Tuesday, 13 October 2015

Famous Monuments Of India

Indian Monuments

Indian monuments are popular worldwide for its beauty. The monuments are the standing examples of stretching the horizon of human imagination and thoughts. The kings and emperors who ruled India had their own way of expressing their ideas in bricks, marble, stone and mortars. These monuments are centuries old and have been examples of philosophies in the world. There are few famous monuments that are damaged during wars between kingdoms and foreign invasion. Visiting these places today tells you a lot of history and the culture in the bygone age.

Following are the famous Monuments in India:

Taj Mahal
The Taj Mahal is a white marble mausoleum located in Agra, Uttar Pradesh, India. It was built by Mughal emperor Shah Jahan in memory of his wife, Mumtaz Mahal. It is considered by many as the finest example of Mughal architecture.
Taj mahal
Qutab Minar
Qutb Minar is the 2nd tallest architecture (73 metres) in India after Fateh Burj in Chappar Chiri at Mohali (100 meters). Located in Delhi, and is made of red sandstone and marble.
Qutab minar
India Gate
The India Gate, originally called the All India War Memorial, is a war memorial located astride the Rajpath, on the eastern edge of the 'ceremonial axis' of New Delhi, formerly called Kingsway.
India gate
Red fort
The Red Fort was the residence of the Mughal emperor of India for nearly 200 years, until 1857. It is located in the centre of Delhi and houses a number of museums.
Red fort
5) Meenakshi Temple
Meenakshi Amman Temple is a historic Hindu temple located on the southern bank of the Vaigai River in the temple city of Madurai, Tamil Nadu, India. It is dedicated to Parvati, known as Meenakshi, and her consort, Shiva, here named Sundareswarar.
Meenakshi
Charminar
The Charminar, built in 1591 CE, is a monument and mosque located in Hyderabad, Telangana, India. The landmark has become a global icon of Hyderabad, listed among the most recognized structures of India.
Charminar

Monday, 12 October 2015

Top 10 coldest place in the world

It’s hard to define exactly where the coldest places on Earth are. It sounds like it should be easy – measure how hot or cold everywhere is, and then rank them. But how you define a place? Antarctica is surely the coldest place on Earth but is it all one place? Or many different points? And do you take the lowest ever temperature or an average over the year? And which year? There are a lot of questions and, unsurprisingly, it doesn’t make for a flawless list. But here are ten places you certainly would’t want to be striding around in swimwear. Shrug on an extra sweater and read our Top 10 Coldest Places on Earth.

10. Rogers Pass, Montana, USA

Located 5,610m  above sea level on the Continental Divide in Montana, this is one of the warmer places on the list, but the average temperature in January still fluctuates between 14 and 33F, so never going far above freezing. It’s like that for the whole winter, with lows at freezing point or below from October till April. But on the bright side, the summer months are fairly hot, with a high of 82 in July. So, overall the average mean temperature for the year is 43.5F, which is relatively high. But that would be little comfort if you happened to visit in December and you knew it wasn’t going to warm up till Easter. It’s also the place where the lowest ever temperature was recorded in the contiguous United States – a bone-chilling minus 70F on January 20 1954.

9. Stanley, Idaho, USA

This Idaho city has a population of just 63 – little wonder as the winters are pretty unforgiving. The record low is -54F in December, and the average lows every January hit the -1F level, only getting up to 18F on a warm day. But again, the summers are warmer with highs of up to 78.5F in July. There was even a record high of 98F, but most Julys there are 10 frosty nights in the month. So, it’s a city of extremes, which makes the average..fairly average at 35F. But given that’s just above freezing, it’s probably not the place to head to if you’re after sea and sun. But it does have a museum, a mayor and even its own chamber of commerce – not bad for just 63 people!

8. Prospect Creek, Alaska, USA

This settlement is currently uninhabited, but it was once home to several thousand construction workers who were building the Trans-Alaskan Pipeline System between 1974 and 1977. The camp was taken down after the pipeline was finished and now there’s no-one to enjoy the daily mean temperatures of -14.9F in January. The lowest temperature ever in the US was recorded there, beating Rogers Pass by 10 degrees with a -80F recorded in January 1971. Like many of these places, it warms up during the summer, thoroughly confusing the bears and bald eagles that do live there, and raising the overall annual average to 24.4. Still, I’m not applying for planning permission to build my next home there, especially as it snows constantly from October to April, with up to 24 inches in February and March!

