Today I Learned #4: Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known.

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TIL that Salt Lake City is 4,226 ft / 1,288 meters above sea level. Over the weekend, the UFC held an event there, and all of the fighters were "gassing out" much sooner than they usually do. I've seen that happen in sports events in places like Denver and Mexico City, but I didn't realize SLC was high enough to take people's breath. I think SLC has an MLS team; I wonder if their opponents get winded when they play there, or if their players have a little extra juice when they play at lower elevations.
I went ice diving in the French alps earlier this year, and therefore read some short things about altitude sickness. Surprisingly it can already kick in from 1000 meters on, apparently. Had not expected that, since I lived for most of my life on the foot of a hill of nearly 1000 meters. Who would have thought that going a few meters higher could be dangerous...?
From 2000m on it's apparently more common, not everyone gets it from 1000 on.
 
@EgonSpengler post fire mudslides and flooding are common in the west. We've seen them in northern NM this summer after our spring fires.
 
I was watching this YouTube vid (it list all the things for everyday objects) and had my mind blown.

 
TIL #1: I was doing some surfant du web over the weekend and realized that Stan Lee introduced the character Black Widow in Tales of Suspense the very same year that Futaro Yamada introduced the kunoichi (a woman ninja) in Ninpō Hakkenden - 1964. Another instance of "parallel evolution" in pop culture, unless the two men knew each other (which seems unlikely) or they were both drawing from a common inspiration (but I don't know what that could have been).

TIL #2: I wondered if Diana Rigg's Emma Peel preceded Black Widow and Yamada's kunoichi, but she debuted in 1965. But here's the real kicker: Emma Peel debuted in series 4 of The Avengers. Patrick McNee's John Steed had four partners before Peel. This makes me wonder if series 1-3 ever aired in the U.S. at all. I knew that Honor Blackman was in the show, at some point. I never saw her, though, and always presumed she came after Rigg & Thorson, but it turns out she was in series 2-3.
 
women ninjas existed for real , probably more dangerous than male ninjas due to surprise issues . Not exactly aware if any reason exists but Vietcong was famous for black pajamas , USS Card was sunk in 1964 , some person from French Partisans might have been noticed in places , which would be an important reason for small talk which then might have led to Johansson in like how many movies again ?
 
TIL wildfires can makes floods much, much worse. This morning I was listening to a podcast interview with a guy who's a geologist & hydrologist who lives in Arizona and studies its water. He said he lives in the Colorado River valley, upriver from Flagstaff. Sometime last year there was a wildfire up in the hills/mountains (somebody was burning toilet paper?) that wiped out the vegetation on the watershed uphill from the town. Then the seasonal rains came, heavier than usual. He said the culvert alongside his house is rated for 50 cubic feet of water per second, and estimated it was getting 300 cubic feet per second. He said there was a "mud geyser." He said the estimate was that the town got 30 times as much water as it normally does during these seasonal rains, mostly owing to the destruction of the thirsty desert vegetation. He also noted that the water coming down from the fire-ravaged hills was black with soot, in addition to carrying all of the usual debris with it, making the cleanup afterwards even tougher.

He didn't mention any mudslides. I think I've read before that wildfires that strip the hills of vegetation can cause big mudslides when the rains come. I want to say that happened in Brazil a few years ago and, like, wiped a whole town off the map. In that instance, I believe the roots of the vegetation literally held the side of the hill in place, and after the fire it was just bare dirt. For some reason, I hadn't connected the dots, vis-a-vis flooding, particularly in desert areas where the plants absorb enormous amounts of water in a short time.
This happens in Alberta and BC as well. BC was hit especially hard last year, due to the heat dome and forest/wildfires. Then they got hit by excessive rain and flooding, as the trees and other vegetation that would have mitigated the flood risk was no longer there - it had burned up.
 
TIL #2: I wondered if Diana Rigg's Emma Peel preceded Black Widow and Yamada's kunoichi, but she debuted in 1965. But here's the real kicker: Emma Peel debuted in series 4 of The Avengers. Patrick McNee's John Steed had four partners before Peel. This makes me wonder if series 1-3 ever aired in the U.S. at all. I knew that Honor Blackman was in the show, at some point. I never saw her, though, and always presumed she came after Rigg & Thorson, but it turns out she was in series 2-3.

The existence of The Avengers in the UK is what led to the first MCU Avengers film being released here as Marvel Avengers Assemble. :)
 
To this day, whenever The Avengers is mentioned as a title, I think of Mr. Steed and Mrs. Peel (and also Miss King).

It does help that it's been on endless rerun here for decades.
 
The til is about who discovered it, and that I was actually alive when he did...

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AC/AB=AB/BC= φ

Pretty amazing that it took till 1980-ish for this to be discovered, so simple a way to construct the golden ratio.
Triangle discoveries have a history of such, of course; other discoveries were made in the 60s and 70s. Often by amateur mathematicians (Hofstadter, and in the case of the above, Odom).
 
To this day, whenever The Avengers is mentioned as a title, I think of Mr. Steed and Mrs. Peel (and also Miss King).

It does help that it's been on endless rerun here for decades.

The intro is still awesome.
 
that there is a mythological beast called a "yale."
 
Petter Sellers was awarded more than $1m for appearing in Dr. Strangelove, more than half of the films total budget. To be fair, he did play three different parts in the film and was originally cast to play a fourth as well.
 
Petter Sellers was awarded more than $1m for appearing in Dr. Strangelove, more than half of the films total budget. To be fair, he did play three different parts in the film and was originally cast to play a fourth as well.
I actually haven't watched the movie (have seen various scenes). Perhaps I should - though I am not a big Kubrick fan.
 
*curiously high-pitched voice* You definitely should vatch it, Herr Kyriakos. It iz ein most hilarious und instructive film.
 
*curiously high-pitched voice* You definitely should vatch it, Herr Kyriakos. It iz ein most hilarious und instructive film.
Spoiler :
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I guess I will. Sellers isn't exactly an actor I like. Has a Robbin Williams vibe, in a way (one continuous life role, which manifests in movie roles too).

He should have played Constantin Cavafy, of course ^_^

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I actually haven't watched the movie (have seen various scenes). Perhaps I should - though I am not a big Kubrick fan.

It's one of the finest dark satires ever made.
It's not particularly 'Kubrickian' in its expression or aesthetics, other than the craft on display in the film obviously being the signature of a master filmmaker. It has some amazing dialogue exchanges.

Ready your bodily fluids!
 
Technically the two aren't incompatible.
 
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