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      <title>Making Light :: Glowing Tomb :: comments</title>
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      <title>Glowing Tomb</title>
      <description>So there I was in South Street Cemetery, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, having my own personal Buffy moment. Nine-thirty pm tonight....</description>
      <content:encoded>So there I was in South Street Cemetery, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, having my own personal Buffy moment. Nine-thirty pm tonight....</content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #1 from Zack Weinberg</title>
         <description>comment from Zack Weinberg on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>With my skeptickal hat on, the first thing that it occurs to me to wonder is what the tombstone is made of.  You could get that effect from a stone made mostly of radioluminescent mineral, with a small amount of something radioactive...</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 12:43 AM by Zack Weinberg</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 00:43:22 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #2 from jere7my</title>
         <description>comment from jere7my on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Nifty!  I'll have to check that out next time I visit my mom.  I saw something similar while looking out my bedroom window at Greenridge Cemetery in Saratoga Springs, where one gravestone among dozens blazed with a bright yellow-orange light.  It turned out to have a mundane explanation (hint: the gravestone faced west), but at the time it was quite startling.  <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jere7my/409399472/" rel="nofollow">I took a picture.</a></p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  1:09 AM by jere7my</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 01:09:22 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #3 from xeger</title>
         <description>comment from xeger on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I feel somehow let down here ... no vampires?  Evil slayers?  Ninjas?  Priests?!?  Inquiring minds want to know!</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  1:18 AM by xeger</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 01:18:27 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #4 from Linkmeister</title>
         <description>comment from Linkmeister on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I'm really really amused at the Google ads: Lighted Bocce Sets! Glow Sticks! Glow and Battery Lighted Novelties!  Best of all, Light Up Ice Cubes!</p>

<p>I'll take a martini, rocks.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  1:21 AM by Linkmeister</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 01:21:35 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #5 from Mary Dell</title>
         <description>comment from Mary Dell on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Maybe the author of the book hangs out behind the tombstone with a lantern on Saturday nights...</p>

<p><i>Fifty-five miles south of where I live, site of the nearest stop light</i></p>

<p>So, I'm guessing that being an EMT and living in BFE, you have the longest commute evah?  Now I don't feel so bad about my 20 (slow, urban) miles.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  2:13 AM by Mary Dell</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 02:13:21 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #6 from Aquila</title>
         <description>comment from Aquila on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Yes, I know I should avoid the urge, but I just have to say it. If Doyle is there surely it's an Angel moment, not a Buffy one? </p>

<p>My apologies to the name's owner.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  2:32 AM by Aquila</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 02:32:47 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #7 from elise</title>
         <description>comment from elise on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Oh, good; I wasn't the only one who thought that.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  2:44 AM by elise</p></content:encoded>
         <link>http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#210876</link>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 02:44:25 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #8 from Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers)</title>
         <description>comment from Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers) on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Are you sure that wasn't in Innsmouth?<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  2:49 AM by Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers)</p></content:encoded>
         <link>http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#210877</link>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 02:49:23 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #9 from PixelFish</title>
         <description>comment from PixelFish on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Ooooo...that sounds kinda neat. I'll have to check that out now that I live here in NE. :) Thanks for sharing this with us.</p>

<p><br />
(Also, I had the same reaction as Elise and Aquila, but then common sense told me it must be Jim Macdonald posting this--I read this first through the LJ feed and it doesn't post who posts.)</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  7:47 AM by PixelFish</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 07:47:58 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #10 from Lazygal</title>
         <description>comment from Lazygal on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>How can you mention Littleton (one of *my* favorite towns, too) without mentioning Chutters?  And The Village Bookstore has gone downhill in the past few years - although St. J's finally got one again, which sort of makes up for it.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  7:50 AM by Lazygal</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 07:50:34 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #11 from Connie H.</title>
         <description>comment from Connie H. on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>OK, I've already thought about a tasteful rocket- or dragon-shaped tombstone, but I'm going to direct my estate to establish a small fund to pay for annually coating the monument in luminescent paint.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  7:54 AM by Connie H.</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #12 from Diatryma</title>
         <description>comment from Diatryma on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>One of my more adrenaline-soaked Alpha moments this year was at the cemetery.  We had a good-sized group sitting there in the dark, and I glanced at one of the tombstones, which looked menacing in my peripheral vision.  "Nope, that's just a weird shape for a stone," I thought, and then it moved again.  Luckily, I realized it was someone leaning on the tombstone before shouting about an attacking gargoyle.<br />
That was pretty close to when someone decided flash photography would be a good idea.  My eyes will never be the same.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  9:06 AM by Diatryma</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 09:06:53 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #13 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Ah, yes, <a href="http://gonewengland.about.com/cs/nhshopping/a/aacandycounter.htm" rel="nofollow">Chutter's General Store</a>.  Home of the world's longest candy counter.  They built that when they bought out the karate studio that used to be in the back of the building and extended the store into the whole space.  They have a little place built near the front of the store where you can stand if you want to get a photo of the entire length of the candy counter.  It really is quite impressive.  Alas, the movie theater across the street won't let you bring in outside candy.  (That movie theater, BTW, is fireproof, following the disastrous fire that leveled the entire block.) The theater did, however, host two world premieres, so that's a good thing.  (They don't have the largest screen in the North Country, though.  The largest screen is at the Rialto in Lancaster.)</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 10:42 AM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 10:42:09 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #14 from ajay</title>
         <description>comment from ajay on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I'm just intrigued to see that Mr Macdonald refers to her as 'Doyle'. It reminds me of the story about the famous (and famously reserved) climber Bill Tilman. According to his long-time climbing companion, Eric Shipton, the following conversation happened one evening in a tent in the Himalayas:</p>

<p>SHIPTON: I say, we've been climbing together for more than twelve years now. How would it be if you called me 'Eric' and I called you 'Bill'?</p>

<p>TILMAN: (after a thoughtful pause) No, I think 'Shipton' and 'Tilman' will do fine, thank you.</p>

<p>As for the glow, it could be phosphorescence from decaying vegetation - moss, perhaps - but it's difficult to see why it should be on one tombstone only, or why it should have persisted for so long.</p>

<p>Or if the stone's slightly more polished than its neighbours, it could be reflecting light that they aren't. </p>

<p>Logically, it's either reflected light, or it's originating from the tombstone... interesting. More research is needed.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 11:13 AM by ajay</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 11:13:27 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #15 from Dan Blum</title>
         <description>comment from Dan Blum on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Littleton is also home to the <a href="http://www.littletoncoin.com/" rel="nofollow">Littleton Coin Company</a>. I don't know how great a coin dealer they really are, but back in the 1970s and 1980s they had a lot of inexpensive cool items they'd advertise to kids to try to get them into coin collecting - 19th-century ceramic Thai gambling tokens, silver Ottoman coins, small change from the Roman Empire and Lydia, etc. Probably overpriced, but for $5, who cares? I still have all of them.</p>

<p>As for the tombstones, I'm thinking phosphorescent lichen, but that's just a wild guess.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 11:18 AM by Dan Blum</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 11:18:11 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #16 from Claude Muncey</title>
         <description>comment from Claude Muncey on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Bruce @8 -- </p>

<p>I think it's closer to Arkham.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 11:20 AM by Claude Muncey</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 11:20:02 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #17 from Lizzy L</title>
         <description>comment from Lizzy L on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Bruce at 8, Claude at 16: just down the road from Dunwich, across the Miskatonic Bridge?  </p>

<p>Somewhere, the shade of Lovecraft is smiling... </p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 12:54 PM by Lizzy L</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 12:54:18 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #18 from ethan</title>
         <description>comment from ethan on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>ajay #14: It reminds me of the way Fox Mulder even made his parents call him Mulder.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 12:57 PM by ethan</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 12:57:07 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #19 from Kip W</title>
         <description>comment from Kip W on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I saw the same book on a table at Geri Sullivan's house yesterday. I started thinking I should get one, then remembered she gave us one as a housewarming present two years ago.</p>

<p>Did you try shining the light on a spot on the tombstone, then turning it off, to see if it made a temporary bright spot?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  1:07 PM by Kip W</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 13:07:18 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #20 from Diatryma</title>
         <description>comment from Diatryma on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>With no information to go on, I wonder if the stone is drawing up a phosphorescent substance from the soil, like saltpeter growing on walls.  </p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  1:33 PM by Diatryma</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 13:33:24 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #21 from Joel Polowin</title>
         <description>comment from Joel Polowin on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Spectrophotometric analysis of the light would probably give a lot of useful information.</p>

