wpr
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15 years ago
Alright IM! That was worth +1
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wpr
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15 years ago
Existentialism is a term applied to the work of a number of 19th- and 20th-century philosophers who, despite profound doctrinal differences, generally held that the focus of philosophical thought should be to deal with the conditions of existence of the individual person and his or her emotions, actions, responsibilities, and thoughts. The early 19th century philosopher Sren Kierkegaard, posthumously regarded as the father of existentialism, maintained that the individual solely has the responsibilities of giving one's own life meaning and living that life passionately and sincerely, in spite of many existential obstacles and distractions including despair, angst, absurdity, alienation, and boredom.

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Nonstopdrivel
15 years ago
If Tyrannosaurus rex is the most famous of the dinosaurs, then Brontosaurus is probably the second most famous. Yet oddly enough, it never existed.

Apatosaurus was discovered by Othniel Charles Marsh, a Professor of Paleontology at Yale University, in 1877, though the skeleton he found was incomplete. A couple of years later, he found the bones of a species similar to Apatosaurus, but different enough in size that he placed it in a new genus altogether. The original specimen skeleton, which he named Brontosaurus (from the Greek meaning 'thunder' and meaning 'lizard') was cobbled together from several different dinosaurs, most close relatives of the Apatosaurus, and placed on display at Yale's Peabody Museum of Natural History in 1905. Several of the bones were in fact recreated using pieces of broken bones. Journal articles as early as 1803 had pointed out that there weren't enough differences between Apatosaurus and Brontosaurus to justify classifying them in separate genuses, and as this became more widely accepted, the species gradually passed out of the canon.

Yet to this days, kids still talk about the good old Brontosaurus. Some things never die.
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wpr
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15 years ago

If Tyrannosaurus rex is the most famous of the dinosaurs, then Brontosaurus is probably the second most famous. Yet oddly enough, it never existed.

Apatosaurus was discovered by Othniel Charles Marsh, a Professor of Paleontology at Yale University, in 1877, though the skeleton he found was incomplete. A couple of years later, he found the bones of a species similar to Apatosaurus, but different enough in size that he placed it in a new genus altogether. The original specimen skeleton, which he named Brontosaurus (from the Greek meaning 'thunder' and meaning 'lizard') was cobbled together from several different dinosaurs, most close relatives of the Apatosaurus, and placed on display at Yale's Peabody Museum of Natural History in 1905. Several of the bones were in fact recreated using pieces of broken bones. Journal articles as early as 1803 had pointed out that there weren't enough differences between Apatosaurus and Brontosaurus to justify classifying them in separate genuses, and as this became more widely accepted, the species gradually passed out of the canon.

Yet to this days, kids still talk about the good old Brontosaurus. Some things never die.

"Nonstopdrivel" wrote:



Thanks in part to Fred Flinstone and his bronto burgers.
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dfosterf
15 years ago
You have to wonder what exactly was in those Bronto Burgers after Non's expose'.
wpr
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15 years ago

You have to wonder what exactly was in those Bronto Burgers after Non's expose'.

"dfosterf" wrote:



Chicken.
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dfosterf
15 years ago

You have to wonder what exactly was in those Bronto Burgers after Non's expose'.

"wpr" wrote:



Chicken.

"dfosterf" wrote:



I think they were eating T-Rex. I think it only TASTED like chicken. Read the highlighted portion of this article.

