Quick Search of DRB:
Lijit Search
drb rss about
suggest
advertise
subscribe
rss rss
rss
airplanes | animals | architecture | art | auto | boats | famous | cool ads | funny pics | food | futurism | gadgets | history | japan
military | music | nature | photo | russia | sci-fi | signs | space | sports | steampunk | technology | trains | travel | vintage | weird

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Speed Cups Stacking



Link
Scroll down for today's pictures & links.

Speed Stacking of Cups

These kids know their routine. Mesmerizing.


url

Today's pictures & links:

Deadly Surveillance

More images of such "Big Brothers" are here


(image credit: Florian Wild)

------------

Very Narrow House in Tokyo

Still wide enough to provide car parking... and a balcony:



(images via tokyo times)

------------

Seen all over CERN recently



Large Hadron Collider will remain shut until middle of next year - info.

------------

Sculptures Made of Bullets and Guns

Having somewhat religious themes... See more here


(original unknown)

------------

Hang on to your lunch


(original unknown)

------------

Mixed fresh links for today:

Is Earth at the heart of giant cosmic void? - [fascinating]
Huge Meteor Lands in Alberta, Canada, info - [wow video]
Top 25 days in computer history - [computers]
Compilation of the Most Beautiful Mountains - [nature]
Fairy Tale Scenes (like you never seen before) - [art]
Hilarious store signage - [funny]
Chicken: a perfect gyroscope - [fun video]
Wicked way to play ping pong - [wow video]
How snakes can eat large eggs - [slightly gross video]
Free Digital Magazine Subscriptions - [promotion]

------------

Problem with theft?



Better keep an eye on your shopping cart.

------------

Condition: Critical - Voices from the war in eastern Congo

London-based organisation "Medecins Sans Frontieres/Doctors Without Borders" is launching the multi-media project, giving a voice to the people of Congo, specifically in the North Kivu region where war is (and has been for years) leaving many dead, injured or homeless - see the trailer at condition-critical.org.

Here are some amazing photos by Cédric Gerbehaye, World Press Photo Award winning photographer.


View on the displaced camp in Nyanzale, North Kivu.


Registration of a displaced family in Lushebere camp, North Kivu. This family of 8 will have to stay in one single hut.


On the right: This man is accompanying his son of nine months, shot in the leg during an attack on their village. The same fighting that killed his wife and dispersed his family.


A shelter without adequate protection in a camp for internally displaced persons in Nyanzale.

All photos copyright by Cédric Gerbehaye

This project will last a year and aims to bring the people of north Kivu to the attention of the world and will be updated regularly with content from on the ground in Congo - more info.

------------

New work by Wayne Chisnall



The exhibition takes place on the 11th December, off Broadway Market, Hackney/Bethnal Green, London.

------------

Thanksgiving Gifts for Pets Who Have Everything

"Critter Cruisers" for hamsters:


(image credit: drsfostersmith)

A special glove to massage your pet:


(image credit: harrietcarter.com)

Ideas are via WebVet.com

------------

Wicked Cartoons - Dark Humor

This tongue-in-cheek gallery may not be for everybody, but it's simply (darkly) hilarious. Some examples:



(image credit: Sheharzad Arshad)

See the whole gallery by Sheharzad Arshad, an animator from Canada, and buy his book of these "not for children" drawings - "The Book of Strange Happenings".

And by the way, he draws some nice space girls, too:


(image credit: Sheharzad Arshad)

------------

Impressive

Having this on the road -



Caused this puncture in a tire of a huge truck:



------------

Silly Cat

"post-punk / emo hybrid"?



an inquisitive cat -


(image credit: Kevin Steele)

and a very wise dog:


(originals unknown)

------------

Hey..!


(original unknown)

READ THE PREVIOUS ISSUE ->

Permanent Link......+StumbleUpon ...+Facebook

READ LATEST POSTS:

November 20, 2009 - Quantum Shot #599
The Extraordinary World of Ex Libris Art

Mythic, bizarre, fantastic

Biscotti Bits
Mixed Links & Images

incl. "Marvelous Burj Dubai Fountain Show"

SFSite
"Steampunk Anthology" Reviewed, in All Its Brass Glory

Making all sci-fi punks in the world "feel lucky", since 2008
(for other weekly "Biscotti" issues - see our main page and monthly archives)

COMMENTS:

13 Comments:

Blogger Marie said...

Really nice blog!

