Researchers Find Clues to 'Pack-Rat' Urge
Saturday 4th of September 2010 03:42:21 PM
Posted by admin / Under Collecting Antiques
| Attention, pack rats: science may have figured you out. Researchers say they've found an area of the brain that seems to govern the urge to collect. For most people, collecting is a perfectly healthy behavior. It's an outlet for expressing passion for just about anything, such as stamps, wine, art, shoes, or Elvis memorabilia. Collecting is also common among animals, and not just for food. It's been observed in creatures great and small, from mammals to insects. For instance, some birds can't resist aluminum and bright objects, while hamsters gather glass beads when given the chance. But in rare cases,... |
Why Is Wikileaks Collecting Military Email Addresses?
Saturday 4th of September 2010 03:42:21 PM
Posted by admin / Under Collecting Antiques
| Why Is Wikileaks Collecting Military Email Addresses?Helicopter video-leakers Wikileaks just asked for a "list of as many .mil email addresses as possible" via Twitter. That is weird. What are they up to? |
Human Rights Watch and Their Analyst's 'Weird' Hobby
Saturday 4th of September 2010 03:42:21 PM
Posted by admin / Under Collecting Antiques
| One can measure the failures of the film American Beauty in so many ways, but perhaps the best is to realize that the screenwriter was so unsure of his audiences ability to spot a creep that he had to make Kevin Spaceys next-door neighbor not just a sadist and a closet case but also a collector of Nazi memorabilia. I bring this up because a fetish for the baubles of fascism is generally thought to be a good way of alienating civilized company. The auction house Christies refuses to sell the stuff. And whatever the interpretative fallacies of the late... |
Stamps mark Abe's 200th (obtain a special postmark of Lincoln postage)
Saturday 4th of September 2010 03:42:21 PM
Posted by admin / Under Collecting Antiques
| Alex Lutgendorf is gearing up for a memorial celebration of Abraham Lincoln's 200th birthday and the first-day issuance of the Lincoln series postage stamps on Monday, three days before his Feb. 12 birthday. Lutgendorf is a volunteer at the Postal History Foundation and, as the curator of the Western State Postmarks for the museum, he requested that Arizona receive a special postmark for the occasion. |
Geology Picture of the Week: Thunder Egg
Saturday 4th of September 2010 03:42:21 PM
Posted by admin / Under Collecting Antiques
| Thunder eggs are spherical objects which form in some types of silica-rich volcanic rocks (e.g. rhyolites). As the volcanic lava cooled, trapped steam and other gases formed an expanding bubble. Silica and feldspar minerals often crystallise around the bubble or grow crystal fibres which radiate outwards from the its centre. These mineral-filled bubbles with a radiating structure are called spherulites. Internal gas pressure forces the spherulite apart to form a central hollow, later filled with more minerals. Adjacent wedge-shaped segments of the cracked and expanding spherule move outwards and away from each other, helping form the typical star-shaped interior. Silica... |
In The Company of Grave Robbers
Saturday 4th of September 2010 03:42:21 PM
Posted by admin / Under Collecting Antiques
| Ransacked West Bank antiquities turn into black-market gold On a small stone patio, surrounded by 2,000-year-old olive trees and piles of ancient pottery, Ahmed takes a deep breath as the smell of freshly slaughtered goat baked with okra and tomatoes wafts from his window. The ritual of sharing a homemade meal from an animal reared in his yard is nothing new for the herder-turned-grave-robber on days when his friends come to visit. To his left sits a once-affluent and significant Palestinian antiquities dealer in a pin-striped shirt, and to his right an Israeli antiquities hunter, who has ventured beyond the... |
Gather Ye Olde Disks and Boxes While Ye May : It's treasure to collectors of AOL CDs and old PCs
Saturday 4th of September 2010 03:42:21 PM
Posted by admin / Under Collecting Antiques
| <p>San Francisco, California, USA -- For most people, tech gear is straightforward and utilitarian. You buy a modem or a computer or a piece of software to perform a task. Once you're done with it, it's obsolete and ready for the landfill if you can't find a charity or a friend to take it off your hands. I mean, what are you going to do with it -- start a collection?</p> |



