The lost variety is the Runts candy banana and it makes me sad that it’s gross
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Has a general prejudice against city people.
What are you planting? Seeds, tiny baby plants, larger plants in nursery pots, transplants?
Are you trying to supress grass & other weeds growth or just improve the soil?
Yes, the seeds are also in the soil, old roots too.
Nope, that’s full of grass seeds. Do you want that kind of grass where you’re mulching?
Compost the grass cuttings and the heat will kill the seeds.
Contact a tree trimming service for a load of free chips if you want mulch.
Weeps in botanical Latin
wolfrasin@lemmy.todayto
LGBTQIA+ (FR)@jlai.lu•Les plus réprimés sont la "génération silencieuse"
1·2 months agoSo the same feeling this post evoked in me, a queer struggling to survive, looking a a graph of survivorship bias.
Thanks for modding!
wolfrasin@lemmy.todayto
LGBTQIA+ (FR)@jlai.lu•Les plus réprimés sont la "génération silencieuse"
1·2 months agoWhat an odd interaction this is.
I’m commenting because the chart is devoid of meaning without the relevant facts. Statistics mean nothing out of context.
This post would be better with context so i provided some
wolfrasin@lemmy.todayto
LGBTQIA+ (FR)@jlai.lu•Les plus réprimés sont la "génération silencieuse"
1·2 months agoBasic historical facts? (US history) Regan ignored AIDS because it was thought to be a gay disease and it wiped out a whole generation of people.
wolfrasin@lemmy.todayto
LGBTQIA+ (FR)@jlai.lu•Les plus réprimés sont la "génération silencieuse"
11·2 months agoThis graphs is shaped by the AIDS epidemic
If you vape both weed & nicotine at the same time it’s the same as blunts. Duh?
Very nice /borat
wolfrasin@lemmy.todayto
news@endlesstalk.org•A crash in the Utah wilderness shattered his ankles. His dog got him out.English
2·3 months agoBooo to the paywall
Local mocking birds still sing that car alarm that hasn’t been popular in at least a decade. They love it and they’re the only ones
Lol the last line of the article
wolfrasin@lemmy.todayto
Science Memes@mander.xyz•Since we're doing magic eyes now...English
21·4 months agoHave you ever had your vision checked?
Nobody’s said it so I will.
A weed is any plant that grows on disturbed or compacted soil without cultivation. Their growth conditions are created by humans and their spread is caused by humans.
Our opinions mean nothing to plants
Red = lobster is already cooked so… This is probably the worst farside
wolfrasin@lemmy.todayto
Archaeology@mander.xyz•A tree fell in the Amazon—and revealed mysterious urns of ancient human remainsEnglish
17·4 months agoWhen a massive tree toppled in the floodplains of Fonte Boa, a region in the Brazilian Amazon, local fishermen noticed something odd: The roots had hoisted two giant ceramic pots above ground. Nobody knew what they were or who had buried them. In June, the Brazilian government announced that. —possibly going back millennia—from Indigenous groups who inhabited the region before the Portuguese first arrived in Brazil about 500 years ago.
Excavations revealed seven urns—some fragmented—entangled among the tree’s roots, containing human bones. The largest stretched almost three feet in diameter and weighed about 770 pounds, says an archaeologist with the Mamirauá Institute in Tefé, Brazil, who helped lead the excavations. “We needed a whole day to loose this large one free from the roots and six men to move it from there,” he adds.
for study was a complex process. Walfredo Cerqueira, the community leader who mobilized his fellow fishermen to help in the excavations, recalls the unusual experience: “We thought we’d get there with hoes and move things around easily, but from what I had seen of how archaeologists work on TV, I knew it would be slow work.”
The tree fell in an area known as Cochila Lake, an archaeological site in the Middle Solimões river region. It is one of more than 70 artificial plains in the area built around 2,000 years ago by Indigenous groups to avoid floods during the river’s high-water season. “Given how little we know about [the past of] this region and how difficult it is to get there, this is really an unprecedented find,” says Karen Marinho, an archaeologist with the Federal University of the West Pará (UFOPA) who did not take part in the excavations.
The urns do not seem to belong to any of the ceramic traditions known in the Middle Solimões or in the broader Brazilian Amazon. “This is a type we haven’t got records of yet,” Amaral says. The absence of ceramic lids set the new discoveries apart artistically. These funerary urns are also rounder than those produced in known styles, notes
Putting bones within ceramic containers, Py-Daniel explains, would have been part of a second step in the funerary process. First, the departed must undergo a ritual to remove flesh, through burial, cremation, or submersion in a river—where the body is wrapped in a woven net that allows fish to feed on it. Then the bones are carefully collected and arranged to, in another ritual, be placed inside the urn. “Indigenous groups who did not have their traditions obliterated by the presence of missionaries still [entirely or in part] follow this ritual,” Py-Daniel says.
, who led the excavations with Amaral. “On social media, many people ask us how a tree could have grown on top of the urns,” she says. “The tree probably grew after the people who used to live in that region were gone.” As the tree grew, its roots made their way into the pots possibly drawn to nutrients in the bones, Holanda adds. While the tree’s exact age remains unknown, its size suggests it could be centuries old, and the researchers suspect that the vases are even older.
For now, the exact age and origin of the urns remains a mystery. The presence of fish and turtle bones around some of the ceramic fragments also raises questions. “We still have to… find out what these leftovers are—whether they were part of an associated ritual,” Amaral says.
Even with these unknowns, Amaral and Holanda both feel that the most important aspect of the discovery was the deep involvement of locals from the Arumandubinha and Arará villages, who helped the archaeologists plan every single step of the process. “The demand came from them, as they wanted to know what these artifacts were—otherwise we’d never know about the urns,” says Amaral.
Researchers at Mamirauá are currently cleaning and excavating sediments from within the urns while they look for funding to study the material. Ultimately, they hope to carbon-date fragments of bone and coal to get a more precise age estimate. “It will all depend on funding and the partnerships we can get,” Holanda stresses






Claptrap?