I have seen the original photo 'an inquisitive cat' on Flickr... This is the link :)

http://www.flickr.com/photos/kevinsteele/231795031/

___  
Blogger Avi Abrams said...

Thank you Marie, credit added.

___  
Blogger Gilipollas said...

What's under the photos of Africa stops being funny after seeing that poor child shot in the legs.

___  
Blogger Mike said...

My dog can out-wise that one.

___  
Anonymous David said...

Hey - those cartoons are great! I love that black Humor. It reminds me a bit of the old "Parking Lot is full" cartoons - http://plif.courageunfettered.com/ - worth a look if you haven't seen them already!

___  
Anonymous Andyman said...

The truck tire hole looks suspicious to me. Why is the rubber inside the hole the same color and wear as the outside of the tire? Shouldn't it be somewhat cleaner rubber?

___  
Blogger Sigivald said...

I agree that the punctured tire photo is almost certainly fake.

Not only is the image dubious, but the physics behind it doesn't make sense.

Those traffic cones are relatively flexible, and hollow all the way through; a tire like that would smash it flat, not be cut through by it.

(And especially not in such a regular way, and while STILL smashing the cone flat and off to one side.)

___  
Anonymous Tangle said...

Sigivald...
It's possible the orange cones were placed there to mark the spot of the STEEL PIPE STICKING VERTICALLY FROM THE GROUND which may, or may not, be able to cut a piece of rubber out of a tire that has several tons of pressure on it.

As for the cut being dirty, the tire probably made quite a few rotations over dirt after the puncture was made. Since it's part of a dual they took the truck off the site to fix it.

___  
Anonymous Chris said...

the truck tire hole is a fake. period.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The last pic is from The Creature From The Haunted Sea. Really bad old horror movie.

___  
Blogger floze said...

The 'Deadly Surveillance' robot guy was shot by me, thanks for consideration! Original flickr can be found here:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/floze/1588186509/

There's some more shots of his fellas right here:

http://www.floze.org/2008/04/big-brothers-work-in-progress.html

Thanks again, cheers

___  
Blogger Avi Abrams said...

Thank you Floze, credit added, plus link to your other images. The Big Brother never slumbers, nor sleeps.

___  
Anonymous Marilyn Terrell said...

I love those speed-stacking-cup kids! Imagine practicing a routine like that when they should be sitting in front of a TV playing video games!

___  

Post a Comment

<< Home


SF ART & BOOK REVIEWS:
Don't miss: The Ultimate Guide to SF&F Writers!
Fiction Reviews: Alastair Reynolds "Chasm City"
Short Fiction Reviews: Lovecraft's "At the Mountains of Madness" (with pics)
New Fiction Reviews: The Surreal Office

MORE RECENT POSTS:


Outrageously Creative Ads, Issue 12

Unexpected Weirdness & Visual Candy


Weird Food McDonald's Sells Around the World

Spaghetti! Soaked! In Sugarrr!


The World's Most Magnificent Pipe Organs

Simply Blockbusters of Their Time!


Lovely Cowgirls in Vintage Westerns

Beauties with guns scorched the screen... and it was good


Weirdest Cell Phones Ever!

Totally non-conventional looks and futuristic specs.


British Pubs: Signs of the Times, Part 2

Pub signs are almost like time machines...


Fabulous Las Vegas: Vintage Treasures

Part 1: Glamour vs. Kitsch


Incredible Astronomical Clocks

Antique and medieval technology blended with art


Battersea, and Other Abandoned Power Stations

Part 2 of popular urban exploration series


Hilarious & Crazy Signage

Part 13 of this side-splitting series


Living, Growing Architecture

Grow your house one root at a time


Alone in the Wild: Yukon Survival Saga

How to eat porcupine livers, and more!


Unusual and Marvelous Maps

Alternate histories, sea monsters, weird politics


Airships & Tentacles

Exclusive Interview with artist Myke Amend


Jet Engines on Trucks (For Fun and Profit)

Snow-blowers from hell, and more...


Star Wars for Your Mind, Heart and Soul

Part 3 of the popular series


Britain's Colorful Pub Signs, Part 1

A map to your last night adventures


Flying Colors! Creative Paint on Airliners

Groovy additions to the fleet...


