Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Mainland connections

Of course, as an Englishman with a Norwegian wife, this interested me……

 

"But it wasn't until 6,100BC that Britain broke free of mainland Europe for good, during the Mesolithic period - the Middle Stone Age.

It is thought a landslide in Norway triggered one of the biggest tsunamis ever recorded on Earth, when a landlocked sea in the Norwegian trench burst its banks.

The water struck the north-east of Britain with such force it travelled 40km inland, turning low-lying plains into what is now the North Sea, and marshlands to the south into the Channel. Britain became an island nation.

 

Ancient signs of French connection

Fossilised trees in Bray, Co Wicklow

"In Bray, on the east coast of Ireland, there are fossilised trees on the beach, lying where they first grew 8,000 years ago.

"There are drowned forests off Dorset, Wales and the Isle of Wight. That's because back then, the Irish Sea, North Sea and the Channel were all dry land.

"When the great melt came, and the seas gradually rose by 300 feet, we were cut off from mainland Europe for good."

At the time it was home to a fragile and scattered population of about 5,000 hunter-gatherers, descended from the early humans who had followed migrating herds of mammoth and reindeer onto the jagged peninsula.

"The waves would have been maybe as much as 10m high," says geologist David Smith. "Anyone standing out on the mud flats at that time would have been dismembered. The speed [of the water] was just so great."

via

dodgem track

I can't quite decide if this was incredibly skilful – or incredibly stupid – driving.

I don't think this is Sweden, but we do have such timber trucks here

extracted from this video by twisternederland

write on!

“I grew up admiring Sweden because it managed to be rich and socialist at the same time, two things I believe everyone ought to be. Coming from a country where no one seemed to think it particularly disgraceful that a child born with a brain tumor could be allowed to die because his father didn’t have the wherewithal to pay a surgeon, or where an insurance company could be permitted by a state insurance commissioner to cancel the policies of its fourteen thousand sickest patients because it wasn’t having a very good year (as happened in California in 1989), it seemed admirable beyond words that a nation could dedicate itself to providing equally and fairly for everyone, whatever the cost." – American author Bill Bryson

Monday, February 14, 2011

Sandefjord exhibition opening

Ragnhild opened her latest exhibition yesterday….and here it is

 

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