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Thursday, September 18, 2014

Free Climbing the Totem Pole, Tasmania, Australia

Free Climbing the Totem Pole, Tasmania, Australia
Free Climbing the Totem Pole, Tasmania, Australia

Ice Climbing Fearful Symmetry, Canadian Rockies, Alberta

Ice Climbing Fearful Symmetry, Canadian Rockies, Alberta
Ice Climbing Fearful Symmetry, Canadian Rockies, Alberta

Kayaking the Mekong River, Laos

Kayaking the Mekong River, Laos
Kayaking the Mekong River, Laos

Deepwater Soloing the Musandam Peninsula, Oman

Deepwater Soloing the Musandam Peninsula, Oman
Deepwater Soloing the Musandam Peninsula, Oman
Photograph by Jimmy Chin
Getting the Shot
“In some ways, shooting someplace new is great because you see everything fresh and with new eyes,” says photographer Jimmy Chin. Chin, on assignment for National Geographic magazine, photographed

Stand-up Paddleboarding Jaws, Hawaii

Stand-up Paddleboarding Jaws, Hawaii
Stand-up Paddleboarding Jaws, Hawaii

Climbing Superfortress, Near Vail, Colorado

Climbing Superfortress, Near Vail, Colorado
Climbing Superfortress, Near Vail, Colorado

Climbing Hallucinogen Wall, Black Canyon, Colorado

Climbing Hallucinogen Wall, Black Canyon, Colorado
Climbing Hallucinogen Wall, Black Canyon, Colorado

Snowboarding the Pemberton Ice Cap, British Columbia

Snowboarding the Pemberton Ice Cap, British Columbia
Snowboarding the Pemberton Ice Cap, British Columbia

Mountain Biking Book Cliffs Near Green River, Utah

Mountain Biking Book Cliffs Near Green River, Utah
Mountain Biking Book Cliffs Near Green River, Utah

Winter Surfing in Cook Inlet, Alaska

Winter Surfing in Cook Inlet, Alaska
Winter Surfing in Cook Inlet, Alaska

Ice Climbing in Hyalite Canyon, Montana

 Ice Climbing in Hyalite Canyon, Montana
 Ice Climbing in Hyalite Canyon, Montana

Ice Climbing in Zirknitzgrotte, Austria

Ice Climbing in Zirknitzgrotte, Austria
Ice Climbing in Zirknitzgrotte, Austria

Kayaking the Rio Santo Domingo, Chiapas, Mexico

Kayaking the Rio Santo Domingo, Chiapas, Mexico
Kayaking the Rio Santo Domingo, Chiapas, Mexico

Skiing at Dusk at Brighton, Utah

Skiing at Dusk at Brighton, Utah
Skiing at Dusk at Brighton, Utah

Mountain Biking in Virgin, Utah

Mountain Biking in Virgin, Utah
Mountain Biking in Virgin, Utah

Climbing in Kootenay National Park, Canada

Climbing in Kootenay National Park, Canada
Climbing in Kootenay National Park, Canada

Surfing Namotu Island, Fiji

Surfing Namotu Island, Fiji
Surfing Namotu Island, Fiji

Climbing El Chorro Gorge, Spain

Climbing El Chorro Gorge, Spain
Climbing El Chorro Gorge, Spain

Surfing Monument Beach, Australia

Surfing Monument Beach, Australia
Surfing Monument Beach, Australia

Kayaking the Stikine, British Columbia, Canada

Kayaking the Stikine, British Columbia, Canada
Kayaking the Stikine, British Columbia, Canada

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Snowboarding Near Zermatt, Switzerland

Picture of a snowboarder on a rocky chute, Zermatt

Skiing Mount Superior, Utah

Picture of Caroline Gleich ski mountaineering on Mt. Superior, Utah

Climbing Cliffbase, Hvar, Croatia

Picture of a female climber at sunset in Croatia

Snowboarding in the Himalaya, Nepal

Picture of snowboarder Jeremy Jones descending a mountain in Nepal

Kayaking Waterfalls in Chiapas, Mexico

Picture of a kayaker going over waterfalls at Agua Azul River, Chiapas, Mexico

Mixed Climbing a New Route in Helmcken Falls, British Columbia, Canada

Picture of climber Will Gadd near a giant waterfall at Helmcken Falls, British Columbia

