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  1. Blackleaf

    Can you solve this 3,000-year-old Scottish puzzle?

    Scotland's national museum is recruiting online gamers to help piece together 3,000 fragments of the Hilton of Cadboll Stone. The stone was carved around 800AD in Inverness-shire which was then the heartland of the Picts. The top part of it was rediscovered in 1811, with the lower part, and...
  2. Blackleaf

    The macabre Victorian photos of people posing with corpses of loved ones

    Three children look miserable as they stare into the camera with their younger sibling asleep on a chair next to them. Well, that's what it looks like at first glance. In reality, however, the younger sibling isn't asleep - but dead. This is just one of a remarkable series of photographs...
  3. Blackleaf

    Englert and Higgs win Nobel Prize in Physics for predicting Higgs Boson

    Belgian scientist Francois Englert and British scientist Peter Higgs have won the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics for predicting the existence of the Higgs Boson particle, which is named after the British scientist. Englert and Higgs theorised about the existence of the particle in the 1960s to...
  4. Blackleaf

    What is a turducken?

    A North American taking the mick out of British cuisine? That's like a Chinaman accusing somebody of being yellow.
  5. Blackleaf

    First World War trenches to be replicated in English countryside

    Just over half a mile of replica British and German WWI trenches are to be built in the Cambridgeshire countryside as part of commemorations to mark the centenary of the conflict. Complete with their own No Man's Land, the trenches are to be built just of the A14 road. The National Centre...
  6. Blackleaf

    What is a turducken?

    I don't fancy eating anything that's got the word "turd" in it. In fact, it looks like something I see floating around inside a public lavatory bowl. The French will probably love it, though.
  7. Blackleaf

    BBC Saturday night fantasy drama Atlantis

    The BBC have a brilliant new Saturday night fantasy drama for the autumn and winter - Atlantis. This is the third Saturday night fantasy series the BBC has made in recent years, following on from Robin Hood (2006-2009) and Merlin (2008-2012). The first episode of thirteen in this brand new...
  8. Blackleaf

    Counting under way in Irish Republic on the fate of the Senate

    Counting is under way in the Irish Republic in referendums to decide the fate of the Seanad Éireann (Irish for Irish Senate), the upper house of the Irish parliament. The current government of the Irish Republic, led by Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Enda Kenny, says that the Seanad costs too much...
  9. Blackleaf

    What Are You Having For Dinner?

    No. Not up at Daubhill.
  10. Blackleaf

    What Are You Having For Dinner?

    I'm not too sure if it IS just German shepherd meat that they serve. All I know is that the Muslim-run kebab shops around Bolton get a lot of their meat from local dogs which have been run over by cars and things like that.
  11. Blackleaf

    What Are You Having For Dinner?

    I don't know what I'm having for my tea (I don't have dinner, just tea). If I can't be bothered making something I'll probbaly just nip to my local doner kebab shop up at Daubhill and order a load of German shepherd meat with loads of raw red onions, lettuce, tomatoes and spicy sauces in a...
  12. Blackleaf

    55 ships and Prince Harry celebrate centenary of Royal Australian Navy

    Warships, galleons and tall ships from 17 nations sailed into Sydney Harbour today to celebrate the centenary of the Royal Australian Navy. On what was a beautiful spring day in Australia, thousands of spectators gathered along the harbour to welcome the 20-strong international fleet...
  13. Blackleaf

    Dambusters prepare for final tour before disbandment

    The RAF's famous 617 Squadron - known as The Dambusters because of its destruction of German dams during WWII - is preparing for its final tour before disbandment. However, the disbandment is only temporary as it will be re-formed in 2016 to fly the new Lighning II aircraft, of which the RAF...
  14. Blackleaf

    The Gambia leaves the Commonwealth

    The tiny, tiny nation of The Gambia - a tiny slither of a country in West Africa, three times smaller than Belgium, about 24 times smaller than the UK and with a population of just 1.7 million - has withdrawn from the Commonwealth. The nation branded the 54-member grouping (now a 53-member...
  15. Blackleaf

    UN: Global warming 95% likely to be manmade

    Animation - Karl Pilkington Talking About the Ice Caps Melting - YouTube
  16. Blackleaf

    The world's only prehistoric boatyard has been found in Monmouthshire

    Workmen were working on a new housing estate in Monmouth, Monmouthshire in South Wales (the county of Monmouthshire was in England until 1974 when Wales annexed it, leading to some English nationalists rightly campaigning to get it back) when they just happened to come across what is probably...
  17. Blackleaf

    Two Bigfoot photographed in Pennsylvania

    Two weeks ago hiker John Stoneman was driving with his girlfriend through Kinzua State Park in Pennsylvania when they came across two Bigfoot/Bigfoots/Bigfeet. He quickly whipped out his camera and took a few photos of the seven foot tall hairy Hominids. Mr Stoneman, from Bradford, PA...
  18. Blackleaf

    Daily Mail refuses to apologise after attacking Labour leader's Marxist father

    The Daily Mail and the leader of the Labour Party and Leader of the Opposition Ed Miliband are embroiled in a war of words after the newspaper attacked Ed's father Ralph Miliband for his Marxist beliefs. Ralph was a Belgian Jew and Marxist academic who fled Belgium for Britain to escape the...
  19. Blackleaf

    Skulls found beneath lost London river may have belonged to decapitated Romans

    Around 20 Roman-era skulls have been found by workers working on London's billion pound Crossrail project. The skulls were found beneath Liverpool Street train station where the River Walbrook, a tributary of the Thames, flows. The Walbrook began being covered by buildings in 1440 and it now...
  20. Blackleaf

    New £27m Stonehenge visitor centre is revealed

    Stonehenge's new £27 million visitor attraction has been unveiled to the world. Scaffolding surrounding the new structure has been removed to reveal a single-storey building which is hidden out of sight of Stonehenge in a natural hollow 1.5 miles away from what is probably the world's most...