<p>I'm startled that my Googling doesn't turn up any references to this phenomenon apart from this blog.  Hasn't <i>anyone</i> investigated this and posted about it, either a serious examination or a "look -- ectoplasm!" piece from the Weekly World Enquirer?<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  1:44 PM by Joel Polowin</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 13:44:40 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #22 from Lance Weber</title>
         <description>comment from Lance Weber on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>It always amazes me when you people refuse to consider the simplest of scientific explanations for phenomena like this.</p>

<p>Obviously one of our more libertarian minded Founding Fathers is buried here. The light is generated by energy harnessed from the poor man spinning in his grave.</p>

<p>*sheesh*<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  2:01 PM by Lance Weber</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 14:01:16 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #23 from Linkmeister</title>
         <description>comment from Linkmeister on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Lance @ #22, maybe not a Founding Father or Mother of the US, anyway; of something else, perhaps?</p>

<p>Who's buried in the luminescent tomb?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  2:22 PM by Linkmeister</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 14:22:09 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #24 from Linkmeister</title>
         <description>comment from Linkmeister on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Dammit, for proper effect that should have been typed as Something Else.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  2:23 PM by Linkmeister</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 14:23:16 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #25 from Scott D-S</title>
         <description>comment from Scott D-S on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Actually, this is very easily explained. It's one of those quaint New England things, where place names get shortened by locals to confuse the tourist trade.</p>

<p>The town is really called Little <i>Hangle</i>ton</p>

<p>Knowing that, a greenish glowing tombstone isn't really a big deal...</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  2:32 PM by Scott D-S</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 14:32:05 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #26 from B. Durbin</title>
         <description>comment from B. Durbin on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Google is my friend!</p>

<p>A newspaper article mentions the <a href="http://archive.seacoastonline.com/2003news/10252003/news/57132.htm" rel="nofollow">glowing tombstone</a> at the end. But a <a href="http://theshadowlands.net/places/newhampshire.htm" rel="nofollow">directory of haunted places</a> does not.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  2:33 PM by B. Durbin</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #27 from Randolph Fritz</title>
         <description>comment from Randolph Fritz on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Could the stone be made of a <a href="http://www.galleries.com/minerals/property/pleochro.htm#phos" rel="nofollow">phosphorescent mineral</a>?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  2:59 PM by Randolph Fritz</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 14:59:53 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #28 from Don Simpson</title>
         <description>comment from Don Simpson on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Lots of speculation, no investigation. Feh. I live on the other side of the continent, and have no car, or I'd go look. There are indeed plenty of tests that could be made....</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  5:11 PM by Don Simpson</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 17:11:01 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #29 from Gar Lipow</title>
         <description>comment from Gar Lipow on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I think Connie H. hit on the explanation:</p>

<p>>OK, I've already thought about a tasteful rocket- or dragon-shaped tombstone, but I'm going to direct my estate to establish a small fund to pay for annually coating the monument in luminescent paint.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  5:48 PM by Gar Lipow</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #30 from Wim L</title>
         <description>comment from Wim L on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Or perhaps it's a stone with a lot of zinc sulfide particles. I like Kip W's experiment proposed in #19.</p>

<p>Maybe the gravestone was <a href="http://optics.org/cws/article/research/19184" rel="nofollow">cast with fiber optics</a> and it's transmitting light from the network of caverns below (caverns being invariably home to luminescent fungi, as we know from D&D).</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  6:36 PM by Wim L</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #31 from Fragano Ledgister</title>
         <description>comment from Fragano Ledgister on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>When do you expect the Great Old Ones to emerge? Will moving the New Hampshire primary arouse them from their slumbers?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  7:44 PM by Fragano Ledgister</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 19:44:57 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #32 from Joel Polowin</title>
         <description>comment from Joel Polowin on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Are there any natural minerals that phosphoresce to this extent, after exposure to the visible/UV light of natural sunlight (rather than to UV from a lamp)?<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  8:05 PM by Joel Polowin</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 20:05:26 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #33 from Mike Berry</title>
         <description>comment from Mike Berry on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I grew up in Portsmouth. It's a weird, but very hospitable town. (Newburyport, just down the turnpike, is reputedly the model for Innsmouth.) </p>

<p>The glowing tombstone wasn't part of the local folklore when I was growing up, and South Street Cemetery is only three blocks from my parents' house. But I did have a genuine UFO encounter in nearby Rye. From an introduction I wrote a few years back for "The Campfire Collection":</p>

<p>One warm night in the early Eighties, my friends Tom, Ken and I were riding along the beach road in my parents' big, red Plymouth Satellite, staving off boredom with conversation and beer. We stopped at Odiorne Point State Park, just over the town border in Rye, a favorite late-night hang-out. We climbed a small hill that overlooked the parking lot and some service buildings. We sat and talked about the things that interest college students during their summer breaks.</p>

<p>At some point, Tom grabbed my arm and whispered, "What's that?"</p>

<p>"What?" I said.</p>

<p>"That light!" </p>

<p>I looked. There was a big, bright, white light just above the roof of the bath house. Presumably it had been placed there so no one would trip on the stairs in the dark. </p>

<p>I said, "That's the light over the bath house. What's your problem?"</p>

<p>And then the light suddenly dimmed to half its intensity -- and moved.</p>

<p>We certainly knew that mysterious light at Odiorne Point was Not Right. It moved in spooky silence, without even the whisper of any motor. It dipped and weaved at angles not likely for any kind of aircraft with which I am familiar. It was not a weather balloon. It was not swamp gas.</p>

<p>The light hovered over the bath house for a few minutes, then zigged and zagged through the air until it was out over the dark water, where it was joined by two other glowing, silent objects. Ken, Tom and I watched open-mouthed as these lights flew out to sea and then disappeared from view. We ran for the car.</p>

<p>From a restaurant pay phone, Ken called Pease Air Force Base in nearby Newington and asked if they had received any reports of strange lights in the sky. They claimed not to know what the hell we were talking about. (Although of course they would say that, wouldn't they?)</p>

<p>I have no explanation for what we saw that night. That's why I am confident in saying that it was an Unidentified Flying Object. It was definitely something that flew and that could not be recognized. <br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007  8:57 PM by Mike Berry</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #34 from A.J. Luxton</title>
         <description>comment from A.J. Luxton on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Aren't there various molds and mosses that produce bioluminescence?  Or am I confusing life with Dungeons & Dragons again?</p>

<p>("Debbie, your cleric has been raised to the 8th level.  I think it's time you learn how to REALLY cast spells.")<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 10:12 PM by A.J. Luxton</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 22:12:57 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #35 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>The reason I didn't shine a light on the tombstone to see if it made a difference is because we were still quite far away -- on the other side of the pond -- and Doyle wasn't willing to go cross-country in the dark.  I too wondered whether -- while the glow was visible at 200 yards -- whether it would be visible at 20 feet.</p>

<p>We thought about lichen or other bioluminescence.  It's a lot too even for that, and it would be really obvious by daylight.  A mineral that fluoresces in response to radioactive material is possible -- New Hampshire in general is radioactive (the granite produces lots of radon).  My best guess is that it's a slab of rock that has a lot of quartz crystals or mica and it was cut so that they've formed corner reflectors, and what we're seeing is reflected sky glow. </p>

<p>I did find <a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?q=%22south+street+cemetary%22+portsmouth+NH&sourceid=navclient-ff&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1B3GGGL_enUS177US203" rel="nofollow">one link to the glowing gravestone</a> last night when I was writing this post, but you have to misspell 'cemetery' as 'cemetary."  (You'll also notice that the location is <i>wrong</i>.)</p>

<p>Meanwhile, more <a href="http://www.hollowhill.com/nh/portsmouth-1.htm" rel="nofollow">Haunted Portsmouth</a> (including a number of entries from South Street Cemetery).</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 10:51 PM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 22:51:38 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #36 from Matt McIrvin</title>
         <description>comment from Matt McIrvin on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I live in Massachusetts not too far from there.  Now you've got me wanting to go up there and take a look.</p>

<p>(I had no idea Newburyport was the model for Innsmouth; it's even closer to here and I was just there watching a friend <a href="http://doctroid.livejournal.com/92305.html" rel="nofollow">morris dance</a>.)<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 11:38 PM by Matt McIrvin</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 23:38:30 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #37 from Marith</title>
         <description>comment from Marith on  3.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Jer37my @ #2,  that is a nifty picture.  I would have been distinctly unsettled on first seeing that in RL.</p>

<p>How long has phosphorescent paint been available commercially?  </p>
	 <p>Posted September  3, 2007 11:58 PM by Marith</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 23:58:53 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #38 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Portsmouth is just an hour by road north of Boston.</p>

