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Bfia Alienware s Newest Desktop Design Leaves the Mothership and Heads Back Down to Earth
 io9 is excited to reveal a first look inside cartoonist Warwick Johnson-Cadwells new quirky supernatural crossover adventure at Dark Horse Comics, Falconspeare. The new graphic novel, written and illustrated by Johnson-Cadwell  with lettering by Clem Robins , features the 19th century heroes Professor J.T. Meinhardt, Mr. Knox, and Ms. Mary Van Sloan, characters Johnson-Cadwell created alon stanley mug gside Hellboy icon Mike Mignola for the comics Mr. Higgins Comes Home and Our Encounters With Evil: Adventures of Professor J.T. Meinhardt and his Assistant Mr. Knox. Now, those heroes are teaming up for another kooky, spooky adventure investigating the paranormal perils of the age, this time investigating the mysterious disappearance of a fellow agent of supernatural investigation: the titular vampire slayer, James Falconspeare. Check out the cover for Falconspeare below, by Mike Mignola and longtime collaborator colorist Dave stanley en mexico  Stewart!     Image: Mike Mignola and Dave Stewart/Dark Horse  Professor Meinhardt, Mr. Knox, and Ms. Mary Van Sloan answer a call from their past. A lost colleague and friend from their formative days may be reaching out to them after years of silence. Is it a call for help, or a warning   Johnson-Cadwell teased io9 about the plot of  stanley quencher Falconspeare, in a statement provided via email.  Our heroes are prepared to find out, though may not be prepared for what they uncover. They pit themselves against vampires and werewolves once more, but is there a more terrible encounter Vowy This Animated Lego Fan Film Is as Good as the Official Movies
 Scientists studying the 15,000-year-old human remains found at Goughs Cave in Somerset, England, have already show that Ice Age Britons consumed human flesh, but they werent sure if these ancient cannibalistic practices had ritualistic significance. An analysis of a human forearm unearthed at the site suggests that the patterned engravings on the bone were a deliberate component of the cannibalistic practice鈥攐ne likely rich in symbolic meaning.     The British Natural History Museum researchers who wrote the study, now published in PLoS One, believe the zig-zag pattern was not the result of the butchering process, nor the result of teeth marks on the bone  human or otherwise . The researchers, led by Silvia M. Bello, say the forearm was filleted  removed from the body , defleshed, and then marked w stanley isolierkanne ith the etchings. Afterward, the bone was broken-up to extract the nutritious marrow. Interestingly, theres no evidence to suggest that these cannibalized humans were the victims of violence鈥攊t seems more likely that they died of natural causes. The researchers cant be entirely certain as to the intent of ancient cannibals, but other research suggests they werent simply eating humans as a matter of survival; cannibalism wasnt worth  stanley mug the trouble given the alternatives. https://gizmodo/why-ancient-humans-didn-t-eat-each-other-for-the-calori-1794048767 Bellos te stanley borraccia am studied each mark under a microscope, looking at depth and the angles of incision. They were able to distinguish marks made