Showing posts with label weekly celebrations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weekly celebrations. Show all posts

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Tolkien Week September 16th-22nd and Hobbit Day, September 22nd

Tolkien Week September 16th-22nd and Hobbit Day September 22nd



If you need a new reason to celebrate Hobbit Day, do it because maybe there is a little bit of Hobbit inside of you!

One of the most puzzling discoveries in human evolution was the unearthing four years ago of the so-called "Hobbit" — a three-foot tall human-like creature with a brain the size of a grapefruit.

The Hobbit skeleton caused a split among anthropologists. Some scientists have said the Hobbit, found in Indonesia, is a weird human ancestor that somehow survived until some 12,000 to 20,000 years ago, living unnoticed as modern humans took over the world. Others have said it is a modern human with a condition resembling the genetic disease microcephaly.

But new evidence suggests that the hobbit really was a primitive form of human never seen before.

Researcher Matthew Tocheri, who studies wrist bones at the Smithsonian Institution, was shocked when he saw the wrist bones of the Hobbit.

"I opened up the container and I pulled out the bones and, wow, I couldn't believe it. I was like — is somebody putting me on? These are completely primitive," says Tocheri.

Tocheri says his knees were shaking with excitement. If the Hobbit was simply a diseased modern human, or even a human cousin like a Neanderthal, it would have human-like wrist bones. But the wrist bones looked more like those of an ape. Nobody had noticed the difference because the identification requires expertise in the tiny bones of the wrist.

Tocheri spent a year studying three of the Hobbit's wrist bones at the Smithsonian. He says all three of the wrist bones support the idea that it is not a diseased modern human.

"In great apes and other primates, the trapezoid looks like a pyramidal wedge, but in modern humans and Neanderthals, it looks like a boot," says Tocheri.

Another anthropologist who worked with Tocheri, William Jungers at Stony Brook University in New York, agrees. He says if these new findings hold up, it could change scientists' view of human evolution.

"I think we have grossly underestimated the complexity of human evolution and I think there are other surprises like this in store," says Jungers.

The new interpretation has not entirely resolved the dispute. Skeptics say hundreds of genetic diseases could affect the size and shape of human bones.

Although partial remains of other Hobbits have surfaced at the same site, they say it could have been an isolated colony of inbred people who shared the same genetic abnormalities.

But Matthew Tocheri says he thinks the Hobbit is an ancient ancestor and the ultimate survivor.

"Just looking at them and seeing and how primitive they were, I almost felt a certain feeling of success for the Hobbit. They made it, they made it into modern times, they've completely baffled us because they did it," says Tocheri.

Regardless of whether the Hobbits are our ancestors or simply abnormal humans, they clearly defied steep odds to survive.

Tocheri's research will appear in the Sept. 21 issue of Science. (Case Grows for 'Hobbit' as Human Ancestor by Christopher Joyce NPR )

Monday, January 8, 2007

Someday We'll Laugh About This Week, January 2nd -8th


Someday We'll Laugh About This Week

So, let's recap. Absent lost her cell phone on Christmas Day. Absent got a new phone. So we think that everything is going well for Absent. But then, driving home from the best Twelfth Night party ever where she participated in the coolest Wassiling ceremony ever, Absent's battery light comes on, right about Draper.

So, Absent, remembering that her brother had a similar problem (with his alternator) once about at the point of the mountain, and that it wasn't fun to be pulled over on the side of the road there, starts fooling around with buttons on her dashboard and starts her car alarm, which causes the headlights to flash on and off and the horn to honk, while she is driving. While she fumbles to turn the alarm off, she realizes that the car in front of her is a Utah State Trooper.

So, the Trooper follows Absent for a while before he pulls her over. He just wanted to check to see that everything was okay. Absent couldn't find her proof of insurance but the trooper was pretty nice about it. He looked at her battery and told her that it probably was her alternator, and that she should go straight home. That was already the plan.

