Finding Mallory’s camera may reveal whether he was first to climb Mount Everest

Washington, March 13 (ANI): Reports indicate that a veteran Everest researcher is trying to find George Mallory’s camera, which may contain photographic evidence of whether he and Andrew Irvine were the first to summit Mount Everest.

According to a report in Discovery News, the lost camera that researcher Tom Holzel wants to find, is a Vestpocket Kodak that belonged to George Mallory, the climber who died just 2,030 feet below Everest’s summit in 1924.

If the camera is intact, there is a possibility its photographic film is still recoverable and could contain vital images that could settle one of the great unsolved exploration mysteries of the 20th century, namely, were Mallory and Andrew Irvine the first to summit Everest or did they die painfully close to the top?

When Mallory’s body was recovered in 1999, his camera was not among the artifacts found on his remains.

This has caused veteran Everest researcher Holzel and others to speculate that the camera was being carried by his climbing partner.

Irvine’s body has not been recovered, but Holzel is pretty certain he knows where it is.

“Two people have seen the body and it’s near where they were,” said Holzel, referring to a possible body he has spotted in survey photographs of the same part of the mountain. “I’m about 85 percent confident in this one,” he added.

If Holzel can get an expedition funded and on Everest next year, he’s hoping to find the body.

If it’s actually Irvine, they’ll need a bit more luck to find the camera.

Even then, their hard work will be only half over.

The camera has to be recovered without ruining what images might exist on the film.

Just how to do that has been studied exhaustively by Eastman Kodak experts, who have provided Holzel with a series detailed procedures to follow.

The good news is that Everest’s frozen, dry conditions are the best for preserving film.

The bad news is that depending on how the camera is protected, the images may have been degraded over the years by cosmic rays.

“At the end of the day, there’s going to have to be a lot of luck,” said Everest climber and guide Eric Simonson. “The stars are going to have to line up,” he added. (ANI)

Christian Bale lashes out at ‘Terminator Salvation’ crew for betraying him

London, Apr 30 (ANI): Hollywood actor Christian Bale says that Terminator Salvation crewmembers betrayed his “magic circle” of trust by recording his on-set rant.

An audio clip of Bale screaming abuse at the film’s director of photography became a YouTube hit when it was leaked online in February. It featured 39 F-words and Bale threatening to quit the film.

In an interview to Total Film magazine, the ‘Batman Begins’ star lashed out at the crewmembers for betraying his trust.

“Hey, I did what I did. I’m not hiding from that. I went overboard,” the Telegraph quoted Bale as saying.

“But there is an essential trust and it’s not a tacit one, it’s a verbal one, a spoken one, which is [that] every sound guy says, ‘We are not only not recording, we’re not even listening.’

“So, well, there goes that. I do stress, though, it’s not in any way a trust that’s there to cover up bad behaviour. It’s not about that. It’s an essential trust that’s needed for creativity,” he added.

On being asked if he feared that the controversy would affect audiences’ enjoyment of Termination Salvation, he replied: “Yeah. It’s not in anyone’s interest to know that much.

“I understand people are interested, I get that they want to hear about it, but to me I look at it as old-school movie magic and with magic you do not reveal your secrets.

“You really make people work to find those secrets and generally you just reveal it to people who are going to join your ****ing magic circle and then you know about it.

“And you know, for me, I’ve never been comfortable with the revealing of those mysteries which I think are wonderful mysteries,” he added. (ANI)

Ancient Mediterranean mystery of Malta solved

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London, April 27 (ANI): A team of researchers at the University of Portsmouth, UK, has claimed to have solved the ancient Mediterranean mystery of how 2 feet deep tracks were cut into the rock of Malta./pp
According to a report in The News, the research team was led by Professor Derek Mottershead, of the university’s geography department, who followed generations of scholars to unravel the mysteries of the Maltese landscape.he team claims that the tracks, or ruts, were almost certainly caused by carts because the rock was not strong enough to support the wooden wheels of loaded carts./pp
They are up to 2ft deep and more than 30km of them run in pairs criss-crossing the island./pp
Professor Mottershead’s team came up with a design of a cart to fit the field evidence, estimated its weight and calculated the stresses involved. /pp
They discovered that in some places the rock was so soft that after heavy rain a single passage of a cart could cause the rock to fail./pp
The ruts have been studied and talked about for centuries and though it is obvious they are related to vehicles nobody understood how they were made or even when, Professor Mottershead said./pp
The underlying rock in Malta is weak and when it’s wet it loses about 80 per cent of its strength, he explained. /pp
What is unique to Malta is the sheer number of ruts. For years, they have attracted the attention of archaeologists, but until now, we didn’t have a convincing explanation of the mechanics of how they could have been formed, he added. (ANI)/p

Brazilian soap operas impact birth, divorce rate

London, Apr 5 (ANI): The colourful story lines running on Brazilian airwaves have reduced the birth rate by three million and driven up the rate of divorce, a new report has revealed.

These racy telenovelas that are mainstays of the country’s powerful TV Globo network depict glamorous love triangles, paternity mysteries and rags-to-riches successes.

According to The Telegraph, an extensive study of population data stretching back to 1971, has found that Brazil’s popular and often fanciful soap operas have had a direct impact on the nation’s divorce and birth rates, as the main channel that broadcasts them gradually extended its reach across the country.

The report, which was prepared for the Inter-American Development Bank claims that the areas, which received the TV Globo signal for the first time, recorded a rise in marriage break-ups and a rapid fall in the number of children born to each woman.

The study of over two decades has revealed that three million fewer Brazilian babies were born than would have been if telenovelas had never been broadcasted.

The report further says that 800,000 more couples separated or divorced. If the effect continued to the present day, the numbers would be even greater. (ANI)

‘Agatha Christie had Alzheimer’s’

London, Apr 4 (ANI): Agatha Christie, the much-loved author of more than 80 mysteries, suffered from undiagnosed dementia, claim scientists.

According to academics at the University of Toronto, an in-depth analysis of Christie’s novels suggests that she was suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, The Daily Express reported.

To reach the probable conclusion, researchers studied a selection of Christie’s novels written between the ages of 28 and 82, counting the numbers of different words, indefinite nouns and phrases used in each.

They found a 15 to 30 per cent decline in her vocabulary in her last novels, and a marked increase in repetitions.

These could be signs that the Poirot author, who died aged 85 in 1976, had Alzheimer’s, said researchers.

“This adds to a trend in textual analysis of prolific public figures who may have had dementia,” added Rebecca Wood, of the Alzheimer’s Research Trust.

“Even those who lead intellectually stimulating lives can get dementia,” Wood added. (ANI)

Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes will be gay

London, Feb 22 (ANI): Guy Ritchie’s new flick Sherlock Holmes is going to portray Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s legendary character in a gay way.

In the film, Holmes, being played by Robert Downey Jr, is seen sharing a bed with Dr Watson, being played by Jude Law.

Holmes can also be seen enjoying some man-to-man wrestling with his close chum.

“We’re two men who happen to be room-mates, wrestle a lot and share a bed. It’s badass,” News of the World quoted Robert Downey Jr, as saying.

Law added: “Guy wanted to make this about the relationship between Watson and Holmes. They’re both mean and complicated.”

Sherlock Holmes is famous for donning his deerstalker hat, puffing on a pipe and solving mysteries with his trusted sidekick. (ANI)