FOR SPECIALISTS ONLY: The Thorniest Problems

This month’s Thorniest-Question-That-Is-of-Interest-Almost-Exclusively-to-Specialists is the determination of the type of the sub-genus Pseudamussium. Read about it, if you will, in F.K. North’s provocative 1951 study “On the Type of Pseudamussium and Other Notes on Pectinid Nomenclature“, a fragment of which is reproduced in the image shown here. (Thanks to investigator Delia Rehobeth for bringing it to our attention.). Professor North explains “The determination of a type for this sub-genus has been the thorniest problem in Pectinid nomenclature, except for that of Pecten itself.”

This month’s Second-Thorniest-Question-That-Is-of-Interest-Almost-Exclusively-to-Specialists is the question of whether the last supper of Jesus Christ occurred on a Wednesday or on a Thursday.  (Thank you to investigator Paula Bek for bringing this to our attention.) A press release just issued by the University of Cambridge says:

The Last Supper … actually took place on a Wednesday, a groundbreaking study is to reveal. Professor Sir Colin Humphreys, a scientist at the University of Cambridge, argues that he has solved what the eminent Biblical scholar, F. F. Bruce, once described as “the thorniest problem in the New Testament”.

Improbable Research