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Penguin Stumblings

Here There Everywhere and Back to Nowhere...

Posts tagged with "Scuba"

Filipino Fishermen Having a Blast, Scaring Whales, Destroying Coral

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by Underwatertimes.com News Service

Babuyan Islands, The Philippines (Mar 19, 2006 19:04 EST) FISHERMEN in the once tranquil Babuyan Islands in Cagayan province are literally having a blast.

Local fishermen, citing poor catch in recent months, have resorted to dynamite blasting to salvage metal from shipwrecks surrounding the islands, according to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF)-Philippines.

It is said to be the newest and most environmentally damaging source of livelihood in the islands, said the WWF, which conducts an annual on-site monitoring of the Babuyan Islands for its Humpback Whale Research and Development Project.

The blasting is scaring away the Pacific humpback whales that come to the Philippines to breed this time of the year, it said.

The dynamite blasts are also inevitably destroying the coral reefs in the Camiguin Island, where the blasts have been monitored.

The WWF records an average of 100 sightings in the Babuyan Islands annually but fears that this would be reduced due to the dynamite blasts.

"We will continue to monitor the whales to see if the blasting has a direct impact on the whales ... although definitely there must be permanent damage to the coral reefs in the area," WWF consultant Jomarie Acebes said in a phone interview.

Located about 50 km north of the Luzon mainland, the Babuyan Islands has the highest known cetacean species diversity in the Philippines, hosting 14 of the 25 known cetacean species in the world including the humpback whale, sperm whale and bottle-nosed dolphin.

The WWF team that arrived in Camiguin Island north of Cagayan province on Feb. 17 has recorded up to six blasts per hour almost everyday. On March 18, just days after the Calayan police arrived in Camiguin, four blasts were recorded again.

"The blasts are really loud. You can hear it even up to eight kilometers from the shore. That's very loud considering that the dynamites explode under water," Acebes said.

The locals themselves have admitted that those who go out for blasting use about a gallon of dynamite for every trip, she said. They dive to plant the dynamites in the shipwrecks and then recover the steel that comes loose due to the explosion.

The scrap metals are sold in the island for about P4 per kilo. The dealer from the island then sells the scrap in Aparri or Cagayan for about P10 per kilo, Acebes said.

There are at least five known shipwrecks surrounding Camiguin Island, all of which are in the breeding ground of humpback whales that travel to the Babuyan Islands before proceeding to Alaska and Russia to feed.

The shipwrecks, which are more than 20 years old, have become artificial reefs that serve as refuge and breeding ground for fish.

Acebes said the locals have been salvaging metal from the shipwrecks for about two years now, but they used to dive and use acetylene to recover the loose scraps.

The locals have only started to use dynamites these past few months because they wanted to get bigger pieces of metal, she said.

The Cagayan provincial government passed an ordinance in 2003 declaring the humpback whales as protected species within the territorial jurisdiction of the province.

The WWF has written Calayan Mayor Joseph Llopis to inform him of the blasting. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources and the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources have also been informed of the illegal activity.

The Calayan police have also visited Camiguin and apprehended the locals for the blasting but the WWF revealed that no police report has been filed in Calayan about the blasts.

Pressures such as illegal hunting and overfishing have threatened the global population of cetaceans. Humpbacks are listed as endangered under the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and the US Endangered Species Act.

Babuyan Islands, The Philippines (Mar 19, 2006 19:04 EST) FISHERMEN in the once tranquil Babuyan Islands in Cagayan province are literally having a blast.

Local fishermen, citing poor catch in recent months, have resorted to dynamite blasting to salvage metal from shipwrecks surrounding the islands, according to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF)-Philippines.

It is said to be the newest and most environmentally damaging source of livelihood in the islands, said the WWF, which conducts an annual on-site monitoring of the Babuyan Islands for its Humpback Whale Research and Development Project.

The blasting is scaring away the Pacific humpback whales that come to the Philippines to breed this time of the year, it said.

The dynamite blasts are also inevitably destroying the coral reefs in the Camiguin Island, where the blasts have been monitored.

