X-Nico

2 unusual facts about Living Things


Living Things

Organisms, contiguous living systems (such as animals, plants, fungi, or micro-organisms)

Life, all objects that have self-sustaining processes (biology)


Medal of Honor: Warfighter

Linkin Park's song "Castle of Glass" from their album Living Things serves as the theme song for Warfighter, and variations of the song appear on the soundtrack.


see also

Alvarez hypothesis

The Alvarez hypothesis posits that the mass extinction of the dinosaurs and many other living things was caused by the impact of a large asteroid on the Earth sixty-five million years ago, called the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event.

BioWeb

The BioWeb is the connotation for a network of web-enabled biological devices (e.g. trees, plants, and flowers) which extends an internet of things to the Internet of Living Things of natural sensory devices.

Eitr

This liquid substance is the origin of all living things: the first giant Ymir was conceived from eitr.

Genitive case

Scientific names of living things sometimes contain genitives, as in the plant name Buddleja davidii, meaning "David's buddleia".

LP Underground 13.0

The compilation album includes the demos of the songs like "Lost in the Echo" and "Until It Breaks" from their studio album Living Things and a demo of "Somewhere I Belong" from Meteora.

Poème sur le désastre de Lisbonne

In the poem, Voltaire rejected belief in "Providence" as impossible to defend — he believed that all living things seemed doomed to live in a cruel world.

Rudolph Schoenheimer

In 1933, he moved to Columbia University to join the department of Biological Chemistry and worked with David Rittenberg, from the radiochemistry laboratory of Harold C. Urey, later together with Konrad Bloch, using stable isotopes to tag foodstuffs and trace their metabolism within living things.

Stationfall

There are two living things on board: an ostrich and an Arcturian balloon creature, both apparently in perfect health.

W. J. T. Mitchell

He draws on ideas from Sigmund Freud and Karl Marx to demonstrate that, essentially, we must consider pictures to be living things.