Record Breakers

all sorts of malarkey to stuff your brain with
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Wind-powered car breaks record[/align]
A British engineer from Hampshire has broken the world land speed record for a wind-powered vehicle. Richard Jenkins reached 126.1 mph (202.9 kmh) in his car Greenbird on the dry plains of Ivanpah Lake in Nevada.

Mr Jenkins told the BBC that it had taken him 10 years of "hard work" to break the record and that, on the day, "things couldn't have been better". "It's great, it's one of those things that you spend so long trying to do and when it actually happens, it's almost too easy," Mr Jenkins told the BBC.

The Greenbird is a carbon fibre composite vehicle that uses wind (and nothing else) for power. The only metalwork used is for the wing bearings and the wheel unit. The designers describe it as a "very high performance sailboat" but one that uses a solid wing, rather than a sail, to generate movement.

Mr Jenkins, from Lymington, spent 10 years designing the vehicle, with Greenbird the fifth vehicle he has built to try and break the record. Due to the shape of the craft, especially at such high speeds, the wings also provide lift; a useful trait for an aircraft, but very hazardous for a car. To compensate for this, the designers have added small wings to "stick" the car to the ground, in the same way Formula 1 cars do. "Greenbird weighs 600kg when its standing still," said Mr Jenkins. "But at speed, the effect of the wings make her weigh just over a tonne."

Richard Jenkins spent much of his childhood sailing on the south coast and from the age of 10 was designing what he calls "radical contraptions". He has also built a wind powered craft that travels on ice, rather than land.

"Now that we've broken the record, I'm going back onto the ice craft. There's still some debate as to whether travelling on ice or land will be faster," he said. "But I think we've got some time. 126.1 mph was a good margin to beat the record and I think it will be some time before anyone else breaks it."

(video is an earlier attempt)
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(stock photo)
Sara Campbell, 'part woman, part fish', regains freediving record
Sara Campbell plunges to glory
Jacqui Goddard in Miami[/align]
A British woman pushed the boundaries of human endurance to new levels yesterday as she dived 96 metres (314ft) below the surface of the Atlantic and back again on a single, very deep, breath. Sara Campbell — “part woman, part fish” — broke the world record in the extreme sport of freediving, whose participants dice with death by submerging themselves to lung-crushing depths without breathing apparatus.

Holding her breath for three minutes 36 seconds, she went deeper than any female freediver has gone before without weights or equipment to hasten her descent, or an airbag to speed her back to the surface. “The dive felt great and I’m just feeling fantastic,” she said last night. “At one point I started feeling negative thoughts — ‘Do I really want to do this?’ — but then I told myself not to be ridiculous, just get it done, go for the bottom. For me, that’s really what the personal battle was all about — fighting my demons and overcoming my doubts.”

Ms Campbell, 37, caught the freediving community by surprise in 2007 when she broke three world records in 48 hours while still a novice, having taken up the sport only nine months earlier. The death of her mother forced her to drop out of competition last year, allowing her Russian rival, Natalia Molchanova, to take her titles.

Last night, at the Vertical Blue competition off Long Island in the Bahamas, Ms Campbell snatched back her crown in the constant weight discipline, which requires freedivers to descend and return using only the power of their own bodies and a mermaid-like fin attached to their feet.

“My mother died ten days before I was due to attempt two more world records last year. I was with her when she died and one of the last things she said to me was, ‘Go back out there and get those records’,” Ms Campbell said. “I know I made her ridiculously proud and of course there’s a part of me that wanted to continue to make her proud and to finish off a promise I made to her.” The former PR woman and yoga instructor from Wandsworth, South London, reclaimed her constant weight record at a 202-metre underwater cavern off Long Island known as Dean’s Blue Hole — the deepest “blue hole”, or sinkhole, in the world. Her feat outstripped beat Ms Molchanova’s performance last year by one metre.

Also known as Mighty Mouse because of her diminutive 4ft 11in frame, Ms Campbell has been studied by doctors to try to understand her extraordinary physiology. Her lungs are 25 per cent larger than an average person of her size and weight, allowing her to pack more air into her system before she descends. She also relies on a natural physical instinct called the mammalian dive reflex, which sustains the body under water by helping respiration and withstanding the pressures of the deep. Coupled with strength and breathing techniques — Ms Campbell does special breathing exercises for four minutes before she dives — freedivers can use the reflex to plunge deeper, and for longer, than others. The world record for a person holding their breath under water while static is 10 minutes 12 seconds.