<p>Looking for glowing tombstones isn't the only thing to do in town, either.  (Did you know that they have USS Albacore up on pylons for public display?)</p>

<p>USS Albacore is in Albacore Park, beside RT 1 Bypass.  (Get off I-95 at the Portsmouth Circle.  (Back before there were Interstates, the Portsmouth Circle was a rotary where US 1 (The Old Boston Post Road, the main road up the East Coast) met New Hampshire 16 (the road up the eastern boundary of the state, up into the White Mountains).  Head north.  Pretty soon (just past Maplewood), you'll see USS Albacore on the left (west side of road).</p>

<p>The Portsmouth Circle is famous for having the closest liquor store to Maine.  Maine alcohol control board agents allegedly hang out in a van in the parking lot of the motel across the street watching with binoculars for people with Maine license plates coming out of the liquor store and heading back to Maine.  They radio back and as soon as the person crosses the bridge he or she gets nailed for the Maine liquor tax.  (Or so I have heard.)</p>

<p>USS Albacore has the "Albacore hull," which was at the time a radical re-thinking of submarine design.  It was optimized for submerged speed.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 12:05 AM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 00:05:41 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #39 from Jon Meltzer</title>
         <description>comment from Jon Meltzer on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>#36: Back in Lovecraft's day Newburyport was very different from the resort it is now. Rising housing prices and yuppification have forced all of the Deep Ones out. (They're now in Seabrook and Amesbury.)</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  1:02 AM by Jon Meltzer</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 01:02:03 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #40 from Jon H</title>
         <description>comment from Jon H on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>What's the date on the tombstone? Maybe it was placed during the period of radium-mania.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  3:30 AM by Jon H</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 03:30:29 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #41 from Jon H</title>
         <description>comment from Jon H on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Another idea would be to pick up a UV source and point that at the stone. Edmunds scientific has a UV LED keychain for a few bucks. Works great on scorpions.</p>

<p>Does it glow all night? Or only for a period after sundown?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  3:35 AM by Jon H</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 03:35:27 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #42 from ajay</title>
         <description>comment from ajay on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><i>Lots of speculation, no investigation. Feh. I live on the other side of the continent, and have no car, or I'd go look. There are indeed plenty of tests that could be made....</i></p>

<p>Oooh! Fluorosphere Road Trip! Can we? Please?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  4:55 AM by ajay</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 04:55:50 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #43 from joel hanes</title>
         <description>comment from joel hanes on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I've seen a big phosphorescent stripe running through the Canadian shield rock in SW Ontario's Quetico Park, and phosphorescent lichen there and in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area.<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  5:13 AM by joel hanes</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 05:13:54 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #44 from Earl Cooley III</title>
         <description>comment from Earl Cooley III on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Marith #37 <em>How long has phosphorescent paint been available commercially?</em></p>

<p><a href="http://www.computersmiths.com/chineseinvention/" rel="nofollow">Sung Dynasty China</a></p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  5:27 AM by Earl Cooley III</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #45 from Audrey Estock</title>
         <description>comment from Audrey Estock on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Joel @ 21: <em>Hasn't anyone investigated this and posted about it, either a serious examination or a "look -- ectoplasm!" piece from the Weekly World Enquirer?</em></p>

<p>I'd say not. I grew up in Dover, NH, which is about a 20-25 minute drive to Portsmouth (though for the brief time I actually LIVED in Portsmouth my parents had me continue commuting to Dover for school. That lasted a whole month, for some crazy reason).</p>

<p>But besides living in Dover for over ten years and Portsmouth for a good five months I've never even HEARD of this tombstone. Nor has anyone in my family. Or any of their friends that they've asked.</p>

<p>It's probably not something widely known about, and that book is probably the only reason people still go to look for it.</p>

<p>On another note, I wish I was still living in Dover, now. This is going to annoy me for a while.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  5:55 AM by Audrey Estock</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 05:55:39 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #46 from Lila</title>
         <description>comment from Lila on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Jon H @ #40: you mean like <a href="http://www.museumofquackery.com/giftshop/images/vigoradium.jpg" rel="nofollow">this?</a></p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  8:07 AM by Lila</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 08:07:48 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #47 from Lance Weber</title>
         <description>comment from Lance Weber on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>#42 Ajay: Oooh, I'm in! Can we make a writing lab out of it?</p>

<p><i>Fluorosphere Expeditions</i><br />
Chapter 1: Secrets of the Glowing Tomb<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  8:25 AM by Lance Weber</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 08:25:02 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #48 from Ken Houghton</title>
         <description>comment from Ken Houghton on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Glow-Stone-Ellen-Dreyer/dp/1561453706/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/105-5676837-0512426?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1188909523&sr=1-1" rel="nofollow">The Glow Stone</a>?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  8:41 AM by Ken Houghton</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 08:41:00 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #49 from ajay</title>
         <description>comment from ajay on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>47:<i> Oooh, I'm in! Can we make a writing lab out of it?</i></p>

<p><i>Fluorosphere Expeditions<br />
Chapter 1: Secrets of the Glowing Tomb</i></p>

<p>Good idea. I'll sort out the transport, you bring the Xopher Snacks.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  9:33 AM by ajay</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 09:33:56 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #50 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>For the Fluorosphere Quest of the Glowing Grave, here's what we'll need:</p>

<p>Minimum two people with those <a href="http://www.google.com/products?q=Cobra+Micro+Talk+5-Mile+2-Way+Radio&sourceid=navclient-ff&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1B3GGGL_enUS177US203" rel="nofollow">little walkie-talkie things</a>.  Helpful if at least one is knowledgeable about rocks.</p>

<p>Each person carries a whistle and at least two flashlights (one white lens, one red or blue lens).</p>

<p>Sticks of chalk.</p>

<p>Compasses.</p>

<p>Whistles.</p>

<p>Notepads and pens.</p>

<p>Portable UV and IR sources.</p>

<p>Large scales USCGS survey map.</p>

<p>(GPS is helpful.)</p>

<p>(Laser pointer is helpful.)</p>

<p>(Camera on tripod with decent optics and a time-lapse option useful.)</p>

<p>Pick a night with decent weather.  First, scout out the ground during daylight.  Then return just after sunset but before moonrise.  Locate the tombstone from the usual viewing position on the path, across the pond.  Then one person skirts the pond and finds the tombstone there.  Person who stays on the path keeps the laser pointer.  Use the radios and the laser pointer to locate the exact tombstone (assuming that it isn't obviously glowing from close up).</p>

<p>(Note: as a magician I am naturally suspicious of any phenomenon that <i>must</i> be viewed from a certain distance or a certain angle.)</p>

<p>Once the tomb is located by the person who went cross-country, mark it with the chalk so that it can be reliably found again during daylight.</p>

<p>Then: Place one of the white-lensed flashlights against the stone, turn it on and wait a bit (guard your night vision while you're doing this!).  See if there's a noticeable more-brightly -glowing spot where the flashlight touched it.  Repeat with the IR and UV sources.</p>

<p>The person on the path makes a mark on the path with chalk, and takes a compass bearing on the stone.  The person at the stone takes a compass bearing back to the person on the path (sighting on that person's color-lensed flashlight).</p>

<p>Next day, return during daylight to examine the tombstone.  Note when it was erected and who's buried there.   Note location of tomb on map.  Hit the library and research everything.</p>

<p>A query to the authors of the guidebook asking "When and how did you first learn of this?" might be helpful.</p>

<p>Note: at least one of the on-line guides to Haunted New England urges caution in the South Street Cemetery after dark since homeless persons apparently camp there.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  9:45 AM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 09:45:42 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #51 from John L</title>
         <description>comment from John L on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>You could also contact TAPS (The Atlantic Paranormal Society); I think they're based out of NY somewhere.  They've got the "Ghost Hunters" show on the Sci-Fi Channel and they are very professional.  They usually go around debunking haunted houses but I bet they could figure out what is making this tombstone glow.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  9:58 AM by John L</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #52 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>What fun is that when we could have a Road Trip?</p>

<p>I already have the radios, compasses, and whistles....</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 10:20 AM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 10:20:21 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #53 from Joel Polowin</title>
         <description>comment from Joel Polowin on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>What's the purpose of testing with an IR source?  I can't think of any way that would produce visible light.  (Unless it's a <i>really powerful</i> IR source, of course, but you probably don't want to do that.)</p>