Bouldering on Oahu, Hawaii

Picture of climber Justin Ridley bouldering in Hawaii

Skiing Jackson Hole's Sidecountry, Wyoming

Hadley Hammer drops a monster air in the Teton backcountry after a record breaking 100 inch snow storm near Jackson Hole Mountain Resort in Teton Village, Wyoming.

Kayaking Spirit Falls, Little White Salmon River, Washington

Picture of a kayaker going over a waterfall on Little White Salmon River

Surfing Peahi, North Shore, Maui, Hawaii

Picture of Yuri Soledade surfing at Jaws

Climbing the Priest, Castle Valley, Utah

Picture of Madeleine Sorkin climbing Excommunication, Castle Valley, Utah
Photograph by Jeremiah Watt

Backcountry Skiing Mount Superior, Wasatch, Utah

Picture of Caroline Gleich skiing Wasatch Backcountry, Mt. Superior

Night Ice Climbing in the Cogne Valley, Western Alps, Italy

Picture of a climber ice climbing at night, Gran Paradiso, Italy

Surfing the Margaret River, Australia

Picture of Bianca Buitendag surfing the Margaret River, Australia

Climbing Monserrat, Catalonia, Spain

Picture of a climber on Montserrat in Catalonia, Spain

Snowboarding the West Fjords, Iceland

Picture of a snowboarder in Iceland

Climbing in Yosemite, California

Picture of Dean Potter climbing in Yosemite with his dog whisper

Big-Wave Surfing at Teahupoo, French Polynesia Photograph by Tim Mckenna

Picture of Koa Rothman surfing Teahupoo

Kayaking the Dudh Koshi, Nepal

Picture of a kayaker on the Surge Gorge

Skiing the Grand, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming

Picture of Jimmy Chin climbing the Grand Tetons

Climbing the Wendenstock, Interlaken, Switzerland

tommy-caldwell-climb-interlaken.jpg

Extreme Photo of the Week


Picture of Bobby Okvist surfing The Wedge

Extreme Photo of the Week

Picture of Cedar Wright climbing near Chuanshang cave, China

Cursed Warship Revealed With Treasure Onboard

Researchers and divers have started studying the secrets the Mars, the pride of Sweden's 16th-century navy, has held for 450 years.

Mars was the largest ship in the world in its day. It exploded and sank during a battle in 1564.
The Mars lies at the bottom of the Baltic Sea, where it sank during a naval battle in 1564. A diver at upper right provides scale.
COMPOSITE PHOTOGRAPH BY TOMASZ STACHURA, OCEAN DISCOVERY  
Jane J. Lee
National Geographic
Published July 7, 2014
It was the largest and fiercest warship in the world, named the Mars for the Roman god of war, but it went up in a ball of flames in a brutal naval battle in 1564, consigning 800 to 900 Swedish and German sailors and a fortune in gold and silver coins to the bottom of the Baltic Sea.