The heartbeat slows, which reduces the amount of oxygen required by the body. As the diver pushes deeper, and the water pressure increases, the blood vessels constrict, diverting blood away from the extremities, pushing it harder to the lungs, brain and heart. That helps to prevent the lungs from total collapse as they are crushed to the size of oranges by the external pressure, although by the time the diver nears the surface again the lungs are screaming for air.

“Before I started freediving I had the same fear of deep water that a lot of people have,” Ms Campbell said. “The idea of suddenly being at 50 metres without air, of course that’s a terrifying prospect, like finding yourself at the top of a ski-jump when you have never even put skis on before. But it’s a gradual progression — you train your mind and your body and it can be done safely.” Ms Campbell will return to the water in four days’ time in an attempt to conquer her record with a 100-metre plunge. “It’s a big number, but I believe I have it in me,” she said.

Even the best freedivers can suffer blackouts as they near the surface and the blood vessels return to normal, suddenly slowing the flow of oxygen to the brain. “About 15 metres from the top I was starting to feel like I might be drifting off and I had to really focus on contracting my body, trying to keep the oxygen supply to my brain going, just trying to keep that grip on reality,” she said.

In 2002 the world record holder for weight-assisted freediving, Audrey Mestre, of France, died after she was stuck under water for more than eight minutes at a depth of 171 metres in the Caribbean when an air balloon that should have shot her back to the surface malfunctioned.

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Tiernan breaks comedy record
...but church charity tuns down the proceeds[/align]
Tommy Tiernan has set a new world record for the longest solo stand-up show, after performing for just over 36 hours. He took to the stage of Nuns Island in Galway at 3pm on Good Friday afternoon, and ended at 3.15am on Easter Sunday.

After the show, he said: 'Towards the end I didn’t think I was going to make it, but there was such good support from the audience. After about 30 hours I was finding it pretty hard to string a sentence together. I’m a bit busted after it all.'

He stood for almost the entire event, eating pasta, fruit, water and high-energy drinks on stage, and being allowed a five-minute break every hour. Guinness World Record rules also stated that there needed to be ten people in the audience at any time.

Tiernan plans to donate profits from the event to a charity to help homeless teenagers – even though trustees of the Galway Diocesan Youth Services have said they will turn down the money. The church-run charity says it did not want to be ‘associated with a comedy show’.

In a statement they said: ‘Tommy Tiernan's very kind offer to donate the proceeds of his show was initially gratefully accepted. However, on further reflection, it was felt that it was not appropriate for the organisation to be associated with a comedy show on this, the most solemn day in the Christian calendar.’

Before Tiernan’s attempt, there was no official record for the longest solo stand-up show. Guinness World Records adjudicator Katie Forde said: ‘Nobody was brave enough – or crazy enough – to attempt this before.’

As he prepared for he event, titled Testamental, he admitted he would have to tone down his usual high-energy performance. ‘It will be like the Sex Pistols doing an album of ballads,’ he said. ‘I have to mind my voice. I don’t want to end up sounding like Freddie Starr. I will have to be careful.’

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What kind of charity refuses donations because it's from a comedy show? The bunch of arseholes in charge of it must think that the homeless people give a flying fuck where their dinner came from!
Last edited by faceless on Wed Apr 22, 2009 12:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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I'm the new tallest man in the world
Zhao Linag, who is 2.46 meters tall, prepares for surgery at a hospital in Tianjin
Thursday, April 16, 2009[/align]
A basketball player who went to hospital for foot surgery suddenly grew to a whole new station in life – the world's tallest man. Zhao Liang is 2.46m (8.07ft) tall, putting him 10cm (3.9in) above the current record-holder, Bao Xishun.

The huge sportsman, who puts away eight burger-sized steamed buns and three plates of food for dinner, has average-sized parents. And, like any other mother, Wang Keyun frets for her 27-year-old son. She said: 'I am so worried about his marriage, job and his health that my hair has turned white.'

Mr Zhao was training as a basketball player when he hurt the tendon in his left foot a decade ago. He languished in unemployment until 2006, when he started working with a street art troupe. He performed magic tricks and played the saxophone with the group until his painful foot became too much for him. But when he hobbled into the Tianjin hospital for his operation, he caused a stir once again. Hospital staff excitedly got him measured properly in the midst of a media circus. Despite the furore, doctors managed to treat him and declared his operation a success.

