:32 |
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SlothBear posted:I remember reading about the Kursk as it happened and feeling the oddest sense of relief when they revealed that the sailors died six hours in and didn't linger for six days slowly starving and gasping for breath in an underwater tomb. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dG5KSD-8J4 How about that guy who spent three days underwater in a shipwreck (and survived!)
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 20:01 |
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Sustentacular posted:MV Sewol Also worth mentioning that the captain and several crew members changed clothes as the boat was sinking so that they could pass as civilians and get on the life boats. And I've watched some of those videos, it's pretty drat sad to hear the kids going like "oh man what if it really does sink and we all die (laughter)" and so on. They didn't realize it was a real emergency until it was too late.
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 21:34 |
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RevSyd posted:
Yeah, I used to listen to the CD a bit then too. Pretty dark stuff, really, but impossible not to laugh. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q9GB8YPy3uI prick with tenure has a new favorite as of 22:45 on Aug 6, 2014 |
# ? Aug 6, 2014 22:42 |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_doll duhquote:The dame de voyage (French) or dama de viaje (Spanish) was a direct predecessor to today's sex dolls that originated in the seventeenth century. Dames de voyage were makeshift masturbatory dolls made of sewn cloth or old clothes, used by French and Spanish sailors while isolated at sea during long voyages.[1] the smell.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 02:42 |
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After a few months I imagine that they'd change their mind on buggery.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 03:45 |
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Nckdictator posted:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_doll duh And people wonder why the British were better on the sea. Jesus. Just gently caress the ship's goats like everyone else, France.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 04:00 |
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AnonSpore posted:Also worth mentioning that the captain and several crew members changed clothes as the boat was sinking so that they could pass as civilians and get on the life boats. The eerie prescience some kids had about how it was going to end really gets me. Imagine being a mom and your kid's gone off on a school holiday, for all you know he's having the time of his life with his friends on a routine ferry trip. All of a sudden your phone buzzes and you have a text message saying "Mom, in case I never get to say it... I love you." You hammer out "Huh? Love you too" and wonder what the gently caress he's on about And that's the last time you ever talk to him. gently caress! Also, I don't know how much of the case is being followed outside Korea but the ferry sinking is only the beginning. To date, this clusterfuck has touched upon shadowy networks of shell corporations, doomsday cults committing mass suicide, utterly botched/suspiciously mismanaged police investigations followed by high-ranking resignations and now the corpse of the ferry owner has been revealed to have been found a month and a half ago, weeks before the manhunt was called off. It's the rabbit hole of rabbit holes.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 04:01 |
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Nckdictator posted:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_doll duh To think the "happy sock" is actually a long standing naval tradition.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 04:15 |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsessive%E2%80%93compulsive_disorder This may seem like an odd one, but it's one specific thing about the disorder that unnerves me. OCD has one extremely specific diagnostic criteria that almost no other mental disorder has. Egodystonia. This means that the person in question has to be totally aware that what they are doing is irrational or unnecessary (or to phrase it another way, nuts.) It freaks me out that someone can see what they're doing, know it is an insane thing to be doing, and have absolutely no power to stop doing it. I really can't imagine being utterly helpless like that not because of some external force, but because your own brain is simply overriding you. It scares me to even try to imagine it.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 12:02 |
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I wouldn't classify OCD as unnerving. Scary, yes, but not in the way you're thinking. Mostly, it's irritating and inconvenient and mood-ruining. Source: I have OCD and I have to avoid certain numbers, have writing compulsions, etc. etc. I think I'm closer to the O than the C, but I have friends who are very C and the prevailing attitude towards OCD is "gently caress this poo poo", not "ooooh spooky".
