TO DOGS!!!
What's next.....plants? Yes please!
Showing posts with label ANIMALS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ANIMALS. Show all posts
Friday, July 31, 2009
Casper the Communter Cat
There is a cat in England that rides the bus. Here it is:
I'm into it.
I'm into it.
Labels:
ANIMALS,
buses,
Cats using public transit,
England,
kitty
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Squirrel in woman's cleavage
This cop is hilarious, total boyscout - when he noticed there was a squirrel he didn't react at all...."the squirrel seemed quite happy". If this gets any buzz on the web, expect Lady Gaga to have all kinds of woodland creatures between her breasts. She'll do anything.
Labels:
ANIMALS,
cop,
Lady Gaga,
women,
woodland creatures
Thursday, January 29, 2009
I change shapes just to hide in this place, but...
Recently, a fellow by the name of Miike Snow (no, that's not a typo) has appeared on the internetz with two of his songs "Animal" and "Burial" that have been remixed by hard-hitting producers that include: Treasure Fingers, DJ Mehdi, and Crookers. There is not much I can say about Mr. Snow because at the moment, his presence is rather elusive and there is not much that can be found about him. This is a Crookers remix of "Animal" that I can't stop listening to. I fucking love the hook and Crookers adds a nice flavor to the original song. Just listen. You'll love it.
Monday, November 10, 2008
Christmas came early....there is an ACTUAL octopus highway

Wonders of ocean life counted in massive census
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A city of brittle stars off the coast of New Zealand, an Antarctic expressway where octopuses ride along in a flow of extra salty water and a carpet of tiny crustaceans on the Gulf of Mexico sea floor are among the wonders discovered by researchers compiling a massive census of marine life.
"We are still making discoveries," but researchers also are busy assembling data already collected into the big picture of life in the oceans, senior scientist Ron O'Dor said.
The fourth update of the census was released Sunday ahead of a meeting of hundreds of researchers that begins Tuesday in Valencia, Spain. More than 2,000 scientists from 82 nations are taking part in the project, which is to be completed in 2010.
A discovery that delights O'Dor is that many deep-ocean octopuses share an Antarctic origin. As the Antarctic got colder, ice increased and octopuses were forced into deeper water, he said in a telephone interview.
Salt and oxygen are concentrated in the deeper waters, he said. This dense water then flows out, carrying along the octopuses that have adapted to the new conditions, enabling them to spread to deep waters around the world.
Deep-water octopuses worldwide, he pointed out, lack the ink sack that allows their shallow-water cousins to shoot out a camouflage screen.
After all, if they live where it is dark, ink is unnecessary, said O'Dor, a Canadian member of the research team.
Patricia Miloslavich, a senior scientist from Venezuela, is pleased with newly discovered mollusks, from snails to cuttlefish to squids.
Once the census is complete, the plan is to publish three books: a popular survey of sea life, a second book with chapters for each working group and a third focusing on biodiversity.
O'Dor said researchers also are working with the online scientific journal PLoS ONE, which is open to anyone and thus would make the results readily available.
Scientists at this week's sessions will hear about the discovery of what the researchers call a brittle star city off the coast of New Zealand.
The brittle stars, animals with five arms, have colonized the peak of a seamount -- an underwater mountain -- where the current flows past at about 2.5 mph. The current delivers such an ample food supply that thousands of stars can capture food simply by raising their arms.
Researchers found a carpet of small crustaceans inhabiting the head of the Mississippi Canyon in the Gulf of Mexico. There are as many as 12,000 of these small crustaceans per square yard.
Among the other findings being reported at the meeting:
* The mid-Atlantic ridge half way between America and Europe is home to hundreds of species rare or unknown elsewhere.
* The ridge includes the world's deepest known active hot vent, more than 13,300 feet (4,100 meters) deep and populated by anemones, worms and shrimp.
* Reefs deep in the Black Sea are made of bacterial mats using methane as an energy source. The bacteria form chimneys up to 13 feet (4 meters) high.
* The deepest comb jellyfish ever found was discovered at a depth of 23,455 feet (7,217 meters) in the Ryukyu Trench near Japan. The discovery raises questions about the availability of food resources at such depths, which had not been thought capable of supporting predators such as this one.
* The White Shark Cafe. Satellite tagging discovers that white sharks travel long distances each winter to concentrate in the Pacific for up to six months. While there, both males and females make frequent, repetitive dives to depths of 975 feet (300 meters), which researchers theorize may be significant in either feeding or reproduction.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Labels:
ANIMALS,
christmas came early,
ocean,
There is a god
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