The WWF records an average of 100 sightings in the Babuyan Islands annually but fears that this would be reduced due to the dynamite blasts.

"We will continue to monitor the whales to see if the blasting has a direct impact on the whales ... although definitely there must be permanent damage to the coral reefs in the area," WWF consultant Jomarie Acebes said in a phone interview.

Located about 50 km north of the Luzon mainland, the Babuyan Islands has the highest known cetacean species diversity in the Philippines, hosting 14 of the 25 known cetacean species in the world including the humpback whale, sperm whale and bottle-nosed dolphin.

The WWF team that arrived in Camiguin Island north of Cagayan province on Feb. 17 has recorded up to six blasts per hour almost everyday. On March 18, just days after the Calayan police arrived in Camiguin, four blasts were recorded again.

"The blasts are really loud. You can hear it even up to eight kilometers from the shore. That's very loud considering that the dynamites explode under water," Acebes said.

The locals themselves have admitted that those who go out for blasting use about a gallon of dynamite for every trip, she said. They dive to plant the dynamites in the shipwrecks and then recover the steel that comes loose due to the explosion.

The scrap metals are sold in the island for about P4 per kilo. The dealer from the island then sells the scrap in Aparri or Cagayan for about P10 per kilo, Acebes said.

There are at least five known shipwrecks surrounding Camiguin Island, all of which are in the breeding ground of humpback whales that travel to the Babuyan Islands before proceeding to Alaska and Russia to feed.

The shipwrecks, which are more than 20 years old, have become artificial reefs that serve as refuge and breeding ground for fish.

Acebes said the locals have been salvaging metal from the shipwrecks for about two years now, but they used to dive and use acetylene to recover the loose scraps.

The locals have only started to use dynamites these past few months because they wanted to get bigger pieces of metal, she said.

The Cagayan provincial government passed an ordinance in 2003 declaring the humpback whales as protected species within the territorial jurisdiction of the province.

The WWF has written Calayan Mayor Joseph Llopis to inform him of the blasting. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources and the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources have also been informed of the illegal activity.

The Calayan police have also visited Camiguin and apprehended the locals for the blasting but the WWF revealed that no police report has been filed in Calayan about the blasts.

Pressures such as illegal hunting and overfishing have threatened the global population of cetaceans. Humpbacks are listed as endangered under the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and the US Endangered Species Act.

Source: http://news.inq7.net/

BREED MORE SHARKS IN OUR WATERS

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15.03.2006
By TOBY WALKER
SCIENTISTS have proposed introducing African and West Australian grey nurse sharks into Queensland waters in a bid to boost endangered local populations before they become extinct.

As few as 500 grey nurse sharks are thought to live on the eastern seaboard but researchers fear a lack of Ĭgenetic diversity has now Ĭbecome the latest threat to their survival.

Humans were once the greatest enemy of the grey nurse shark, eradicating huge numbers during a bloody campaign throughout the 1960s and 1970s because they were deemed vicious killers.

But within a decade, the grey nurse shark became the first to be protected worldwide and it is now commonly accepted that the species is more like the Labrador of the seas.

Now new research suggests the greatest danger to grey nurse sharks on the eastern seaboard could in fact be their own kind.
The research published in academic journal Biology Letters focused on DNA samples taken from grey nurse sharks.

It found the genetic variations in those living off Queensland and New South Wales was low.

The upshot is the local grey nurse sharks did not generally mix with other types of grey nurse sharks and would be less likely than other breeds to adapt to changes in their surrounding environment ¡X fast tracking them to extinction.

With local grey nurse shark populations already dangerously low, UnderWater World curator Andreas Fischer welcomed any ideas that could help them thrive.

¡§I think if genetically there¡¦s no variation between the populations and they¡¦re just geographically separated, then I don¡¦t see why (introducing foreign breeds) should be a problem,¡¨ he said. ¡§At the current numbers, you¡¦re probably looking at extinction in the next 20 years, so I guess you¡¦ve got to do something.¡¨

The proposal to import African and West Australian sharks was based on the belief that the imported specimens could expand the genetic pool. But researchers conceded it was a suggestion that needed further scientific investigation.

