Elbow Pass
Weekend hike down Elbow Pass, Peter Lougheed Provincial Park. The last panorama is a 200ish degree view.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elbow_Pass
http://www.albertaparks.ca/peter-lougheed/information-facilities/day-use/elbow-pass.aspx?id=st-day:8145
http://www.trailpeak.com/trail-Elbow-Lake-near-Kananaskis-AB-2183
Jason Padgett
"Jason D. Padgett is a number theorist with Acquired Savant Syndrome from Anchorage Alaska, currently living in Tacoma Washington."
Real ‘Beautiful Mind’: College Dropout Became Mathematical Genius After Mugging
Images from: http://fineartamerica.com/profiles/jason-padgett.html

George Bellows
"George Wesley Bellows (1882 - 1925) was an American realist painter, known for his bold depictions of urban life in New York City"
http://www.georgebellows.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Bellows
http://www.artfinder.com/artist/george-wesley-bellows/
Panorama at ya
I've decided to document my jaunts in panorama form, so here are a couple bonerable panoramas to pleasure your occipital lobe and celebrate a return to a blog layout that actually works. The first is Horseshoe Canyon west of Drumheller and the second is a bit below the fire lookout at Barrier Lake in Kananaskis. Alberta Canada. Cha.
BBC - The Perfect Suit
I bought my first suit the other day. All of a sudden I'm looking at the GQ website to see if I bought the right fit and all that nonsense. Here's a BBC documentary on suits that delves into the history of the suit and how it forms the male identity. And stuff.
Henrietta Lacks
Henrietta Lacks died of cervical cancer in 1951, but cells taken from her tumour have lived on to the present day as the HeLa immortal cell line. The mutated cancerous cells can divide an unlimited number of times. Of course, normal cells don't do that, which is why we age and die, and also why we aren't all dead from cancer. Fascinating and deeply ironic at the same time, no?
"HeLa cells have an active version of telomerase during cell division,[21] which prevents the incremental shortening of telomeres that is implicated in aging and eventual cell death. In this way the cells circumvent the Hayflick Limit, which is the limited number of cell divisions that most normal cells can later undergo before becoming senescent." (Senescence being aging)
Apparently about 20 tons of Henrietta's cancer cells have been grown to be used in the testing of various things.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)