Mr Zhao, whose huge stature gives him no major health issues, will be fully mobile in a couple of months. Although Mr Zhao, from Henan province, is far taller than Mr Bao he has yet to be measured by staff from Guinness World Records. He is now seeking ­official recognition.
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[align=center]Image[/align]

Nihang Singh - world Turban champion.
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[align=center]'OMG rcrd attmpt' 'wut' 'LOL'
April 22, 2009[/align]
Two friends in America have attempted to set a text-messaging record attempt - exchanging a thumbs-numbing total of 217,000 texts during March. Awkwardly, for one of the two, that meant an unexpected itemized bill for $26,000 (about £17,800) that was several inches thick

Nick Andes, 29, and Doug Klinger, 30, were relying on their unlimited text messaging plans to get them through the escapade, so Andes didn't expect such a big bill. 'It came in a box that cost $27.55 to send to me,' he said on Tuesday. He said he 'panicked' and called T-Mobile, which told The Associated Press it had credited his account and was investigating the charges.

The two, from central Pennsylvania, have been practically nonstop texters for about a decade since they attended Berks Technical Institute together. That led Andes to search for the largest monthly text message total he could find posted online: 182,000 sent in 2005 by Deepak Sharma in India.

Andes and Klinger were able to set up their phones to send multiple messages. During a February test run they found they could send 6,000 or 7,000 messages on some days, prompting the March messaging marathon. 'Most were either short phrases or one word, "LOL" or "Hello," things like that, with tons and tons of repeats,' said Andes, who was reached by phone.

Andes sent more than 140,000 messages, and Klinger sent more than 70,000 to end the month with a total of just over 217,000, he said. A spokesman for Guinness World Records has yet to comment on whether it could be certified as a record.

April came as a relief to Andes' wife, Julie, who had found his phone tied up with texting when she tried to call him on lunch breaks. 'She was tired of it the first few days into it,' Andes said.

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:crazed:
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Palestinian breaks hellish world record

A PALESTINIAN political prisoner in an Israeli jail has entered the Guinness Book of Records as the longest-serving political prisoner in the world.

Nael al-Barghouthi, 52, from Ramallah in occupied Palestine broke the record on Friday May 1. He was arrested on April 4 1978 when he was 21 years old. The record was previously held by another Palestinian, Said al-Attaba from Nablus, who spent 31 years and 26 days in Israeli jails and was released a few months ago.

There are about 11,000 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails, including hundreds of women and children. Human rights organisations have raised concerns about their detention conditions and the torture methods used by the Israelis.

It is estimated that about one in every four Palestinians had been in an Israeli jail for political reasons.
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Britain's biggest oyster found in Plymouth

Image

THE biggest oyster ever found in British waters has been pulled from the seabed off Plymouth.

The monster shellfish weighs a whopping 1.36kg and measures 18cm across - three times the size of the average oyster.

Previously the biggest ever found in Britain was discovered on Arisaig beach in Scotland in August 1997.

It weighed 0.83kg and was listed in the Guinness Book of Records - but that has has now been eclipsed by the latest discovery.

The animal - nicknamed Shelly - is a species known as the Edible or Native oyster which usually grow to 0.5kg or 11cm.

It was dredged up from the sea near Plymouth and then later found in a box of fish bought at Plymouth Fish Market by fishmonger Peter Randall, 58.

Peter, 58, of Mevagissey, Cornwall, says he has shown the oyster to stunned colleagues who were "gobsmacked" at its size.

Shelly is now on display at Mevagissey Sealife Aquarium.
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Urm...eh, yum, I guess...
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Yew must be kidding: Amazing tree with a canopy the width of Royal Albert Hall goes into the record books
David Derbyshire
19th May 2009
[/align]
A giant yew with a canopy the size of London's Royal Albert Hall has entered the record books as the widest tree in the UK. The champion tree, which has engulfed a National Trust garden, has an amazing crown circumference of almost 200 yards.

Tree experts, who discovered the 350-year-old Yew as part of the Woodland Trust's ancient tree hunt, believe it may even be the widest in Europe. The branches of tree, in the grounds of Shugborough Hall, Staffordshire, spread out a massive 50 metres wider than its nearest rival. It has now been recorded in the Tree Register of the British Isles (TROBI) as the largest spreading crown of any tree in Britain and Ireland.

'This remarkable tree has spent most of its life growing naturally sideways rather than upwards,' said David Alderman, from TROBI. 'Many of its branches have rooted themselves, providing even more vigour as it has engulfed other trees originally planted 25 metres away. As yew can live for 1,000 years or more, if left unchecked, this tree could potentially keep growing ever wider and eventually cover the whole estate!'

