Helioceras Heteromorph Ammonite

Helioceras Heteromorph Ammonite

Helioceras Heteromorph Ammonite

More Posts from Iphleandro-blog and Others

6 years ago
Entelodonts: Terrifying.

Entelodonts: terrifying.

Shown here compared to a modern pig skull on the left. (Entelodonts were actually more closely related to whales and hippos than pigs.)

6 years ago

Apparently, Luzia’s section of the museum is ruined.

She was a fossil known as “the first brazilian”, because hers were the oldest homo sapiens remains found in brazilian soil. Her skull was discovered in Minas Gerais in the 70′s and anyone who visited the national museum from the 80′s until now has seen her face.

Descanse em paz, mais uma vez, Luzia.

Apparently, Luzia’s Section Of The Museum Is Ruined.
6 years ago
You And I Had A Fight Recently.
You And I Had A Fight Recently.
You And I Had A Fight Recently.
You And I Had A Fight Recently.

You and I had a fight recently.

6 years ago

PROBOSCIDEANS

Whilst we all know that modern elephants are beautiful and remarkable creatures, few may be familiar with the order of which they are from, Proboscidea. Proboscidea not only contains the elephantids, but a whole range of diverse mammals, some reaching magnificent sizes and each one more intriguing than the last.

Deinotherium 

PROBOSCIDEANS

Deinotherium quite literally means “terrible beast” and they trawled the savannah-like Miocene landscape. Deinotheriums most striking feature is certainly its menacing downward facing tusks, a complete skull found in the nineteenth century measured at just under a metre in length, the skull also showed very deep nasal bones suggesting it had a much wider and shorter trunk than modern elephants. The reason for the unusual orientation of the tusks has been debated, perhaps they were purely for attracting mates or maybe they had a vital role in stripping tree bark to eat. Deinotherium was quite a bit larger than modern elephants standing a whopping 4 metres tall (almost as tall as a double decker bus) and weighing in at an estimate 11-14 tonnes.

Palaeoxodon namadicus 

Palaeoxodon namadicus, otherwise known as the Asian straight-tusked elephant lived during the pleistocene. Little is known about these species and whether it is a species on its own rather than a subspecies within Palaeoxodon antiquus, yet is is known from a thigh bone over 5 foot in length which indicates a possible height of over 4.5 metres which would make Palaeoxodon namadicus the largest land mammal to have ever existed surpassing Deinotherium and Paraceratherium.

Gompotherium 

PROBOSCIDEANS

Gompotherium is another highly unusual member of the proboscidea. Gompotherium stood around 3 metres high and had 4 tusks extending straight from its jaw, the two bottom tusks are flattened and shovel-shaped leading to suggesting that they were used in digging and finding food. Gompotherium is believed to be the first of the proboscideans to escape its homeland and migrate towards north america, mammoths would eventually evolve from the shovel-tusked creature. Although they are unfamiliar to most, they were very successful and flourished in north america for over 10 million years (during the miocene and pliocene). Their demise coincides with the rise of todays modern elephants, perhaps they were outcompeted to extinction.

Stegodon

PROBOSCIDEANS

Stegodon stood at around 3.5 metres tall and weighing in a 12 tonnes, however it is not this beasts size that is hard to comprehend, but its enormous tusks which could reach a whopping 3 metres in length. Stegodons thrived in the golden age of elephants 11 million years ago, exactly when they died out is a mystery, some believe they contained to roam across north america as little as a few thousand years ago.

Mammoths

PROBOSCIDEANS

Mammoths are amongst the most recognisable prehistoric creatures, they were extremely successful and thrived during the ice age thanks to their masses of fur, migration patterns and small ears. They died out around 4500 years ago when the ice age came to an end, although it is widely thought that humans contributed to their reduction in numbers as we fed on their meat, wore their fur and used their immense tusks and skin for shelter. The largest known species of mammoths could reach 4 metres in height and weigh up to 7 or 8 tonnes and they travelled in herds much like modern elephants. Incredibly well preserved specimens have been found across the world in peat bogs and permafrost preserving skin, hair and some organs in immaculate condition, this has led to multiple projects hoping to bring back the mammoth, although this is still highly controversial.