Healthscience 

Mmm, tastes like chicken: Common ancestors could account for phenomenon

By Byron Spice, Science Editor, Post-Gazette

It was inevitable.
Once the castaway contestants on CBS's "Survivor" had their first rat skinned and sizzling over the fire, everyone knew what would come next.
Tastes like chicken, they reported.
Why should rats on the South Pacific isle of Pulau Tiga-- apparently the descendants of shipwrecked common black rats, the species Rattus rattus -- taste like chicken, Gallus gallus?
For that matter, why did Uncle Hank insist that, if you ignored the buckshot, those squirrels he bagged tasted just like chicken? Remember the day Mom served rabbit? Bet it tasted like chicken.
Why do so many meats taste like chicken?
One obvious answer is that they don't. It's simply more comforting to think you're feasting on Sunday chicken than munching on an animal associated with garbage bins. "As poor as we got in the ghetto, we never ate rats," observed Ramona Gray, a 29-year-old chemist from Edison, N.J., just before the famished competitor began gnawing on a rat leg in "Survivor's" third episode.
Ruth Adams Bronz, a culinary author, former restaurateur and host of a radio food show in western Massachusetts, said a rat's diet in a nonurban habitat is actually pretty healthy -- nuts, berries, fruits. Consequently, island rat probably doesn't taste that bad, though her advice would be to disguise it a bit.
"Get the skeleton out of that rat," she suggested. "Get the tail away from the table. Don't let anyone see an ear."
Bronz didn't volunteer to do any taste-testing of her own, however.
Another reason why rat and so many other meats taste like chicken is that skinned, boned chicken breast is just so darn bland. The muscle itself, she said, doesn't have much flavor.
"What gives meat its flavor is the fat," Bronz said, and the feed given commercial chickens is meant to produce innocuous fat. By contrast, a free-range chicken that eats a more varied diet has a distinctive taste, thanks to its more flavorful fat. "Chickens are very sensitive to their feed," she noted.
When you remove skin and fat from the already mild commercial chicken meat, what's left tastes pretty plain. "That's why when you say something tastes like chicken, what you're saying is it doesn't taste like anything at all," she said.
Mark Mattern, senior chef instructor at the Disney Institute in Orlando, Fla., agrees with the tasteless description, though he emphasizes the role of glutamate and "rigor" in altering meat's "mouthfeel." Chicken breast has low levels of glutamate, the chemical associated with the "fifth taste" known as umami, which is savory rather than sweet, sour, bitter or salty. Chicken muscle also has little rigor, the quality that determines a meat's toughness.
After sufficient processing, which lowers glutamate levels and tenderizes the meat, almost any meat can be made to taste like chicken, said Mattern, a North Hills native.
An ordinary person might let the whole matter go at that, but Joe Staton, an evolutionary biologist at the University of South Carolina, several years ago launched a whole new field of study -- culinary evolution -- to root out the origins of chicken flavor.
Actually, he was less interested in answering the burning question of why so many cooked meats taste like chicken than in finding a way to teach evolutionary principles to easily bored undergraduates. "This makes them laugh," he explained.
One of the ideas he wanted to get across is how an organism's different traits have different evolutionary origins -- some are inherited from thousands or perhaps millions of generations of ancestors and shared with other related species, while others have been acquired more recently and are less widely shared, if at all.
So Staton, then at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University, set out to determine if a creature's taste is something that it evolves independently, or inherits from an ancient ancestor. He went to supermarkets that sell exotic meats, gathered up as many types of meats as he could find, and began his gustatory exploits.
In cases where he wasn't able or willing to sample a meat type, he relied on either experts or "common knowledge." He then plotted the flavor results on a phylogenetic tree, a diagram that shows which kinds of animals evolved from which other animals.
It's a task he approached lightheartedly. In fact, his analysis was published two years ago in the Annals of Improbable Research, the tongue-in-cheek magazine that sponsors the annual "Ig-Nobel" awards honoring research "that cannot or should not be reproduced."
Staton, whose serious work involves studying the genetics of microscopic marine invertebrates called meiofauna, said his aim was to have some fun with the evolution of taste. "But the data are real, to the best of my knowledge," he added.
He concluded, not surprisingly, that the cooked flavor of meat generally is something that developed with a common ancestor of all "tetrapods" -- four-limbed creatures with a backbone. Taste is not something that seems to have evolved independently in creatures that have similar tastes, he said.
"They all taste the same," Staton said, "because they all have a common ancestor."
Muscle is muscle.
Certainly, almost all birds taste like chicken. The only odd bird Staton found was the ostrich, which has a more beef-like flavor. He attributed the difference to the dense system of blood vessels required to feed the big bird's muscular legs.
Mammal meat was a little harder to fit into a pattern. Differences in hemoglobin and myoglobin levels in mammal meat -- perhaps related to different ways that mammals manage their internal temperatures -- result in different tastes.
He maintains it's impossible to determine whether the beefy flavors of hoofed mammals evolved before pork-like flavors.
And humans, in case you were wondering, have a pork-like flavor, Staton noted, emphasizing that he was basing this observation only on hearsay. Cannibals have been known to refer to humans as "long pork."
Bronz noted that humans, like pigs, carry their fat on the outside, rather than marbled through the muscle like beef cattle.
Staton couldn't bring himself to try mouse meat, much less sample the rats so popular on "Survivor." He stopped short of predicting how it might taste, noting that a close relative, muskrat, has a beefy flavor, while another close relative, rabbit, tastes like chicken.
But there are those who have sampled mouse meat, like outdoor writer Farley Mowat. In his book, "Never Cry Wolf," Mowat described mouse meat as "pleasing, if rather bland."
Why he didn't just say, "Tastes like chicken," we can only guess.
Amphibians and reptiles such as salamanders, frogs and turtles also have chicken-like flavor.
Seafood has its own flavor, which evolved even earlier than the tetrapods. But, again, "crabs taste like lobsters because they both evolved from the same group of crabby-lobstery-tasting crustaceans."
It's possible to use this evolutionary approach to predict how certain creatures tasted, Staton said. Dinosaurs, for instance, evolved after reptiles. Birds, according to many scientists, may have evolved from dinosaurs.
So what was the flavor of Tyrannosaurus rex, the carnivorous dinosaur that some scientists are now arguing should be called Manospondylus gigas?
By either name, it tasted like chicken.



Now if Fred, Barney, et al were detecting a pork-like flavor...well, you just might want to read the fine (relatively speaking) print in the article.

Now those bean  counters at the RockDonald's were probably serving Trachodon, but that is another story, for another thread.
wpr
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15 years ago
Trexucken
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IronMan
15 years ago

Trexucken
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"wpr" wrote:


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dfosterf
15 years ago
Speaking of birds, I was just contemplating the road runner and the coyote that was always trying to catch him. Does anyone know what the "E" stands for in Wile E. Coyote? Yes? No? Don't give a rat's ass? <-------(They taste like chicken, see previous post)

Well, I'm going to tell you anyway, yessir!

Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner 

What the E stands for is Elenberry-a name that was once said in the comics of Road Runner. Elenberry is a type of fruit that is parasitic (takes nutrients from other fruits around it). Although the coyote's last name is routinely pronounced with a long "e" as in the real-life animal (e.g. "ky-O'-tee"), in at least one case (To Hare is Human), the character himself is heard pronouncing it with a long "a" (e.g. "ky-O'-tay") in an attempt to sound refined or intellectual.

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