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Tag: pseudoscience

Our favorite sea monsters – Mermaids (#5)

Posted on September 7, 2010September 7, 2010 By Bluegrass Blue Crab 5 Comments on Our favorite sea monsters – Mermaids (#5)
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Mermaids occur in legends from cultures around the world and vary in shape, origin, and intent. From the beautiful temptress on the cliffs luring boats onto dangerous shoals to peaceful coexisting aquatic humans, mermaids have made a place for themselves in history. The basics of merfolk is that they are neither human nor fish but some sort of mammal that includes elements of both. They are musically talented and astoundingly beautiful.

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365 days of Darwin: September 7, 2010 (3/7)

Posted on September 7, 2010August 31, 2010 By Andrew Thaler 2 Comments on 365 days of Darwin: September 7, 2010 (3/7)
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Charlie wants to see what it’s like to be a Mer-Darwin

An Ocean of Pseudoscience Linkfest

Posted on September 6, 2010September 8, 2010 By Andrew Thaler
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Below are all the other blogs that have joined in on our week long adventure into an Ocean of Pseudoscience. Ya Like Dags? – There’s an Ocean of Pseudoscience Out There Arthropoda – Ocean of Pseudoscience Week Cephalove – News flash: Octopuses are actually psychic Observations of a Nerd – Ocean of Pseudoscience: Sharks DO … Read More “An Ocean of Pseudoscience Linkfest” »

Our favorite sea monsters – Nessie (#6)

Posted on September 6, 2010September 7, 2010 By David Shiffman 2 Comments on Our favorite sea monsters – Nessie (#6)
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One of the most famous “sea monsters” of all time – so famous that her outline graces the Ocean of Pseudoscience Week logo – actually lives in a lake. I’m talking, of course, about “Nessie”, the Loch Ness monster.

Local reports of a bizarre creature inhabiting the Scottish lake go back over a thousand years, but the story became popularized in the 1930’s when Dr. Robert Kenneth Wilson took a now-famous photograph.

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The Green Flash

Posted on September 6, 2010September 7, 2010 By Bluegrass Blue Crab 5 Comments on The Green Flash
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Legend goes that just as the sun sets below the horizon, a flash of green light appears to kiss the day goodbye. Sailors say that when the flash appears, it means a soul has crossed over. Jules Verne wrote that those who witnessed it could no longer be deceived because he could read the thoughts of others. Admiral Byrd supposedly saw one that lasted 35 minutes.  For a full record of sightings, see here.  But is this really stuff of legend or a real phenomenon in the sky?

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Ocean of Pseudoscience Shorty – Sharks and Cancer

Posted on September 6, 2010September 7, 2010 By David Shiffman 1 Comment on Ocean of Pseudoscience Shorty – Sharks and Cancer
Science

One of the most prevalent shark myths  is  “sharks don’t get cancer”. This is associated with the more troubling myth that consuming shark cartilage will cure humans of cancer. Despite the success of books with titles like “Sharks don’t get cancer: How shark cartilage could save your life” and “Sharks still don’t get cancer: The … Read More “Ocean of Pseudoscience Shorty – Sharks and Cancer” »

The Gentle Tasaday: An anthropological hoax

Posted on September 6, 2010September 7, 2010 By Bluegrass Blue Crab 7 Comments on The Gentle Tasaday: An anthropological hoax
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In 1971, a group of people known as the Tasaday were discovered on a remote island of the Phillipines known as Mindanao. They wore leafy loincloths and subsisted off what the forest could provide, possessing no knowledge of tobacco, corn, rice, or domesticated animals. They spoke a new dialect of Malay-Philipino language that included no word for outsiders, war, weapon, or enemy, giving them the title ‘The Gentle Tasaday’. The family unit was nuclear and the community has no formal organization or government outside of some loose food-sharing networks.

Today, Tasaday life is way different and matches more modern tribal life in the Phillipines, as documented on their website. The question is, however, whether this modernization was normal development post-contact or whether there was a hoax involved.

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365 days of Darwin: September 6, 2010 (2/7)

Posted on September 6, 2010August 31, 2010 By Andrew Thaler
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Charlie dons his beret and Julbo mountain goggles as he gets ready to bust some ocean myths

It’s an Ocean of Pseudoscience Week!

Posted on September 5, 2010October 1, 2011 By Andrew Thaler 7 Comments on It’s an Ocean of Pseudoscience Week!
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Pseudoscience. The world is full of it. From acupuncture to cryptozoology to ghosts and homeopathy, sometimes it’s harmless and sometimes it’s not. The major trend that runs through all pseudoscience is that the anecdote trumps data. So what if the data indicate that Bigfoot ain’t real, I saw one! It must be true! The ocean … Read More “It’s an Ocean of Pseudoscience Week!” »

365 days of Darwin: September 5, 2010 (1/7)

Posted on September 5, 2010August 31, 2010 By Andrew Thaler
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Hmm, I wonder why Charlie is reading that book…

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