CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title
[3759] CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title - See negative of movie scene and guess the title. Length of words in solution: 3,7,6 - #brainteasers #movie #film #cinemania - Correct Answers: 19 - The first user who solved this task is On On Lunarbasil
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CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title

See negative of movie scene and guess the title. Length of words in solution: 3,7,6
Correct answers: 19
The first user who solved this task is On On Lunarbasil.
#brainteasers #movie #film #cinemania
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A woman from New York was driv...

A woman from New York was driving through a remote part of Arizona when her car broke down. An American Indian on horseback came along and offered her a ride to a nearby town. She climbed up behind him on the horse and they rode off.
The ride was uneventful, except that every few minutes the Indian would let out a "Ye-e-e-e-h-a-a-a-a!" so loud that it echoed from the surrounding hills.
When they arrived in town, he let her off at the local service station, yelled one final "Ye-e-e-e-h-a-a-a-a!" and rode off.
"What did you do to get that Indian so excited?" asked the service-station attendant.
"Nothing," the woman answered. "I merely sat behind him on the horse, put my arms around his waist, and held onto the saddle horn so I wouldn't fall off."
"Lady," the attendant said, "Indians don't use saddles".
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Neanderthal origins

In 1997, the first sequencing of pieces of DNA extracted from a Neanderthal-type specimen was published in the journal Cell, by a team of scientists led by Svent Pääbo.In the groundbreaking study, mitochondrial DNA was amplified from a sample (a small piece of the arm bone) from the first Neanderthal man found (1856). “The Neanderthal sequence falls outside the variation of modern humans.” The results suggested that from their common origin (“African Eve”), Neanderthals split off from humans a little over 550,000 years ago as a separate species and “went extinct without contributing mtDNA to modern humans.” (Using population models, Pääbo, more recently estimated that Neanderthals could have contributed up to 25% of their genetic makeup to modern human, but likely much less.)«[Ref: Cell (11 Jul 1997), 90, No.1, 19-30.]
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