Krebs' Free form/Chaos Thread

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Jul 16, 2009
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krebs303 said:
A wild Dingo eating a shark. Welcome to Australia
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yEP .... THATS HOW WE ROLL DOWN HERE !!! :cool:
 
Jul 16, 2009
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Thoughtforfood said:
You guys eat dead things that wash up on the beach?

No not usually, but when weve got deadly snakes / spiders / great white sharks etc anything goes ...... heck ... when a dingo goes a shark its game on !!!
 
Mar 16, 2009
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There once was a young cow named Zephyr.
She seemed quite an amiable hephyr.
But the farmer came near
And she kicked off his ear,
Which made him considerably dephyr.
 
Mar 16, 2009
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World’s oldest sports manual found
worlds_oldest_sports_manual_found_covers_wrestling.jpg


Wrestling announcer Ed Aliverti often spiced up the NCAA Division I wrestling tournament by yelling that wrestling was "the world's oldest and greatest sport." Prints sold at wrestling events depict biblical figure Jacob wrestling an angel, and Abraham Lincoln engaged in his own wrestling match before becoming president. The sport has always been proud of the ancient origins of the sport. Now, wrestling has proof of its long history, as researchers at Columbia University found an instructional manual on wrestling that dates back to 200 A.D. It was discovered in a dump in Egypt, and will now be kept at Columbia, which is also the home to the NCAA's oldest wrestling program. It is considered to be the oldest sports manual of any kind, and the only document that relates to the original Olympic games.
 
Overstuffed Mongrams
In 1960, Cambridge graduate Ron Hall announced a discovery he called Hall’s Law: “For any sufficiently large group of people the average number of initials possessed by members of that group is a direct measure of the predominant social class of the group.”

Hall’s computer analysis of the English aristocracy found that dukes averaged four names apiece, marquesses 3.96, earls 3.92, barons 3.53, baronets 3.49, viscounts 3.41, and knights 3.06. As modern examples he named John Selwyn Brooke Lloyd and Hugh Todd Naylor Gaitskell; those from the past included Admiral the Honorable Reginald Aylmer Ranfurly Plunket-Ernle-Erle-Drax, a commodore of convoys during World War II, and Major Tollemache-Tollemache de Orellana Plantagenet Tollemache-Tollemache, who was killed in World War I.

From across the sea, an American newspaper observed, “It would be interesting to know what the worthy major’s parents called him in his boyhood years.”
 
Apr 20, 2009
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Cobblestones said:
Looks a bit like a giant space condom if you ask me. Maybe G_d is trying to tell us something.

...or space sperm and egg.
↓↓↓↓compare it with sea urchin fertilization↓↓↓↓
eggsperm_320.jpg