Railways, UNESCO to Revamp Bandra Station as a Heritage Landmark…..

Western Railways, in collaboration with United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), is working on a plan to renovate Mumbai’s Bandra station, as a heritage landmark.

In April this year, UNESCO had accepted the offer to work as a consultant for heritage conservation at the charming 146-year-old station. They will restore the damaged or missing structures on the building and will also be involved in designing the surrounding areas. The station has been identified as a National Rail Heritage site by Western Railway as well as Grade I heritage building by the Maharashtra government.

This heritage conservation work aims to restore the image of Bandra as the “queen of suburbs”.

bandra

Photo Credit: Flickr

For this, a concrete plan has been made to transform the station with the view of providing efficient transportation facilities, and also to reinforce the magnificence of the building that is known for its sloping Mangalore-tiled roof, and a spacious layout.

UNESCO has submitted the initial report for redevelopment to Railway Minister, Suresh Prabhu. The report focuses on urban design strategy. According to a report in The Times of India, the recommendations include steps for relieving congestion and streamlining movement at entry and exit of the station.

The overall report proposes to develop the station into a culturally relevant community asset. They plan to create an attractive and comfortable environment, while focussing on giving priority to pedestrians and to make the station universally accessible. A number of steps for improving accessibility for people with disabilities will also be taken. UNESCO’s final report with conservation and management plan of the station building, is expected next month.

This redesign will boost the preservation of the rich heritage of Mumbai. Indian Railways is also the overseer of four world heritage sites – Mumbai Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminal, Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, Nilgiri Mountain Railway and Kalka Shimla Railway.

In 2009, Western Railways had the undertaken restoration work of the Bandra station building, and appointed conservation architect Abha Narian Lambah as a consultant for the same. However, heritage conservation plan was not carried out after the repairs.

Source…..Tanaya Singh … http://www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

Image for the Day… Spacewalk Selfie …!!!

Astronaut photograph reflected in space helmet visor during spacewalk

Expedition 45 Commander Scott Kelly took this photograph during a spacewalk on Oct. 28, 2015. Sharing the image on social media, Kelly wrote, “#SpaceWalkSelfie Back on the grid! Great first spacewalk yesterday. Now on to the next one next week. #YearInSpace”

This was the first spacewalk for both Kelly and Flight Engineer Kjell Lindgren; the two will venture outside the International Space Station for the second time on Friday, Nov. 6. The two spacewalks were scheduled around milestones in space. Today, Oct. 29, Kelly becomes the U.S. astronaut who has lived in space the longest during a single U.S. spaceflight, and on Monday, Nov. 2, the crew celebrates the 15th year of a continuous human presence in space aboard the station.

During the 7-hour and 16-minute spacewalk, Kelly and Lindgren applied a thermal cover on the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer; applied grease to a number of components in one of the latching ends of the Canadarm2 robotic arm; and began work to rig power and data system cables for the future installation of a docking port to the station that will be used for the arrival of the Boeing Starliner CST-100 and SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft.

Image Credit: NASA

Source…..www.nasa.gov

natarajan

Image of the Day… “Old Faithful geyser, and moon eclipse”…..

“Over a year of planning paid off!” said Jeff Berkes Photography.

View larger. | Photo taken September 27, 2015 - the night of the total eclipse of the moon - by Jeff Berkes Photography.

View larger. | Photo by Jeff Berkes. Visit Jeff Berkes Photography on Facebook

Here’s one of our favorite photos from an EarthSky community member, so far this year. Jeff Berkes captured it during the recent total eclipse of the moon – September 27, 2015 – and the photo shows the eclipsed moon next to an eruption of Old Faithful geyser in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. Jeff wrote:

Over a year of planning paid off!

Old Faithful, the super Blood Moon fully eclipsed, a meteor, the Andromeda galaxy and the Milky Way… There is a lot going on in this shot!

See the Andromeda galaxy? It’s at about 10 o’clock, above the geyser. The meteor is directly above the geyser.

Old Faithful geyser at Yellowstone National Park erupts during Blood Moon maximum eclipse!

Old Faithful geyser at Yellowstone National Park erupts during September 27, 2015 lunar eclipse.

Posted by yrd in http://www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

A RED-BELLIED WOOPECKER’S TONGUE IS ALMOST THREE TIMES THE LENGTH OF ITS BEAK AND WRAPS AROUND ITS SKULL WHEN RETRACTED….

Today I found out that the tongue on a Red-Bellied woodpecker, along with some other species of woodpecker, is so long that it can extend at least three times the bill length and, when retracted, wraps around its skull.