Source: http://www.sunshinecoastdaily.com.au/localnews/storydisplay.cfm?storyid=3676319&thesection=localnews&thesubsection=&thesecondsubsection=

Giant squid grabs London audience

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By Rebecca Morelle
BBC News science reporter

One of the biggest and most complete giant squids ever found is on display at London's Natural History Museum.

Measuring a monstrous 8.62m (28ft), the animal was caught off the coast of the Falkland Islands by a trawler.

Researchers at the museum undertook a painstaking process to preserve the giant creature, which is now on show in a 9m- (30ft-) long glass tank.

Giant squid, once thought to be sea serpents, are very rarely seen and live at depths of 200-1,000m (650-3,300ft).

They can weigh up to a 1,000kg; the largest ever spotted measured a vast 18.5m and was found in 1880 off Island Bay in New Zealand.

"Most giant squid tend to be washed up dead on beaches, or retrieved from the stomach of sperm whales, so they tend to be in quite poor condition," explained Jon Ablett, the mollusc curator at the Natural History Museum who led preservation efforts.

As a result, finding such a large, complete specimen was something of a rarity, he said.

Archie the squid

The team nicknamed the creature Archie, after its Latin name Architeuthis dux, but it may have to revise this after finding out that the squid is probably female.

It took several months to prepare the squid for display.

"The first stage was to defrost it; that took about four days. The problem was the mantle - the body - is very thick and the tentacles very narrow, so we had to try to thaw the thick mantle without the tentacles rotting," Mr Ablett told the BBC News website.

The scientists did this by bathing the mantle in water, whilst covering the tentacles in ice packs, after which they injected the squid with a formol-saline solution to prevent it from rotting.

The team then needed to find someone to build a glass tank which could not only hold the huge creature, but could leave the squid accessible for future scientific research, and they decided to draw upon the knowledge of an artist famed for displaying preserved dead animals.

"We contacted Damien Hirst's group after seeing their animals preserved in formalin. They put us in touch with a company who could make these tanks," explained Mr Ablett.

The squid now resides in a glass tank, filled to the brim with preservative solution, and is one of 22 million specimens that can be seen as part of the behind-the-scenes Darwin Centre tour of the Natural History Museum.

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4756514.stm

The Sound and the Worry

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Okinawan sea life likely to suffer under Navy sonar deal

By Jeff Shaw

23 Oct 2003

Every year, scuba divers make tens of thousands of excursions into the waters off Okinawa, Japan, drawn by the spectacular array of sea life on display. Soon, though, that sea life may be blasted out of the water by an unwelcome sonic barrage.

Almost everywhere in the world except in this patch of ocean, denizens of the deep won a reprieve this month, when a court agreement between environmental organizations and the U.S. Navy limited the military's use of low-frequency active sonar (LFAS). Experts contend that the sonar, which uses high-intensity bursts of sound to track submarines, is deadly for marine mammals and other sea life. Under the terms of the agreement, use of the technology is now restricted to East Asia, including portions of the Sea of Japan, Philippine Sea, South China Sea, and East China Sea -- meaning the Navy may soon visit earsplitting noises on endangered animals in Okinawa's peaceful waters.

Joel Reynolds, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's Marine Mammal Protection Project, calls the recent settlement "a major step forward" toward protecting marine life and a measure of protection "against the proliferation of sonar around the world." He's right -- but however important the settlement is, it is just a step. And this incomplete victory comes at great cost for threatened species in an ecologically significant part of the world.

The Dugong Show

"The waters off of Okinawa are some of the richest in biodiversity in the world," says Peter Galvin, Pacific director for the Arizona-based Center for Biological Diversity. "It's been described as the Galapagos of the East, and it's under siege."

That rhetoric isn't hyperbole: Okinawa supports a dizzying variety of marine species. The island's coral reefs rank behind only Australia's Great Barrier Reef in terms of ecological diversity, sustaining more than 1,000 types of fish and a host of other spectacular wildlife. One prime example is the critically endangered Okinawa dugong, a manatee-like creature that holds a special place in local culture because it is traditionally regarded as a messenger from the sea gods. Only about 50 of these animals remain alive today in the waters off Okinawa. Any new threat could push this unique dugong population over the brink to extinction.

