Thursday, May 31, 2007

Fauld Explosion


Prompted by another story to be found in 'An Audience with an Elephant', here are a couple of links about the world's largest (at the time) man-made, non-nuclear explosion. "One search party found a cow standing motionless, twice it's normal size obviously inflated by air under pressure." and "All we ever found of either of them was the end of an iron bedstead."

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Affe Aap Singe Scimmia Macaco Monkey Mono





























More from La Nature and yes, I know they're not all monkeys.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

The Deep






Fantastic photography. Link…

Monday, May 28, 2007

Joseph Dalton Hooker

















Himalayan journals; or, notes of a naturalist in Bengal, the Sikkim and Nepal Himalayas, the Khasia mountains etc. 2 volumes - 1854. Link…

Friday, May 25, 2007

Bastard Chairs





A selection from one of the many projects created by the wonderful photographer Michael Wolf. Link…

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Alec Allen


Lord, grant that I may catch a fish so big that even I,
When speaking of it afterwards, may have no need to lie.

The photograph heading this post comes from here because it was the only place I could find it. However, the story is originally from a newspaper column in the Sunday Telegraph that was written by Byron Rogers and published in the collection 'An Audience with an Elephant'. I think maybe the addition of a photograph and a couple of sentences doesn't justify the copyright slapped on the end of it by Andy Dickson (and a credit wouldn't have gone astray either). You can also find the story here (with different edits) without any credit either. The story is also here in the South Wales Argus in a somewhat abridged form but with many whole sentences and phrases intact (once again without any credit). Here's a column from the Daily Mail that is written from a different perspective (that of the farmer's daughter) but I wonder what his source was for the story of the catching of the fish ("Good job people kept notes" indeed)? Finally, here's an article in Fish & Fly wherein the contributor (Jon Beer) vaguely recalls the story and asks for help from his readers. Scroll to the bottom for the helpful reply from one Dan Metcalfe. Well done. Credit where it's due.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Jesus Christ's Blog


Amusing. Link…

Friday, May 18, 2007

Wilfred Thesiger






The photography of Sir Wilfred Thesiger, the distinguished explorer and travel writer. Link…

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Dome



Polish Radio station. Link…

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Frantisek Drtikol





Renowned for his art nouveau style photographic nudes and his studio portraits, Drtikol only painted later in his career. Svet Publishers 'focus primarily on the artistic, philosophical and spiritual legacy of Frantisek Drtikol'. Other items of interest are an article, some images, more information and some more images.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Aerotrain



Jean Bertin, a French engineer, designed and built the Aerotrain in the 1960s. You can see it in action here. There was also a 'Surburbain S44', here's what's left of it. Rohr Industries, licensed the technology and built an Aerotrain in America.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Igor Ivanovich Sikorsky



Aviation (multi-engined and helicopter) pioneer.
"Sikorsky, who was virtually unknown in the United States, was working on the S-29A (�A� for America), a twin-engine, closed-cabin, 14-passenger transport. At that time, his �factory� was set up on a chicken farm owned by his friend Victor Utgoff, a former lieutenant in the Russian navy. The obstacles faced by the company seemed insurmountable. Aside from the money problem, the work had to be done by hand, since the farm did not have appropriate machinery. Sikorsky and his workers, mostly Russian immigrants, were raiding junkyards for parts for the airplane, which had to be constantly redesigned depending on the equipment and materials they found. The main structure of the fuselage was built with angle irons from discarded bedsteads. Turnbuckles, which were used to adjust wire tension, were found in a Woolworth�s five-and-dime. The landing gear was installed with the help of Sikorsky�s nephew, Dmitry (Jimmy) Viner, who was a ditch digger. �Since there was no jack to raise the fuselage,� Frank Delear wrote in Igor Sikorsky: His Three Careers in Aviation, �Jimmy dug under it to make space for the wheels and landing struts. With the gear installed, the plane was then pulled out of the ditch.�
Since the work was done outside, cold weather brought it to a standstill. The enthusiasm of Sikorsky�s men, who had worked for weeks without pay, was at its lowest, and the workforce dropped to a mere handful. The few dollars that could be raised by selling stock in the company were spent mostly on food.
One Sunday, a chauffeur-driven limousine drove up to the chicken house. A tall, slender figure in a long black coat stepped out of the car and walked up to the airplane. In total silence, he inspected the aircraft.
Everyone on the farm got greatly excited,� says Sergei Sikorsky, Igor�s son and the retired vice president of Sikorsky Aircraft, who remembers well how his father described the event.. "They all immediately recognized Sergei Rachmaninoff as their guest. My father went up to him and they began to talk. After about a half-hour visit, Rachmaninoff said, �I believe in you and your plane and I want to help you.� � The composer sat down and wrote a check for $5,000 (approximately $100,000 today). With a smile, he gave the check to the stunned Sikorsky and said, �Pay me back whenever you can."� Link…

Friday, May 11, 2007

I'll get you Butler




Jimmy Sheng likes to take pictures of buses. Lots of pictures. Link…

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Formosa (Taiwan)



Maps, text, images, linguistic data and an interesting timeline. Link…

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Stuffed Birds











Extinct birds from the Zoological Museum of the University of Amsterdam (ZMA). Link…

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

On ya bike


























All these images are from the fabulous La Nature - Review of sciences and their applications to arts and industry (1873 – 1905). Link…

Monday, May 07, 2007

Rossetti and the Wombats

Parted Love! Oh! how the family affections combat
Within this heart; and each hour flings a bomb at
My burning soul; neither from owl nor from bat
Can peace be gained, until I clasp my Wombat. Link…

Death of a Wombat I never reared a young Wombat
To glad me with his pin-hole eye,
But when he most was sweet & fat
And tail-less; he was sure to die! Link…


Here's some more about Rossetti and his wombats - "Earlier, in 1862, Rossetti had moved to Tudor House, at 16 Cheyne Walk, Chelsea. Spacious, with plenty of room for family and friends including George Meredith and the deeply unattractive poet and semi-professional sadomasochist Algernon Charles Swinburne—who liked to slide naked down the banisters—the house had four-fifths of an acre of garden, with lime trees and a big mulberry. As soon as he arrived, Rossetti began to fill the garden with exotic birds and animals. There were owls, including a barn owl called Jessie, two or more armadillos, rabbits, dormice and a racoon that hibernated in a chest of drawers. There were peacocks, parakeets, and kangaroos and wallabies, about which we know frustratingly little. There was a Canadian marmot or woodchuck, a Pomeranian puppy called Punch, an Irish deerhound called Wolf, a Japanese salamander and two laughing jackasses. We know the neighbours were tolerant up to a point but Thomas Carlyle, for one, was driven mad by the noise. At length there was a small Brahmin bull that had to go when it chased Rossetti around the garden, and, in September 1869, a long-awaited wombat." Link…

Friday, May 04, 2007

Troll Gas


Troll A is the tallest structure ever moved by humans over the surface of the Earth. [Huge pictures] Link…

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Representing Crisis: A Hypertext Genealogy



Political, educational, and literary texts confronting crisis from 1888-1941. Interesting and link rich, project with some great photography (the two above being an Alvin Langdon Coburn self-portrait and his portrait of Yeats). Link…

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

D'Ordel's Pantechnicon



Victorian magazine parody. Link…

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

GDR




Emotive photography from East Berlin, 1958-1961. Link…