According to a study conducted by the Dalian University of Technology in China,  Grey-Faced woodpeckers have a tongue that measures around 171mm (6.73 inches), which is about 2.8 times the length of their beaks (~60mm or 2.36 inches) and  typically even longer than their body length (~165mm or 6.5 inches, measured from the mouth tip to the buttock).

In this species of woodpecker, and some others, the tongue is so long that it forks in the throat, goes below the base of the jaw and wraps behind and over the top of the head, where the forked section rejoins and inserts in the bird’s right nostril or around the eye socket.

This bizarre tongue structure is possible because of a linear series of tiny bones sheathed in muscles and soft tissue known as “hyoid apparatus” that extends the entire length of the woodpecker’s tongue. This cartilage-bone like skeleton of its tongue is sheathed in muscle and soft tissue and the ultra-thin hyoid bones fold up like an accordion when not outstretched. Contraction of the muscles pulls the tips of the hyoid bone around the back of the head and back down toward the mouth, and in doing so, pushes the tongue out the mouth.

So what does our small feathered friend do with the talented tongue? After he has slammed his head against a piece of dead wood, or tree at the rate of around 15 miles per hour, repeatedly and several times over, (see bonus factoids as to why the little guy doesn’t get brain damage), he shoves his elongated tongue deep into the hole, searching for small bugs or insects. He’ll feel around the insects thin tunnels, and, when he finds one, he pierces it with his tongue , which is covered in sharp barbs like a spear, and then pulls it back in for eating. The woodpecker’s tongue also contains paired longitudinal muscles that allow it to move side to side as the bird probes for food. A woodpecker’s tongue is especially sensitive to touch, an adaptation that aids in detecting unseen insects within dead wood.

Not all species of woodpeckers have barbed tongues or feeding behaviors like that of the Red-bellied woodpecker. Take for example the Yellow-bellied Woodpecker {A.K.A. Sapsucker}. It burrows 1/4 inch holes and uses it’s tongue to lap up the sap, not unlike a hummingbirds tongue (except a hummingbird’s tongue is split and rolls into a shallow spoon like shape). Oddly enough though, a baby woodpecker’s tongue is actually quite short, making it much easier for a parent bird to stick food items into their hungry little mouths.

Bonus Facts:

  • A woodpeckers brain is protected by a spongy elastic material between their bill and their skull that holds their brain so tight that it can’t move around, which is what keeps it from getting injured while they bang away at at tree, which produced incredible G-forces.
  • Woodpeckers have small feathers over their nostrils that help keep wood particles from being inhaled.
  • A pair of stiff, centrally placed tail feathers allow the woodpecker to “tripod” itself on trees.  This allows them to peck away at a tree, or whatever surface, for long periods of time without getting tired from holding themselves  on the side of the tree. These particular tail feathers are not molted until their replacement feathers have already grown in.
  • Downy woodpeckers are the most common backyard woodpecker. Pileated woodpeckers are almost as big as American crows, making them the largest member of the woodpecker family.

Source….www.today i found out .com

Natarajan

10 Strange Things That You Probably Didn’t Know About The Moon….

There are few things more satisfying than looking up into the sky on a clear night and seeing the moon. Whether it’s bright and full or partially hidden in shadow, there’s something cool about watching the moon pass through its many phases. We start learning about our moon and how it works at an early age, so we must know it all by now, right?

Well, maybe not. Here are a few facts about the moon that you probably weren’t taught in school.

1. It might be Earth’s twin.

It might be Earth's twin.

Some people consider our moon to be the Earth’s twin! Due to it’s large size and strange orbit, there are a few people out there who actually think of our moon as its own planet.

2. It’s been used as a burial ground.

It's been used as a burial ground.

While this person technically isn’t buried on the moon, the ashes of former NASA scientist Eugene Shoemaker were scattered across the moon’s surface. It was his dying wish.

3. It might have been inhabited once.

It might have been inhabited once.

Some photos of the moon’s surface show things that NASA can’t explain. Some believe that these phenomena are evidence of previous inhabitation. Since the photos are so grainy and obscured, however, it’s hard to tell exactly what the images are showing. Did an advanced race live on the moon long before humans started poking around up there? We may never know.

4. Shadows are darker on the moon.

Shadows are darker on the moon.

When astronauts first started visiting the moon, they noticed that their shadows were much darker than usual. This causes numerous problems for researchers to this day, since these dark shadows sometimes make it hard for astronauts to see what they’re doing up there. It’s hard to avoid stepping into a crater when your shadow is too dark and dense to see through.

