kristen | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 25 2008 | ocean, travel, preservation, archaeology
A really interesting and fair article about tourism on Easter Island.
Quoted: It's earth's most remote inhabited land, a South Pacific speck of volcanic rock so isolated the locals call it "Te Pito O Te Henua," or "The Navel of the World."
...
Today, in addition to a few cruise ships, there are eight flights a week from Santiago, Chile's capital, and Papeete, Tahiti. During low season, late March through July, the number of weekly flights drops to four, but packed planes have brought record numbers of tourists.
kristen | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 30 2008 | science, animals, ocean
There's nothing more awesome than the words "colossal squid"! They are broadcasting the examination on a webcam if you are into giant squid dissection ...
http://www.tepapa.govt.nz/TePapa/English/CollectionsAndResearch/CollectionAreas/NaturalEnvironment/Molluscs/ColossalSquid/Quoted: A colossal squid caught from deep Antarctic waters was defrosted on Wednesday by New Zealand scientists keen to discover more about the little-known giant predator.
The 8 meter long (26 feet) colossal squid (Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni), which weighs about 495 kg (1,089 pounds) is the largest and best preserved adult colossal squid to be caught.
kristen | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 05 2008 | news, science, animals, ocean
kristen | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 26 2007 | ocean, fish, environment, science
kristen | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 21 2007 | news, fish, ocean
Wow ... that's A LOT of jellyfish ... 10 square miles and 35 feet deep?!?
Quoted: Sky News - More than 100,000 salmon worth over £1m have been killed in a freak jellyfish attack.
It has wiped out Northern Ireland's only salmon farm and owners are now facing ruin.
The massive invasion happened at Glenarm Bay and Red Bay, Cushendun, off the Co Antrim coast.
Billions of small jellyfish called Mauve Stingers were involved - they stung and then stressed the salmon which were being kept in cages about a mile out into the Irish Sea.
kristen | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 17 2007 | ocean, animals, news
kristen | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 15 2007 | science, news, ocean
How come in the diagram there's nothing to eat?
Quoted: This past April, entrepreneur and science hobbyist Lloyd Godson awoke in the middle of the night with a pounding headache. He needed fresh air. Instead he drew in a deep breath and hoped that the algae blooms inside his 8-by-10-foot underwater home would give off enough oxygen to get him through the night.
kristen | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 29 2007 | ocean, science
That's cool that these ducks have been useful to science.
Quoted: The ducks began life in a Chinese factory and were being shipped to the US from Hong Kong when three 40ft containers fell into the Pacific during a storm on January 29, 1992. Two thirds of them floated south through the tropics, landing months later on the shores of Indonesia, Australia and South America. But 10,000 headed north and by the end of the year were off Alaska and heading back westwards. It took three years for the ducks to circle east to Japan, past the original drop site and then back to Alaska on a current known as the North Pacific Gyre before continuing north towards the Arctic.
kristen | Shared With: Everyone - May 01 2007 | ocean, science, news, global warming
kristen | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 14 2007 | science, design, ocean, monterey bay, mbari
Related Content from Around Faves
science
-
About www.many-eyes.com and others
1 FaverViewed: 2 TimesQuoted: PEOPLE share their videos on YouTube and their photos at Flickr. Now they can share more technical types of displays: graphs, charts and other visuals they create to help them analyze data buried in spreadsheets, tables or text. An experimental Web site allows users to upload the data they want to visualize, then try sophisticated tools to generate interactive displays.
- btreloar - 11 days ago2 FaversViewed: 7 Times
- ms.kruse - 17 days ago2 FaversViewed: 7 Times
news
-
nicely said Steinem!
2 FaversViewed: 5 TimesQuoted: Here's the good news: Women have become so politically powerful that even the anti-feminist right wing -- the folks with a headlock on the Republican Party -- are trying to appease the gender gap with a first-ever female vice president. We owe this to women -- and to many men too -- who have picketed, gone on hunger strikes or confronted violence at the polls so women can vote. We owe it to Shirley Chisholm, who first took the "white-male-only" sign off the White House, and to Hillary Rodham Clinton, who hung in there through ridicule and misogyny to win 18 million votes.
- ms.kruse - 7 hours ago1 FaverViewed: 5 Times
- ms.kruse - 10 hours ago1 FaverViewed: 5 Times