Walled Cities: Keeping Out the Joneses

Highlights of the defensive architecture


Postage Stamps From the Future

...and some alternative realities


The Glamour of Flight: Sexy Stewardesses

Part 4 of highly popular series


Flags of Forgotten Countries

Don't just wave a black flag... consider your options


Spectacular Steampunk Art Update

Part 2 of this eye-popping, mind-boggling series

MORE OF THE RECENT POSTS:








Anything for the Perfect Shot! Part 3
Charmed by the Unknown Brazil
Ekranoplans Showcase, Part 2
Riot Vehicle with Water Cannon
Thrilling Vintage Movie Posters
Cheers to Beers!
Most Interesting Bridges, Part 3
Mesmerizing Kinetic Sculptures
Real Life Spy Gadgets
Tangled & Crazy Wiring
Underground Cities and Bunkers
Extraordinary Clocks & Watches
Pasta Monster & Other Strange Food
How Morgan Cars Are Made
Abandoned Boeing-747 Restaurant
Surprised Astronauts (Funny Pics)
One-Track Wonders: Early Monorails
Komodo Dragons: They Eat Meat
Spring Cleaning of the Mind: Surreal Art
Crazy & Funny Faces, Part 5
Wonder Weapons of World War Two
Narrow Buildings in Japan & Around the World
The Cutting Edge of Retro Tech
Bladerunner Tokyo Large-Format Photography
Nightmare Playgrounds, Part 3
Victorian Flea Circuses: A Lost Art Form
Strangest Music Scores, Part 2
Monstrous Aviation: Huge Helicopters!
- many more in the Archives and in the Contents Index (left bar)


FULL ARCHIVES (with previews, fast loading):

September 2009 -- August 2009 --
June-July 2009 -- May 2009 -- April 2009 -- March 2009 --
February 2009 -- January 2009 -- December 2008 --
November 2008 -- October 2008 -- September 2008
August 2008 -- July 2008 -- June 2008
May 2008 -- April 2008 -- March 2008
February 2008 -- January 2008 -- Dec, 2007
November 2007 -- October 2007 -- Sept, 2007
August 2007 -- July 2007 -- June 2007
May 2007 -- April 2007 -- March 2007
February 2007 -- January 2007 -- Dec, 2006
November 2006 -- October 2006 -- Link Lattes




CATEGORIES:
airplanes | animals | architecture | art | auto | boats | books | cool ads | funny pics | famous | futurism | food
gadgets | health | history | humour | japan | internet | link latte | military | music | nature | photo | russia | steampunk
sci-fi & fantasy | signs | space | sports | technology | trains | travel | vintage | weird



Discretion Advised! These cartoons contain some extreme animated violence!






Airplanes
Animals
Architecture
Art
Auto
Boats
Computers
Cool Ads
Extreme Weather
Food
Funny Pics
Futurism
Gadgets
History
Humour
Link Latte
Military
Music
Nature
Oops Accidents
Photography
Robots
Science
Science Fiction

Space
Sports
Technology
Trains
Travel
UE Abandoned
Vintage
Weird




Avi Abrams
Rachel Abrams
M. Christian
James Golbey
Simon Rose
Paul Schilperoord
Scott Seegert
Constantine vonHoffman
Steve Levenstein

- Join Our Team -
Guidelines








  • A desktop that pours beer? Yess!!
    Read more

  • The USB copying device looks useful to me - for organisations that give away USB drives with presentations on as an advertising gimmick.
    Read more

  • 31 USB ports? not 32?
    Read more

  • See USB horn-doggies at
    http://www.thinkgeek.com/geektoys/japanfan/9c89/
    Read more

  • Usb.brando.com mixer would be great alarm for morning:

    Get up and turn it off quickly, because otherwise you'll have to pick up the balls all around your room!
    Read more

  • Y'all know the USB Grill is an April Fool's Joke, right?
    Read more

  • Oh lord, that video, when the geek squeaks his cheeks to get moving & the music pauses was too funny. Thanks for the laugh! :D
    Read more

  • Probably a parking garage, not a vending machine.
    Read more

  • It's not a parking garage. Vending machine isn't too far off. The picture is of Palette Town in Odaiba, Tokyo and the cars are part of the Mega Web Toyota showroom. You pick a car you want to see by pushing a button and a giant conveyor belt system rotates the vehicles around until your selection is in view. It's pretty awesome.
    Read more

  • I like the video on the Pimped Office Cubicles link where the office workers show how they converted their colleague's cube into a tiny house while he was on vacation.
    Read more

