Entremet Originally shared by Kam-Yung Soh "“Like most people in the US, I grew up knowing the words to this carol and even (shudder) singing them occasionally (singing is not a strong point of mine), but never really thought about what they meant, how the carol originated, or what birds were involved”, says Dr Rasmussen in email. So she decided to figure it out. Dr Rasmussen, who’s tied for third for the most bird discoveries in the world, is probably also the world’s foremost avian sleuth, due to her meticulous detective work a few years ago that uncovered the many ornithological thefts and records frauds in museums that were committed by eminent British ornithologist, Richard Meinertzhagen. But who would ever have thought that an old Christmas carol might also hold an avian mystery? “After all, it’s just a Christmas carol!” Dr Rasmussen points out." https://medium.com/@GrrlScientist/meet-the-real-birds-of-the-twelve-days-of-christmas-fame-grrlscientist-5a8bc09350c9
I was at an art museum in NYC one time and noticed a tiny flicker on the floor. There was a knothole in the boards, and underneath the knothole was an LCD displaying a very tiny movie. Nobody else, as far as I can see, had noticed it, until they saw me down there looking at it. So, this is totally a reasonable misunderstanding, given the system.
ReplyDeletePS1, was the museum. I just remembered. Man, that was bugging me. It's part of the NYC MOMA group.
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