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Now, a few years after the ship's discovery, researchers have concluded that the one-of-a-kind ship is also the best preserved ship of its kind, representing the first generation of Europe's big, three-masted warships.
Naval historians know a lot about 17th-century ships, but very little about warships from the 16th century, said Johan Rönnby, a professor of maritime archaeology at Södertörn University in Sweden, who is studying the 197-foot-long (60 meter) wreck.
"It's a missing link," said Rönnby, whose work is funded in part by a grant from the National Geographic Society's Global Exploration Fund. The 1500s is an important period, he said, because it's when big three-masted warships started being built.
Researchers have found cargo from early warships called galleons—slightly later iterations of the type of vessel the Mars exemplifies. And they've recovered pieces of actual ships, including the English flagship Mary Rose, which sank during a battle in 1545. But never have they found something as well preserved as the Mars.
Rönnby and his team want to leave the Mars on the seafloor and instead use three-dimensional scans and photographs to share the wreck with the world.
Rönnby, with help from Richard Lundgren—part owner of Ocean Discovery, a company of professional divers that assists in maritime archaeology work—and others, has been piecing together photomosaics and scanning the wreck to produce 3-D reconstructions. With funding from the National Geographic Society/Waitt Grants Program, they are working this summer to complete their scans of the entire ship.
Bringing a ship out of the ocean is expensive, and it can cause significant harm to artifacts. The laser scans Lundgren and colleagues have taken are accurate to within 0.08 inches (2 millimeters)—more than enough to satisfy most researchers.
Using some relatively new tools and methods, archeologists now have a chance to reconstruct the last minutes of the ship and the souls onboard, Lundgren said, and gain some insight into how people behaved on a battlefield.
Finding the Mars
Treasure hunters, archaeologists, and history aficionados have sought the Mars over the years. But they were unsuccessful until the late spring of 2011, when a group of divers located one of maritime archaeology's greatest finds in 246 feet (75 meters) of water. (See "5 Shipwrecks Lost to Time That Archaeologists Would Love to Get Their Hands On.")
Legend has it that a specter rose from the inferno to guard the Mars, the pride of the Swedish navy, against ever being discovered.
The discovery was the culmination of a 20-year search by Lundgren, along with his brother Ingemar and their colleague Fredrik Skogh. The men had dreamed of finding the mighty Mars since making a childhood visit to a Stockholm museum housing another iconic Swedish warship, named the Vasa. Richard and Ingemar Lundgren became professional divers in part because of that dream.
Graphic of the Mars shipwreck location.
NG STAFF, JAMIE HAWK. SOURCE: RICHARD LUNDGREN, OCEAN DISCOVERY
War Machine
The Mars sank on May 31, 1564, off the coast of a Swedish island called Öland. She came to rest on the seafloor tilted to her starboard, or right, side. Low levels of sediment, slow currents, brackish water, and the absence of a mollusk called a shipworm—responsible for breaking down wooden wrecks in other oceans in as little as five years—combined to keep the warship in remarkable condition.
What makes this find even more exciting, said Lundgren, is that the Mars didn't sink because of a design flaw or poor seamanship.
"Mars was a functioning war machine that performed extremely well in battle," he explained. She sank loaded to the gills with cannons—even her crow's nests had guns—sailors, and all the accoutrements needed to run a ship built for war (including eight different kinds of beer).
This warship had "totally unheard of firepower" for her time, said Lundgren. And it's those cannons that played a role in her demise.
Watch video of the underwater Mars wreck.
A Fiery End
The Mars went down while engaged with a Danish force allied with soldiers from a German city called Lübeck. The Swedes routed the Danes on the first day of battle, said Rönnby. So on the second day, the Germans decided to press their luck.
German forces began lobbing fireballs at the Mars and eventually succeeded in pulling alongside the burning ship so soldiers could board her. As gunpowder on the warship fueled the inferno, the heat became so intense that cannons began to explode, said Rönnby.
Those explosions eventually sank the warship. Legend, however, tells a slightly different story.
The Swedish kings at the time were busy trying to consolidate their position, Rönnby explained. "[But] the Catholic Church was a problem for the new kings because it was so powerful," he said. So in trying to diminish the church's power, monarchs like Erik XIV—who commissioned the Mars—would confiscate church bells, melt them down, and use the metal to make cannons for their new warships.
Legend has it that carrying those repurposed church bells doomed the Mars to a watery grave. The warship carried either 107 or 173 cannons of many different sizes.
A Time Machine
"It's not just a ship, it's a battlefield," said Rönnby. Diving on the wreck, "you're very close to this dramatic fire on board, people killing each other, everything was burning and exploding," he said.
In fact, when Lundgren and colleagues brought a piece of the ship's hull to the surface, they noticed a charred scent wafting from the burnt wood.
"In the end, I think, that's the aim of archaeology—to discuss ourselves and the human aspects of a site," Rönnby said.

