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Sunday 21 October 2012

creating scenarios of perfect situations

Our brain spends 80% of its time replaying memories & creating scenarios of perfect situations.

Real Superpower Man


Real Superpower Man who eats everything, he's a french intertainer known as Monsieur Mangetout (Mister Eats All)

Michel Lotito has a stomach lining which is twice as thick as normal, and it is a rare condition that most doctors are not sure how it occurs. This man can eat metal, glass, as well as toxic and poisonous material. He also consumes mineral oil and drinks tons of water. His gastric juic
es, or digestive acids, are unusually powerful, which is the only explanation on how he can digest metallic feasts. He entered the Guinness book of records after eating an airplane! It took him TWO YEARS to finish it (from 1978 to 1980).

Here is the list of items consumed by Michel Lotito
Bicycle - 18
Shopping cart - 15
Television - 7
Chandelier - 6
Bed - 2
Skis - 1
Cessna aircraft - 1
Coffin - 1
A steel chain - 400m

Michel Lotito died of natural causes on June 25, 2007, ten days after his 57th birthday.
 

Lake Natron is a salt lake located in northern Tanzania

Lake Natron is a salt lake located in northern Tanzania, close to the Kenyan border.

The color of the lake is characteristic of those where very high evaporation rates occur.

The red accessory photosynthesizing pigment in the cyanobacteria produces the deep reds of the open water of the lake, and orange colors of the shallow parts of the lake.


Seeing Stars Spin

Seeing Stars Spin

This gorgeous image required an all-night exposure, made on a night with no moon and clear skies. It was shot on Blackcomb Mountain in British Columbia, Canada.

The photographer, Kim Eijdenberg, told National Geographic's My Shot, "It's amazing to think it's really us who are spinning in relation to the stars."

That's because the Earth rotates on its axis and revolves around the sun.


Morning Glory Pool (Hole), Wyoming, USA

Morning Glory Pool (Hole), Wyoming, USA

This is one of the most prominent and prettiest thermal pools in the Yellowstone park. The depth of this pool (natural hole) is 4 meters (13ft). The "Morning Glory Pool" was given its name in the 1880 for its resemblance to a morning glory flower.

The distinct color of the pool is due to bacteria which inhabit the water. However, this pool was once in dang

er of losing its colors when the Grand Loop Road used to pass close to it, which increased the likelihood of thoughtless visitors throwing coins into it - thus causing the pool to cool and jeopardize the existence of the color-causing bacteria that thrive within. Today, you'll have to do a little walking along the Upper Geyser Basin to get to the pool, and it's well worth the exercise.
 

Crooked Forest, Poland

Crooked Forest, Poland

In a tiny corner of western Poland a forest of about 400 pine trees grow with a 90 degree bend at the base of their trunks - all bent northward. Surrounded by a larger forest of straight growing pine trees this collection of curved trees, or "Crooked Forest," is a mystery.

Planted around 1930, the trees managed to grow for seven to 10 years before getting held down, in what is understood to have been human mechanical intervention. Though why exactly the original tree farmers wanted so many crooked trees is unknown.


World’s Smallest Fish

World’s Smallest Fish

The world’s smallest fish has been discovered in the peat swamps of the Indonesian Island of Sumatra. The picture on the right shows its size against a thumb. At maturity, the fish can be about 7.9 mm in length.