5. Moon dust can cause breathing problems.

Moon dust can cause breathing problems.

The moon’s chalky debris is so fine that it has been known to move right through astronauts’ helmets and into their noses and mouths.

6. Playing in the moon’s low level of gravity isn’t as fun as it seems.

Playing in the moon's low level of gravity isn't as fun as it seems.

It may seem like fun to jump around in low gravity, but it has actually caused a ton of problems for astronauts, especially back in the early days of space exploration. Back then, their suits were so heavy that they were forced to move painfully slowly using kangaroo-like leaps.

7. We have earthquakes down here, and the moon has moonquakes up there.

We have earthquakes down here, and the moon has moonquakes up there.

If you thought that the Earth was the only planet to experience tremors, you’re wrong. The moon, which isn’t even a planet, has moonquakes that can reach a magnitude of 5.5 on the Richter scale.

8. People litter on the moon, too.

People litter on the moon, too.

On the moon, there is an alarmingly large amount of trash left over from experiments. Some astronauts have even left their poo bags up there.

9. Some people believe that the moon’s phases affect sleep patterns.

Some people believe that the moon's phases affect sleep patterns.

It is believed that the moon actually affects how humans sleep. Different phases of the moon’s cycle cause us to rest better or worse than others.

10. Researchers still don’t really know how the moon came to be.

Researchers still don't really know how the moon came to be.

Scientists actually don’t have any solid ideas about where the moon came from. There are a few guesses, but its origins remain a mystery.

(via Listverse)

That’s fascinating, isn’t it? All of these cool facts kind of make me want to become an astronaut. Okay, that won’t happen, but if any of you end up going to the moon, look into these mysteries!

Source…..joe welkie …www.viralnova.com

Natarajan

” I Knew Crows Were Clever…But I Had No Idea That They Were This Smart…” !!!

Most people don’t know this, but crows are actually some of the most intelligent animals on Earth. And there are scientific studies to back up that claim. Take this experiment, for example. One study based on Archimedes’ principle determined that crows actually have a better understanding of how water displacement works than children do.

As you’ll see in the incredible video below, a clever crow figured out that it could use rocks to raise the water level enough to grab a nice drink.

This is just further proof that you should never underestimate our furry and feathered friends. Honestly, this crow has better problem-solving skills than most people in their twenties.

Source…. Binny Gudjonsson in http://www.viralnova.com  and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…Woman ‘Lakshmi of the Home ‘ often Lead Men on the Godward Path and the Practice of Holy Virtues …”

Sathya Sai Baba

Heaping respect and honour upon a person who does not followAtmic dharma (righteousness driven by the Self) is like heaping decorations on a body that has no life in it. The soul that left the body cannot enjoy the respect shown to the corpse. So too is the case with the person who is unaware of the Reality and the purpose of life but is crowned with fame and glory. A modest woman will not care for such meaningless trash and tinsel. This characteristic is what confers on her the title ‘The Lakshmi of the home’. The woman is the prop of the home as well as of the practice of religion. She plants and fosters religious faith. Women have natural aptitude for faith and spiritual endeavour. Women with devotion, faith, and humility often lead men on the Godward path and the practice of holy virtues.

Thought for the Day….Bright Side of Our Life….

We all know that life is too short to squander on negativity. And yet, most of us find the time for it anyway! Sure, life is challenging and often unfair, but it makes up for it in a thousand myriad little ways, you just have to notice them…

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

positive side flowers

Source…..www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

The story behind this picture of a lion getting a CAT scan….!!!

Samson the lion

The Koret School of Veterinary Medicine                                                   Samson the lion.

Earlier this year, I came across a striking image of a lion undergoing a Computerised Axial Tomography scan (or CAT scan).

I tweeted out the image, and it got over 2,000 retweets.

People were intrigued, and so was I, so I dug into the back-story of how the lion ended up there.

The photo, taken in 2005, depicts a then-2-year-old baby Barbary lion named Samson.

Barbary lions, also referred to as Atlas lions, are the largest lion subspecies known to populate large portions of North Africa.

Zoo keepers noticed that Samson, who lived in the Hai-Kef zoo near Tel Aviv with his sister Delilah, had suddenly stopped being able to walk.

At the time, Samson was suffering from what would later be diagnosed as a rare and life-threatening problem.

After the zoo had veterinary neurological specialist Dr. Merav Shamir from Israel’s Koret School of Veterinary Medicine examine Samson, Shamir observed that the lion “stood on his legs with difficulty.”

