Nathan Jones
9.1K posts

Nathan Jones
@JonestechDev
Vulcanus Hybridus 🖖🏼 Aπογονος Επαφου 👽 Teyrnas Powys 🛸
South Dakota انضم Mayıs 2023
497 يتبع434 المتابعون

@KaihatsuYT "I love Mexico. Mexico is one of my favorite countries; tacos are one of my favorite foods."
youtu.be/RDrfE9I8_hs?si…

YouTube
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@FatherMcKennaa don't grow the one from home depot. get a cutting from someone who was already growing it.
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Don't harvest wild peyote. San Pedro works just as well, isn't endangered, and you can buy it at Home Depot.
x.com/FatherMcKennaa…
Taylor Sterling@FatherMcKennaa
You can buy this cactus at Home Depot for $15. It contains mescaline — the same psychedelic compound as peyote. This one is growing wild near Quito, Ecuador. Likely over a hundred years old. San Pedro grows a foot per year. Peyote takes 10-15 years to grow a single button. Its original name is huachuma. The Spanish tried to ban it. They failed — and accidentally named it "San Pedro," Saint Peter, because it "holds the keys to heaven." 3,500 years of continuous use. Schedule I in the US. $15 in the garden department.
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@HateradeHQ @FatherMcKennaa No need to get defensive about it, right?
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@JonestechDev @FatherMcKennaa He commented on his own post saying exactly this…. Not sure why everyone is still telling him not to touch it.
He was just sharing a picture of an awesome find.
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@CopiumPoppies @FatherMcKennaa No; it's still foolish because there are already grafts out there. Don't need to keep behaving like an opportunist when you can break the law on Ebay
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@JonestechDev @FatherMcKennaa Only if you aren't doing it for religious reasons. 😉
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@_NTME9_ @chrisramsay52 No I am referring to the MO of the occupants.
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@JonestechDev @chrisramsay52 Sorry you lost me, is that an obscure reference to something? 🤷
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@JonestechDev @FatherMcKennaa ...or take a cutting from those. 🤷♂️
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@_NTME9_ @chrisramsay52 "one thing pretending to be many things"
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@JonestechDev @chrisramsay52 Bob said that all of the craft used the same propulsion technologies, that explains why there were multiples of everything in both the lab and the sport model
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@HistContent I feel the need to point out that I have watched dozens of bronze age weapon casting videos on Youtube, and not a single one of them used lost-wax. The forgers often complain about how the edge warps during work hardening, with minimal appreciation for its predecessor.

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The precision of the wood bending on this vehicle rivals modern steam-bending techniques. Achieving these exact symmetrical curves without modern pressure chambers is a mechanical puzzle that archaeologists still debate. We are clearly missing a massive piece of their technological timeline.
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@Gnosisinformant Because he's a plagiarist that thrives off of notoriety like some kind of celebrity parasite.
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Reconstructing Jesus: Using Science to Flesh out the Face of Religion -
For being one of the most widely recognized men in the last 2,000 years, the true appearance of Jesus of Nazareth remains a mystery. Traditionally portrayed in western art as a be-robed, light-skinned Caucasian man with a tidy beard and flowing, light-brown hair, scientific analysis has changed perceptions of what Jesus may have really looked like—and it’s not the familiar face from Sunday school teachings....
Based on the multitude of images of Jesus that exist in the world, we are coaxed into an image of Jesus that is similar to one recently produced by photographer Bas Uterwijk using AI Artbreeder software which produces ‘photo-realistic’ images based on existing paintings and portrayals of historic figures. But this is only as true to life as were the existing images, of which none are photographs, and so the impressions are entirely the imagination and hand of the artist. So although Uterwijk’s image may look realistic, there is no reason to believe it really is the face of Jesus Christ. Indeed, Uterwijk admits on his X page, “I don't really believe it has any archaeologic-historical value regarding to the actual life of Jesus.”
Although this portrayal can only be as faithful to the truth as the portrayals from which it was drawn, others have tried to produce the face of Jesus using scientific means. Recently, a British scientist teamed up with Israeli archaeologists in an attempt to forensically recreate a truer face of the historical man who is believed to be the son of God in Christianity. And it had very different look to the one we are accustomed to.
The physical appearance of Jesus has varied across locations, ages, and cultural settings, with a western likeness being very common in modern times. Jesus has been represented traditionally in art as having pale skin, a narrow face, medium-brown (even blonde) hair, with kind or sad eyes in any color. Long, flowing hair, with a beard and robes typifies the figure.
Comedian Eddie Izzard jokes that the popular modern image of Jesus is that of a “white man from Oxford,” England, but researchers have produced a reconstruction of what they believe Jesus, as a real historical man, may have looked like based on the time period and location of the story of Jesus from ancient texts and forensic reconstruction.
The reconstruction was reportedly a great challenge, as PopularMechanics writes, “nowhere in the New Testament is Jesus described, nor have any drawings of him ever been uncovered.”
Richard Neave, a medical artist retired from The University of Manchester in England had experience reconstructing historical faces, including Philip II of Macedonia, the father of Alexander the Great and King Midas of Phrygia.
Using methods commonly employed by police to solve crimes, Neave used modern-day forensic techniques on ancient skulls from around Jerusalem, area where Jesus was said to have lived and preached.
X-ray “slices” of three skulls from 1st century Jewish men were created with computerized tomography to reveal minute data. Specialized programs determined where soft tissue would have been on skulls, fleshing out muscles and skin of the composite face. This created a wider face shape than seen in western depictions.
"The entire process was accomplished using software that verified the results with anthropological data. From this data, the researchers built a digital 3D reconstruction of the face. Next, they created a cast of the skull. Layers of clay matching the thickness of facial tissues specified by the computer program were then applied, along with simulated skin. The nose, lips and eyelids were then modeled to follow the shape determined by the underlying muscles," writes PopularMechanics.
📷 : Richard Neave has recreated the face of Jesus (pictured), using forensic techniques. This is in contrast to traditional western depiction of a fair-skinned man with flowing hair.
#archaeohistories

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@ApexImperialist When did libertarians ever say this.
If you have sex with another human being and cause a pregnancy, you are responsible and liable for your actions. We have a finite amount of medical resources, and we need to be better humans about all this.
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Fun fact: Despite the Libertarian theology claiming otherwise, babies have a human right to the care and labour of their parents.
edelnougat 🐿️@edelnougat
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@IRGIORGIO @chrisramsay52 Answer: It came from the damaged craft because an amplifier is going to be the most vulnerable component in a circuit during failure. The emitters were thus salvageable. We know you can remove an amplifier, and the emitters will still function, but not the other way around.
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@HandyGingerGal flue backflow will make all your clothes smell like mercaptans lol
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