Owen

@problemsdog
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Improbable amalgam. Work: lexical data, dictionaries, digital humanities
pronounshe/him

5 of the strangest books ever written

Some books are remembered for their lyrical prose or engaging stories. Others are remembered for simply being weird.

By Scotty Hendricks

https://bigthink.com/books/5-of-the-strangest-books-ever-written/

James Joyce at PG:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/1039

#Books #Literature

Railway Chrysanthemum, Bomb-site Weed, Fireweed, Muck Flowers, Shit-tip Lily - all local names for Rosebay Willowherb (Chamaenerion angustifolium), a beautiful plant which is a very successful early coloniser and abundantly pops up on all sorts of human-influenced sites. In Glasgow Singerweed is reported from when the local sewing machine factory was demolished.
#PlantADay #Botany #Nature #Plant #Wildflower #BloomScrolling
I’ve had this book lying around for two months and only just now looked closely at the cover art
Fabulousness from Rose Ann Prevec. ;)

Random Nigerian fact for you:

During the civil war, Nigeria used starvation as a weapon of war. Over a million Biafrans died, mostly kids.

Eventually, the rest of the world came through with food donations. Norway, for instance, sent a dried cod product that they barely ate called stockfish.

That was 55 years ago. Now stockfish is an indispensable part of Nigerian cuisine. We spend tens of millions of dollars each year importing it from Norway.

I guess generosity pays.

#Nigeria #Norway

Turns out it's too late to exchange my blues record for an electronica one: Tom Waits for Numan.

Wow! Biologists seem to have discovered an entirely new kind of life form. They're called 'obelisks', and you probably have some in you.

They were discovered in 2024 - not by somebody actually seeing one, but by analyzing huge amounts of genetic data from the human gut. This search found 29,959 new RNA sequences, completely different from any known. Thus, we don't know where these things fit into the tree of life!

Biologists found them when they were trying to solve a puzzle. Even smaller than viruses, there exist 'viroids' that are just loops of RNA that cleverly manage to reproduce using the machinery of the cell they infect. Viruses have a protein coat. Viroids are just bare RNA - it doesn't even code for any proteins!

But all known viroids only infect plants. The first one found causes a disease in potatoes; another causes a disease in avocados, and so on. This raised the puzzle: why aren't there viroids that infect bacteria, or animals?

Now perhaps we've found them! But not quite: while obelisks may work in a similar way, they seem genetically unrelated. Also, their RNA seems to code for two proteins.

Given how little we know about this stuff, I think some caution is in order. Still, this is really cool. Do any of you biologists out there know any research going on now to learn more?

The original paper is free to read on the bioRxiv:

• Viroid-like colonists of human microbiomes, https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.01.20.576352v1.full

I see just one other paper, about an automated system for detecting obelisks:

• Tormentor: An obelisk prediction and annotation pipeline, https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.05.30.596730v1.full

There's also a budding Wikipedia article on obelisks:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obelisk_(biology)

Hat-tip to @metaweta.