The Woolwich Observer

Picture this: going with prunes rather than cheese

- BILL&RICH SONES

Q. Consider the door — a rather mundane architectu­ral feature that may date back more than 5,000 years. Yet the door has some interestin­g spinoffs: Do you know about trapdoor spiders, Death’s Door and Door to Hell?

A. Trapdoor spiders make doors for their burrows out of dirt and silk, camouflage­d with leaves and other materials and even complete with hinges, says Gemma Tarlach in “Discover” magazine. The doors can be used offensivel­y, cracked open for the spider to strike at nearby prey; or defensivel­y, “locked” in place as the spider grips the door from inside with its front legs and mouth appendages.

As for “Death’s Door,” a narrow passage connecting Lake Michigan to Green Bay along Wisconsin’s coast, it was one of the most treacherou­s Great Lakes waterways during the 19th century, with its strong winds, swift currents and rocky hazards. “Between 1872 and 1889, according to a local lighthouse keeper’s journal, the strait claimed an average of two vessels per week.”

Finally, Turkmenist­an’s “Door to Hell,” a natural gas field in a collapsed cavern, has been ablaze for decades, perhaps intentiona­lly set in the 1970s by engineers hoping to quickly burn off a potentiall­y deadly methane leak. As the fire continues to burn, “the Door to Hell is giving astrobiolo­gists a glimpse

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Movie guide

Taken away, by horse perhaps

Before the conflict Of solutions and gowns Scout adornment Climate forcer, pipeline filler

Two names for a drum Challenge, metaphoric­ally Place a judge, for instance Roman marketplac­es Lack of willpower Readings of court documents

Pans' companions

First cow stomach Espouses democracy, may not be one for long Spectacles of what extraterre­strial life in extreme environmen­ts might look like.”

Q. “Say cheese.” If you’re in an English-speaking setting, these two words let you know a photograph­er is ready to take your picture and wants you to smile broadly, since the long E-sound forces your mouth into one. But what directive predates this saying and why?

A. As recently as the 1950s, photograph­ers would say “Say prunes,” since they did not want you to smile, reports Dan Lewis on his “Now I Know” website. According to “TechXplore,” a dataset of 37,921 frontal-facing American high school yearbook photos from 1900-2010 shows that “the modern ‘smile for the

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One of many European mountains

Noise canceler

Paper underwrite­rs Beach bucket Desert, literally from Arabic Ceremonies Nightshade poison Blue-green eye condition Field worker

People of no mind, literally Dog to heel, as small to whiskey

Artillery

Snipers, rampagers camera’ edict only dates back to the 1960s or so, and as you go back further, the smile trend hasn’t yet emerged.”

Why the serious look? Though the answer isn’t definitive, perhaps it’s because “in the late 19th century, people posing for photograph­s still followed the habits of painted portraitur­e subjects,” when it was hard to hold a smile for very long. Saying “prune,” then, was a cue for those being pho

DOWN

1. Bubble for one, heap for another

Novel thought

Renee was a drunken fart, "I drink therefore I am" (Monty Python) Young pigs Domestic fowl Waters in the desert Wrench from a hand Dressing type

Syrian city

French high school Do-, achiev-, remarkLeas­t cowardly

Can you even read this in Ontario now?! Corrected, improved copy Second largest of the dolphins

Angler's basket Attention, bridge, of time American posties Pram to literally everyone without airs

Mother of Minos Deformity correcting medicine

Sun bubble

Starry N. American lily Game of stones Sulfurous moon Sedimentar­y rock with lots of Fe

Smaller amount

What the Norwegian Blue did for the fjords. (Monty Python) African antelope Great plains people, esp. of Wyoming Oversaw a cricket match Relating to element 92 Tenor Enrico Eastern

Pleads strongly Pestilent Australian cockatoo

Desolate

Arabic leader

Drains vigour

You might get one to go to one

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75. tographed to keep their mouths prim, and this trend lasted more than a century, Lewis says. “But ultimately, cheese — and smiles — won out.”

Q. What does an ancient fossilized forest have to tell us humans in 2020?

A. The remnants of the oldest known forest, recently discovered in a New York quarry, date back about 386 million years and “could teach us more about how Earth’s climate has changed,” says Jason Arunn Mugugesu in “New Scientist” magazine. Of the three types of trees found there, one is similar to modern coniferous trees and was the first to have evolved flat green leaves. It had roots up to 11 meters (36 feet) long.

Names:

Location: Reason for travel:

The plants played a role in the developmen­t of life on Earth, helping to cool the planet as they removed carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Says Christophe­r Berry of U.K.’s Cardiff University, “By the end of the Devonian period [360 million years ago], the amount of carbon dioxide was coming down to what we know it is today.”

And, adds Oxford’s Sandy Hetheringt­on, understand­ing how climate change happened in the past “is crucial for predicting what will happen in the future in light of climate change and deforestat­ion.”

Bill is a journalist, Rich holds a doctorate in physics. Together the brothers bring you “Strange But True.” Send STRANGE questions to sbtcolumn@gmail.com

Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9 only once. Each 3x3 box is outlined with a darker line. Numbers are preplaced to get you started.

 ??  ?? Danielle Wideman and Renita Bauman (lives in Thailand as a missionary)
Thailand
Vacation. Prior to Thailand, I had travelled to the Philippine­s for a missions trip. After that experience, I went to Thailand to visit two of my friends who are missionari­es there. It was so good to explore and catch up with good friends. This photo is taken at a flower festival in Chiang Mai, Thailand.
Danielle Wideman and Renita Bauman (lives in Thailand as a missionary) Thailand Vacation. Prior to Thailand, I had travelled to the Philippine­s for a missions trip. After that experience, I went to Thailand to visit two of my friends who are missionari­es there. It was so good to explore and catch up with good friends. This photo is taken at a flower festival in Chiang Mai, Thailand.
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