7. Snag, Yukon, Canada

We’ve had the record for the lowest temperature in the contiguous USA, the lowest temperature in the whole of the USA…now, how about the lowest in continental North America? That honor goes to the village of Snag in Canada, where a temperature of -81F was recorded on February 3rd 1947. That broke the long-standing record of 80F set in Snag…on February 2nd 1947. When that was recorded, there were between 8 and 10 people living in Snag and they were a mixture of natives and fur traders. It also had its own airstrip, with a  staff of 15-20, but that closed in 1968. While in  Snag, researchers also noticed a strange acoustic effect – voices could be heard clearly over a distance of several miles. This has never quite been explained.
The average annual temperature in Snag nowadays is a high of 34.3F and a low of 10.3F, making a mean average of 22.3F. January regularly goes down as far as -27F, so again there is quite some difference between the hottest and the coldest months. Snag is currently uninhabited.

6. Oymyakon, Russia

When it comes to cold, Russia is just in another league. Oymyakon has a record low of -90F, which is the lowest recorded temperature for any permanently inhabited location on Earth, and it was recorded on February 6th 1933 (the first week of February seems to be a good week for these kind of records). Of course, the daily temperatures don’t ever go quite that low, but the average lows for December, January and February are all in the minus fifties. Even the average for January is still a terrifying -51.5F, although in July it climbs all the way up to an average of 58.8F. With a population of 472, the town is quite big compared to some on the list and its far north location means that it enjoys a 21-hour day in June, although the December day only lasts 3 hours. Fancy booking a holiday there yet?

5. Eureka, Canada

This research base has no permanant inhabitants, but there is a rotation of 8 staff who work there at any one time. It’s been used as a weather station since its inception in 1947. It can’t be the most alluring place to work, with no sunlight from October to February and an annual average temperature of -1.8F. But at least you wouldn’t get rained on during those long winter months  – there is no rain between October and May, causing the area to be a polar desert. Even so, there’s a lot of plant life as the temperatures are too low for the moisture in the air to evaporate. It’s even been described as “The Garden Spot of the Arctic”, with wildlife such as oxen, foxes and wolves roaming around, and the endless sunshine of the summer makes it an ideal habitat for nesting birds. A place of great contrasts.

4. Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia

Certainly the most populated place on our list, the capital of Mongolia holds the dubious honors of being the coldest capital in the world and one of the most polluted. It’s also quite high up, being 1,310m above sea level, and home to 1,278,000 people. Apparently, it’s a great cultural center, with museums like the Zanabazar Museum of Fine Arts, which is just as well because you’d hardly want to linger outside in temperatures of -16F like the ones you’d find there in January. Across the year, the average temperature is around -2.4F and the climate is like a subarctic one, thanks to icy winds. But I hear the people are friendly, so that’s something…

3. Eismitte, Greenland

It’s fair to say that the next few places on the list are largely devoid of museums of fine art. In fact, Eismitte (literally “Middle of the Ice” in German) is largely devoid of anything. It was the site of an expedition in the 30s which took temperature readings of between -85F and 27F and although we don’t have enough information to accurately gauge what the annual average would be, we can take a guess by splitting the difference between the average of the warmest month (July, 10F) and the coldest (February, -53F).  That gives us a chilly average of -21.5F, which is definitely cold enough to get onto the list.
You can’t be too churlish about the lack of information – the figures we do have came at a horrendous cost. That 1930-1931 mission claimed the lives of Alfred Wegener and Rasmus Villumsen, while another member of the party had his toes amputated without anaesthetic. That’s enough reason to never want to go there and find out more…

2. North Ice, Greenland

Another place about which little is known, North Ice was the subject of a British expedition in the 1950s, where they successfully recorded the lowest temperature in North America, beating Snag’s record by 6 degrees (but as Snag is part of continental North America, it still gets to keep that title). An astounding -87F was recorded at North Ice on January 9th 1954 and, though it warrants its own page on tourism sites, it’s unlikely to be a top holiday destination any time soon.