Elephants

PROBOSCIDEANS

All modern elephants are the only relic from the glorious evolutionary history of the proboscideans that we have left. They can reach 4 metres in height and weigh up 7 tonnes. Their tusks are used in competing for mates as well as for feeding and the trunks, perhaps the most recognisable feature of any animal, are analogous to human hands, they are used to grab things, communicate and sense their environment. Elephants travel in close herds led by a matriarch and have been shown to display emotions of grief when a valued member dies, their social structure is incredibly sophisticated and complex, when a matriarchs reign is over, their is a specific order of individuals to take her place, usually the eldest daughter. Separate families of elephants have even been known to form bonds with each other and socialise in passing. Elephants have long been attractive to humans, their skin has been sold, their tusks highly valued for decoration and medicine. Elephants have been relentlessly hunted by humans, so much so that in in the twentieth century their numbers declined by 74% in ten years. Over the last few decades multiple conservation efforts have been put in place to save these magnificent creatures from extinction, their population numbers have shown slight increases since the efforts began.

The proboscideans have been, and are still, one of the most remarkable groups in the animal kingdom. They have been incredibly successful since their first appearance over 40 million years ago, with only the elephants remaining we must save these wonderful animals from extinction for future generations to see and to continue the reign of one of the most spectacular dynasties in the animal kingdom.

7 years ago

Some cool engineering please !!!

F1 engine playing Happy Birthday

When I was researching about F1 sometime ago, I stumbled upon this amazing video of the lotus team playing happy birthday on a F1 freaking engine!

The way this works is that the sheet music is taken and broken down into frequency and the milliseconds that it lasts for.

And the engine is turned on and off rapidly with different frequency tones to produce the tone i.e

OFF  - f1 Hz - f1 Hz - OFF - f2 Hz - f2 Hz - f2 Hz- OFF …. (entire song)

The dynamic response of the F1 engine to changes in the throttle is what blew my mind. F1 cars are able to pull this off due to the extremely lightweight flywheel/general rotating assembly. 

Imperial march on Floppy drive

Now you can do the same thing with motors as well. The motors can be revved up or down based on the frequency of the input.

Here’s the imperial march played on the floppy drive and Super Mario on the stepper motor:

What you are hearing is the tones made by the motor. 

Notice the slider moving faster for higher frequency

If you are into Arduino and DIY projects you can play around with the ToneMelody package and piezo-buzzer to get a similar response.

Thanks for asking. Have a great day!

7 years ago
The Concept Of Information As Viewed In Theoretical Physics Through Statistical Mechanics And Thermodynamics,
The Concept Of Information As Viewed In Theoretical Physics Through Statistical Mechanics And Thermodynamics,
The Concept Of Information As Viewed In Theoretical Physics Through Statistical Mechanics And Thermodynamics,
The Concept Of Information As Viewed In Theoretical Physics Through Statistical Mechanics And Thermodynamics,

The concept of information as viewed in theoretical physics through statistical mechanics and thermodynamics, and its implications and connections with evolutionary biology. An interesting reading:

How Life (and Death) Spring From Disorder (via WIRED -original story from Quanta Magazine)

Biological systems don’t defy physical laws, of course—but neither do they seem to be predicted by them. In contrast, they are goal-directed: survive and reproduce. We can say that they have a purpose—or what philosophers have traditionally called a teleology—that guides their behavior.

By the same token, physics now lets us predict, starting from the state of the universe a billionth of a second after the Big Bang, what it looks like today. But no one imagines that the appearance of the first primitive cells on Earth led predictably to the human race. Laws do not, it seems, dictate the course of evolution.

David Kaplan explains how the law of increasing entropy could drive random bits of matter into the stable, orderly structures of life.

6 years ago

Fiann on Instagram: “Here is a shot along the vertebral column of my smallest ichthyosaur called Bella. At the end you’ll see how her vertebrae compare to the biggest vert I’ve found from the same location. This huge bone is from an animal that would have been over 8 metres long, which is a bit bigger than poor little Bella! These fossils are both around 198 million years old. Bella was prepared by the ever talented @alexander_james_moore.

7 years ago

Transformers: Prime Wars Trilogy | S3:E4 Primal

With our heroes cornered, Predaking demands Victorion hand over the Enigma of Combination. Inside the mysterious dome, Megatron finds the Requiem Blaster, but is confronted by a mysterious figure guarding it.

New Episodes on Tumblr every Tuesday!

Watch on Tumblr.

EPISODE GUIDE: Episode 1 | Episode 2 | Episode 3 | Episode 4 | Episode 5

6 years ago

yorkshire.fossils Following from yesterday’s Nautilus post, our only pyritic specimen to that standard in around ten years… here’s another my dad, Mark (who prepared all of our fossils to an excellent standard) found very recently!! ⛏⛏ Unbelievably, six other fossil hunters areas of us had walked past it and missed this rare quality fossil! The original shell is preserved on this specimen which is uncommon! When prepared, it should be a beautiful chocolate colour 🍫 😍

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