4 Sky Events This Week: Ringed Jewel and Cat’s Eye Sparkle

What looks like a swarm of bees is actually an image of Messier 4,  a giant globular cluster containing thousands of stars. This week the moon helps telescope users track down this celestial gem. Credit: SkySafari
A swarm of bees? Actually, it’s an image of Messier 4, a giant globular cluster containing thousands of stars. This week the moon helps telescope users track down this celestial gem. Courtesy of SkySafari

A celestial scorpion stares down the moon this week for sky-watchers, and Mars meets the Maiden’s guiding light.
Saturn joins the moon. After nightfall on Monday, July 7, look toward the high southern sky for the waxing gibbous moon enjoying a close encounter with one of the true jewels of the solar system, Saturn.
Shining less than one degree away from the moon on that evening will be the bright-yellow ringed planet. If you have a telescope handy, even a small one, it’s worth training it on Saturn, just to see its majestic rings and some of its brightest moons.
Lucky sky-watchers in Argentina and Chile can actually see the ringed world hide behind the moon in a rare lunar occultation. Here are the maps and timetables.
What does an occultation of Saturn look like? Check out this amazing video footage taken through a telescope in South Africa earlier this year that shows how the ringed planet disappears behind the cratered moon.


Cat’s Eye Cluster. Once the sky darkens totally before midnight on Tuesday, July 8, watch the moon within the northwestern corner of the constellation Scorpius, which resides low in the southern sky. If you superimpose the mythological figure on the stars, as in the illustration, the moon would appear nearly within the claws of the stellar scorpion. The bright-orange star to the moon’s left is Antares, which is located some 600 light-years from Earth.
Skychart showing the moon and the constellation scorpius. The globular star cluster Messier 4 is located just a few degrees west of the bright orange star Antares. Credit: SkySafari
This sky chart shows the moon and the constellation Scorpius. The globular star cluster Messier 4 is located just a few degrees west of the bright-orange star Antares. Credit: SkySafari
Use binoculars to scan over to the lead star Antares to start the hunt for the Cat’s Eye “globular cluster” of stars.
The Cat’s Eye, or Messier 4, is seen easily with binoculars but really sparkles through a telescope. It is a true metropolis of stars, easily containing 10,000 residents. Sitting at about 7,000 light-years away, it is one of the closest examples to our solar system of a globular cluster. Because of its proximity, even a small telescope can easily resolve some of the stars swarming near its core. The cluster’s name comes from the barlike structure that appears to cut across its center, which makes it look like a feline eye staring back at you in the eyepiece.
Vega near zenith. On Thursday, July 10, near midnight, look straight up at the brightest star of the season, Vega. While the 26-light-year-distant star marks the tiny constellation Lyra, the Harp, it also represents one of the corners of the Summer Triangle stellar pattern.
This sky-chart shows the Summer Triangle cutting right across the Milky Way in the late evening sky. Credit: SkySafari
This sky chart shows the Summer Triangle cutting right across the Milky Way in the late evening sky. Credit: SkySafari

Since the stars of the cosmic trio are so bright, finding them is easy, even from light-polluted city suburbs.
Look toward the lower left of Vega, toward the northeast, and you will see the 1,400-light-year-distant bright star, Deneb. To Vega’s lower right, in the southeast, is the 17-light-year-distant yellow star, Altair. The Summer Triangle dominates the overhead evening skies throughout summer and into early autumn as well.
Mars and Spica. On Saturday, July 12, look toward the low southwestern evening sky for our neighbor, Mars, which will be reaching its closest point to the lead star in the constellation Virgo, the Maiden.
This sky-chart for the early evening of July 13, 2014 shows Mars at its closest approach to Spica, the lead star in the constellation Virgo, the maiden. Credit: SkySafari
This sky chart for the early evening of July 13, 2014, shows Mars at its closest approach to Spica, the lead star in the constellation Virgo, the Maiden. Credit: SkySafari
The red planet and the blue-white stellar diamond, Spica, will appear to pass each other at a distance of less than 1.4 degrees, less than the width of three full moons side by side.
Their apparent proximity, of course, is due only to their chance alignment when seen from our vantage point here on Earth. While Mars is only 8.6 light-minutes from Earth, Spica sits a whopping 250 light-years away.