"We're very concerned about impacts to the fragile dugong population," Galvin says. "There's every reason to believe that these sonar impacts are across the marine mammal spectrum. That's what the science shows."

While no study has found that low-frequency sonar threatens the dugong particularly, the risks posed by the technology to other marine mammals are well documented. The sonar can boom out a signal reaching 215 decibels -- as loud as an F-15 fighter plane at takeoff. In the acoustic environment of the ocean, this deafening roar can cause stress and severe physical harm to sea life, including marine mammals such as the humpback whales that use the East China Sea for breeding and migratory grounds.

Species like whales and dolphins that communicate with sound face a distinct risk, but it's not just marine mammals that are affected. Compelling evidence shows that sonar can also be deadly for sharks, fish, and endangered sea turtles, at least three species of which exist off the coast of Okinawa.

When U.S. Magistrate Judge Elizabeth Laporte issued the initial injunction prohibiting use of the sonar in October 2002, she cited the threat to turtles specifically. Laporte wrote that "endangered species, such as sea turtles, will ... be in LFA sonar's path" and that the sonar risked causing "irreparable harm to the marine environment that supports the existence of these species." The hawksbill, loggerhead, and green sea turtle are all included on the United States' Endangered Species List as well as the global Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species. All are found in Asian waters, and all lay their eggs on Okinawan beaches.

These facts point to one inescapable conclusion: This is not the place to deploy an invasive, noisy, and ecologically devastating technology. "This will affect the wildlife around Okinawa very severely, but it will also affect the entire area, from Indonesia to Sakhalin," says Chalmers Johnson, head of the Japan Policy Research Institute.

Sacrificial Slam

If these seas are so important and sensitive, why were they chosen as the sacrifice area? The nations whose waters will be affected had no role in the court settlement negotiations. Talks between the Navy and environmental groups "were conducted under a veil of confidentiality," says Reynolds of NRDC, so it's impossible to say with certainty how this arrangement was reached.

It isn't too hard to make an educated guess, though. Okinawa is already home to a huge U.S. military presence, so making the surrounding seas a training ground is convenient for the Navy. Moreover, because of a vexing dual colonialism, Okinawa is largely powerless to resist.

Though legally part of Japan, Okinawa's ethnically and culturally distinct people are often looked down upon by mainland Japanese. Okinawa is further politically isolated by its status as Japan's poorest prefecture and by the lack of a shared history with the rest of the country. (Okinawa's islands were part of the independent Kingdom of the Ryukyus until they were annexed in the 19th century.)

The U.S. military has been all too willing to exploit Tokyo's reluctance to stand up for Okinawa. The tiny island chain has been forced to house 75 percent of Japan's American military bases -- though all of the Okinawan islands put together comprise just six-tenths of one percent of Japan's territory. Okinawa bears the resultant burdens, including pollution on land and at sea.

Johnson, one of the foremost Asia scholars in the U.S., says he isn't surprised the same technology that raised an outcry when used in Puget Sound is being shipped to the North Pacific instead. "This seems like typical Navy racism," he says flatly.

Sound Bites

The outcome also raises uncomfortable questions about U.S. environmental groups' right to decide the fate of Okinawa's ocean life. If LFAS is a real threat to marine natural resources, as almost every credible scientist seems to believe, then shifting its use to a place most Americans don't see smacks of environmental racism.

Still, it is difficult to fault NRDC and the five other plaintiffs in the lawsuit for settling; after all, the global environment is better off for it. Indeed, under the settlement agreement, less than 1 percent of the world's oceans faces the disruption and death caused by LFAS, as opposed to about 75 percent. The settlement also adds seasonal restrictions to sonar tests and limits sonar use near the coastline. "[The plaintiffs] probably thought [the agreement] was the best they could do," Johnson says. Probably -- but the bottom line is that an impoverished and oppressed sea-based culture takes the fall to protect the environment elsewhere.