1. Vostok, Antarctica

And of course, the number one spot has to go to Antarctica which, if inhabited and measured, would probably fill these kind of lists on its own. Vostok is a Russian weather monitoring station which holds the record for the lowest ever recorded temperature on Earth – minus 128.6F, on 21st July 1983 – although there are claims that it dipped to -132F in 1997. The warmest month there is January, with a mean average of -25.8F, but the mean averages for the winter months are consistently in the minus 80s. It’s also 3,488m above sea level which means there’s a distinct lack of oxygen and there’s almost no moisture either. All considered, it is one of the most dangerous, inhospitable and unpleasant places in the world. Surprisingly, there are no permanent inhabitants…

Sunday, 11 October 2015

Top 10 Real incident that prove Time Travel Exist

1. Charlie Chaplin Movie’s Cell Phone – January 6, 1928
Charlie_Chaplin_Cell_PhoneIn the DVD extras of Chaplin’s “The Circus”, people were given access to a short film and photos of the movie’s premiere at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in 1928.  In this footage it appears that a woman is walking around and talking on a cell phone.
Since Cell phones do not exist in 1928 this has lead people to suspect that time travel is possible.  However this doesn’t explain who they would be talking to and what cell tower they would be using.  Perhaps something else is going on that we haven’t thought of yet.
Others suspect that maybe this person is using an ear trumpet but this doesn’t really explain why she appears to be talking and laughing into the device.
2. Compact Disc Case in the 1800s
img5A painting from the 1800s shows of a man holding what looks like a fancy CD box.
The earliest form of plastic wasn’t invented until the mid-1800s, and (obviously) Compact Discs weren’t in use until the 1980s.
Do you know what he is holding?

3. Hit and run Victim from the Past
193e0ukvxo9r4jpgIn mid-June 1950 a man in his early thirties named Rudolph Fentz wearing 19th century clothes was hit by a car and killed at New York City’s Time Square.  The investigation by a NYPD policeman revealed that the man had disappeared without trace in 1876 in the age of 29.
The items in his possession were
• a copper token for a beer
• a bill for the care of a horse and the washing of a carriage
• a letter from 1876
• 70 dollars and business cards
This man was appeared to still be 29 and there was no explanation as to how he went from 1876 to 1950!
4. The Montauk Project Conspiracy
montauk_dishThe Montauk Air Force Station is said to have an interdimensional tunnel in its subterranean laboratory that allowed scientists to travel back to 1943.  This Idea has been spread by two men, the author Preston B. Nichols and Al Bielek in the 1980s, when they had began to “recover repressed memories of working in the lab”.
What purpose could the Air Force have going back to 1943?
5. Time travelling Hipster
193d63yf1jo89jpgA photograph from 1941 taken during the South Fork Bridge reopening in Gold Bridge, Canada appears to show a time traveler.  It has claimed that his clothing, sunglasses, and logo printed T-shirt are very modern and he is holding a portable camera.
None of these things existed in the 1940s. People have nick-named him the ‘Time Traveling Hipster’.  I would love to find out if there is any proof that this isn’t photoshopped.
6. The Philadelphia Experiment, 1943
01The Philadelphia Experiment is a naval military experiment that is said to have been carried out by the U.S. Navy at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, sometime around October 28, 1943.
It is said that the U.S. Navy destroyer escort USS Eldridge was to be rendered invisible to enemy devices and teleported from Pennsylvania to Virginia.  Some reports allege that the warship travelled back in time for about 10 seconds.
In this example it also shows how teleportation and time travel can go wrong because the crew ended up tragically reappearing in the walls of the ship and many of them are said to have not survived the trip.
7. Sir Victor Goddard Flight to Future
sir-victor-goddardIn 1935 Sir Victor Goddard, a British Royal Air Force officer, was flying his plane over an abandoned airfield at Drem, Edinburgh.  During his returning journey over the Drem airfield, he was shocked when he looked down to see the airfield had beencompletely renovated and was now in use by mechanics in blue overalls and occupied by four yellow planes parked on the runway.
Four years later in 1939, The Royal Air Force began to paint their planes yellow and the mechanics uniforms were switched to blue.  Was this a premonition, interdimensional shift or jump into the future?
8. Evidence of time travel in Chinese tomb?
timetravelartifactwatch1In December 2008, Chinese archaeologists removed the opening of a giant coffin in the Si Qing tomb located in Shangsi County, which they strongly believed to be an undisturbed for 400 years.
As they removed the area around the coffin, however, they were shocked and amazed to find a small piece of metal shaped like a watch, with the time frozen at 10:06.  Also the word “Swiss” was engraved on the back.
If the tomb was truly undisturbed for 400 years, why was there a modern artifact? Perhaps it was dropped by a time traveler?
9. The Moberly–Jourdain incident
3aeee__Moverly-Jourdain-Incident-Ten-More-Questions-to-Make-you-Think_thumbIn 1901 two women claim that they traveled back into time.  While they were visiting a small chateau in versailles they say they suddenly found themselves in the time of the french revolution.  They saw many famous people from that time including Marie Antoinette and the Comte de Vaudreuil.
10. The Vanishing Hotel
78320195In 1979 two couples were traveling through France on their way to Spain stayed over night at an old fashioned looking hotel.  After their stay they were unable to find the hotel and the pictures they took while they were staying at the hotel also never developed.   Could they have jumped to an alternate reality?

