“Palace of Pebbles…”

A Handmade Palace of Pebbles

When French postman Ferdinand Cheval walked his route, he would collect pebbles and put them in his wheelbarrow, taking them home with him. It all began when Ferdinand tripped over a strangely-shaped rock, which he then decided to pick up and take home with him. In 1879, Ferdinand’s hobby became a real project – once he was done with his work, he would work on constructing his pebble palace through the night. 33 years later, Ferdinand finally completed his palace, now known as Le Palais ideal.   

pebble palace

pebble palace

pebble palace

pebble palace

pebble palace

pebble palace

pebble palace

pebble palace

SOURCE::::: http://www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Russia wants to Build a Superhighway …Between Russia and Alaska !!!

Siberia

The Trans-Siberia Railway.

A report by the Siberian Times has detailed one of Russia’s more outlandish schemes to date: a super motorway that would connect the eastern border of Russia with Alaska in the United States. The highway would make it possible to drive from the United Kingdom to the US, with help from ferries, tunnels, and trains.

The plan, unveiled at a meeting at the Russian Academy of Science and presented by the head ofRussia Rail Vladimir Yakunin, also calls for a high-speed railway to be built alongside the motorway. Both routes would support new cities and industries created as a result of the construction, the Siberian Times writes.

The development is called the Trans-Eurasian belt Development (TEPR). That name doesn’t sound very catchy, so instead we’re going with the International Road of Russia (IRR). If it were really built, it would mean you could drive (with help from the Eurostar and the Panama Canal) from the top of the UK, say Wick in Scotland, to the very bottom of South America, Cape Horn.

Here’s our rough interpretation of the route (the new railway would help cars hop across the Bering Strait, we think):

RUSSIA

Alongside the train track and road, pipelines for oil and gas and new electricity and water supply lines would be put in place. The network would total around 12,400 miles. The aim is to link Asia with Europe as it would run from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

Cities most people haven’t heard of, such as Yeketerinburg and Irkutsk, would be joined up as a result of the plan.

The road would follow a similar path to the Trans-Siberian railway — but would stretch even further, crossing the Bering Strait to Alaska. It remains unclear what the US would think about that….

Here’s the Trans-Siberian railway:

Siberia
And here’s a Siberian road. It’s part of the Kolyma Highway in a remote part of the country. 

Russia

The Kolyma Highway in Siberia.

Russia sees the project as essential to spurring development within the region, the Siberian Times explains.

Yakunin said at the meeting: “This is an inter-state, inter-civilisation, project. It should be an alternative to the current (neo-liberal) model, which has caused a systemic crisis. The project should be turned into a world ‘future zone’, and it must be based on leading, not catching, technologies.”

The Russia Rail chief said he estimates the cost of the new venture would be in the trillions. He argued that the project’s economic benefit would outweigh the money spent.

Siberia

Vladimir Fortov, the Head of the Russian Academy of Science, said the scheme is “very ambitious and expensive,” reports the Siberian Times. But he added: “It will solve many problems in the development of the vast region. It is connected with social programs, and new fields, new energy resources, and so on. The idea is that basing on the new technology of high-speed rail transport we can build a new railway near the Trans-Siberian Railway with the opportunity to go to Chukotka and Bering Strait and then to the American continent.”

The Trans-Siberian Railway in Russia, which runs from Moscow to Vladisvostok and stretches across 6,152 miles. It takes seven days to travel.

SOURCE:::: http://www.businessinsider.com.au

Natarajan

Image of the Day….”Marathon Valley” @ Mars…

This view from NASA’s Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity shows part of “Marathon Valley,” a destination on the western rim of Endeavour Crater, as seen from an overlook north of the valley.

The scene spans from east, at left, to southeast. It combines four pointings of the rover’s panoramic camera (Pancam) on March 13, 2015, during the 3,958th Martian day, or sol, of Opportunity’s work on Mars.

The rover team selected Marathon Valley as a science destination because observations of this location using the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) instrument on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter yielded evidence of clay minerals, a clue to ancient wet environments. By the time Opportunity explores Marathon Valley, the rover will have exceeded a total driving distance equivalent to an Olympic marathon. Opportunity has been exploring the Meridiani Planum region of Mars since January 2004.

This version of the image is presented in approximate true color by combining exposures taken through three of the Pancam’s color filters at each of the four camera pointings, using filters centered on wavelengths of 753 nanometers (near-infrared), 535 nanometers (green) and 432 nanometers (violet).

Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell Univ./Arizona State Univ.

Source:::: http://www.nasa.gov

Natarajan

” படித்ததில் பிடித்தது ….கவலைப்படாதே செல்லம் …” !!!

கவலைப்படாதடா செல்லம்

கள்ளிப்பாலோ

குப்பத்தொட்டி கலாசாரமோ

நம்மகிட்ட இல்ல…

காக்கைக்கும் தன் குஞ்சு

பொன் குஞ்சுன்னு சொன்ன பகுத்தறிவுள்ள

மனுசங்களுக்குத்தான் அதெல்லாம்..

பட்சி ஜாதி நாம இங்கே பகுத்தறிவாளர பாக்காதீங்க

கா.. கா.. கா.. கா…

source:::::Somasundaram Thirumalaiswamy in http://www.dinamani.com

Natarajan

Germanwings Flight Crash… Is A 320 Still a Safer Aircraft …?

IT IS technologically advanced and used by major airlines across the globe with one taking off on average every two seconds.

However, despite two major crashes involving an A320 in the space of just three months, the jet remains one of the world’s safest.

That’s the view of leading aviation expert Neil Hansford who told news.com.au that the plane was so technologically advanced it practically flew itself.

The chairman of Strategic Aviation Solutions, with more than 30 years experience in the industry, said if there was a major design fault in the plane the world would have known about it before now.

His comments comes in the wake of Germanwings Flight 4U9525, which crashed on a remote mountain range in the French alps overnight.

Germanwings Flight 4U9525 was travelling from Barcelona, Spain, to Dusseldorf, Germany, when at approximately 10.30am local time on Tuesday, the plane lost radio contact.

The flight was just 46 minutes in when trouble struck, plummeting 31,200 feet in 8 minutes.

It is the second major crash involving an A320 in just three months.

AirAsia Flight QZ8501 crashed into the Java Sea in stormy weather on December 28 during what was supposed to be a short trip from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore.

In 30 seconds, it rose from 32,000 feet to 37,400 feet, then dipped to 32,000 feet, before descending for around three minutes.

The plane’s stall alarms were going off for four minutes before the crash.

In both cases Mr Hansford said he didn’t believe it was a fault of the plane itself which caused them to crash and added investigators couldn’t rule anything out.

“An A320 takes off every two seconds around the world,” Mr Hansford said,.

“The A320 is a sophisticated aircraft which is not flown in the traditional way in that the computer flies the aircraft, the pilot operates the computer.”

Mr Hansford maintained despite the two crashes, the plane remained one of the world’s safest and it was just sheer coincidence and force of numbers that two crashes had taken place in as many months.

He still believed the A320 was the trump aircraft as evidenced by the sheer numbers of them flying popular flight routes including between Paris and London and Sydney to Melbourne.

Mr Hansford said the plane’s hi-tech systems meant if there was a fault in the plane, or if an engine had failed, the pilot would have had time to save it.

He also said the black box would reveal further details which would come to light sooner than in recent crashes including the Air Asia and Malaysian crashes last year.

“Unlike Malaysian and Indonesian authorities however, the French and German authorities and their carriers will be more transparent,” he said speaking of the retrieval of the black box and the release of information.

The A320 remains a popular aircraft among the world’s airlines with a good safety record.

The A320 remains a popular aircraft among the world’s airlines with a good safety record. Source: AP 

THE A320:

Regarded as a workhorse of modern aviation, similar to the Boeing 737, there are more than 3600 of them in operation worldwide, according to Airbus, which also makes nearly identical versions of the plane, the smaller A318 and A319 and the stretched A321. An additional 2500 of those jets are flying, according to AFP.

The A320 family has a good safety record, with just 0.14 fatal accidents per million takeoffs, according to a Boeing safety analysis.

This particular jet was delivered to Lufthansa — the parent company of Germanwings — in 1991 and had about 58,300 flight hours over 46,700 flights.

The airline is the budget offshoot of major carrier Lufthansa, and this is the first deadly incident in its 13-year history.

This A320 had also passed its last routine check on Monday and its captain had more than 10 years flying experience, Sky News reported.

Airbus is investigating whether a mechanical fault is to blame, however this particular Airbus A320 of Germanwings underwent full maintenance in 2013, according to the head of the company Thomas Winkelmann.