<p>Some kind of spectrometer shouldn't be too hard to borrow.  Getting the spectral pattern could be very useful.<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 10:35 AM by Joel Polowin</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #54 from John Houghton</title>
         <description>comment from John Houghton on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>James D. Macdonald (50): <br />
 I can see it now, the <b>Jim Macdonald Paranormal Investigation Go Kit&trade;</b> &mdash; what, you don't have one already packed and by the door? [Insert photo of Jim's hallway, crowded to capacity with racks of  color-coded go kits, enough so that the colors get interesting (quickly now, grab the puce colored bag, column 4 row 6!)].<br />
Hmmm. I shouldn't comment, I'm only missing the UV light source, and the USGS 7.5 quad for the area (but I can print an equivalent one). I even have a choice of whistles, from English Bobby, to modern shepherd's, to various pennywhistles in D D' A and oh, yeah, a safety whistle on each of the compass lanyards,<br />
GPS - check (waterproof even), Laser pointer, red flashlight, a couple of GMRS/FRS radios, multiple ranger compasses with sighting mirrors, check.<br />
I can't leave Marlborough MA until 6pm this evening, need to be back by 2:45 tomorrow afternoon. The moon doesn't rise until 11:30 tonight.<br />
I am puzzled why you think we'll need to take the back bearing, though.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 10:35 AM by John Houghton</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #55 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I'd like to take a back-bearing in order to check the accuracy of the original bearing.</p>

<p>Reason for the IR source:  it was part of the universal invisible-ink detection setup the USG used during WWII to find invisible ink in suspected documents.  The basic idea is to add energy in various parts of the spectrum to see what happens.</p>

<p>I can imagine an object that glows in response to heat.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 10:55 AM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #56 from John Houghton</title>
         <description>comment from John Houghton on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>While I don't know of natural minerals that glow under IR, and IR isn't in the standard mineral ID tool kit, I have a little plastic IR indicator patch for checking remote controls.<br />
OK, I'll go with a back-bearing just in case of very localized magnetic anomalies.<br />
Most everything pyroluminesces (sp?) under enough heat.<br />
Hmm, I just found my portable UV source, cheap so just long-wave.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 11:10 AM by John Houghton</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #57 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>We're not just looking for natural minerals.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 11:20 AM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #58 from wolfa</title>
         <description>comment from wolfa on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>When you all go visit Portsmouth, try either The Friendly Toast, for diner-ish food (I had a lovely gingerbread waffle with pomegranate sauce) or The Green Monkey, for pricey-ish food. </p>

<p>I can no longer recommend the goat cheese truffles at the Mainely Gourmet, because the last three times I got them, they were mouldy. But when they're not, they're absolutely delicious.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 11:34 AM by wolfa</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #59 from Epacris</title>
         <description>comment from Epacris on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>James @ 57: You mean you're looking for a glow of <em>no natural</em> origin?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 12:07 PM by Epacris</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #60 from Michelle</title>
         <description>comment from Michelle on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>They have a glowing tombstone in the Breckenridge, Colorado Cemetery as well.  We used to go look at when we were in high school. </p>

<p>I suspect that it was available for customers to order through funeral homes at one point.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 12:17 PM by Michelle</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #61 from John Houghton proposes to shine some light</title>
         <description>comment from John Houghton proposes to shine some light on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><b>Road Trip!<br />
</b>This far out, the weather may be iffy, but Saturday evening, Sept 8th, 2007 with a revisit during the day on Sunday the 9th (fits well with a trip I'm taking to Maine, so it works for me) we should be able to guage the weather for a go/nogo on the morning of the 7th. I'll be starting from Marlborough, MA. Close to the full moon, so lighting (darking?) should be good. I've got nearly everything on Jim's list.<br />
Any takers? Or are some things better left to the Elder Ones?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 12:38 PM by John Houghton proposes to shine some light</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #62 from ajay</title>
         <description>comment from ajay on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Now available from the Zwingle Funeral Corporation of America - the D-50 Atomatic Nuclear Grave Marker!<br />
The D-50 Atomatic is manufactured using modern atomic technology, developed by the AEC. With an Atomatic, your loved one can rest in peace - peace through superior firepower! Each Atomatic contains not less than six ounces of radioactive Thorium, giving it a soft white radiance that will set your plot apart from the rest.</p>

<p>The Atomatic is not available to customers outside the U.S. <br />
WARNING: the Surgeon General of the United States advises that radioactive tombstones have been linked to outbreaks of Atom Zombie Men. </p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 12:40 PM by ajay</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #63 from ajay</title>
         <description>comment from ajay on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>61: I'd go, but I'm otherwise engaged and in the wrong continent anyway. But well done. <br />
And if we see a post from you on this thread in about five days that just says:</p>

<p>"No! They're breaking down the door! Their horrible forms surround me..."</p>

<p>...well, then, I guess we'll all feel a little guilty.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 12:44 PM by ajay</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #64 from Steve Buchheit</title>
         <description>comment from Steve Buchheit on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>#61, John Houghton, If memory serves, the 11 is the New Moon (not the full moon).</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  1:04 PM by Steve Buchheit</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #65 from Lance Weber</title>
         <description>comment from Lance Weber on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Ajay #63: I'm torn between checking flights from Denver* and letting the <strike>bait</strike> intrepid explorers go first.</p>

<p><i>* Because as soon as I start checking flights, I'm 80% committed to go, which leads to following conversation:<br />
"So, honey, this thing came up for the weekend, I gotta fly outta town. No, it's not for work. Errr, no, it's not a con either. Well there's this glowing tombstone in New England..."</i><br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  1:05 PM by Lance Weber</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #66 from Carrie S.</title>
         <description>comment from Carrie S. on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>If it glows from up close, you might also try setting up an enclosure around the stone to eliminate the possibility of reflected light.  Doesn't have to be elaborate--draping it with an opaque cloth would do so long as there's room to get one's head under without letting in outside light.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  1:19 PM by Carrie S.</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #67 from ajay</title>
         <description>comment from ajay on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>65: if you're in Denver, you and Michelle can check out the one in Breckinridge. (see comment 60)</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  1:35 PM by ajay</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #68 from joann</title>
         <description>comment from joann on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Steve #64:</p>

<p>Correct. The full moon was last weekend-ish. My Google Moon Tool tells me that it's 3rd quarter 43% of full.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  1:58 PM by joann</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #69 from mds</title>
         <description>comment from mds on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>ajay @ 63</p>

<blockquote>"No! They're breaking down the door! Their horrible forms surround me..."</blockquote>

<p>Ahem.  "<em>Even as I write this</em>, they're breaking down the door!"  For some reason, it's important to explicitly note that one is transcribing as such things occur.</p>

<p>And woe betide the minions of darkness that break down Mr. Macdonald's door.  'Cause you know he's got a kit for <em>that</em> eventuality, too.  ("With your free hand, rip the insulating tape from the proton pack contacts...")</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  2:13 PM by mds</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 14:13:42 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #70 from Joel Polowin</title>
         <description>comment from Joel Polowin on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>John Houton @ 56, I think I get it.  The test patch is a really-long-term phosphor, and it's exposed to light to "charge" it.  IR does something to trigger the emission.  I don't know enough about stimulated emission of radiation to figure out how that works.<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  2:14 PM by Joel Polowin</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #71 from John Houghton</title>
         <description>comment from John Houghton on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I <i>meant</i> to say new moon. I know that the new moon is on the 11th. I looked at the sky last night and saw that the moon was about last quarter. <br />
So what do I type? I type <i>full</i>.<br />
Sigh.<br />
Joel, that's pretty much how it works, you have to leave it out in the light before using it. Is there a rule about not fluorescing at a shorter wavelength than the energy that you receive?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  2:43 PM by John Houghton</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #72 from Howard Peirce</title>
         <description>comment from Howard Peirce on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Jim @50: Personally, I wouldn't dream of going on a Lovecraftian tomb expedition without my Webley service revolver, 40 feet of good hempen rope, a carboy or two of carbolic acid, and a change of jodhpurs.</p>

<p>Also, take note of any strange old books that may be lying around in the caretaker's cottage. They might come in handy.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  2:46 PM by Howard Peirce</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #73 from Diatryma</title>
         <description>comment from Diatryma on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Fluorescence is always at a longer wavelength.  You can put a certain amount of energy in, kick some electrons up a level, then they'll fall back down and emit light.  Since some energy is lost as heat, the light has less energy, and a longer wavelength.<br />
If you homogenize green leaves, like spinach, and shine a bright bullet lamp on the test tube, you can see green light shining through to the other side, and red light shining on the side with the light.  It's a nifty trick.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  2:52 PM by Diatryma</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #74 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Alas, the 8th and 9th Doyle and I will be at the Farthing Party in Montreal.</p>

