Animals And Birds
Thursday, 8 December 2011
Wednesday, 7 December 2011
Monday, 5 December 2011
Scientific Discovery May Lead to Woolly Mammoths Roaming Earth,Vedio,Images
Let's take it all way back to middle school science class. Remember when your teacher told you about the woolly mammoth? Well these now extinct prehistoric animals roamed the Earth more than 10,000 years ago, but they may be coming back. Scientists from Russia and Japan are working to bring woolly mammoths back by cloning the giant within the next five years. A mammoth thigh bone was found under permafrost soil in Siberia with its marrow in unusually well preserved condition. The Sakha Republic's mammoth museum and Japan's Kinki University will team up to recreate the mammoth using DNA taken from the marrow that is then put into the nuclei of egg cells of common elephants. The next step is implanting the embryos into elephant wombs to be delivered. Since the two species are close relatives, scientists are not foreseeing many complications. So what does this mean for us? There very well could be a new breed of woolly mammoth walking our planet by 2016. People on social media are drawing comparisons to the movie 'Jurassic Park' with one person saying 'Pliocene Park' doesn't have the same ring to it.' Some are questioning if scientist should do this kind of collaboration just because they can, tweeting that science has run amok and asking 'what could possibly go wrong?' Looks like we'll have to just wait and see.
Being involved in a horrific accident is terrifying enough. Imagine capturing it on camera you're using to record the experience. That's exactly what happened to a skydiver in Wisconsin. Video of a man having a mid-air collision with another skydiver is going viral. The video shows the man getting tangled with another skydiver and free-falling 2,500 feet to the ground. He was instantly paralyzed, breaking his neck and his back during the impact, and is now a quadriplegic. The man posted the video of the incident on the news Web site Reddit.com and he answered questions from the commenters. He said that the last thing that went through his head was, "this is going to hurt." However, he says he doesn't regret skydiving, calling it "the best decision [he's] ever made." The video has received more than 240,000 views, and a ton of comments on YouTube in just more than a day. On Twitter, people are calling it absolutely incredible, and 'the most intense thing I've seen on the Internet in a while." As for the man in the video, he just brought himself to watch the video for the first time, just four and half years since the incident took place.
More Letest Vedio:
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Thursday, 1 December 2011
Horses could soon be slaughtered for meat in US,Pic`s
TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Horses could soon be butchered in the U.S. for human consumption after Congress quietly lifted a 5-year-old ban on funding horse meat inspections, and activists say slaughterhouses could be up and running in as little as a month.
Slaughter opponents pushed a measure cutting off funding for horse meat inspections through Congress in 2006 after other efforts to pass outright bans on horse slaughter failed in previous years. Congress lifted the ban in a spending bill President Barack Obama signed into law Nov. 18 to keep the government afloat until mid-December.
It did not, however, allocate any new money to pay for horse meat inspections, which opponents claim could cost taxpayers $3 million to $5 million a year. The U.S. Department of Agriculture would have to find the money in its existing budget, which is expected to see more cuts this year as Congress and the White House aim to trim federal spending.
The USDA issued a statement Tuesday saying there are no slaughterhouses in the U.S. that butcher horses for human consumption now, but if one were to open, it would conduct inspections to make sure federal laws were being followed. USDA spokesman Neil Gaffney declined to answer questions beyond what was in the statement.
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Wednesday, 30 November 2011
Gnu Profile & Imeges
OS family Unix-like
Working state Under development, no stable releases
Latest unstable release 0.401 (1 April 2011) [+/−]
Available language(s) Multilingual
Supported platforms x86, x86-64
Kernel type Microkernel
Default user interface None
License GNU General Public License and other free software licenses
Official website gnu.org
Images:
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