Xffg Did you know that the smelloscope from Futurama actually exists
COVE CITY, N.C. - A 9-year-old North Carolina girl pinned in a wrecked car for almost two days ate Pop-Tarts and Gatorade to help her survive the single-car crash that killed her father, police and relatives said on Monday.Jordan Landon of Cove City was airlifted to a hospital Sunday night after rescue teams cut her out of the 1995 Chevrolet Monte Carlo that had been upside down in a culvert since Friday ni
stanley tumbler ght, the North Carolina Highway Patrol said. Killed was 39-year-old Douglas Landon, police said.Sgt. David Clifton called the girl heroic and that she was able to stay calm despite being trapped in the dark and cold. He says the girl was talkative and is expected to fully re
stanley cup cover.Clifton said a person walking by saw the car off the state highway and
stanley quencher called 911 late Sunday afternoon, more than 40 hours after the pair was believed to have crashed on their way to a store. Temperatures at night had dropped into the 30s in the area in eastern North Carolina.Girl, 3, lives 2 days on leftovers after mom dies Police said the speedometer on the car was stuck at more than 100 mph. Douglas Landon s employer and friend, Butch Morse, said he found hard to believe Landon was going that fast. He wasn t speeding, there is no way in God s green earth he was speeding, Morse told WCTI-TV.In his final moments, a family friend said Landon was trying to protect his daughter. He was curled up in a ball with his arm right across his chest and his other arm pushed out across Jordan. He wa Hrmu You Can Use A Vibrator To Give Yourself Powerful Body Illusions
3D printing might be bad for your health, according to a new study by the Illinois Institute of Technology. Imagine that. Melting plastic in your home might be hazardous. According to a paper published in the journal Atmostpheric E
stanley mugs nvironment, the desktop 3D printers on the market can emit a pretty hefty amount of harmful ultrafine particles UFPs into the air. Typically a 3D printer will heat up a thermoplastic feedstock, extrude it through a nozzle, then deposit it onto a sort of landing pad where your item is built. Similar processes are known to emit harmful emissions in industrial environments, but the difference here is that in a factory, an operator might be required to wear certain protective gear and there might be better ventilation. In your home Not so much. Researchers measured the amount of UFPs let out into the air when a commercial printer the study doesn
stanley cup 8217;t specify which brands creates a small plastic item. And the emission rates were high鈥攁bout 20 billion particles per minute for a 3D printer working with PLA material at a relatively low temp and upwards of 200 billion/minute for
stanley cup those working at higher temps and with other materials. Researchers compared it to working with a gas or an electric stove in an inclosed space or smoking a cigarette inside. But what kind of effect does that really have on your health The study says UFPs will park themselves in your lungs pretty easily, specifically in the pulmonary and alveolar areas. They can also dep