Other UK contenders for the title include a layering Horse chestnut at Settrington House, North Yorkshire, with a circumference of 120 metres. The tree with the widest unsupported spreading branches, that are not touching the ground or layering, is the King Oak at Charleville, Co. Offaly in Ireland, which at its widest point has a single branch reaching almost 30 metres. In February a douglas fir in Argyll was named UK's tallest tree. The fir is 63.7m (209ft) tall - and beat its nearest rival by three feet.

The enormous Shugborough yew would have measured even bigger but has just been clipped back by head gardener Joe Hawkins as it was taking over the entire garden.

'The tree is extremely impressive,' said Fiona Moss, from The Woodland Trust. 'It's extraordinary to look at and so huge it's just like something out of the rainforest.'

The yew tree dates to around 1659 - the year after Oliver Cromwell died and half a century before the current Shugborough Hall was built. It is likely to have sprung up in the grounds a small medieval manor house. The Hall was built in the 18th century and went on to become home of the Earl of Lichfield. The estate is also famous for the Shepherd's Monument which contains a mysterious code carved in the 18th century. Some people believe the code reveals the hiding place of the Holy Grail.

Yews were considered sacred in ancient times and were planted on religious sites. Today they are traditionally found in graveyards. Some can grow for thousand years. Their bark, seeds and leaves are poisonous. The oldest tree in Europe is the Fortingall Yew in the churchyard of the village of Fortingall in Perthshire, Scotland. It is thought to be at least 2,000 years old.

The Ancient Tree Hunt is a project that aims to involve thousands of people in finding and mapping all the fat, old trees across the UK. It will create a comprehensive living database of ancient trees and is the first step towards cherishing and caring for them. The Woodland Trust is challenging everyone to take part by finding and recording any ancient or notable trees on the project website at www.ancienttreehunt.org.uk

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We did tree puns recently didn't we?
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Yew know it!
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Snail boy in world record attempt
Thursday, May 21, 2009[/align]
A boy is trying to get into the record books by covering his face with live snails. Eleven-year-old Fin Keheler, from Sandy, Utah, allowed 43 of the slimy mollusks to be put on his face. He wants the Guinness World Records to verify his effort.

The Guinness web site says the record set in 2007 for snails on the face for 10 seconds is eight.

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Calling a Utah town Sandy must have taken a whole committee!
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Eight snails on your face for 10 seconds? That doesn't sound very hard...it's not like snails bite or are poisonous. I think even I could beat that...it would be gross and slimey, but it could be done.
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go for it spurs! Be a global achiever in the mollusc sticking world!

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Japanese man sets record for paper plane flight
A Japanese engineer has set the world record for the longest flight for a paper airplane, keeping his design aloft for 27.9 seconds.
By Julian Ryall in Tokyo
18 May 2009
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Mr Toda, who is chairman of the Japan Origami Airplane Association, performed his feat at a competition in Hiroshima Prefecture in April and it has now been confirmed by Guinness World Records as the longest ever flight by a paper plane. "I had thought that the world record was impossible to break, but the key to breaking the record is how high you fly it," Mr Toda told The Daily Telegraph.

Made of a single sheet of folded paper with no cuts, his design measured 10 cm from tip to tail. He plans to use the same shape to try to break his own record at another event for paper plane enthusiasts in September. His ultimate aim, however, remains having one of his aircraft launched from the space shuttle.

"Thirty years ago, I saw a space shuttle - with a similar shape to a paper airplane - returning to Earth," said Mr Toda, who traces his hobby back to the two years he spent convalescing after a climbing accident while at university. He claims to have had made a paper plane with an almost identical triangular configuration three or four years before NASA unveiled its shuttle. "I thought it would be possible for a paper aircraft to do the same thing, but back then no-one would listen seriously to my ideas," he said.

Founder of the association in 1980, he has lobbied scientists and professors to take his proposal seriously and was finally rewarded last year when the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency announced that it would fund a three-year, 90 million yen (£617,000) study into the feasibility of launching paper darts from the International Space Station and, hopefully, recovering them when they return to Earth about a week later.

"If it is proven that a paper plane can re-enter the Earth's atmosphere and glide back down safely then the scientific community could gain very valuable data about aerodynamics," said Mr Toda says. "That knowledge could even lead to improvements in the design of spacecraft in the future as it would prove that even ultra-light materials are able to withstand the demands of the upper atmosphere."
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Usain Bolt smashes the 150m sprint record in street exhibition[/align]
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