Ask Your Weird Animal Questions: Spiders and Other Animals With Bite

We love getting questions with teeth, and this week’s Ask Your Weird Animal Questions tackles animals and their various bites. Keep your hands (and toes) away from these critters.
Why does the gavial have such a narrow snout? Do they have snout envy issues? —Tristan 
A photo of a gharial.
A gavial is seen at the Czech Republic’s Prague Zoo in 2008. Photograph by Yannick Tylle, Corbis

The gavial (Gavialis gangeticus), sometimes called a gharial, is a wicked-looking crocodile relative with quite the bite. The reptile sports an intimidating set of 106 to 110 teeth that are ”ideally suited for holding struggling prey such as slippery fish,” according to the National Zoo. (See National Geographic’s photos of crocodiles and alligators.)
That narrow snout has little resistance in water and is used to “whip its head sideways through the water to snatch prey,” according to ARKive.
The bulb on the end of the mature male’s snout is called a ghara—the word for “pot” in India—and may be used to make their calls resonate or to attract females.
Very interesting publication on arachnids. Are some fatal to humans? —Karina Feo, Uruguay
Our spider edition of Ask Your Weird Animal Questions prompted this question, and the good news is that death from spider bites—including black widows—are quite rare. (See video: “Black Widow: Most Venomous Spider in North America.”)
Even so, there are plenty of spiders that can do harm. For instance, brown recluse and sac spiders “produce necrotics, so that their venom causes the tissue around the bite to die.” Though the bite isn’t fatal, an infected wound could be, Jo-Anne Nina Sewlal, an arachnologist at the University of the West Indies, said by email.
A photo of a black widow spider.
A black widow with the telltale hourglass-shaped mark. Photograph by John Cancalosi, Alamy
Other spiders potentially fatal to humans are the Australian Sydney funnel-web spider and the similar-looking mouse spider. In South America, wandering spiders—including the Brazilian wandering spider, or banana spider, so named “because they are known to hitchhike across in shipments of bananas”—are also dangerous to humans, Sewlal said.
I’ve had a very hungry black widow as [a] pet and saw her pick up a dead fly from the bottom of her cage and hang it into her web. She proceeded to wrap it and suck it dry as she would have with live prey. Are black widows known to scavenge? —Renate, Santa Cruz, California
Will a black widow take a bite out of a dead insect? Actually, yes.
Maydianne Andrade, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Toronto Scarborough, said movement is what attracts these predators, which “find and detect prey using vibrations that are transmitted to them via their web.”
However, a research note published in the Journal of Arachnology in 1981 and sent to us by Catherine Scott, a student at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, reported black widows wrapping and consuming dead insects in enclosures abandoned by other spiders.
“Most spiders also use chemical communication and their tactile sense to make sense of the world around them,” Andrade said.
“They may be able to detect potential food [dead prey] if they come into contact with it when exploring a new space or repairing their webs.”
Will iguanas bite your toes if they’re colorful?
Yes. I took author’s prerogative on a tidbit seen on the blog Virgin Islands Now, which says that peckish iguanas can mistake red toenail polish for flower petals—and that the reptiles might move in for a nibble. (Read about a pink iguana discovered in 2009.)
It’s more of a problem in areas where iguanas are used to people. In those areas, the blog suggests covering up red-painted toes to avoid unwanted attention.
Got a question about the weird and wild animal world? Tweet me or leave me a note on Facebook.