Saturday, May 23, 2026
Coal mines - out of India!
Some deep underground coal mines face rock temperatures above 50°C (122°F), so massive refrigeration systems using chilled water and even ice slurry are used to keep working conditions survivable for miners.
Friday, May 22, 2026
Cheating Death!
Deep in the frozen wilderness of Alaska lives a tiny survivor that sounds almost impossible. 🐸❄️
Meet the wood frog, an animal that can literally freeze during winter… and come back to life in spring.
As temperatures drop, this remarkable frog allows most of its body to turn solid. Its heart stops beating. Its breathing completely shuts down. Ice crystals form throughout its tissues, and for months it remains frozen beneath snow, leaves, and forest debris like a living ice cube.
For most animals, that would mean certain death.
But the wood frog has evolved an extraordinary survival strategy. Before freezing, its body floods with natural chemicals like glucose and urea that act as cryoprotectants, helping protect its cells and organs from damage caused by ice.
In some cases, nearly two-thirds of the water in its body can freeze.
Then, when spring finally arrives and temperatures begin to rise, something incredible happens.
The frog slowly thaws.
Its heart starts beating again. Its organs begin functioning. And eventually, it simply wakes up and hops away as though nothing ever happened.
Scientists consider the wood frog one of nature’s most fascinating examples of extreme survival, and researchers continue studying it for insights that could someday help improve organ preservation and medical science.
Hidden beneath the snow each winter is a creature that temporarily cheats death itself.
Road Markings!
Road markings have guided drivers since the early days of modern highway infrastructure and the technology has changed remarkably little in the century since the 1st painted lines appeared on public roads. Reflective paint improved visibility when headlights hit it directly. Active lighting improved visibility further but required grid power, maintenance schedules, and infrastructure costs that rural and remote roads have rarely justified economically. Australia just installed road markings that glow in the dark using photoluminescent material that absorbs sunlight during daylight hours and emits that stored energy as visible light through the night without any electrical connection, any maintenance requirement beyond what painted road markings already need, and any ongoing cost beyond the initial installation.
The safety case for glow in the dark road markings is most significant on the roads where conventional lighting is least present: rural highways, remote stretches, and regional routes where the distance between street lights is measured in kilometers and where the darkness between them creates the visibility conditions responsible for a disproportionate share of serious road accidents. Australia has some of the longest stretches of unlit highway of any developed nation and the photoluminescent marking technology it is deploying addresses the visibility gap on precisely those roads without the infrastructure investment that conventional lighting would require to serve them. The sun charges the road during the day. The road lights itself at night. No grid required and no driver left navigating in complete darkness on a road that absorbed enough sunlight to show them the way.
Deepika echoes Indians' voice!
Deepika Padukone’s old statement about Rahul Gandhi has once again gone viral on social media, sparking fresh online discussions and political conversations. In the resurfaced clip from a past interview, Deepika had said:
“India needs a leader like Rahul Gandhi. Hopefully, he becomes PM someday.”
Although the statement is from an older interview, its renewed circulation online has led to mixed reactions across social media platforms. While many users appreciated her openness and personal opinion, others shared different viewpoints, turning the moment into a wider political discussion online.
The viral clip highlights how celebrity opinions on politics often continue to attract attention years later, especially in the age of social media where old interviews and statements frequently resurface and trend again.
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