I really don't even know what to say on here but please if u feel like it explore my site. I am always working on making it bigger.
I hope everyone likes my site.
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Hey! I have a new video called The treasure of ImaWeiner go to http://www.youtube.com/Adude4ever to find it and the many other videos I have made. You can see a few of them here but I don't wana put em all on here cuz of site space. Also I have 3 new easy question submitted by PheonixGamez find him at http://www.freewebs.com/phoenixgamz/ he is also the fist person ever to suggest anything so a BIG ty to you!
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Answers
1) 116 years, from 1337 to 1453.
2) Ecuador.
3) From sheep and horses.
4) November. The Russian canendar was 13 days behind ours.
5) Squirrel fir.
6) The Latin name was Insularia Canaria - Island of the Dogs.
7) Albert. When he came to the throne in 1936 he respected the wish of Queen Victoria that no future king should ever be called Albert.
8) Distinctively crimson.
9) New Zealand.
10) Thirty years, of course. From 1618 to 1648.
11) 911
12) 1812
13) Lewis and Clark
Check out theese weird optical illusions!
Optical Illusions!
Look at the image below.
Do you see rectangles or diamonds?

Take a look at this one.
There are NO black dots anywhere in the image.
Your brain gets confused and your eyes create
the black dots inside the white empty spaces!

What's going on with this painting?

None of the circles below are actually turning.
The ones you look directly at are still,
but the others appear to move.
It's all in your head!

Amaze your friends with these optical illusions!
Hahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!!
Instructions: Close your left eye and fixate your right eye on the cross in the first diagram. If your eye is about 12 inches (30 cm) away from the monitor, you should notice that the round dot disappears. This distance may vary according to the screen resolution you have set.

You may be surprised to see that the dot is replaced, not by a black region, but rather blank white space. The brain simply "fills in" the most probable stimulus (in this case, a uniform white area) where there is none.
The following examples demonstrate the "filling-in" phenomenon in greater detail. Apply the same instructions as given above and you should notice the red markings each time are replaced by the most probable pattern that your brain is able to perceive.


Instructions: Fixate upon the black spot in between the uniform cyan and yellow areas for about 30 seconds. Then scroll down and shift your gaze to the black spot in the 2nd image. Note that the image of the seaplane appears approximately uniform after this adaptation.

Instructions: The following series of images begins with a collection of dots that are clearly green and have significant amounts of space in between them. Reducing the original image, we notice that the colored dots seem to blend together and a coherent color appears solid in the final image. Using similar methods, it is possible to mix colors by simply altering dot formations and limiting white space. Both RGB (television, computer monitors, film projection) and CMYK (4-color process) use this technique.

Instructions: The diagram below features two circles with different surroundings. Would you believe that the two circles are identical?

Instructions: Stare at the black spot in the center of the four colored squares for about 30 seconds. Then scroll down and move your gaze to the black spot in the uniform white area. Note the colors of the afterimages relative to the colors of the original stimuli. Did they appear different?
