Can you fit half a Mini down the toilet?

Mini Cooper

How did half a Mini Cooper end up in London’s sewer system?

Some strange things turn up in the sewers, but there is usually an explanation for the majority of items the sewer workers dredge up.

However, one unusual case has stuck in the mind of Simon Evans, a Thames Water employee. In a bit of a one-off, he recalls finding half a Mini: “It was dragged out of one of our major London sewers. Pretty bizarre. Obviously that didn’t get flushed down the toilet.”

How the half a vehicle made it into London’s underground sewer system is a bit of an unsolved mystery given the sheer size of the item. But while it is pretty unusual to find sections of vehicles in the pipes under our streets, Mr Evans told the Guardian that there is a host of other weird discoveries trawled up on a daily basis.

‘Fatbergs’ were one such issue. This is what sewer workers call fat that has been washed away down the sink while warm which has then cooled and congealed once it hits the sewer. The ‘fatbergs’ then bind to other detritus floating around to cause problems in the system.

The old cliché of flushing dead goldfish down the toilet is also true, but other small animals also crop up now and again, including hamsters and gerbils. “They don’t help, because they’re quite sturdy little things,” observed Mr Evans.

So next time you’re wondering if you can flush some odd item down the toilet thinking it will never be seen again, spare a thought for the sewer workers labouring away to keep the city clear of fatbergs and rogue Minis.

Talking wale astounds handlers in San Diego

Noc the wale

Noc is just looking for someone to talk to …

A Beluga whale called Noc has learned to use its nasal cavities to mimic the human voice, according to its handlers at the National Marine Mammal Foundation in San Diego.

This would be impressive and bizarre for any animal, but the fact that whales don’t even have vocal chords make Noc’s human voice even more astounding. Don’t just take our word for it, check out the video of Noc talking.

Although this amazing story has only just come to light, after being published in the Current Biology journal this week, Noc has been talking like a human since the 1980s, according to staff at the Foundation.

His warbling sounds a little like two people having a conversation far away, but he has also been known to raise his voice at staff members. Once, a diver who entered his tank quickly rose to the surface asking ‘who told me to get out?’ It merged that he had heard what sounded like a human voice shouting ‘out’ at him repeatedly. It seems Noc wasn’t in the mood for visitors that day!

His dedicated handlers have not been put off by his mood swings and insist his human-like sounds are an attempt to mimic those around him. Researchers believe he makes the sounds by cleverly adjusting the pressure in nasal cavities to make a sound much lower than regular whale sounds.

Giant eyeball washes up on beach

 

Eyeball

The giant eyeball found on a Florida beach. Credit: The Sun Sentinel

A mystery has been unravelling in recent days after a giant eyeball was discovered on a beach in Florida.

Gino Covacci discovered the item while out for a stroll on Pompano Beach, north of Ft. Lauderdale in the US Sunshine State. At first nobody could work out what kind of creature the eyeball came from, its size prompted a number of people to suggest it belonged to a mysterious deep-sea animal.

Mr Covacci told local paper the Sun Sentinel: “It was very, very fresh. It was still bleeding when I put in it the plastic bag.”

We’d love to say that the discovery led scientists to uncover a freaky new deep-sea creature, but the eyeball has been seen by marine biologists who have now revealed that it probably belonged to a large swordfish. Such fish can grow as large as 1,400 pounds so it is perfectly possible that the eye – which is a little bigger than a baseball – originally belonged to one of these knights of the sea.

Joan Herrera, curator of collections at the FWC’s Fish and Wildlife Research Institute in St. Petersburg, Fla. said in a statement: “Experts on site and remotely have viewed and analysed the eye, and based on its colour, size and structure, along with the presence of bone around it, we believe the eye came from a swordfish.”

She added: “Based on straight-line cuts visible around the eye, we believe it was removed by a fisherman and discarded.”

Genetic tests will now be conducted to find conclusive proof that the eyeball was that of a swordfish. Or not …