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středa 19. června 2013

It's the end of the world, as we view it: The furthest extremes of the Earth visible on Google Maps (Daily Mail)


"Thanks to Google's Street View project it is possible to travel to travel to the far reaches of the Earth without ever leaving your armchair.

But although the search giant's mapping project is ongoing, there are limits to the virtual journeys possible on the world-beating online service.

Inspired in part by the geography game GeoGuessr, Atlantic blogger Ian Taylor set out to find out just where the end of the road lies on Google Street View."



úterý 18. června 2013

Russia Lied About How The First Man In Space Died (Jalopnik)



On March 27, 1968, the first man in space, Yuri Gagarin, died. He was in a MiG-15 on a routine training flight with his instructor when his plane crashed. The official explanation has been that he had to avoid a "foreign" object, but new information from Cosmonaut Alexi Leonov tells a different story.P
Leonov was the first man to walk in space, and much later was also on the committee that investigated Gagarin's crash. Leonov has been trying to reveal the truth of what happened for over 20 years, and the information has only now been de-classified, prompting Leonov to explain the truth of what happened in an interview with Russia Today.P
Of the official "foreign object" explanation — which could mean a goose, a hot air balloon, a squirrel in a home-made bark ultralight — Leonov says “That conclusion is believable to a civilian – not to a professional,” and reveals that the truth is that another fighter jet, a Sukhoi Su-15, flew much too close to Gagarin's MiG.P
The issue was that the Su-15 was flying far lower than it was supposed to. As Leonov tells RT:P
“We knew that a Su-15 was scheduled to be tested that day, but it was supposed to be flying at the altitude of 10,000 meters or higher, not 450-500 meters. It was a violation of the flight procedure.”P
When the Su-15 flew so close to Gagarin's plane, the passage caused the MiG to go into an uncontrollable spin, similar to that scene in Top Gun I bet at least half of you are picturing right now. Leonov explains to Russia Today:
P
“While afterburning the aircraft reduced its echelon at a distance of 10-15 meters in the clouds, passing close to Gagarin, turning his plane and thus sending it into a tailspin – a deep spiral, to be precise – at a speed of 750 kilometers per hour,"P
The involved and intense 40+ year cover up was mostly to hide that such a lapse in air-traffic logistics could have happened so close to Moscow and to someone so important. In fact, Gagarin was deemed too valuable a public relations tool to ever be sent into space again, especially after the death of Vladimir Komarov in Soyuz 1, a mission Gagarin himself felt was launched prematurely.P
SEXPANDP
Gagarin had proven to be a PR handful after his flight, behaving in ways the Soviet leadership found problematic, such as diving out of a second-story window when his wife caught him with another woman. Because of the Soviets' desire to keep Gagarin as a pure propaganda tool, there has been much speculation that the accident that took his life was planned by the KGB, along with many other conspiracy theories.P
The truth is more mundane, but no less tragic. P
One of the conditions of finally allowing Leonov to reveal the truth is that the Su-15's pilot remains anonymous. As Leonov wisely points out,P
I was asked not to disclose the pilot’s name. He is a good test pilot…It will fix nothing,”
source - jalopnik.com 
P

úterý 23. dubna 2013

Is 'Siberian Stonehenge' really the birthplace of astronomy? (Daily Mail)



  • - Sunduki in Siberia may be oldest human observatory in history
  • - Russian scientist claims to have found evidence of crude solar calendars
  • - Ancients 'used landscape to record time'

  • A Russian scientist believes a remote Siberian rock formation may be the first place that humanity began to follow the movements of the heavens.

    Sunduki, known as the Siberian Stonehenge, is a series of eight sandstone outcrops on a remote flood plain on the bank of the Bely Iyus river in the republic of Khakassia.

    Professor Vitaly Larichev, of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography at the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, claims that the 16,000-year-old site was not only a place of huge religious significance in the ancient world, but also its stargazing capital.


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2312902/Is-Siberian-Stonehenge-really-birthplace-astronomy--Astonishing-theory-remote-spot-used-stargazers-16-000-years-ago.html#ixzz2RHQlevum
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