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 13:12 |
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Rysithusiku posted:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsessive%E2%80%93compulsive_disorder A million times this. My teenage daughter has real diagnosed OCD and sometimes the stuff she does makes her so upset that she cries while she's doing it. gently caress people that giggle and say "OMG I'm so ocd!" because they like to straighten the pencils on their desks. My daughter just called me because she washed her hands too much and one's bleeding.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 13:15 |
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Nckdictator posted:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_doll duh The whole sex doll thing creeps me the gently caress out. Even though they are lumps of plastic I find the glassy eyes and limp bodies to be utterly horrifying, they look like corpses slumped in wheelchairs. Even more horrifying are the sorts of people who are super into the doll loving community and the way they refer to women as 'human females'. I may be remembering wrong, but when the doll fucker thread was around people posted stories of folks who worked in doll repair shops and how they would receive dolls who were riddled with knife wounds or had their vaginas slashed up and poo poo.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 13:41 |
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chthonic bell posted:I wouldn't classify OCD as unnerving. Scary, yes, but not in the way you're thinking. Mostly, it's irritating and inconvenient and mood-ruining. Really depends on the severity. We had a lady here who had to have reconstructive surgery when her OCD kicked in regarding her various bowel problems and she ended up trying to clean her anus with bleach and steel wool repeatedly.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 14:13 |
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Stairs posted:A million times this. My teenage daughter has real diagnosed OCD and sometimes the stuff she does makes her so upset that she cries while she's doing it. Agreed, and sorry to hear about your daughter. What type of help is she getting? It really is something that is ingrained deep in the mind and I'm sure we don't really understand much about the mental disorder.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 14:20 |
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Rysithusiku posted:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsessive%E2%80%93compulsive_disorder OCD isn't the only egodystonic mental disorder, there are quite a few. Depression could be considered egodystonic after cognitive behavior therapy, a common statement by depressed individuals seeking therapy is 'I know it's stupid that I'm this depressed, but I just can't break out of it'. Tourette's Syndrome is just as egodystonic as OCD, and there are quite a few other mental issues that, once you get them pointed out, are completely understood to be unhelpful or bad even in the grips of it. I have Tourette's (and, like most people with Tourette's, I have some OCD symptoms as well) and it is utterly maddening to sit there and feel the urge to twitch build up and get stronger. There's little you can do to make the feeling go away, except twitch. There are also certain materials that, on bad days, I just can't even touch. For me it is specifically cardboard, and very dry cotton balls (it's weird as hell, I know) and it is super annoying. I can usually make myself do it if I have to, even on my worse days, but I have to go wash my hands like 4,000 times an hour to get past it. I agree with the other poster where I wouldn't exactly call it creepy, but it is highly annoying.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 16:03 |
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Found this in the Schadenfreud thread, but it really should be here due to it's catastrophic nature: The Texas City Disaster. I don't know much about ammonium nitrate, but it was apparently the catalyst of an explosion that: Wikipedia posted:[T]he tremendous blast sent a 15-foot (4.5 m) wave that was detectable nearly 100 miles (160 km) off the Texas shoreline. The blast leveled nearly 1,000 buildings on land. The Grandcamp explosion destroyed the Monsanto Chemical Company plant and resulted in ignition of refineries and chemical tanks on the waterfront. Falling bales of burning twine added to the damage while the Grandcamp's anchor was hurled across the city. Two sightseeing airplanes flying nearby had their wings shorn off,[6] forcing them out of the sky. 10 miles (16 km) away, people in Galveston were forced to their knees; windows were shattered in Houston, Texas, 40 miles (60 km) away. People felt the shock 100 miles (160 km) away in Louisiana. The explosion blew almost 6,350 short tons (5,760 metric tons) of the ship's steel into the air, some at supersonic speed. Official casualty estimates came to a total of 567, including all the crewmen who remained onboard the Grandcamp, but many victims were burned to ashes or blown to bits, and the official death total is believed to be an undercount.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 16:23 |