Saturday, there wasn't a battery light. Then Sunday night, when driving home from Orem, Absent's interior lights begin to freak out... and then go out. And then shortlyh, Absent was driving without headlights, for about five miles. As she pulled into her parking lot, her steering froze up, and she could no longer turn, so she just parked, and pushed the defective vehicle into a proper parking spot.

Which brings us to today. Absent woke up with a head cold. Blah. But, she was able to get the car towed to a dealership. But, Absent was absent from her office of employment all day while trying to get car situation in line, and her head drained of all mucus. Actually, neither is accomplished. Absent's car is absent still, and her head is still full of gross green stuff. And her head is bleeding from the nose a lot. But, that is probably TMI.

And then, while Absent was intent on the scary part of Heroes where the cheerleader was getting levitated and bloody and gross, my lampshade broke. The shade just fell straigh off of its wire frame. It scared Absent because it made a horrible noise, and it made her sad because she loves her lamp. Poor lamp.

It's a good thing that it's Someday We'll Laugh About This Week. And it's a good thing this week ends today. Because other than the car and the lamp, and I probably can't count the cell phone, but I will, I can't loose anything else. This is getting expensive.

Sunday, December 3, 2006

The Weeks of December


The Weeks of December

December 1st-9th
Cookie Cutter Week, Aplastic Anemia Awareness Week, Tolerance Week, Recipe Greetings for the Holidays Week, Clerc-Gallaudet Week, National Handwashing Awareness Week

December 10th-16th
Human Rights Week, International Language Week

December 15th-23rd
Halcyon Days

December 24th-31st
It's About Time Week

Friday, November 10, 2006

The Weeks of November

November 1st-7th

World Communication Week

November 3rd-11th

Animal Shelter Appreciation Week, Long-term Care Awareness Week, "Dear Santa" Letter Week, Kids' Goal Setting Week, World Kindness Week, Chemistry Week, National Fig Week

November 11th-19th

Green Ribbon Awareness Week, Childrens' Book Week, Pursuit of Happiness Week, Hunger and Homelessness Awareness Week, Home Health Care Aide Week

November 17th-24th

Family Week, Farm-City Week, Better Conversation Week, Game and Puzzle Week

November 25th-December 2nd

Travelers with Disabilities Week

Friday, October 6, 2006

The Weeks of October


The Weeks of October

October 1st - 8th

Last Week to Register to Vote, Mental Illness Awareness Week, National Newspaper Week, Teller Appreciation Week, Nuclear Medicine Week, Long Term Care Planning Week, Universal Children's Week, Carry A Tune Week, Financial Planning Week, 4-H Week, No Salt Week, Spinning & Weaving Week, Customer Service Week, World Space Week, Nuclear Medicine Week, Work From Home Week, Squirrel Appreciation Week, Mystery Series Week

October 6th - 15th

Physicians Assistant Week, Get Organized Week, Chili Week, Emergency Nurses Week, Fire Prevention Week, Home-Based Business Week, Chestnut Week, Metric Week, Build Your Business with Business Cards Week, Improve Your Home Office Week, School Lunch Week, Wildlife Week, Pet Peeve Week, Credit Union Week

October 14th - 21st

Shopping Cart Safety Week, Getting the World to Beat a Path to Your Door Week, Freedom from Bullies at Work Week, Radon Action Week, Achieve Financial Differences Week, Getting The World To Beat A Path To Your Door Week, International Credit Union Week, Teen Read Week, Food Bank Week, School Bus Safety Week, YMCA Week without Violence, Character Counts Week, Celebrate Micro Small and Home Business Week, Health Education Week, Infection Prevention Week

October 20th - 31st

Chemistry Week, Massage Therapy Week, Save Your Back Week, Shut-In Visitation Week, New International Version of the Bible Week, World Rainforest Week, Kids Care Week, Pastoral Care Week, Synergy Week International, Celebrate Job Loss Week, Freedom From Bullies at Work Week, Give Wildlife a Break Week, The Magic of Differences Week, United Nations Disarmament Week, Prescription Errors Education & Awareness Week, International Magic Week, Chicken Soup for the Laughing Soul Week, Peace, Friendship & Goodwill Week