Listeners who have discovered Swans through their second act were treated to a vastly different band than the one that carved out their niche in the ’80s. Aside from Michael Gira, the sole permanent member of Swans, there was literally a completely different lineup of people behind their sprawling post-rock soundscapes. But this latest version of Swans also has moved away from the direct application of sledgehammer rhythms and assembly-line abrasion of their earlier, industrial-noise creations. By the mid ’80s, Gira and company refined their sound somewhat, having reshaped the no-wave noise of their first two LPs into the kind of grinding filth that might actually compel someone to dance — maybe not the average person, but someone. “A Screw (Holy Money),” in both its album version and remixed 12″ version, put that idea to the test, Gira’s menacing mutter largely overshadowed by the tuneless drone and thumping percussion. It’s Branca disco, a hit single for and from people that don’t acknowledge such things.
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Later this spring, the researcher is planning to move his base of operation from the PSFC to the Air Force Research Lab (AFRL) in Kirkland, New Mexico, in order to take advantage of a microwave source that would allow him to perform experiments at a power level a factor of 10 higher than is currently possible in the laboratory at MIT. He would be able to graduate from drilling rocks in the 4-6 inch range to those in the 2-4 feet range. He is especially interested in exploring how well the rock can be vaporized, which would only be possible with the higher power available at AFRL.
New York trio Unsane have a discography full of blood-spattered album covers designed to trigger gag reflexes, which is a fair warning to all who dare venture into their unforgiving din. On the suitably titled “Body Bomb,” Unsane present their M.O. pretty clearly: simple, even bluesy riffs and basslines performed through several layers of distortion, and vocalist Chris Spencer wailing through a C.B.-quality mic like his fingernails are being ripped off. (Which, admittedly, would suit their vehicular-homicide-and-bathtub-full-of-blood aesthetic.) Their songs are melodic, and even carry a good groove at the heart of it all, but they certainly don’t make it easy. Music this brutal takes a certain level of desensitization, or at least a good pair of earplugs.
Within the crust of both the oceans and continents – which, let me remind you is often extremely hot, highly pressurised and exceedingly dark – there is a mind-bogglingly diverse array of life. I’m not just talking about bacteria and archaea here, but Eukaryotes too: more biologically complex critters that, unlike those two aforementioned prokaryotic groups, have membrane-enclosed nuclei and organelles, including the energy-producing mitochondria you may be familiar with. Plants and animals, including us, are eukaryotes.
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By braving greater depths, and using increasingly improved scientific techniques, scientists have found life pretty much wherever there is even just a modicum of water, and little else. Forget oxygen and even what we’d think of as nutrients: microorganisms have been found living all over the place; some are suspended within giant crystals deep within suffocating caves in Mexico, and others are sneaking around mine shafts in South Africa, residing in perpetual darkness and bathed in radiation.
The 2018 exploration program amounted to $14 million, totaling approximately 165,700 meters of drilling, focused mainly on the Kari gold-in-soil anomaly which covers a 6km-long by 2.5km-wide area, resulting in:
Still, the team speculates further. Could this be a sudden flow of water connected to the Money Pit and Smith’s Cove?
That new design is about to be put to the test. The BAS team completed its ice coring on January 10 and will next examine the iceâs chemical composition, including gases trapped within the ice, to learn more about the regionâs climatic history. Meanwhile, the Glasgow team is preparing to send its drill down into one of the ice boreholes.
My initial impression is that this is a game more concerned with action and light strategy than making crafting and construction an overly finnicky process. I remember bouncing off From The Depths (another mechanically minded sandbox) as it wanted me to construct my ship from the basic blocks upwards, right down to assembling my own engine by hand. This is a game where you decide how many engines you want, stuff them full of coal and ride off into the ash-dimmed sunset in search of your pyroclastic foe.
Half of all group revenues came from Europe, Middle East and Asia (EMEA) with the Americas representing Mincon’s second most significant market, accounting for 29 per ent of turnover. Revenues in the company’s Australasia division rose from 17 per cent of group turnover to 22 per cent last year.
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