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Old Boot posted:The creepy as hell thing, for me, in this, is the total lack of disaster preparedness that we have in a great deal of hospital, counties, cities, states, etc, and that it defaults to relying on people who are working off of so much fatigue and anxiety based on the total lack of response (throughout the entire thing, no matter how much they tried to communicate) from their parent company (Tenet) that they thought that euthanizing people during an evacuation is their best course of action. If it was in the thick of it, I could understand. Great read. I think one of the creepiest things in the world is our precarious sense of security in developed countries. We're all like a week or two away from helplessness from lack of food, clean water, medicine, transportation, etc., but not only do we not seem to be too concerned about it, we are incredibly smug about it.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 17:33 |
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Rodent Mortician posted:Really depends on the severity. We had a lady here who had to have reconstructive surgery when her OCD kicked in regarding her various bowel problems and she ended up trying to clean her anus with bleach and steel wool repeatedly. Like I said: scary, yes. But probably not in the way this thread means the term, or we'd be posting incurable cancers and other poo poo like that way more often.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 17:59 |
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LawfulWaffle posted:Two sightseeing airplanes flying nearby had their wings shorn off,[6] forcing them out of the sky. Is that 'forcing them out of the sky' as in "crashed and burned"? What a bizarre euphemism.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 18:36 |
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nucleicmaxid posted:There are also certain materials that, on bad days, I just can't even touch. For me it is specifically cardboard, and very dry cotton balls (it's weird as hell, I know) and it is super annoying. I can usually make myself do it if I have to, even on my worse days, but I have to go wash my hands like 4,000 times an hour to get past it. I agree with the other poster where I wouldn't exactly call it creepy, but it is highly annoying. I'm not trying to be all armchair doctor and I have absolutely zero experience with Tourette's or OCD, but I'm with you on the cotton balls. Sometimes I get the same way when I touch paper after taking a shower or washing my hands. The soap pulls all the oils from your fingertips so it's super dry skin against super dry cotton/paper. Maybe try a little bit of lotion or moisturizer before you know you'll be handling cotton balls or cardboard. Don't know if it will do anything for you, but it may help a bit.
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# ? Aug 7, 2014 19:27 |
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I have always been terrified of Coronal Mass Ejections and the resulting fallout that would happen to our electrical systems. Imagine if one day you woke up to bright auroras and all the electrical systems in the world failing at once.Wikipedia posted:From August 28, 1859, until September 2, numerous sunspots were observed on the Sun. Just before noon on September 1, the English amateur astronomers Richard Carrington and Richard Hodgson independently made the first observations of a solar flare. The flare caused a major coronal mass ejection (CME) to travel directly toward Earth, taking 17.6 hours. Such a journey normally takes three to four days. This second CME moved so quickly because the first one had cleared the way of the ambient solar wind plasma. Solar Storm of 1859 Cyoktine has a new favorite as of 19:42 on Aug 7, 2014 |
# ? Aug 7, 2014 19:29 |
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nucleicmaxid posted:OCD isn't the only egodystonic mental disorder, there are quite a few. Depression could be considered egodystonic after cognitive behavior therapy, a common statement by depressed individuals seeking therapy is 'I know it's stupid that I'm this depressed, but I just can't break out of it'. Tourette's Syndrome is just as egodystonic as OCD, and there are quite a few other mental issues that, once you get them pointed out, are completely understood to be unhelpful or bad even in the grips of it. To clarify, I wasn't saying it's the only egodystonic disorder. Schizophrenia can be egodystonic after someone points out that wall doesn't really have teeth. However, it is one of the few that actually has egodystonia as a diagnostic criteria. Depression can be diagnosed with or without egodystonia, OCD can't. e. spelling and poo poo
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 02:41 |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1931_China_floods This is considered to be one of the worst natural disasters. As many as 4 million people died from drowning and disease. quote:The Yangtze and Huai River floods soon reached Nanjing, the capital of China at the time. The city, located on an island in a massive flood zone, suffered catastrophic damage. Millions died of drowning or from waterborne diseases such as cholera and typhus. Wives and daughters were sold by desperate residents, and cases of infanticide and even cannibalism were reported in stark details to the government. Some of the areas affected included Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, Wuhan, and Chongqing. The high-water mark was reached on 19 August at Hankou, Wuhan, with the water level exceeding 53 ft (16 m) above normal. Comparatively, this is an average of 5.6 ft (1.7 m) above the Shanghai Bund. On the evening of 25 August 1931, the water rushing through the Grand Canal washed away dikes near Gaoyou Lake. Some 200,000 people drowned in their sleep in the resulting deluge.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 03:00 |
