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Thanks, Skitch
On Thu, 24 Jul 2003 17:55:34 +1000, Oz1
wrote: On Thu, 24 Jul 2003 07:40:56 GMT, (Peter Wiley) wrote: Far as I'm aware, there aren't any. Only the pelagic sharks have homocercal tails. Of those, I can't think of any that have an invisibly small 2nd dorsal fin and a heavily hooked 1st dorsal fin. Looks like a cetacean, doesn't key out to be any known shark. Bob****'s full of it - as usual. As to whether it's a porpoise or dolphin - dunno. Too little detail to tell and it's not my field. Hell, I have a hard time telling a fin whale from a humpback. Killers are the only ones I can identify on sight. Doesn't take much to get you started does it ;- Interesting though. It's raining, I'm bored, I'm avoiding going home and cooking dinner. I keep hoping to see a blue whale but never have. Nobody has for years (on our ships). The damned USSR has a lot to answer for, except they got what they deserved. *******s kept killing blues long after it was prohibited and just lied about it. Typical. OT, a leopard seal killed a diver down south recently. Not an Australian tho, our divers aren't there yet. Can't remember, are they the beasts we get on the south of Kangaroo Island? Big ugly agressive suckers they were. http://www.aad.gov.au/default.asp?casid=1769 Can't remember if their range is as far north as Kangaroo Is. They're fast, aggressive and dangerous, all right. You'll note that the photo on the left shows one threatening to bite Bob****'s nose. BTW, do you know this guy? http://www.personal.usyd.edu.au/~buz/home.html done some interesting stuff on isopods and enviro impact Nope, tho he looks my vintage - old. I'm outa biology these days, been lobotomised and made management. My reward is to get to discuss cargo manifests and the like :-( |
Thanks, Skitch
a leopard seal killed a diver
I thought seals were rather benign vreatures unless in rut.... -- katysails s/v Chanteuse Kirie Elite 32 http://katysails.tripod.com "Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein |
Thanks, Skitch
Not the Leopard Seal.... it's a predator..... at 3 meters [10ft] 500kg
[1100lbs] it would prove awesome. Walrus up in the arctic have been known to sink boats and kill hunters as well. Not all seals are friendly and cute..... most are very tasty! ;-D CM "katysails" wrote in message ... | a leopard seal killed a diver | | I thought seals were rather benign vreatures unless in rut.... | | -- | katysails | s/v Chanteuse | Kirie Elite 32 | http://katysails.tripod.com | | "Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax | and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein | | |
Thanks, Skitch
Walrus up in the arctic have been known to
sink boats and kill hunters as well. I was NOWHERE near the arctic!!! (A gift for Scotty and Donal) RB |
Thanks, Skitch
On Thu, 24 Jul 2003 09:59:01 -0300, "Capt. Mooron"
wrote: Not the Leopard Seal.... it's a predator..... at 3 meters [10ft] 500kg [1100lbs] it would prove awesome. Walrus up in the arctic have been known to sink boats and kill hunters as well. Not all seals are friendly and cute..... most are very tasty! ;-D How true. Seal steak fried on a shovel blade :-) Leopard seals are scary because, like crocs, they can, will and do come out of the water after prey. You need to watch what you're doing near the edges of icefloes, esp if there are penguins around. |
Thanks, Skitch
You need to watch what you're doing
near the edges of icefloes, esp if there are penguins around. Here that, stay away from the edges of the iceflows!!! RB |
Thanks, Skitch
On Thu, 24 Jul 2003 23:13:16 -0300, "Capt. Mooron"
wrote: Bob... it's not all that uncommon to go snorkeling along the edge of an ice pan. I've done it quite a few times. It's really cool under the ice and the clarity is phenomenal. Walking along the edge of iceflows in the arctic presents no problem. The biggest piece of ice Bob's seen is in a glass. Oh wait, I forgot - he lives in a crap climate. And a crap environment. The biggest piece of clean ice he's seen is in a glass. Whereas you & I know first-hand what the endless delicate shades of blue there are to see, looking at white ice disappearing into indigo water, and the delicate light effects from the play of sunlight through pressure ridges, snow over clear ice, and the bands of green where glacial ice has partially melted and refrozen into sea ice. We've seen the ice-blink on the horizon, and the water sky. Bob will never be able to walk on the edge of a floe. He'll never see an iceberg carving its way through an endless plateau of sea ice. He'll never be able to sit and talk with penguins. He'll never see seals playing in the tide cracks and Adelie penguins swarrking at you when you turn their floe over. He'll never have the pleasure of drilling cores in icefloes with half a dozen Emperor penguins supervising your every move. He'll learn what little he knows from watching Discovery Channel, paying other people to guide him about, and living a second-hand life. And he deserves it. "CANDChelp" wrote in message ... | You need to watch what you're doing | near the edges of icefloes, esp if there are penguins around. | | Here that, stay away from the edges of the iceflows!!! | | RB |
Thanks, Skitch
The biggest piece of ice Bob's seen is in a glass. Oh wait, I forgot -
he lives in a crap climate. And a crap environment. The biggest piece of clean ice he's seen is in a glass. Gosh, that's quite a sense of humor you have there! Too bad Tracy Ulman is off the air. Bwahahahahaha RB |
Thanks, Skitch
He'll never be able to sit and talk with penguins.
I've handled Emperor penguins and more exotic Animals than you'll ever manage. RB |
Thanks, Skitch
He'll learn what little he knows from
watching Discovery Channel, paying other people to guide him about, and living a second-hand life. Ever climb down into a cave on a volcanic Island in search of a trap door spider that lives in bat guano? I have. Ever handle a just born pair of baby gorillas? I have. Ever track through a rain forrest in Trinidad's Centipede island in search of a giant foot long centipede? I have....and bloody hell, we found two! Forget it, Pete. By the time I was 20 I'd been on 11 NY Zoological Society expeditions through the Museum of Natural History where my father worked for 25 years as a Naturalist. You lose again! RB |
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