"This series presents information based in part on theory and conjecture. The producer's purpose is to suggest some possible explanations, but not necessarily the only ones, to the mysteries we will examine."Nimoy was especially dedicated to his new television series. He even wrote an episode (Season 4, Episode 16, January 10, 1980) about the life of the artist, Vincent van Gogh. Nimoy's research uncovered van Gogh's medical records, which suggested that the artist may have suffered from epilepsy, and not insanity. I think that a severed ear counts as insanity, especially when it's your own.
Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890), self-portrait with pipe and bandaged ear, 1889, oil on canvas. (Via Wikimedia Commons.) |
Study co-author, Marie Jackson, holding a 2,000-year-old sample of maritime concrete from the Santa Liberata harbor site in Tuscany. (University of California, Berkeley, photograph by Sarah Yang.) |
Yellowish inclusions in this Roman concrete core sample are pumice, the dark stony fragments are lava, the gray areas are volcanic crystalline materials, and the white spots are lime. The inset is a scanning electron micrograph of the aluminum-tobermorite crystals. (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory image.) |
"There is not enough fly ash in this world to replace half of the Portland cement being used... Many countries don't have fly ash, so the idea is to find alternative, local materials that will work, including the kind of volcanic ash that Romans used. Using these alternatives could replace 40 percent of the world's demand for Portland cement."[8]One interesting item about this research is that it started with initial funding from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia, which started a research partnership with Berkeley in 2008. Saudi Arabia has "mountains of volcanic ash" that could potentially be used in concrete.[8]
FexC0.12Si0.25-0.75Mn0.20-0.50P0.07-0.15S0.03Cr0.50-1.25
Cu0.25-0.55Ni0.65.