<p>Other Boston-area Fluorons interested?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  3:07 PM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #75 from Zarquon the Mysterious</title>
         <description>comment from Zarquon the Mysterious on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Fhcre-frperg zrffntr gb zl sryybj nyvraf ng gur fhcre-frperg* onfr uvqqra jvgu gur tybjvat gbzofgbar:</p>

<p>Nyy vf xabja, be ng yrnfg fhfcrpgrq.  Cercner gb syrr** orsber gur Znxvat Yvtug rkcrqvgvba neevirf.  Ynfg bar bhg ghea bhg gur tenirfgbar.</p>

<p>Nygreangviryl, neenatr irel vagrerfgvat pbairagvbaf va gur Abegurnfgrea Havgrq Fgngrf sbe rirel jrrxraq orgjrra abj naq gur svefg fabjfgbezf.</p>

<p>-----<br />
* Ybfg zl fhcre-frperg gurfnhehf.  Bhg bs flabalzf sbe fhcre-frperg.   Fbeel.<br />
** Lbh qb unir lbhe whzc ontf ernql, qba'g lbh?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  3:25 PM by Zarquon the Mysterious</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #76 from Howard Peirce</title>
         <description>comment from Howard Peirce on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><i>Remember, Friend, as you pass by,<br />
As you are now, so once was I.<br />
But now I've got this freakish glow --<br />
I think you ought to take it slow.</i></p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  3:42 PM by Howard Peirce</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 15:42:00 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #77 from Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers)</title>
         <description>comment from Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers) on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>ajay @ 62</p>

<p>The D-50 is old hat these days.  Who wants to use thorium?  You can find that in rocks! The happening thing is the D-70, using authentic radioactive waste from the Hanford Nuclear Reservation.  This is genuine high-level waste from breeder reactors used to create plutonium for atom bombs!  Be the first on your block to glow blue from Čerenkov radiation!</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  4:40 PM by Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers)</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #78 from Joel Polowin</title>
         <description>comment from Joel Polowin on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>John, IIRC there are some multi-photon systems possible -- the first kicks the system into a metastable excited state; the second boosts it to a still higher excited state, and then the system drops back down, emitting a photon with the combined energy.  But the absorption probabilities are usually pretty lousy.  I'm very rusty on this stuff, and it's possible that there are newer materials that do this kind of thing better than I remember.<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  5:21 PM by Joel Polowin</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #79 from ethan</title>
         <description>comment from ethan on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I'd potentially be in for the road trip.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  5:33 PM by ethan</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #80 from ethan</title>
         <description>comment from ethan on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Oh, hang on, no I wouldn't. Sorry.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  5:41 PM by ethan</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 17:41:40 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #81 from Claude Muncey</title>
         <description>comment from Claude Muncey on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Zarquon @ 75</p>

<p>Yeah, right.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  5:52 PM by Claude Muncey</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #82 from Zack Weinberg</title>
         <description>comment from Zack Weinberg on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Joel @ 78: Plants do exactly this, all the time: add up two 650nm photons to get the potential you need to rip the hydrogen atoms off a water molecule... (if memory serves it's four photons per oxygen molecule generated).</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  7:00 PM by Zack Weinberg</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2007 19:00:25 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #83 from Leva Cygnet</title>
         <description>comment from Leva Cygnet on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Amateur rockhound speaking up here.</p>

<p>First thing to do would be to establish what the tombstone's made of and *where ambient light is coming from*.</p>

<p>Certain minerals flouresce in response to UV light, which I believe was mentioned upthread. If there's any fluorescent lights within line of sight of the tombstone, that would be a very simple and plausible explanation. Most flourescent lights have a UV component to them ... some types more than others. This could be a street light, a sign on a building, a security light on a nearby building ... anything like that. Doesn't have to be bright, just line of sight. Once your eyes are adapted to the dark even a very dim, distant light might cause the tombstone to appear to glow when it is contrasted with the others around it ... If it's only glowing during certain atmospheric conditions it may even be "glowing" from the effect of light from city lights reflecting off clouds or an inversion layer.</p>

<p>If the tombstone is made of a different type of rock than all the others around it (or is even a similar type of rock but comes from a different quarry) that'd be enough of an explanation. </p>

<p>Simple test to verify this? Take a battery operated black light along. If it lights up like a spotlight and the tombstones around don't, bingo. </p>

<p>Of course, I prefer the explanation of spinning founding fathers. Or ghosts. *grins* </p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  8:03 PM by Leva Cygnet</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #84 from mds</title>
         <description>comment from mds on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><blockquote>Be the first on your block to glow blue from Čerenkov radiation!</blockquote>

<p>Wouldn't you have to be underwater?  (Much harder to exceed the speed of light in air, and all that.)</p>

<p>Hmm, that would make for an interesting pool party...  "Even as I write this, Gunderson is being dragged into the deep end by their corpselight limbs."</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  8:23 PM by mds</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #85 from Bob W.</title>
         <description>comment from Bob W. on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>The key point is fluorescence vs. phosphorescence and the fact that a persisting glow such as that of the tombstone is an example of the latter, not the former.</p>

<p>After Googling around a bit to jog the recollections from my undergraduate "bluffing your way through solid state physics" courses, here's the basic notion.</p>

<p>Some part of the material of the tombstone consists of impure and imperfect crystals of a phosphorescent material like zinc sulfide.  During the day, sunlight photos boost electrons in the ZnS from their base energy state up into the conduction energy band.  Rather than falling back to the base state quickly, as they would in fluorescence, the excited electrons emit some of their energy in the form of phonons (thermal excitation of the crystalline lattice) and fall into an intermediate energy state knows as the "impurity" energy band.  Those electrons are more or less stuck in that excited state because there are no allowed quantum transitions from the energy they're at to the base energy.  As time goes by more sunlight photons are absorbed into the crystal and transformed into potential energy of excited electrons in the impurity band and thermal energy or phonons.</p>

<p>The impurity energy band, by the way, is associated with anomalies in the theoretically uniform electric field of the crystal.  These are caused not only by impurity atoms in the lattice  (Cd in the place of a Zn, Se in the place of an S, random oxygen atoms, etc.) but also by structural irregularities, places in the crystal where the spacing between atoms deviates from the regular distances found in a theoretical perfect crystal.</p>

<p>Anyway, given that the electrons can get trapped in the impurity band due to emission of phonons, or thermal excitation of the lattice, you could probably guess that at any given time some number of those trapped electrons will gain enough energy from random phonons to make it back into the conduction band.  Once in the conduction band the electrons can make a single quantum transition to the ground state and emit a photon.  When it's dark and the rate of phonon-electron recombinations exceeds the rate of reflection and refraction of photons from the mineral, the mineral glows due to phosphorescence.</p>

<p>Since the energy that has to be added to an impurity band electron can be on the order of the energy of a near IR photon, a near infrared lamp can provide a sufficiently high rate of excitation to produce enough phosphorescence to be visible to the human eye, i.e. can make invisible ink glow enough to be read.</p>

<p>Because phosphorescence in minerals in the absence of an IR light source is a thermal effect, it is likely that phosphorescence of a tombstone would persist far longer in the cold than in a warm place and thus be more noticeable in New Hampshire or higher elevations of Colorado than in warmer parts of the US.</p>

<p>The expedition to actually see this effect in action, particularly to see if using an IR source can brighten the phosphorescent glow as one would expect if this model is the correct description of this phenomenon.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  9:27 PM by Bob W.</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #86 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>It pays to advertise on <i>Making Light</i>!  Since this post has been up a copy of <i>Curious New England</i> sold on Amazon (linked above).  Formerly there were five copies available; now there are four.</p>

<p>(Oh -- using the Search Inside the Book feature and the key words "Glow Stone" you can read the entire entry.)</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  9:46 PM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #87 from Marilee</title>
         <description>comment from Marilee on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I found <a href="http://www.randi.org/jr/042304seven.html" rel="nofollow">two</a> <a href="http://www.randi.org/jr/050704your.html#11" rel="nofollow">reports</a> on Randi's site where glowing tombstones turned out to be highly-polished and reflecting non-obvious light.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007  9:52 PM by Marilee</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #88 from Jon H</title>
         <description>comment from Jon H on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Careful, friends.</p>