Moreover, without vigilance, other seas may share East Asia's burden. Taking advantage of their elevated status in today's security-conscious environment, the U.S. military is asking Congress to exempt it from the Endangered Species Act and Marine Mammal Protection Act. This legislative end run would circumvent the court's ruling on sonar and enable what Galvin calls "a full-scale assault on environmental law."

"The overall context to keep in mind is that the military is trying to exempt itself from these requirements all around," says Galvin. "The military is talking out of both sides of their mouths, signing this settlement at the same time that they're asking to be exempted from all environmental protections."

Facts haven't gotten in the way of the military's push. Even former U.S. EPA Administrator Christie Whitman admitted before Congress that she couldn't come up with one example of environmental regulations that prevented the military from carrying out its duties. Still, Congress is considering granting these wide-ranging exemptions, which would gut two flagship environmental laws and effectively reverse every victory the new settlement secured.

Now is a pivotal time for developing a real solution for seas around Okinawa and the world. The first step is to defeat these exemptions, which Johnson calls "attempts to establish the military as a force beyond the law that can do whatever it damn well pleases." The second is to prevent Okinawa and the rest of East Asia from becoming the world's environmental whipping boy.

NRDC, Reynolds promises, "absolutely" plans to reach out to Japanese and Okinawan environmental groups as part of an international effort. If that happens, and this agreement is followed by a policy that protects oceans everywhere -- with no exceptions -- from acoustic assault, then the work leading up to the settlement will have been worthwhile.

If not, this agreement represents at best a holding pattern, and at worst, a Faustian bargain. If Puget Sound deserves to be free of low-frequency sonar, then so does the East China Sea.

Source: Grist Magazine

'Giant' lobster lives up to name

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A giant freshwater lobster measuring almost one metre in length has been found in north-west Tasmania.

The species is listed as endangered and is only found in streams and lakes in northern and north-western Tasmania

Giant freshwater lobster researcher Todd Walsh found the animal in an undisclosed location.

Mr Walsh says the male is probably about 35-years-old.

"I have caught the biggest lobster I have caught in 20 years," he said.

"I've only got little hands but it's very hard to pick him up with one hand, put it that way.

"His claws are about 25 centimetres long. He's probably about 90 centimetres stretched out so he's almost a metre mythical lobster.

"He's not far off being one of the biggest ones you'll ever see."

Source: http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200603/s1587181.htm

New Shark Species Discovered in the Sea of Cortez; 'Mustelus hacat'

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Mexico City, Mexico (Mar 2, 2006 19:26 EST) A Mexican marine biologist has discovered a new shark species in the murky depths of Mexico‘s Sea of Cortez, the first new shark find in the wildlife-rich inlet in 34 years.

Postgraduate student Juan Carlos Perez was on a fishing boat in early 2003 studying sharks from the Mustelus family netted at depths of 660 feet when he noticed some of them had darker skin and white markings.

The sharks, slender, dark gray-brown and around 5 feet (1.5 meters) long, turned out to be a new species that Perez and his team have named "Mustelus hacat," after the word for shark in a local Indian dialect.

"What I first noticed was their color. They are dark in color, like dark coffee, and have white markings on the tips and edges of their fins and tails which jump out at you because they are so dark," Perez told Reuters on Thursday.

"I got back from the boat and the first thing I said was that I thought I had a new species, but I wasn‘t sure until six months on when we did genetic tests," he said, audibly elated.

Worldwide, marine biologists tend to discover two or three new shark species in any given year.

But Perez‘s find -- bringing to five the types of Mustelus shark found in the eastern North Pacific -- is the first shark discovery in the Sea of Cortez since the tiny Mexican Horn Shark (Heterodontus mexicanus) was identified in 1972.

"I wasn‘t looking for something new, but it‘s very satisfying. I‘m very happy," said Perez, 31, who is based at the CICESE science and technology research center at the port of Ensenada in northwestern Baja California state.

His find was published in the U.S. journal Copeia in December.

"There must be more undiscovered species there but access is difficult. If we hadn‘t been on those boats I‘d never have seen them because that‘s the only place they are caught. And it‘s not a region that attracts scuba diving."