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Speaking of dams... ISIS is in control of the Mosul Dam in Iraq and if they blow it up, Baghdad gets 15 feet of water. Half a million dead. The dam isn't even in the best shape to begin with, but being occupied by fanatics who don't give a... drat doesn't help.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 03:21 |
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Floyd Collinsquote:The Collins family owned Crystal Cave, a tourist cave in the same general area as the Mammoth Caves. Although beautiful, Crystal Cave attracted a disappointingly low number of tourists because of its remote location. Collins hoped to find another entrance to the Mammoth Caves or possibly a new cave along the road to the Mammoth Caves and to draw some of the visitors to them. He made an agreement with three farmers who owned land closer to the main highway. If he found a cave with commercial potential on their land, the owners would pay to develop the cave, and Collins would share in the profits from operating it as a tourist attraction. Working alone over three weeks, he explored and expanded a hole that would later be named "Sand Cave" by news media. quote:Shortly after the media arrived, the publicity drew crowds of tourists to the site, at one point numbering in the tens of thousands. Vendors set up stalls to sell food and souvenirs, creating to a circus-like atmosphere. Trapped underground is one of my big fears, but to be that close to the surface with thousands of people coming by to gawk is something else. Also has a good bit in the wiki article about the owners after the Collins Family digging up Floyd's body and putting it up for display in a glass-topped coffin.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 04:14 |
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DryGoods posted:Floyd Collins Well at least he got the tourists there. Alls well that ends well!
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 04:31 |
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Wait if his friends could reach him to give him crackers and set up lights, how did he die of starvation and exposure? Did no one think to ask his friends to drop in a Twinkie or something?
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 04:36 |
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Nemesis Of Moles posted:Wait if his friends could reach him to give him crackers and set up lights, how did he die of starvation and exposure? Did no one think to ask his friends to drop in a Twinkie or something?
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 04:41 |
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IShallRiseAgain posted:Read the article, it said part of the tunnel collapsed. They weren't able to reach him at all for almost 2 weeks. Oh duh, yeah my bad.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 04:43 |
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Dr Scoofles posted:The whole sex doll thing creeps me the gently caress out. Even though they are lumps of plastic I find the glassy eyes and limp bodies to be utterly horrifying, they look like corpses slumped in wheelchairs. Even more horrifying are the sorts of people who are super into the doll loving community and the way they refer to women as 'human females'. I may be remembering wrong, but when the doll fucker thread was around people posted stories of folks who worked in doll repair shops and how they would receive dolls who were riddled with knife wounds or had their vaginas slashed up and poo poo.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 05:05 |
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Not wikipedia but there are volcanoes in Australia! http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/queensland/volcano-eruption-overdue-20090921-fwxm.html
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 05:22 |
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DryGoods posted:Floyd Collins Here's Floyd. I don't know if he's trapped here or not. But it's creepy to think that this might be the last photo of him alive. And here's Floyd's body on display in Crystal Cave. "Floyd Collin’s body was recovered and placed in his family’s Crystal Cave. Floyd CollinsIt was presented in a glass coffin, but the normal paid tour did not pass by his glass coffin.Rumor has it that if you passed the tour guide a good gratuity, then a view of Floyd was allowed. Floyd’s body rested securely until one night a group of vandals entered Crystal Cave and stole his body. The robbers were never identified, but the body was found wrapped up in a gunny sack near the Green River. A lot of mention is given to the fact that it was missing a leg, as though the robbers took the leg off the corpse.Other accounts state that his Father authorized the amputation of Floyd’s leg in order that his body could be removed from his entrapment in the first place."
