Amateur Night at the Mos Eisley Cantina [Video]

Or, more accurately, Mash-Up Day at the Senior Citizens Center. Prepare yourselves for the weirdest four minutes you’ll have all day.

[buzzfeed]



Smallville Finale Freakout [Video]

Spoiler Alert: Video features the last six minutes of the Smallville finale… with some audio of a guy litteraly having some kind of cerebral orgasm over the whole thing.

[Via Geekologie | Nerdbastards]

Retro-Style Star Wars Propaganda Posters [Pictures]

These may not be as sexy as some of the other ones we featured in the past, but they still look pretty darn fantastic!

Continue reading

Scientist nose why mammal have big brains

It’s long been known that mammals have proportionally big brains in comparison to other creatures. Now new scanning technology suggests it may be linked to the sense of smell.

A research project led by Professor Timothy Rowe of the University of Texas at Austin involved scanning the fossilised skulls of two of the earliest known mammals, Morganucodon and Hadrocodium. The former is considered one of the evolutionary links between reptiles and mammals, while the latter is less than two inches long.

The problem in the past has been that it’s difficult to get information on what would have been inside the skull without damaging the fossil, which, to put it mildly, seems a bit of shame for something that’s around 200 million years old.

Now though, Rowe and company were able to use computed tomography, a technique that uses multiple two-dimensions X-rays to produce a three-dimension image. The technique is more commonly known as the CT scan used in medicine.

The data from the scans suggested that when mammal brains first started getting proportionally bigger, it was the areas associated with smell that grew most rapidly, possibly by a factor of 10. It also appeared that the cerebellum, which controls movement, increased in size at a similar time.

Rowe’s theory is that mammal brains didn’t simply grow as a whole, but rather that the process was driven by particular sections growing in response to particular needs. The first of these looks to have been the need to develop a stronger sense of smell in order to hunt at night time rather than go out for food during the day and compete with dinosaurs.