“But we cannot rule out a structural issue: a failure of a part of the structure caused by an absence of detailed maintenance or the wear of a particular element that will become apparent after tens of thousands of flight hours,” the former investigator said.

“In the history of aviation, it’s only when accidents occur that we are able to detect unforeseen weaknesses on parts of a plane where maintenance procedures were not thought necessary.”

LOW COST, LOW SAFETY?:

Xavier Tytelman, an air safety specialist told AFP while this particular plane was 24 years old, that didn’t necessarily mean it was less safe than newer planes.

While new aircraft are more efficient which gave airlines who use them a major cost advantage as fuel can account for a quarter to half of operating costs, it didn’t mean they couldn’t be used by budget carriers.

According to him, new planes can also mean lower maintenance costs. Each four or five years passenger jets require an extensive overhaul, which is both costly in itself and requires taking the plane out of service for weeks.

“Low-cost airlines don’t have any incentive to invest in such maintenance and just before planes arrive at that age they sell them,” Mr Tytelman told AFP.

However the Germanwings A320, was probably in its final years of commercial service and pulling old planes out of service wasn’t an issue of safety but rather economics.

“Low cost, that means less comfort, but not less safety,” Mr Tytelman said.

‘EASY TO BLAME A DEAD MAN’:

Another international aviation expert Arthur Wolk told 3AW Breakfast that the cause of the crash would be determined really quickly.

“If there was not foul play, and that will be determined pretty quickly, it looks like another example of the angle of attack sensors being iced over,” he told the program.

He speculated that “angle attack sensors” at the front of the aircraft may have “iced over”, causing the plane to “pretty much go straight down”, which was the same problem that contributed to the 2009 Air France crash.

“It’s easy to blame a dead man … but this is a problem even the best pilots can’t handle,” he told the radio program.

Two planes of German airline Germanwings are pictured at Cologne/Bonn airport yesterday.

Two planes of German airline Germanwings are pictured at Cologne/Bonn airport yesterday. Source: AFP 

SOURCE:::: http://www.news.com.au

Natarajan

Image of the Day…. Eclipse Flyby…!!!

The awesome video above shows an airplane shooting past, in front of the moon and sun, during the partial eclipse. Our friend David Walker posted it to the EarthSky Photo page on G+.

SOURCE:::::: http://www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

 

Africa”s Alien-Like Landscape…Danakil Depression, Ethiopia…

Sulphurous hot springs, salt-encrusted wastelands, temperatures that soar as high as 50C – Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression is home to a kaleidoscopic world unlike any other.

Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression (Credit: Tanveer Badal)

Strangely beautiful, geographically fascinating

Sulphurous hot springs, salt-encrusted wastelands, temperatures that soar as high as 50C – it’s hard to imagine a harsher spot to call home than Africa’s Danakil Depression. Not only is it one of the planet’s hottest places, it’s also one of the lowest, driest and most tectonically active. But for the adventurous few who journey to Ethiopia’s remote northwestern corner, the rewards are two-fold: a glimpse of kaleidoscopic terrain unlike anywhere else and a peek into the self-reliant Afar people who continue to survive living there. (Tanveer Badal)

Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression (Credit: Tanveer Badal)

A surreal swirl of sulphur, salts and minerals

Dallol, the Danakil’s lowest point at 116m below sea level, is known for its mix of sulphur, iron oxide and other mineral deposits, which form a shocking rainbow of hues. It’s a raw, shifting, bubbling terrain. This strange earth, alongside all the other otherworldly landscapes of the Danakil region, is the result of three deep rifts that geologists call the Afar Triple Junction. This warring trio, tearing the earth apart with incredible force, has birthed the Danakil’s volcanoes, hot springs, sinkholes and bizarre land formations. Scientists estimate that when the rifting is complete in about 10 million years, the Red Sea will completely engulf the Danakil and create a new ocean. (Tanveer Badal)

Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression (Credit: Tanveer Badal)

A less-relaxing hot spring

Water is a scarce, precious commodity in the Danakil Depression, and unsurprisingly, steaming, sulphurous pools like this one aren’t potable. According to our Ethio Travel and Tours guide, Yonas Hailu, the Afar people distil a healing skin treatment out of the pool’s yellow, syrupy liquid – but he implicitly warned against just sticking in a finger. There are very few springs with fresh water in the area, and rain falls, well, almost never. (Tanveer Badal)

Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression (Credit: Tanveer Badal)

The great salt flats

One of the Danakil’s most distinctive features is Lake Karum (also known as Lake Assale or Lake Asale), one of two crystalline salt lakes on the northern end of the Depression. As this low-lying area was once fully submerged in saline water, the lakes are a remnant of ancient times. Studies have estimated that the salt here is – incredibly – about 2km deep. (Tanveer Badal)

Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression (Credit: Tanveer Badal)

Walking on (salt) water

Blindingly white, expansive Lake Karum is often covered with a shallow layer of briny water an inch or so deep; don’t expect a refreshing dip. But it is easy to stroll around this huge basin. Underfoot, flakes of salt snap with a satisfying crunch. (Tanveer Badal)

Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression (Credit: Tanveer Badal)

The big business of ‘white gold’

Salt blocks, called amolé, were once used throughout Ethiopia as money. Cash has now replaced the salt as currency, but the ancient trade – mining blocks of “white gold” by hand – remains a core livelihood for the northern Afar people. (Tanveer Badal)

Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression (Credit: Tanveer Badal)

All-important beasts of burden

Camels, the sole domesticated animal uniquely suited to survive in this harsh world, transport the bundled blocks of salt as they have for hundreds of years. A single camel can carry about 40 salt blocks per trip. At the time of reporting, each slab was selling for approximately $0.25, with the price increasing the farther the salt travelled. (Tanveer Badal)

Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression (Credit: Tanveer Badal)

No luxury hotels

Most visitors to the Danakil sleep in handmade bed frames, tied together with cords, placed under the stars (with hopes for a breeze). The experience is about as far from a luxury vacation as it gets, but given the unforgettable world you’ll encounter – from florid terra firma, to oddball formations, luminous salt lakes and the proud, fiercely independent Afar – it’s an adventure well worth the hardships. (Tanveer Badal)

SOURCE:::::KellyPhillips Badal in http://www.bbc.com

Natarajan

An Impala and a Crocodile…Face to Face …!!!

It’s the type of encounter that can send panic through a herd, but this fearless impala refused to turn and run after a crocodile popped out of the water in front of it.

At one point the predator’s snout was just inches from the impala’s nose, but the bold gazelle didn’t back down as it casually sipped from a watering hole.

Tourist Graham Hewer snapped the jaw-dropping scene as he visited Kruger National Park

in South Africa.

Photographer Graham Hewer captured the jaw-dropping encounter during a visit to Kruger National Park in South Africa

Photographer Graham Hewer captured the jaw-dropping encounter during a visit to Kruger National Park in South Africa

The 29-year-old said the imapala simply walked away from the crocodile without giving it a second thought.

The crocodile was close enough to attack the impala, but its would-be prey remained calm and seemed oblivious to the fact that it was at death’s door.

Graham’s series of photos show a herd sipping from the lake as they keep a watchful eye on a group of much larger crocodiles nearby.

The bold impala survived the strange meeting, which photographer Graham Hewer puts down to the crocodile not feeling hungry

The bold impala survived the strange meeting, which photographer Graham Hewer puts down to the crocodile not feeling hungry.

His snaps then show the lone impala drinking from the watering hole, moments before its encounter with the crocodile.

The final photo shows the crocodile alone, with its razor-sharp teeth visible inside its gaping mouth.

Graham, a self-taught photographer from the South African capital of Pretoria, revealed he watched on in suspense, expecting the crocodile to kill the impala almost instantly.

After getting its fill from the lake the impala simply walked away from the crocodile without giving it a second thought

After getting its fill from the lake the impala simply walked away from the crocodile without giving it a second thought

But bizarrely it survived the strange meeting – which he puts down to the croc not feeling hungry.

He said: ‘I got the camera ready just in time as the impala made their way towards the water.

‘One got close to a crocodile laying in the shallow water so I was expecting a straight kill.

Graham Hewer's photos show a herd sipping from the lake as they keep a watchful eye on a group of large crocodiles

Graham Hewer’s photos show a herd sipping from the lake as they keep a watchful eye on a group of large crocodiles

‘But the impala and the crocodile just had a face-to-face meeting.

‘All the people who have seen this image are amazed to hear the impala survived this face-off.

’That’s what fascinates me about photographing animals – its unpredictable, you never know what they will do.’

SOURCE:::::::::www.dailymail.co.uk

Natarajan