Oddity Central

Oddity Central


Say What? The Clicking Languages of South Africa

Posted: 04 Dec 2013 03:00 AM PST

I had heard of African names with clicks before, like ǂXóõ, ǂHõã and !Kung, but I thought they were limited to just a few words. Now, after some research, I've realized that clicks are used quite extensively in many South African languages.

If you're having trouble understanding the click and its use, think of it this way – it's just like any other consonant used in the English language.

The credit for introducing clicks to a worldwide audience goes to singer Miriam Makeba, whose life has been celebrated on Google's Doodles this year. In her 1957 hit single, Pata Pata, you can clearly hear clicks in the lyrics. "Everywhere we go, people often ask me, 'How do you make that noise?'" she said during an interview in 1979. "It used to offend me because it isn't a noise. It's my language," she clarified.

Xhosa-language

Russian Photographer’s Photos Reveal the Unique Beauty of Snowflakes

Posted: 04 Dec 2013 02:00 AM PST

Alexey Kljatov is a photographer with a difference – he takes incredibly breathtaking shots of snowflakes with equipment that he developed at home, eliminating the need for cameras and lenses worth thousands of dollars.

It's hard to believe that Moscow-based Kljatov is an amateur. Take a look at these close-up snowflake photographs and you'll know exactly what I'm talking about. The amount of precision and clarity he has achieved with just a home-made rig is amazing.

Kljatov used parts from old cameras and attached them to wooden boards using a bunch of screws and some tape. Doesn't sound like much, but this set-up is really working wonders for him. The close-up views of the snowflakes are enchanting.

snowflake-closeup

Meet the Man Who Artistically Carves Entire Caves by Hand with a Pickaxe

Posted: 04 Dec 2013 01:00 AM PST

Sculptor Ra Paulette has a phenomenal hobby – he digs caves in New Mexico's sandstone cliffs. Not plain, rocky, boring ones. Ra's caves are smooth, artistic, and breathtakingly beautiful, and he creates them with his bare hands. His only tools – a pickaxe and a wheelbarrow.

67-year-old Ra came into his unusual profession after years of being a drifter. He was a college dropout, was discharged from the U.S. Navy and hitchhiked his way across America. He worked on a series of odd jobs – postal employee, security guard, janitor, and even farmer and one point.

Ra learnt the art of digging in the summer of 1985, when he worked in Dixon as an excavator. He would dig outhouses and build wells, giving him a longing to do something artistic with his hands. One thing led to another and soon, he was digging caves.

Ra-Paulette-caves

Comments system

Disqus Shortname