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A body found in a snow cave on Mount Hood by searchers looking for three missing climbers is the same climber who placed a distress call to relatives a little more than a week ago, a person close to the family and a military official said Monday.Jessica Nunez, who is close to the family of missing climber Kelly James and has bee
stanley cup deutschland n acting as a spokeswoman, said the body is that of Kelly James. She said the information comes from James family, an
stanley website d that she had
stanley puodelis talked to them.A military official involved in the search also confirmed the body is that of James, 48, of Dallas. The official asked not to be identified.James mother, Lou Ann Cameron of Bryant, Ark., told the AP she did not want to comment. Reached on her cell phone, she referred queries to the Hood River County Sheriff s Office. The sheriff s office said they could not yet comment on the identity of the body.A Chinook helicopter was preparing to fly to the snow cave, about 300 feet below Mount Hood s 11,239-foot summit, to recover the body, said Pete Hughes, a spokesman with the Hood River County Sheriff s Office. He said other helicopters mdash; two Blackhawks mdash; were getting ready to fly to the mountain to search for the two climbers still missing: Brian Hall, 37, also of Dallas, and Jerry Nikko Cooke, 36, of New York City. We remain hopeful, said Capt. Mike Braibish, spokesman for the Oregon National Guard. We are going to still collect information and pursue the rescue of the two other climbers. R Vlel Satiregram Is the Only Instagram Account You Need to Follow
You may have thrown your 3D glasses away a long while back, but not this little cr
stanley cup itter. After all, this praying mantis has had his glued to his face by scientists in the name of research. In fact, this is what Newcastle University scientists in the UK are doing to try and understand the eyes of the insect world. By giving the praying mantis a pair of 3D specs鈥攖hey don ;t get much choice in the matter, really鈥攖he researchers are testing their depth perception to see how it differs from that of humans. Unusually for invertebrates, praying mantises have stereoscopic vision, hence the interest. The experiments sound interesting,
stanley cup if infuriating for the insects. The mantis has the glasses attached using bee wax, not actual glue, animal activists , and is then placed in front of a computer monitor that displays images in 3D. By adjusting the 3D effects on the display, the researchers try and freak the animals out by making it seem as if an object is headed right at them. They ;ve yet to work out exactly how the insect vision differs from that of humans, but at least they
stanley france ;re having fun finding out. The researchers have kindly made a video called Man, Mantis 038; Machine to accompany the work, because, of course they have. Watch it below. Try not to laugh. Fail. [Newcastle University via Discovery] InsectsScience