<p>It might be a <i>Rockoid</i>.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 10:27 PM by Jon H</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #89 from Jon H</title>
         <description>comment from Jon H on  4.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>lila @ 46: precisely.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  4, 2007 10:28 PM by Jon H</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #90 from Bob Webber</title>
         <description>comment from Bob Webber on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Marilee @ 87: No offense intended, but those reports seem more like theories in need of some disprovable hypotheses than solid cases for reflections as the cause of the glowing tombstones.</p>

<p>Stuff like this makes me take the explanations of phenomena by members of skeptic organizations with a grain of salt.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 12:16 AM by Bob Webber</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #91 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Me 'n Google:</p>

<p><a href="http://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/forum/lofiversion/index.php/t41119.html" rel="nofollow">Glowing Tombstone of Leeton, Missouri</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.infomi.com/ghostly.html" rel="nofollow">Glowing Tombstones of Evart, Michigan</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://paranormalknights.com/Ohioghost.html" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstones in Corning, Dayton, and Dundas Ohio</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.topix.net/forum/city/campbell-mo/TEVQUJCPM6JAVNBFC" rel="nofollow">Glowing Tombstone of Campbell, Missouri</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://okielegacy.org/journal/Vol6/OHTHV6-43.htm" rel="nofollow">Glowing Tombstone of Alva, Oklahoma</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://community.netscape.com/n/pfx/forum.aspx?tsn=1&nav=messages&webtag=ws-newageliving&tid=157621" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Franklin, Michigan</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.texasghosthunters.com/stories/north/" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstones of Potsboro and Springtown, Texas</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.geocities.com/wmghost/hp.html" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Schoolcraft, Michigan</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://forums.nasioc.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-554466.html" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Roseau, Michigan</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.angelfire.com/in4/believe/haunts.html" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Elnora, Indiana</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.texasescapes.com/MikeCoxTexasTales/221-Jake-the-Bridge-Ghost-of-Williamson-County.htm" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Hutto, Texas</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.lahontanvalleynews.com/article/20070826/COMMUNITY/108260040" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Virginia City, Nevada</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.wirenot.net/X/Stories/Ghost/Ghost_H-I/HappeningsAtAStrangeChurch.shtml" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Lewisburg, Tennessee</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://release-me.net/iowa.php" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Metz, Iowa</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://members.tripod.com/~lindaluelinn/index-34.html" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Benton, Kentucky</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://missourifolkloresociety.truman.edu/hoy.htm" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Emporia, Kansas</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.nipis.org/a2z.htm" rel="nofollow">Glowing tombstone of Wadsworth, Illinois</a>.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 12:22 AM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #92 from Diatryma</title>
         <description>comment from Diatryma on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>The Metz link did not work on my computer-- froze Firefox several times, and Googling didn't get me anywhere but the parent site, which made things worse.  Thank you for the list, though.  I feel more connected to the fluorosphere expedition into the eldritch.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  1:05 AM by Diatryma</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #93 from Bruce E. Durocher II</title>
         <description>comment from Bruce E. Durocher II on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>John Houghton:</p>

<p><em>[Insert photo of Jim's hallway, crowded to capacity with racks of color-coded go kits, enough so that the colors get interesting (quickly now, grab the puce colored bag, column 4 row 6!)].</em></p>

<p>This sounds like the opening for a rousing good comedy-adventure.  The heroine and hero have a huge collection of go kits--but have lost the color chart, so while each kit is professionally perfect for <em>some</em> sort of emergency, they're never sure it will be for <em>this</em> emergency.  Sort of like McGiver on Nyquil...</p>

<p>Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers):</p>

<p><em>Are you sure that wasn't in Innsmouth?</em></p>

<p>And wouldn't you hate to be the guy hired to do publicity by the Innsmouth Town Council.</p>

<p><em>The happening thing is the D-70, using authentic radioactive waste from the Hanford Nuclear Reservation.</em></p>

<p>The Purex site at Hanford is surrounded by wire fencing.  It's not rabbit proof.  If you look around the area at night you'll see glowing pellets of rabbit poo.  And no, I'm not organizing a field trip so you can see it.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  1:18 AM by Bruce E. Durocher II</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #94 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><i>hired to do publicity by the Innsmouth Town Council...</i></p>

<p>Don't miss the Seafood Festival!</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  1:25 AM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #95 from Wim L</title>
         <description>comment from Wim L on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Bob W. @ 85:</p>

<p><i>The impurity energy band, by the way, is associated with anomalies in the theoretically uniform electric field of the crystal. These are caused not only by [...] but also by structural irregularities, places in the crystal where the spacing between atoms deviates from the regular distances found in a theoretical perfect crystal.</i></p>

<p>You mean, places in the crystal with unnatural, eldritch spacings and irrational angles, beyond the theories of science?!?</p>

<p>"Even as I write this, Lockton, who had thought himself finally safe in a crystal defect, is decaying from his metastable state, while emitting a photon of about 580 nm..."</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  1:56 AM by Wim L</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #96 from Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers)</title>
         <description>comment from Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers) on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Bruce E. Durocher II @ 93<br />
<i>And no, I'm not organizing a field trip so you can see it.</i></p>

<p>No problem.  I live about 200 miles downstream from there, and, from what I hear, it's coming to see me.</p>

<p><br />
James D. Macdonald @ 94<br />
<i>Don't miss the Seafood Festival!</i></p>

<p>Just don't ask for fried calamari appetizers.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  3:24 AM by Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers)</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #97 from Paul A.</title>
         <description>comment from Paul A. on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>mds @ #<a href="#211204" rel="nofollow">84</a>:</p>

<p>The first time <em>I</em> encountered Čerenkov radiation, it was in air.</p>

<p>(This was in Simon Hawke's neo-pulp Time Wars series - the first time in each volume that our heroes let loose with the disintegrator rayguns, there would always be a parenthetical note that the blue colour of the rays was due to Cerenkov radiation. He never bothered to explain what 'Cerenkov radiation' <em>was</em>, though, so until I hit high school physics I always thought he'd just made it up.)</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  8:56 AM by Paul A.</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #98 from mds</title>
         <description>comment from mds on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Bruce Cohen (SpeakerToManagers) @ 96:</p>

<p><em>Just don't ask for fried calamari appetizers.</em></p>

<p>At the Innsmouth Seafood Festival, I think it's more important to avoid becoming a fried appetizer <em>for</em> calamari...</p>

<p><br />
Bruce E. Durocher II @ 93:</p>

<p><em>The heroine and hero have a huge collection of go kits--but have lost the color chart, so while each kit is professionally perfect for some sort of emergency, they're never sure it will be for this emergency.</em></p>

<p>This needs to become a new Foglio project.  "So, you're going 'handle' the cannibals with <em>water wings</em>?"</p>

<p><br />
Paul A. @ 97:</p>

<p><em>The first time I encountered Čerenkov radiation, it was in air.</em></p>

<p>Fortunately, your parachute deployed correctly.<br />
And yes, cosmic rays and the like will do the trick in air, but this is not at the level of neighborhood entertainment Čerenkov radiation.</p>

<p><br />
Wim L. @ 95:</p>

<p><em>"Even as I write this,</em>...</p>

<p>Full marks.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  9:10 AM by mds</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #99 from Joel Polowin</title>
         <description>comment from Joel Polowin on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Bruce @ 93: <i>The Purex site at Hanford is surrounded by wire fencing.  It's not rabbit proof. If you look around the area at night you'll see glowing pellets of rabbit poo.  And no, I'm not organizing a field trip so you can see it.</i></p>

<p>This sounds remarkably similar to Fred Small's story-and-song "Hot Frogs on the Loose".  The newspaper article having reported that the frogs had escaped the "frog fencing":</p>

<p>"'[...] The fugitive amphibians --'" (pause for audience reaction) "Tom Paxton said it best: 'Some folks you don't have to satirize, you just quote 'em.'"</p>

<p>Zack @ 82: Yes, photosynthesis is a multi-photon process, but it involves storing the energy by a rather complicated series of low-energy chemical transformations of multiple molecules.  I was thinking more in terms of storing the energy within a single system.<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  9:24 AM by Joel Polowin</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #100 from Diatryma</title>
         <description>comment from Diatryma on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Innsmouth: A Trip You'll Never Forget<br />
Your Friends Won't Believe The Time You Had!<br />
Escape From The Mundane at Historical Innsmouth!</p>

<p>I'm not sure if the Innsmouth Aquarium would be a great place to take the kids or not.  Would there be deep-sea fishing?<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  9:30 AM by Diatryma</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #101 from abi</title>
         <description>comment from abi on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><strong>Diatryma @100</strong>:<br />
<em>I'm not sure if the Innsmouth Aquarium would be a great place to take the kids or not. Would there be deep-sea fishing?</em></p>