“When he tried to walk, he fell after a few steps,” noted Shamir. “He also had no appetite and appeared generally to be in poor condition.”

So Shamir decided to do a neurological exam, which included a thorough study of Samson’s nervous system. It was then that she diagnosed the lion as suffering from “damage to the posterior portion of his skull, which applied pressure on his cerebellum and the upper sector of the spinal cord.”

In other words, the cause of Samson’s trouble was in his skull. It had grown abnormally, putting unnecessary stress on the part of his brain which is vital to carrying out motor functions.

The images below, from a study Shamir coauthored, show a healthy lion skull (A) and an abnormal lion skull (B). The abnormal skull shows a malformation that’s very similar to the one Samson had. As you can see, the foramen magnum — the hole in the base of the skull through which the spinal cord passes — is unobstructed in image A. Image B shows an abnormal bone growth (identified with an asterisk) protruding down from the roof of the foramen magnum.

Screen Shot 2015 10 28 at 2.29.03 PM

After a CAT scan confirmed Samson’s diagnosis, Shamir’s team prepared for surgery.

“We decided to carry out this operation that had never before been performed anywhere,” Shamir told Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

The six-hour operation began after Samson was temporarily put to sleep with an anaesthetic.

According to The Telegraph, Shamir’s team shaved part of Samson’s mane and then used a drill to “remove part of the thickened skull tissue, some of which had become deeply embedded in the animal’s brain.”

Samson the lion

The Koret School of Veterinary Medicine                          Samson undergoing a scan
                            

“We were working in the dark really,” Shamir told The Telegraph. “It is difficult when you are not really sure of the anatomy and in this case the anatomy was abnormal.”
The impressive operation was successful. Within 10 days, Samson was reunited with his sister Delilah at the zoo and was walking without stumbling. Shamir thinks malformations like the one that caused Samson’s symptoms could be caused by a poor diet or other factors from captivity.

“Samson is walking around as a fully healthy lion, and our final worry is that the impressive mane which covered his head before the operation will return and cover any traces of our surgical work,” Shamir said.

Samson the lion

The Hebrew University of Jerusalem                                         Samson and his haircut.

Business Insider reached out to Dr. Merav Shamir and her colleague Dr. Rona Nadler Valency and will update this story if and when we hear back.

Source….AMANDA MACIAS….. http://www.businessinsider.com.au

Natarajan

Image of the Day… ” Dooms Day Vault…”

 

View larger. | Svalbard Global Seed Vault.

Researchers have been adding seeds to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault – or Doomsday Vault – since 2008. Now, for the first time, they’ve taken seeds out.

Earlier this month (October 19, 2015), seeds deposited in 2012 from war-torn Syria became the Svalbard Global Seed Vault’s first-ever withdrawal. The seed vault – located in Norway, sometimes called the Doomsday Vault – was built in 2008. Since then, researchers there have been storing containers of seeds from all parts of the globe in the vault, and this is the first time they’ve removed seeds.

According to the seed vault’s website, all seed samples in the vault remain the property of the gene banks that deposit them. A nonprofit organization in Syria had originally stored the seeds in the Arctic vault. The International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas – which promotes agriculture in developing countries – ran a major seed bank near Aleppo, Syria until 2012, when rebel forces took over that area.

Before the nonprofit shut down its Aleppo operation, researchers there were able to transfer thousands of seed samples from Syria. Some were stored in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault.

Now, researchers have taken 38,000 seeds back out of the vault. On October 19, the seeds were delivered to Lebanon and Morocco, where the nonprofit will continue the research started in Syria.

This was the first of what they say will be “several shipments” over the next few years.

PBSNewsHour reported on October 19, 2015:

The 138 black boxes stacked on trolley carts and transported out of the vault contained a precious resource — seeds, that researchers hope will restore some of the genetic diversity lost during the Syrian conflict.

Visit the website of the Svalbard Global Seed Vault.

By the way, earlier this year, a new documentary film about the Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened in theaters. It tracks the history and mission of the vault and its founder Cary Fowler. It’s available on iTunes and Netflix

Bottom line: The Svalbard Global Seed Vault – sometimes called the Doomsday Vault – opened in 2008 for the purpose of storing seeds. Researchers have been adding seeds to the vault since then, but this month – October, 2015 – for the first time, they withdrew seeds from Syria that had been placed there in 2012.

Visit the documentary’s website to learn more. …….http://www.seedsoftimemovie.com/

Source….www.earthsky.org

Natarajan