  • Japan is small, but creative !
    Read more

  • The Absolutely Monstrous Machine Found Somewhere in Russia, would most likely have been used for deicing and drying runways.(Because of the aircraft in the background) It's basically a jet engine mounted on a truck and the hot exhaust is directed at the runway surface.
    Read more

  • Creepy. Nice post!
    Read more

  • all coasters has been manufactured by italian industry Zamperla
    http://www.zamperla.it/

    ciao
    Read more

  • It´s remember me the movie "Chihiro´s travel" from Miyazaki.
    Read more

  • Wow..! Great post, that place must be creepy at night
    ;)
    Read more

  • Okpo Land was very peaceful at night. We went up there at 2am while very drunk. The third picture from the bottom with the swirling lights was taken from the ride as it was rotating, and we could see the city way below.
    Read more

  • FYI,
    I would like to correct
    some mistakes here.

    First of all, the author of this post was not actually supposed
    to go inside. It's forbidden
    to go inside as it will be
    under construction very soon.

    Second, it's not likely abandoned.
    Around the resort, there are gonna
    be new housing area(apartments), and the resort will be transformed
    to bigger park!
    hope this helped u guys understand!


    if you wanna see pictures,
    pls refer to the pictures below.

    http://pds54.cafe.daum.net/image/10/cafe/2008/06/28/17/57/4865fccfe88fe

    http://pds83.cafe.daum.net/image/14/cafe/2008/07/28/15/47/488d6b848cb1f
    Read more

  • Hey Anonymous,

    You obviously have no idea what urban exploring is if you think I made a mistake.

    There were no signs, in Korean or otherwise, forbidding entrance. Nobody stopped us, despite the fact we were crawling around there for several hours and seen by many people.

    Thanks for posting your pictures. If there is anything South Korea needs more of, it's soulless highrises.
    Read more

  • It's great that you guys were able to take pictures of this place, since this place will be gone soon due to the apartment complex construction plan throughout the area. The price of the land in Seoul and its suburban areas including Suwon is considerably expensive because of "supply and demand". (e.g. 1300 ft2 of apartment, not a house, costs minimum $300,000 average and up.-plz google the population density in these areas if interested.) And that's why people would like to utilize this piece of land to build more housing to live.

    By the way, FYI, it's kind of sad and true that Koreans really don't talk to Foreigners because of the language barrier. Don't be surprised!
    Read more

  • Just so everyone's clear:

    -A city of 1 million may be large by western standards, but in Asia it's relatively small, especially when it's a little south of a city of 10 million.
    -A site is abandoned if it has been vacated and is awaiting demolition. The two significantly large neighbourhoods of vacated houses awaiting demolition that are within five minutes of my home are abandoned.
    -Not everyone sees beauty the same way. The Japanese have a word, haikyo, which relates to the hidden beauty found in sites like this. There are hundreds of people all over the world who seek out places like this. Korea is not unique in this way.
    Read more

  • I want that big, green gargoyle! ^_^
    Read more

  • Remember the movie "Big", with T Hanks...the wish machine is somewhere in those parks.
    Read more

  • Anonymous,
    we see the beauty in these places. When we say weird or creepy we really mean cool. :)
    Where are these abandoned neighborhoods you speak of?
    Read more

  • "It´s remember me the movie "Chihiro´s travel" from Miyazaki."

    I believe this film was released in the U.S. as "Spirited Away."
    (Chihiro's Dad mistakes a portal to the spirit world for the entrance to an abandoned amusement park; surreal eerieness ensues).

    Yes, I had the same thought, looking at those pictures.

    This and "Castle in the Sky" by Miyazagi are amazing, and well worth renting; but do not select the English language version: it changes the stories too much. Read subtitles on the original Japanese-soundtracks.
    Read more

  • awesome
    Read more

  • I'm sad to report that the front gate arch has been removed.

    South Korea is filled with large abandoned neighbourhoods. In the near future I'm thinking of putting together a report on them for this site, but for now you can see a ton of photos on my site.
    Read more

  • Too bad you weren't able to get inside the floating restaurant with the windmill. Maybe come back at night and borrow one of the boats to get across. Would suck if the door leading up turned out to be locked.
    Read more

  • Oh, I later got into two of the floating restaurants. The one titled "...and another one" has some pretty cool stuff inside.
    Read more

  • This is the first time I can ever say, on any comments on any web page, "FIRST!"