<p>Of course it's a great place to take the kids.  There's no bait shop.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  9:57 AM by abi</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #102 from Joel Polowin</title>
         <description>comment from Joel Polowin on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Years ago, I had the idea for a new children's cartoon show: "Cthulhu and Friends".</p>

<p>It would feature a new cast of super-heroes every week.<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 11:04 AM by Joel Polowin</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #103 from Michelle</title>
         <description>comment from Michelle on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>:)  It's Breckenridge not Breckinridge...the difference is a matter of pride...the town was going to be Breckinridge then the guy joined the confederates.  So it's Breckenridge.  </p>

<p>But as for the glowing tombstone.  As a kid in highschool we'd go look but the guy who lives behind the cemetery is a nut job.  So we would have to climb over the fence instead of walk through the back.  He's not the caretaker though.  </p>

<p>I'm not sure why it glowed but for those worried about radiation...remember:  A little radiation was good for you.</p>

<p>Goverment propaganda at it's best.   I wish I could remember the date on the stone.  </p>

<p>http://www.whale.to/a/cantwell9.html</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 11:17 AM by Michelle</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #104 from ajay</title>
         <description>comment from ajay on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>#100: Get a Look at Innsmouth!</p>

<p>(See you all at the Three Jolly Luck Fish Bar...)</p>

<p>Actually, I am now starting to think of a new  crossover. Script by Compton Mackenzie from an original novel by HP Lovecraft - it's</p>

<p><a href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whisky_Galore%21_%28film%29' rel="nofollow">Ichor Galore!</a></p>

<p>Wartime rationing is hard for the inhabitants of the Hebridean island of Little Todday. And no restriction hits harder than the shortage of whisky. One moonless night, old Hamish MacRoon rows out to the skerry and returns with a boatload of whisky in salt-stained crates. The islanders rejoice - but where did he get it? And what has he promised in return? </p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 11:20 AM by ajay</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #105 from abi</title>
         <description>comment from abi on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><strong>The Sea-Coast of Innismouth</strong></p>

<p>I will arise and go now, and go to Innismouth<br />
And a small altar make there, of bones and bodies built;<br />
Nine gravestones will I have there, a gibbet facing south,<br />
And live alone but for those I've killed.</p>

<p>And I shall have no peace there, for They come creeping slow,<br />
Creeping from the veils of the morning to where the raven caws;<br />
There midnight's all a-glimmer, and noon an eerie glow,<br />
And evening full of the Deep Ones' claws.</p>

<p>I will arise and go now, for always night and day<br />
I hear the water lapping with low sounds by the shore;<br />
While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavement sgrey,<br />
I hear it in the deep heart's core.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 11:52 AM by abi</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #106 from abi</title>
         <description>comment from abi on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>For Innismouth read Innsmouth.  Sigh.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 11:55 AM by abi</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #107 from Jon Meltzer</title>
         <description>comment from Jon Meltzer on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><i>the Innsmouth Seafood Festival</i></p>

<p>In real life it's called "Yankee Homecoming"*; and I'm a little surprised that Newburyport hasn't taken advantage of the Lovecraft connections. There must be at least some fans willing to take tours off Plum Island to look for Devil Reef. </p>

<p>*"home" remains ambiguous to those not of The Blood of Dagon</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 12:14 PM by Jon Meltzer</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #108 from Caroline</title>
         <description>comment from Caroline on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>abi @ 105, I thought it was a deliberate pun.  Worked for me, anyway.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 12:15 PM by Caroline</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #109 from abi</title>
         <description>comment from abi on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><strong>Caroline @108</strong><br />
What I found fun is that I did not rewrite the third stanza <em>at all</em>.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 12:19 PM by abi</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #110 from ajay</title>
         <description>comment from ajay on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>109: that is a bit disturbing, to be honest. I've gone one better and not changed this at all.</p>

<p>Below the thunders of the upper deep,<br />
Far, far beneath in the abysmal sea,<br />
His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep<br />
The Kraken sleepeth: faintest sunlights flee<br />
About his shadowy sides; above him swell<br />
Huge sponges of millennial growth and height;<br />
And far away into the sickly light,<br />
From many a wondrous and secret cell<br />
Unnumbered and enormous polypi<br />
Winnow with giant fins the slumbering green.<br />
There hath he lain for ages, and will lie,<br />
Battening upon huge sea-worms in his sleep,<br />
Until the latter fire shall heat the deep;<br />
Then once by man and angels to be seen,<br />
In roaring he shall rise and on the surface die.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 12:43 PM by ajay</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #111 from James D. Macdonald</title>
         <description>comment from James D. Macdonald on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Guys, while this weekend won't work for a road trip, I'm not on duty or at a con on the 15th or the 16th of this month.</p>

<p>Anyone want to go check this out?</p>

<p>Heck, anyone want to try to get a non-fiction magazine article out of it?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  5:12 PM by James D. Macdonald</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #112 from Neil Willcox</title>
         <description>comment from Neil Willcox on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>#75 "Zarquon the Mysterious"</p>

<p>Thanks a lot.  Now I have to put all the words I don't recognise as English from the H P Lovecraft canon into Rot13.  It was bad enough doing it for Doc Smith.</p>

<p>More generally, an interesting thing I noticed is that even translating "glowing tombstone" into British English* still pulls up lots of US examples but only about two in the UK.</p>

<p>* "glowing gravestone" or "shining gravestone"</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  8:21 PM by Neil Willcox</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #113 from Thena</title>
         <description>comment from Thena on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Darn it, now I'm going to have to keep reading this thread to find out when y'all are converging on Portsmouth.</p>

<p>I need to go down to NH to pick up some rum for the holidays anyway.</p>

<p>(Why pay sales tax when you can have plausible deniability?)<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007  8:55 PM by Thena</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Wed, 05 Sep 2007 20:55:21 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #114 from Earl Cooley III</title>
         <description>comment from Earl Cooley III on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>The prospective tomb raiders should probably check with the area geocacher tribes to find out how touchy local law enforcement is about people sneaking about like that.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 10:03 PM by Earl Cooley III</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Wed, 05 Sep 2007 22:03:18 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #115 from CHip</title>
         <description>comment from CHip on  5.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>abi: Have you, in the end, no shame?</p>

<p>No?</p>

<p><b>Good</b>. I got force-fed Yeats until I ran to Shaw for mercy; nice to see him getting taken off on, especially in something that looks it shouldn't support a takeoff -- parodying "Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world" doesn't seem like it would have the same impact.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  5, 2007 10:56 PM by CHip</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #116 from David Goldfarb</title>
         <description>comment from David Goldfarb on  6.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Wow, there's actually an English use of the word "polypus"?  Rather cool.</p>

<p>(On rec.arts.sf.composition I got into a discussion of whether "octopus" could pluralize as "octopi".  I went looking for the Latin word for "octopus".  It appears they had a word "polypus" which covered both octopuses and squid.  This changed my long-standing opposition to the word "octopi", since if "poly-" "-pous" can be reanalyzed as "polyp-" "-us, i" [which is in fact what the Romans did] there's no real reason that "octo-" "-pous" can't do the same.)</p>
	 <p>Posted September  6, 2007  1:13 AM by David Goldfarb</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #117 from John Stanning</title>
         <description>comment from John Stanning on  6.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>David #116 : the plural of octopus would be octopi if octopus was a regular second-declension Latin noun like locus or deus. But it isn't. Octopus is a Greek word (oktopous, eight-footed) borrowed into Latin, and the plural in Latin is the same as in Greek, octopodes. So a good plural in English is octopods, but there's no reason at all not to anglicize it and say octopuses (but not octopusses or octopussies). </p>
	 <p>Posted September  6, 2007  4:06 AM by John Stanning</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #118 from ajay</title>
         <description>comment from ajay on  6.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I suspect that "polypi" is Tennyson finding a plural of "polyp" that is a bit easier to rhyme and sounds better. In other words, he's talking about corals, not squid. Coral polyps do sort of live in cells and  filter feed. Although they don't have fins. Well, whatever. Tennyson wasn't that good with hard science - he thought railway trains ran in grooves. ("Locksley Hall")</p>
	 <p>Posted September  6, 2007  4:47 AM by ajay</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #119 from abi</title>
         <description>comment from abi on  6.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><strong>CHip @115</strong>:<br />
I love that poem, but I do think it needs a little kick from time to time.</p>

<p><em>parodying "Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world" doesn't seem like it would have the same impact.</em></p>

<p>You can't parody it by keeping its portentious tone, certainly, so Cthulhu rewrites are out.  How about this?</p>

