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SWAT Team Storms Private Bunker

May 10, 2012 – 1:39 pm | 3 Comments

The anti-survivalist actions of some authorities in the USA are getting much worse. In recent times we have seen the malicious use of zoning laws to thwart survival plans, and we have seen many of things survivalists do listed as suspicious (in a terrorism way). This most recent news is of special concern for anyone who has a private bunker:
After getting dressed Mr. Del Rio went and opened his front door. He was immediately bum rushed by the Austin Police Department’s SWAT Team and then detained and interrogated for over 10 hours.
His crime: on his property was an old Cold War bunker that Mr. Del Rio had converted into a workshop.
You’d think the interrogation would have been enough punishment, but unfortunately the authorities:

fenced off his home and prohibited him from entering the residence
filled in his entire basement and bunker with 264 tons of concrete
sent him a bill for $90,000 in …

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Articles in Evolution

Snake Grows a Leg!

December 27, 2009 – 10:29 am | 6 Comments
Snake Grows a Leg!

Occasionally snakes have two heads, but this mutation is quite unique, and eerily appropriate with 2012 approaching. 2012 is the Chinese Year of the Dragon, and possibly the return of Quetzalcoatl (“feathered serpent” = dragon) for the Maya. Here we have a snake that has grown a leg. Source: The Telegraph

UltraSound and Evolution

July 2, 2009 – 3:13 pm | No Comment
UltraSound and Evolution

Barely mentioned in the scientific media, heating from sonic waves can activate genes:
Using mice engineered with a bioluminescent gene containing a heat-sensitive stretch of DNA, they focused high-intensity ultrasound pulses on a 0.5-millimeter-wide patch of the mice’s legs, heating up that area just below the skin’s surface to about 43 degrees Celsius (109 degrees Fahrenheit). Light given off revealed that the gene became active.
Call me stupid, but could there be a link between why dogs have evolved to hear ultrasounds (for no purpose that I could find), and the ability of these waves to activate genes, and evolution?

Rapid Darwinian Evolution

February 25, 2009 – 4:14 pm | No Comment
Rapid Darwinian Evolution

Simply stated, Darwin told us that evolution revolves around the survival of the fittest – those least fit don’t make it, and therefore they don’t leave offspring. Those most fit will prosper, and their offspring will inherit the genes that gave them that advantage.
Most experts would say that evolution is a slow process. Some say it can happen rapidly (see “punctuated equilibrium“). I figure both are correct – it can happen fast, medium or slow. The more extreme the circumstances, the more rapid the evolution.
In late 2007 SciAm published an opinion piece that highlights just how rapidly evolution can occur:
Brought to Queensland in 1935 to combat beetles infesting sugarcane fields, the [Cane]toads have spread out from their point of entry like the shock waves of a bomb, warty legs and oversize tongues jettisoned into every conceivable ecological crack.
…Recent research… has shown that the toads are evolving as they spread, perfecting …

Blue Eyes only 10,000 Years Old

January 28, 2009 – 11:51 am | 3 Comments
Blue Eyes only 10,000 Years Old

According to Discover magazine, “blue eyes have their hue because of a single genetic mutation that occurred fewer than 10,000 years ago in one individual and swept rapidly through the European population…”
The most likely cause of the mutation spreading would be that individual having lots of children…
Various theories vaguely related to 2012 include ancient races known by names such as the Watchers, Angels, Annunaki, Atlanteans, Nephilim and so on. They are generally depicted as either being lizard-like, or Elvish (think LOTR).
Could this mutation have come from one of these speculative races? If so, what was their relation with humans? Did this individual just happen to have lots of children with human partners, or were the conceptions forced, or even experimental in nature?
Food for thought.

Were Unicorns Real?

September 18, 2008 – 11:00 am | One Comment
Were Unicorns Real?

As this image of a deer in Italy shows, genetic abnormalities can cause a creature to have a “horn”. The reamining question is whether the unicorn myth was due to one odd deer (or horse), or whether it was an inherited genetic trait that existed in large enough numbers to give them their own name of unicorn.

Human evolution speeding up?

August 8, 2008 – 2:44 am | No Comment
Human evolution speeding up?

The pace of change accelerated about 40,000 years ago and then picked up even more with the advent of agriculture about 10,000 years ago, the study says.
…The biggest changes have come since the end of the last ice age, about 10,000 years ago, which opened up new environments for the quickly expanding human population to grow from millions to billions.
More people mean more mutations, Harpending noted.
“You are also giving them the potential to be adaptive mutations,” said Brian Verrelli, who studies population genetics and evolution at Arizona State University in Tempe and was not involved in the research.
Hmmm…
Evolution has speed up since 10,00 years ago – for me this means since the last global cataclysm.
“More people means more mutations”. How about, more cosmic rays meant more mutations!

