Incredible Nature: How a Daredevil Raccoon Pulled Off a Terrifying 23-Story Climb!

[Nature is incredible. And we are a part of nature. We too can be incredible if we are correctly motivated. Jan]

Not all heroes wear capes, but most of them do wear masks. Even raccoons.

Yesterday (June 12), a daredevil raccoon in St. Paul, Minnesota, captivated the Internet by climbing 23 stories up a vertical concrete wall. The raccoon, now known as MPR raccoon in honor of the Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) employees who spotted the critter scaling a nearby skyscraper, became an instant social media star as viewers around the world rooted for its safe return to the ground. [The 5 Smartest Non-Primates on the Planet]

The raccoon rested on various window ledges during its daring climb (resulting in some amazing photos) and ultimately reached the building’s roof this morning around 3 a.m. local time. At the end of the day, MPR raccoon had spent nearly 20 hours scaling the concrete building — alone, afraid and totally bereft of food and water.

The raccoon has been safely captured, but many questions remain. Why would a raccoon climb 23 stories straight up instead of climbing down? And how is this even possible? According to Minnesota Department of Natural Resources employee Bryan Lueth, it may be a simple mix of instinct and anatomy.

“If I had to come up with a scenario,” Lueth told MPR, “I would say it was maybe holed up in an alley … ran out onto the sidewalk, and then there’s all these people around. It’s like ‘Ah!’ The natural instinct is to climb.”

Raccoons are notoriously skilled climbers. Because many raccoons make their dens near populated human settlements where garbage is plentiful, they’re used to scurrying up trees, chimneys and buildings to stay out of harm’s way, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFD) wrote on its website.

Nature has equipped raccoons well for this job. Sharp, nonretractable nails cap each of their long fingers and toes, and are perfect for digging into craggy surfaces like trees and cliffs. Unlike your house cat, raccoons can even rotate their back paws 180 degrees to climb down surfaces headfirst, the WDFD wrote.

This means raccoons can, and will, climb pretty much anything they can get their paws around —  your car, your garbage can or even your modest metropolitan skyscraper. One famous 1907 study on raccoon intelligence marveled at the animal’s ability to climb the bare steam pipes in the laboratory “with as much ease as though they were the trees of the forest.” (The study also found that raccoons are ticklish … Science was different back then.)

“Digging into tree bark is certainly a little bit easier than hard stone,” Lueth said, “but there must’ve been enough cracks or crevices or textures where [MPR raccoon] could get a grip [on the building].”

While some are hailing MPR raccoon as the hero Gotham City deserves, it seems the critter may have just been raccooning the only way raccoons know how. And that’s good enough for us.

Source: https://www.livescience.com/62806-how-mpr-raccoon-climbed-23-stories.html?utm_source=ls-newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20180614-ls

Top Secret: How the Titanic was really discovered…

[I keep trying to tell people that a LOT more SECRET stuff goes on than they realise and it only comes out into the public arena when they decide it is time to tell the story! Secrets CAN and ARE kept SUCCESSFULLY, much more times than you can believe! Look at an unexpected side to a story you never expected! The real mission was to hunt for sunken nuclear submarines! The Titanic was just a side dish! Look at how this secret has been kept for over 30 years! It is only now coming out because the Navy has decided to tell it! Ponder that. These kinds of things are happening all the time across the world. Jan]

(Newser) – The story of how the Titanic was found is widely known, but some of the most interesting details are only now emerging, reports USA Today. A new exhibit at National Geographic Museum in Washington, DC, reveals the once top-secret story. “The Navy is finally discussing it,” Robert Ballard tells National Geographic. Ballard is the oceanographer and Navy commander who found the wreck in 1985. The exhibit, Titanic: The Untold Story, explains how the Navy had commissioned Ballard to explore the wreckage of two nuclear submarines. The subs were resting on the floor of the North Atlantic Ocean, and the Navy wanted to determine if the nuclear reactors on board were potentially dangerous and why the subs had sunk. Ballard asked if he could look for the Titanic after he had completed the mission (which would be the first of two) because he believed the passenger liner was located between the two subs. Deputy chief of naval operations Ronald Thunman agreed, never suspecting that Ballard might be successful.

“I was a little short with him,” recalls Thunman, who stressed that Ballard’s mission was to study the sunken warships, not look for the Titanic. Ballard studied every detail of the Titanic and decided to seek not the ship itself, but the debris field. He theorized that the ship had broken in half and left a debris trail as it sank. He approached it as if he were photographing a deer hiding in winter: “I’d look for its footprints and follow its footsteps,” he says. At 2am on Sept. 1, 1985, submersible robotic technology began delivering images of the Titanic’s boiler. “We were at the very spot the Titanic sank,” Ballard recalls. “We were there.” Of course, the Navy hadn’t expected Ballard to find the Titanic, so when that happened, “they got really nervous because of the publicity,” Ballard says. The exhibit will be on display through Jan. 6, 2019.

Source: http://www.newser.com/story/260101/titanic-was-discovered-during-a-top-secret-mission.html