Tuesday, May 5, 2009

4-articles

Cat got your tongue? What happened to a male lion when he angered his jealous mate





The male lion was answering a call of another female lion in season. The female mate attacked the male lion to prevent him from going over to the other female lion.



Big Shots for April 28,2009








The Top 15 Most Bizrre Sea Animals

Colossal Squid


Leafy Sea Dragon


Frilled Shark


Ocean Sunfish or Mola Mola wt 2200lbs




Rainbow Over the Arctic

Poster-The Cooper Show

Algebraic Reasoning






Thursday, April 30, 2009

articles

Human landscapes from above




Photographer Jason Hawkes, used a Nikon D3 hanging on the outside of the helicopter to captures these landscapes from all over the world.


Egypt orders slaughter of all pigs over Swine Flu


The goverenment made a direct order to slaughter all pigs because of the Swine flu. It was estimated to be about 350,000 pigs slaughtered in one day. Muslim do not eat the pork. The pork is sold to the Christian minority, which is about ten percent of the poplulation. Some of the pig farmers refused to slaughter their pigs. Ironically, the pigs farmer were able to sell their pig meats as a compensation from the government.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Earth Day 2009











A Swarm of Ancient Stars




Afghanistan Establishes First National Park




Band-e-Amir- the protected wildlife are ibex, urial, and Afghan snow finch. The park could be the beginning of the creation of an Afghan Protected Area System that may include the transboundary area in the Pamirs shared by Afghanistan, Taijkistan, Pakistan, and China. Funding for creating the park came from the United States Agency for Conservation Development and the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), and the WCS conducted preliminary wildlife surveys, and helped to identify and delineate the boundaries of the park. They, also helped the government to hire, train local rangers, developed the management plan for the park, and assistace to the government to craft the laws authorizing the park's creation.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Monday, April 13, 2009

Cooper, Texas

articles

Best 'Help Wanted' Store Sign You'll See Today



The home of a mysterious female "king" in Canaan, the land that became ancient Israel, may finally have been identified.



The home of a mysterious female "king" in Canaan, the land that became ancient Israel, may finally have been identified.

Archaeologists digging in the ruins of the Canaanite city-state Beth-Shemesh last summer found a decorated plaque with what could be the first known depiction of a ruler known as the Mistress of the Lionesses.


The plaque—which is slightly smaller than a cigarette pack—shows a bare-chested figure wearing a kilt, with short-cropped hair and bent arms holding up two long-stemmed lotus flowers.

The figure is standing on a basket called a neb, which in ancient Egyptian iconography signifies a ruler or deity.

Although the tablet bears no writing, the figure's hairstyle and the fact that it is holding lotus flowers suggests it is a woman, said Tel Aviv University archaeologists Shlomo Bunimovitz and Zvi Lederman, who made the discovery.

Mistress in Distress

Before it became the Promised Land of the Hebrews, Canaan was a collection of city-states ruled by mostly male kings who paid tributes to their more powerful neighbors the Egyptians.

Around 1350 B.C., several Canaanite kings sent clay tablets to the Egyptian pharaoh requesting military help from nomadic marauders known as the Habiru.

Of the 382 tablets that have been found, two were signed with the feminine epithet "Mistress of the Lionesses."

"The Mistress complained to the Egyptian court that the Habiru were around and that her city was in danger," Lederman said.

Some archaeologists believe the Mistress was a female ruler of a Canaanite city, but which city has remained an open question.

The new plaque could link the Mistress to the city of Beth-Shemesh, Bunimovitz and Lederman suggest.

But not everyone is convinced the tablet portrays the mysterious Mistress.

"The figure is, in my opinion, a man," commented University of California, Los Angeles Egyptologist Kathlyn Cooney.

"I would expect a female to wear an ankle-length dress, not a knee-length kilt," Cooney said.

"This figure is also shown striding, with legs apart, a typical posture for a man."

Instead, the plaque may depict a male king who is wearing a wig and making an offering to a deity of lotuses—a flower symbolic of death and rebirth to the ancient Egyptians, Cooney added.

Robert Griffin, an Ancient Near Eastern history scholar at the University of Memphis in Tennessee, is also skeptical the figure is a woman, but said a female Canaanite ruler would not be that surprising.

"It would not have been the norm, but it certainly could have been possible," Griffin said.

As an example, Griffin points to Hatshepsut, the wife of an 18th-dynasty Egyptian pharaoh.

After her husband's death, Hatshepsut famously portrayed herself as a man in a bid to solidify her claim to the throne over that of her young stepson.

A similar thing may have happened in Canaan, which was heavily influenced by the Egyptians, Griffin said.


Baby camels have rough debut at Minnesota Zoo


Bactrian baby camels, Samara and Sarah came into the publeic with the rest of the camel family. The father 2.500 pound bull camel crashed into the calves on his way to their moms and survived.

Tiger at the Masters


Final round 18th green


Galapagos Volcano erupts, could threaten wildlife



The eruption could affect marine and terrestrial iguanas, wolves and other fauna. Charles Darwin's theory of evolution was base on the animals and plant species of Galapagos Isand.


Astronomy Picture of the Day-M39: Open Cluster in Cygnus


The stars in M39 are all about 300 million years old, much younger than 5,000 million years of our Sun. Open clusters contain fewer and younger stars-generally confined to the plane of our Galaxy.