Where did we come from, originally?

June 22, 2008 – 11:40 pm | 2 Comments
Where did we come from, originally?

Regarding the very beginning, ie DNA, the recent analysis of an Australian meteorite provides evidence for Carl Sagan’s idea that we are of extra-terrestial origins:
Researchers discovered the organic molecules uracil and xanthine in the meteorite and confirmed they could not have formed on Earth. These molecules, called nucleobases, are precursors to DNA…
“Emergent life systems may have adopted nucleobases from meteoritic fragments for use in an early and primitive genetic material, enabling them to pass on their successful features to the next generations,” said study leader Zita Martins of Imperial College London.
Regarding our evolution from apes to humans, I came across an article at Nature.com that proposes a nuclear reactor could occur at the base of Earth’s mantle – providing heat and also radiation. The key factor for me is this:
Yet it is clear that natural nuclear reactors can occur. Crustal rocks at Oklo in Gabon, Africa, bear unambiguous evidence of …

Supporting Evolution Snippets from New Scientist

April 22, 2008 – 10:32 am | No Comment
Supporting Evolution Snippets from New Scientist

Can mutation really lead to the evolution of new species?
Yes. Several species of abalone shellfish have evolved due to mutations in the protein “key” on the surface of sperm that binds to a “lock” on the surface of eggs. This might appear impossible, but it turns out that some eggs are prepared to be penetrated by deviant sperm. The same thing can happen in fruit flies, and likely in many other groups too. In yeasts, the mutations that led to some new species forming have not only been identified, they have even been reversed.
http://www.newscientist.com/channel/life/dn13673-evolution-myths-mutations-can-only-destroy-information.html
Organisms do not always hang about waiting for a helpful mutation to occur. For instance, the parasite that causes sleeping sickness has thousands of spare genes for its coat proteins, which it mixes and matches to generate new coats faster than its host’s immune system can keep up.
More controversially, a few biologists think some microbes may have …

Thanks Cataclysm, for Blue Eyes

February 2, 2008 – 1:42 pm | 4 Comments
Thanks Cataclysm, for Blue Eyes

Further (minor) evidence for my evolution circa 10,000 BC theories:
A team of scientists has tracked down a genetic mutation that leads to blue eyes. The mutation occurred between 6,000 and 10,000 years ago. Before then, there were no blue eyes.
…”From this we can conclude that all blue-eyed individuals are linked to the same ancestor,” Eiberg said. “They have all inherited the same switch at exactly the same spot in their DNA.” Eiberg and his colleagues detailed their study in the Jan. 3 online edition of the journal Human Genetics.
That genetic switch somehow spread throughout Europe and now other parts of the world.
“The question really is, ‘Why did we go from having nobody on Earth with blue eyes 10,000 years ago to having 20 or 40 percent of Europeans having blue eyes now?” Hawks said. “This gene does something good for people. It makes them have more kids.”
http://www.livescience.com/health/080131-blue-eyes.html
Unless of …

Sex with Gorillas – Idea Affects Scientific Analysis

December 17, 2007 – 2:58 pm | No Comment
Sex with Gorillas – Idea Affects Scientific Analysis

It has been scientifically proven that pubic lice were transferred between early humans and gorillas about 3.3 million years ago.
Pubic.
Pubic.
However, those discovering scientists:
“claim it is far more likely that early humans caught the lice from sleeping in abandoned gorilla nests than from having sex with gorillas.”
…According to Reed, this suggests that early humans and gorillas made close contact, though he “seriously doubts” that pubic lice transferred between the two during sex.
…Pubic lice can live for up to 24 hours once removed from their host. But he acknowledges: “I don’t know if we’ll ever be able to know for certain which hypothesis is correct.”
So, given that gorilla sex is abhorrent to the scientists, despite that 24hr survival time, they have decided that humans snuck into “abandoned gorilla nests” less than 24 hours after they were abandoned.
This is right up there with “every statue is a god or goddess”.

Risk Distribution Law For Evolution

November 11, 2007 – 1:12 am | No Comment
Risk Distribution Law For Evolution

I’ve been saying for a long time that a bombardment of cosmic rays would cause high rates of mutations in humans, but our bodies are capable of repairing DNA damage, and can choose which damage to leave unfixed. That’s correct – choose.
Now supporting evidence has arrived:
Barkai and her team discovered a sort of “risk distribution law” for evolution. They found that a genetic “phrase” that regularly shows up in the promoter region of genes (the bit of genetic code responsible for activating the gene) contains a key to gene conservation: The expression of a gene that contains the sequence TATA in its promoter is more likely to have evolved than that of a gene that does not have TATA in its promoter.
In other words, the level of risk appears to written in the gene code, in a way that’s similar to financial risk analysis: When the cost of error is …