<p>Striding and striding along the red carpet<br />
The publicist cannot hear the designer;<br />
Things fall apart; the specification cannot hold;<br />
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the news,<br />
The bloggers speculate, and everywhere<br />
The customs of the press conference are lost;<br />
The spokesmen lack all conviction, while the insiders<br />
Are full of passionate intensity.</p>

<p>Surely some revelation is at hand;<br />
Surely the iPod announcement is at hand.<br />
The iPod announcement! Hardly are those words out<br />
When a vast image out of 1984<br />
Troubles my sight: somewhere in Los Altos<br />
A device with touch screen and new proportions<br />
Memory as vast and limitless as the sun,<br />
Is showing onscreen, while all about it<br />
Flash quotes of the breathless Apple publicists.<br />
The darkness drops again; but now I know<br />
That twelve months of hush-hush development<br />
Were brought to market by a production schedule<br />
And what smooth gadget, its moment come round at last,<br />
Sloches towards the market to be born?<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  6, 2007  6:01 AM by abi</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #120 from Faren Miller</title>
         <description>comment from Faren Miller on  6.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>abi: both parodies are brilliant! (I wish grad schools encouraged English majors to try such things from time to time, just to lighten the load a little.)</p>

<p>This may be as good a place as any to note that the September issue of <i>Discover</i> has an article they call "Rise of the Jellyfish: Meet Our Planet's Next Masters", which includes a bunch of really cool photos.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  6, 2007 10:45 AM by Faren Miller</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #121 from ethan</title>
         <description>comment from ethan on  6.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>ajay #118: If what railroads run on is hard science, I think I'm ready for the even-harder level.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  6, 2007 11:36 AM by ethan</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #122 from SI</title>
         <description>comment from SI on  6.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>abi: F*ckin' BRILLIANT.</p>

<p>The best bit is you didn't have to change the last verse.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  6, 2007  1:14 PM by SI</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Thu, 06 Sep 2007 13:14:57 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #123 from Joel Polowin</title>
         <description>comment from Joel Polowin on  6.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>To Portsmouth, to Portsmouth, it is a haunted town<br />
And there we will solve a mystery, with a Scooby snack gobbled-down<br />
An eerie glowing tombstone, a villain unmask&egrave;d:<br />
"I would have succeeded, but for those meddling kids!"<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  6, 2007  1:39 PM by Joel Polowin</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #124 from Lila</title>
         <description>comment from Lila on  6.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Bruce E. Durocher II @ #93: see also  the about-to-be-closed <a href="http://www.uga.edu/~srel/" rel="nofollow">Savannah River Ecology Lab</a> (located near the <a href="http://www.srs.gov/general/srs-home.html" rel="nofollow"> Savannah River Site</a>). The turtles there get quite a reaction from a geiger counter.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  6, 2007  3:28 PM by Lila</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Thu, 06 Sep 2007 15:28:07 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #125 from David Goldfarb</title>
         <description>comment from David Goldfarb on  7.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>John Stanning@117:  There is no attested use of the word "octopus" in Roman times, and you will not find the word in your Lewis and Short.  The word was coined in modern scientific Latin, if memory serves in the 18th century.  The classical word was, as I said earlier, "polypus" -- there's a passage in Pliny the Elder about the two different kinds of polypi, the ones with eight limbs only and the ones with two extra larger feeding limbs.  (What we today of course would call octopuses and squid.)</p>

<p>And yes, "polypus" was in fact a regular second declension noun.</p>

<p>I have nothing at all against the English plural "octopuses" and in fact use it myself.  My point is that I can't object to the plural "octopi" anymore, since if "polypus" was second declension, there's no reason why "octopus" can't be too.</p>

<p>ajay@118:  As you note, coral don't have fins.  I see no reason to think that Tennyson wasn't in fact referring to octopuses and squid.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  7, 2007  1:24 AM by David Goldfarb</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #126 from John Houghton</title>
         <description>comment from John Houghton on  7.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p> James D. Macdonald (111):<br />
 Unfortunately my truck is going into the body shop on Monday, and I can't guarantee that it'll be done by Saturday (it's supposed to be, but...). A future weekend perhaps? Oct 6th or 13th are both dark-of-the-moon.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  7, 2007 10:16 AM by John Houghton</p></content:encoded>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #127 from B. Durbin</title>
         <description>comment from B. Durbin on  7.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>I have suddenly realized that, contrary to my prior belief that I didn't care what was done with my body after I die (though having my skeleton made into a medical aid would be a hoot), I really, really need to have a marker stone made out of phosphorescent material.</p>

<p>Don't you agree that would be cool? Messing with later generations' heads...</p>
	 <p>Posted September  7, 2007 11:32 PM by B. Durbin</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Fri, 07 Sep 2007 23:32:56 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #128 from Marilee</title>
         <description>comment from Marilee on  8.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>B., I'm having mine cremated and thrown into the closest ocean.</p>
	 <p>Posted September  8, 2007 12:08 AM by Marilee</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Sat, 08 Sep 2007 00:08:26 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #129 from Paula Helm Murray</title>
         <description>comment from Paula Helm Murray on  8.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Alas, the two 'glowing tombstones' within striking distance (Emporia, KS and Leeton, MO have been proven to be refraction artifacts.</p>

<p>I wish I could go up to New England for the investigation. Can't afford now, and I'm making extra money on weekends at our local Renaissance Festival. Double alas.</p>

<p>Have fun if you do it, and report back!</p>
	 <p>Posted September  8, 2007 12:19 AM by Paula Helm Murray</p></content:encoded>
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         <pubDate>Sat, 08 Sep 2007 00:19:14 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #130 from Jon H</title>
         <description>comment from Jon H on  8.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>" I really, really need to have a marker stone made out of phosphorescent material."</p>

<p>i think it would be interesting to make the marker out of something  pervaded by luminous material, but with a thin layer of non-luminous coating that would weather away in a decade or three.</p>

<p>That way over time, the luminous material would start to show through, probably not uniformly either but depending on weathering patterns. Dim streaks would likely appear first, which would brighten, and expand, with darker spots where dirt collects.<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September  8, 2007  2:15 AM by Jon H</p></content:encoded>
         <link>http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#211739</link>
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         <pubDate>Sat, 08 Sep 2007 02:15:15 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #131 from mds</title>
         <description>comment from mds on  8.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>Marilee @ 128, why would you bother to get a marker stone to begin with, if you were just going to have it cremated and thrown in the ocean?</p>
	 <p>Posted September  8, 2007  2:06 PM by mds</p></content:encoded>
         <link>http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#211766</link>
         <guid isPermaLink="true">http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#211766</guid>
         <pubDate>Sat, 08 Sep 2007 14:06:59 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #132 from Marilee</title>
         <description>comment from Marilee on  8.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>mds, I was replying to this part of the post: "didn't care what was done with my body after I die."</p>
	 <p>Posted September  8, 2007  6:51 PM by Marilee</p></content:encoded>
         <link>http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#211784</link>
         <guid isPermaLink="true">http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#211784</guid>
         <pubDate>Sat, 08 Sep 2007 18:51:18 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #133 from VCarlson</title>
         <description>comment from VCarlson on 10.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p><em>#130 ::: Jon H ::: (view all by) ::: September 08, 2007, 02:15 AM:</em></p>

<p>[snip]</p>

<p><em>i think it would be interesting to make the marker out of something pervaded by luminous material, but with a thin layer of non-luminous coating that would weather away in a decade or three.</em></p>

<p>Not only that, but it weathering away in a decade or three would allow for forgetfulness, and <strong>really</strong> mess with people's heads - I love it!<br />
</p>
	 <p>Posted September 10, 2007  5:57 PM by VCarlson</p></content:encoded>
         <link>http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#212058</link>
         <guid isPermaLink="true">http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#212058</guid>
         <pubDate>Mon, 10 Sep 2007 17:57:49 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Glowing Tomb -- comment #134 from Rozasharn</title>
         <description>comment from Rozasharn on 10.Sep.07</description>
         <content:encoded><p>B. Durbin @127:<br />
Well, if you don't care about your body's disposition, you could have a marker created at the site of your death instead.  Subtle luminosity wouldn't be very noticeable in a hospital, but it could add a lot of interest to a bedroom or a busy intersection.  </p>
	 <p>Posted September 10, 2007  7:46 PM by Rozasharn</p></content:encoded>
         <link>http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#212082</link>
         <guid isPermaLink="true">http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/009342.html#212082</guid>
         <pubDate>Mon, 10 Sep 2007 19:46:53 -0500</pubDate>
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