Thursday, 8 October 2015

Top 16 Hollywood movies you should watch before you die


1.
Predestination (2014)
    7.4/10  
The life of a time-traveling Temporal Agent. On his final assignment, he must pursue the one criminal that has eluded him throughout time. (97 mins.)
2.
Inception (2010)
    8.8/10  
A thief who steals corporate secrets through use of dream-sharing technology is given the inverse task of planting an idea into the mind of a CEO. (148 mins.)
3.
The Expendables (2010)
    6.5/10  
A CIA operative hires a team of mercenaries to eliminate a Latin dictator and a renegade CIA agent. (103 mins.)
4.
Lockout (2012)
    6.1/10  
A man wrongly convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage against the U.S. is offered his freedom if he can rescue the president's daughter from an outer space prison taken over by violent inmates. (95 mins.)
5.
The Dark Knight (2008)
    9.0/10  
When the menace known as the Joker wreaks havoc and chaos on the people of Gotham, the caped crusader must come to terms with one of the greatest psychological tests of his ability to fight injustice. (152 mins.)
6.
Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol (2011)
    7.4/10  
The IMF is shut down when it's implicated in the bombing of the Kremlin, causing Ethan Hunt and his new team to go rogue to clear their organization's name. (133 mins.)
Director: Brad Bird
7.
Die Hard (1988)
    8.3/10  
John McClane, officer of the NYPD, tries to save wife Holly Gennaro and several others, taken hostage by German terrorist Hans Gruber during a Christmas party at the Nakatomi Plaza in Los Angeles. (131 mins.)
Director: John McTiernan
8.
Die Hard: With a Vengeance (1995)
    7.6/10  
John McClane and a Harlem store owner are targeted by German terrorist Simon Gruber in New York City, where he plans to rob the Federal Reserve Building. (131 mins.)
Director: John McTiernan
9.
Shutter Island (2010)
    8.1/10  
A U.S Marshal investigates the disappearance of a murderess who escaped from a hospital for the criminally insane. (138 mins.)
Director: Martin Scorsese
10.
Catch Me If You Can (2002)
    8.0/10  
A true story about Frank Abagnale Jr., who, before his 19th birthday, successfully conned millions of dollars' worth of checks as a Pan Am pilot, doctor, and legal prosecutor. (141 mins.)
Director: Steven Spielberg
11.
Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005)
    6.5/10  
A bored married couple is surprised to learn that they are both assassins hired by competing agencies to kill each other. (120 mins.)
Director: Doug Liman
12.
Ocean's Eleven (2001)
    7.8/10  
Danny Ocean and his eleven accomplices plan to rob three Las Vegas casinos simultaneously. (116 mins.)
13.
Buried (2010)
    7.0/10  
Paul is a U.S. truck driver working in Iraq. After an attack by a group of Iraqis he wakes to find he is buried alive inside a coffin. With only a lighter and a cell phone it's a race against time to escape this claustrophobic death trap. (95 mins.)
Director: Rodrigo Cortés
14.
Open Grave (2013)
    6.3/10  
A man wakes up in the wilderness, in a pit full of dead bodies, with no memory and must determine if the murderer is one of the strangers who rescued him, or if he himself is the killer. (102 mins.)
15.
The Butterfly Effect (2004)
    7.7/10  
A young man blocks out harmful memories of significant events of his life. As he grows up, he finds a way to remember these lost memories and a supernatural way to alter his life. (113 mins.)
16.
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)
    6.0/10  
A teenager becomes a major competitor in the world of drift racing after moving in with his father in Tokyo to avoid a jail sentence in America. (104 mins.)
Director: Justin Lin