    I know, I know. It's been done before.
    Read more

  • The Boohbahs aren't weird - they're a British kids' programme!
    Read more

  • man, I'm from Lithuania but that Lithuanian Folk Art cracked me up. I have no idea what is that. And maybe that really is an ancient handjob porn, carved in a tree, LOL.
    Read more

  • I think they're badly placed scissors. See, she has cloth in the other hand.
    Read more

  • Heh! the cupid peeping around the corner would certainly startle the bejesus out of someone if they didn't know it was there. :P
    Read more

  • I love the "Black Hole Office" video but I'm sorry it had an unhappy ending.
    Read more

  • Quite an amazing array of geeky goodness. The tower designs were pretty freaking amazing!
    Read more

  • Re: Japanese Toys Resting

    Ummm, I am not sure, but I think that the toys are possibly for ADULT MEN if you know what I mean. I believe that the Japanese make them in Anime style as well as more human-like form
    Read more

  • chocolate hills are spectacular
    Read more

  • Don't forget about Texas City, Texas, home of two major disasters in 60 years.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_City_Disaster

    April 16, 1947 saw the ignition of 2,300 tons of ammonium nitrate loaded on board the french-registered vessel SS Grandcamp. it is considered the worst industrial accident in US history with a death toll of 567.

    58 years later, as insult to injury the BP refinery there exploded do to a running truck.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_City_Refinery_(BP)
    Read more

  • Another huge explosion occured in Siberia, 1982.

    A Soviet gas pipeline system exploded after the CIA modified the firmware in a shipment of pipeline control chips.

    The resulting 3 kiloton (approx) explosion was seen from space.

    http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1071087/posts
    Read more

  • You also missed the PEPCON disaster http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PEPCON_disaster

    The two explosions, measuring 3 and 3.5 on the Richter scale respectively, left a crater 15 feet deep.
    Read more

  • Closer to us, in 2001 (10 days after 9/11), 300 tons of ammonium nitrate ignited in a fertilizer factory in the middle of the Toulouse, France. It was a 100 kiloton blast that killed 30 people, injured 3000 and made 40000 people homeless for several days.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AZF

    The factory next door produces rocket fuel and uses phosgen (mustard gas). Miraculously, there were no deadly leaks, or else the death toll would have been between 50 and 100000 deaths.
    Read more

  • A picture of the Fauld, Staffordshire crater can be seen here http://www.gearthhacks.com/dlfile27084/RAF-Fauld-Explosion-near-Tutbury,-Burton-upon-Trent-in-Staffordshire.htm

    Also, regarding the anonymous comment about the Toulouse blast - there is no way 300 tons of ammonium nitrate can produce an equivalent blast of 100 kilotons. One ton of ammonium nitrate does not have the explosive force of 333.3 tons of TNT...
    Read more

  • In 1921 IG Farben (later BASF) used dynamite to break up a mixture of Ammonium Sulphate and Ammonium Nitrate that was stored in a warehouse. This was a process that they had reportedly followed numerous times previously.

    On 21 September they learned empirically that the mixture was explosive. 500 people died.

    A report: http://www.corporate.basf.com/en/ueberuns/profil/geschichte/1902-1924.htm?id=V00-QdITSDCGVbcp0-D

    A picture of the blast damage: http://www.bufata-chemie.de/reader/ig_farben/pics/1-4-3_01_oppau-big.jpg


    DRB is a compulsory daily read. Thanks for the interesting site.

    Andrew J. Winks
    Cape Town, South Africa
    Read more

  • Enschede, Netherlands

    A local firework factory blows up:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ks5X0N8M_o8
    Read more

  • When I was a kid I read at Readers Digest about the Mont Blanc explosion and I remember a question. The anchor of the Mont Blanc it was found two milles far.
    Read more

  • I think the biggest non-nuclear explosion ever was the "Tunguska Event"