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 05:33 |
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rayne503 posted:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1931_China_floods This actually is kind of personal for me. My dad's family comes from Hunan and during the floods, my great-grandma and her family had to climb onto the roof to get away from the water. While they were there, they considered pushing her off the roof in order for the others to have a better chance for survival and she was just a girl anyways. Obviously they didn't and she lived on to be 96 and died surrounded by her nine children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. What's unnerving to me is that sometimes I'll think about how if she had been pushed in the water, 100+ people wouldn't even exist today.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 18:55 |
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DryGoods posted:Trapped underground is one of my big fears, Don't read this then: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/what-lies-beneath-mossdale-caving-disaster-794268.html The Mossdale Cavern disaster: quote:On 24 June 1967, in the world's worst caving tragedy, six tough young men perished by drowning in the tortuous extremities of Yorkshire's Mossdale Caverns. Classed as Super Severe, the cave was notorious as being Britain's most testing – its far reaches then as now seen by fewer people than have walked on the Moon. quote:Rain was falling steadily; the dam still unstable. Reaching the corpses took five hours crawling – their retrieval seemed impossible. The coroner, Steven Brown, conferred with the parents, police and rescue leaders. Obtaining Home Office sanction for an inquest without bodies, he ordered the cave to be permanently sealed and be respected as a grave. Seriously, just read it. It's a good and rather moving article.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 20:00 |
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Literally Kermit posted:Lastly most unnearving and scary this the DSV Alvin is still in service after all these years and several refits. Scary awesome. Keep exploring the deep, little buddy. See what you can see. My mom got to go and see the Alvin recently which was pretty cool. She brought back a styrofoam cup that had started out at 7" high. They put them on the Alvin and after coming back from deapth, the cups are shrunk down to little perfect 2" versions of the original cup. Pressure is cool when it's not exploding your brains. edit for content: I felt like I already posted this link but apparently I didn't. http://www.crimelibrary.com/serial_killers/predators/rais/index_1.html I could have linked to the Wikipedia article but I liked the way crime library broke it down better. I really like the idea of historical serial killers because you can't ever really be sure if they did what history said they did. Gilles de Rais was a French nobleman and soldier who spent time fighting alongside Joan of Arc as her main general and advisor. The two of them helped put Charles II on France's throne. Joan was by all accounts an all around general badass but Gilles was later accused of some unsavory activity. He seemed to be on good behavior when he was hacking through dudes on behalf of Joan of Arc and Charles II but after the fighting he got up to some shenanigans and got away with it as one of the richest men in France. Namely he kidnapped, sexually molested, and killed young boys followed by disemboweling them and loving their entrails. He admitted to this in court and had people testify that he did these things as well but was he actually an early sexual serial killer or was this some political plot? It's an interesting read and makes you think. JibbaJabberwocky has a new favorite as of 00:13 on Aug 9, 2014 |
# ? Aug 8, 2014 20:10 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 22:30 |
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The most unnerving thing about the Titanic to me is that, nearly a century later, we didn't learn our lesson and the Costa Concordia was destroyed by the same drat thing: both ships had her hulls sliced open by an immovable object, resulting in massive flooding. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Costa_concordia#2012_grounding_and_partial_sinking From what I've read, a double hull would have helped slowed, if not stopped, a fatal amount of flooding on the Costa Concordia, but cruise ships generally don't utilize them in favor of more possible cargo weight. I'm probably wrong on that, though, I'm not a shipbuilding expert. The idea that a sheet of steel is the only thing keeping water out on even modern ships, and that they are still incredibly susceptible to being torn open despite the fact that we have 100 years of advancements in shipbuilding, is unsettling to me.
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# ? Aug 9, 2014 04:11 |