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The Messenger spacecraft has photographed some neat craters on Mercury surface and NASA thinks they look like the cookie monster. What kind of magic cookies are you eating, NASA Hmmm, wait. I think they are right. Anyone Else Think This Looks Like the Cookie Monster Ok, so maybe it just me. But the superposition of younger craters on older craters in this case two smaller craters upon the rim of an older crater can result in landforms that appear to resemble more familiar shapes to human eyes. It not just you, NASA. Don ;t worry, it all ok. You may be reading too much Gizmodo and watching too much Sesame Street, but all is fine. And guess what: Sesame Street agrees too! According to the space agency, this image w
stanley cup as acquired as a high-resolution targeted ob
stanley cup servation. Targeted observations are images of a small area on Mercury surface at resolutions much higher than the 200-meter/pixel morphology base map. It is not possible to cover all of Mercury surface at this high resolution, but typically several areas of high scientific interest are imaged in this mode each week. Pretty neat. [NASA] AstronomyNAS
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We have identified well over a hundred different gestures used by chimpanzees,
stanley cup website more than enough to reveal the primates use nonverbal communication much like we do. But it what the chimps are saying with their hands that
stanley mugs truly fascinating. Dr. Anna Roberts of the UK Stirling University spent months in Uganda studying the hand gestures used by chimpanzees to communicate with each other. She identified about 20 to 30 gestures that dealt with concepts from nursing and feeding to fighting and aggression, plus a bunch to do with sex. While these findings aren ;t exactly new 鈥?other researchers have identified over a hundred such gestures in chimps and other primates over the past few years 鈥?what sets this new data apart is how so many of the chimps ; gestures resemble those of humans. Dr. Roberts found that at least a third of the chimps ; gestures were similar to those of humans and meant broadly the same thing. Chimps will use what we would recognize as a begging gesture to get others to give them food, they clap their hands together when excited, and when they want another chimp to approach them, they make what we would instantly recognize as a beckoning gesture. It enough to suggest that these gestures are not simply evolutionary coincidence, that they actually share a common origin with the similar signs used by humans. And, of course, the only way that could work is if these gestures date all the way back to the evolu
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