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunguska_event

    The Tunguska Event, or Tunguska explosion, was a powerful explosion that occurred near the Podkamennaya (Lower Stony) Tunguska River in what is now Krasnoyarsk Krai of Russia, at around 7:14 a.m.[1] (0:14 UT, 7:02 a.m. local solar time[2]) on June 30, 1908 (June 17 in the Julian calendar, in use locally at the time).[2]
    Although the cause is the subject of some debate, the explosion was most likely caused by the air burst of a large meteoroid or comet fragment at an altitude of 5–10 kilometres (3–6 miles) above Earth's surface. Different studies have yielded varying estimates for the object's size, with general agreement that it was a few tens of metres across.[3]
    Although the meteor or comet burst in the air rather than directly hitting the surface, this event is still referred to as an impact. Estimates of the energy of the blast range from 5 megatons[4] to as high as 30 megatons[5] of TNT, with 10–15 megatons the most likely[5] - roughly equal to the United States' Castle Bravo thermonuclear explosion set off in late February 1954, about 1,000 times as powerful as the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan and about one third the power of the Tsar Bomba, the largest nuclear weapon ever detonated.[6] The explosion knocked over an estimated 80 million trees over 2,150 square kilometres (830 square miles). It is estimated that the earthquake from the blast would have measured 5.0 on the Richter scale, which was not yet developed at the time. An explosion of this magnitude is capable of destroying a large metropolitan area.[7] This possibility has helped to spark discussion of asteroid deflection strategies.
    Although the Tunguska event is believed to be the largest impact event on land in Earth's recent history,[8] impacts of similar size in remote ocean areas would have gone unnoticed before the advent of global satellite monitoring in the 1960s and 1970s.
    Read more

  • Januar 12, 1807 a ship loaded with 17 tons of black powder exploded in the cite of Leiden blasting away a great part of the inner citty and killing 150 people.

    animation:
    http://www.infofilm.nl/animaties/kruitramp/kruitramp.html

    dutch wikipedia with some images:
    http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leidse_buskruitramp
    Read more

  • How about the even BIGGER explosions of stars? National Geographic has a photo gallery:
    http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2007/03/cosmic-explosions/cosmic-explosions-photography
    Read more

  • The Fauld crater appears to be more like 200m across, not 3/4 of a mile.

    The depth may have changed, but the crater width would remain unchanged.

    If you look at the detailed google map of the area, it is easy to see the dimensions have "grown" with time....
    Read more

  • You should look up the SS Richard Montgomery, its still loaded with thousands of tons of ammunition from WW2 sunk in the Thames estuary, read that if it goes up it will be the biggest non nuclear detonation, I have fished from a boat next to it a few times, worst fishing spot on the planet I imagine.
    Read more

  • 1800's - fertilizer plant in Opau Germany blew up. Flattened half the town.
    Read more

  • This is also a big explosion: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nC0FetkeqA , a fireworks safety test(The tiny thing in the middle is the shipping container).
    Great site you have btw, one of my favourites :).
    Read more

  • Its looking more and more like I don't want to live near harbors nor anywhere having anything to do with bulk fertilizer.
    Read more

  • "..300 tons of ammonium nitrate ignited in a fertilizer factory in the middle of the Toulouse, France. It was a 100 kiloton blast.."

    Just to clarify, 300 tons of ammonium nitrate cannot ever equal 100 kilotons of TNT. For example, the fission weapon "Little Boy" detonated over Hiroshima produced a 13 to 16 kiloton blast. Ammonium Nitrate in a blast prepared slurry also containing nitromethane - not just stored fertilizer - has a TNT equivalency of 1.6, IE: 1 ton ANNM is equal to 1.6 tons of TNT.

    Comparatively, the most common fission nuclear warhead in the US arsenal is the B61 which has a disclosed yield up to 350 kilotons

    Better living through chemistry, eh?

    Ref:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Boy
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANFO
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_weapon_yield
    Read more

  • Thank you everybody for really explosive information... will go into the next part. Fantastic info.
    Read more

  • Ripple Rock--I believe it is supposed to be one of the largest intentional man-made non-nuclear explosions.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ripple_Rock
    Read more

  • For another in humanity's long running attempts at self-immolation see:
    www.reddit.com/r/wikipedia/related/7d98l/the_largest_nonnuclear_explosion
    A tale of Russia executing the largest intentional non-nuclear explosion in our sorry history of blowing things up, intentional or otherwise.
    arrtist
    Read more

  • 1769 The city of Brescia, Italy is devastated when the Church of San Nazaro, near Venice, is struck by lightning. The resulting fire ignites 200,000 lb (90,000 kg) of gunpowder being stored there, causing a massive explosion which destroys 1/6 of the city and kills 3,000 people.
    Read more

  • You forgot the man made explosion in WW1. A whole line of trench was mined and filled with explosives. It obliterated everything. Second four of the sites are still active. (One exploded recently creating football long hole.) I believe this is the battle; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Messines
    Read more


Send us your topic ideas, site suggestions, rants or sweet unpublished poetry. We love to hear from you.



Misc.:
Compare Prices
Samsung LED TV






Blu