There are some 50 to 60 species of shark in the Sea of Cortez, a narrow body of water also known as the Gulf of California that separates Mexico‘s Baja California peninsula from the mainland and is famous for its rich and unique ecosystem.

The Mustelus hacat lives in the ocean‘s depths feeding on shellfish and shrimp," Perez said, adding: "They have very, very small teeth. They are really not aggressive or dangerous."

Source: www.underwatertimes.com

Stumbling Links For March

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Scuba Diving:
Jean-Michel Cousteau at LIDS
Hand signals used by divers approved by RSTC
ARSBC - The Artificial Reef Society of British Columbia, ARSBC, is a non-profit society based in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Our mission is to create environmentally- and economically-sustainable "artificial reefs" in British Columbia and around the world for the enjoyment of Scuba Divers, and for the protection of environmentally- and historically-sensitive marine habitats. Since 1991, the ARSBC has sunk 6 ships and one Boeing 737 in B.C.
TURTLE LIVE - Live webcast Of Turtle napping spot.
Live webcasts Of Orca's - They will also notify you at key times when orca are near the camera and mics.
Aquaskipper - Fly above the water with the most popular product from Inventist! Your hopping motion causes the hydrofoil to propel you forward while giving you lift. Since the hydrofoil has very little drag in the water, you can move at speeds of up to 17 mph. With the AquaSkipper, you can ride on waves, try new tricks, and race your friends. Any way you use it, the Aquaskipper fun and a great way to exercise.
Tank of the Month - February 2006 - Reefkeeping.com - Don't personally like Saltwater Tanks...but all I got to say is WOW!
Sea Slugs Madness - Nice Site!
World first? - Diving instructor captures images of divers interacting with killer whales.
Something Fishy - How Humans Got So Smart
Ocean Was a Hot Tub in Dino Era

Kids:
TRAINING TOILET PAPER - Paw prints show kids how much toilet paper to use. Kids follow the prints to the puppy and tear off the right amount.
Adobe Digital Kids Club - Lessons and activities
The MINI-MIZER - Build a Lego You!
StoryNory - Free download of children stories.

Mind:
Simple ways to make yourself far cleverer - Doing 'brain exercises' such as watching Countdown, playing Sudoku or taking a shower with your eyes closed can make us all up to 40 per cent cleverer within seven days, according to research by a BBC programme this week.
A Theory on the Deja Vu Phenomenon - A physiological explanation of the deja vu phenomenon may exist. The optical and neural paths from the two eyes may be slightly different. Or, alternately, a "newer" and "older" brain processing method might be responsible.
Sleep position gives personality clue - If you want an insight into somebody's true personality, then try to catch a glimpse of the way they sleep.
What's Your IQ?

Health:
Strange afflictions - Ever felt the urge to eat dirt or attack the alien impersonating your brother? Megan Gressor can explain why.
Over-the-counter (OTC) Medicines - familydoctor.org
New England Journal Of Medicine - NEJM Handhelds : PDA Home
If I am feeling chest pain, should I call 911?

Odd:
International Earth-Destruction Advisory Board - The International Earth Destruction Advisory Board (IEDAB) is an independent scientific institution which monitors the current status of the Earth and the number of times it has been destroyed. In the event of the Earth being destroyed it will be the IEDAB's job to relay this information to people who need to know and provide advice on how to proceed.
Top 10 Strangest Lego Creations
How to Stop Time
Spirit Project - Palmistry
Tricks of the Trade - Professional secrets from those in the know.
Awesome - A Site about Cool Shit
Aquada - Now this is a cool car!
The Micropolitan Museum - the Institute for the Promotion of the Less than One Millimeter
proudly presents...
Portable Telephone
The Witching Hours - Medieval Through Enlightenment Period European Witch History
The Final Curtain
Nessie on the Net - The Ultimate Loch Ness Monster Live Cam, Scotland
Doodles, Drafts Designs
Sacred Destinations — a catalogue and travel guide to more than 1,500 (and counting!) sacred sites, holy places, pilgrimage destinations, historical religious sites and religious buildings and artifacts around the world.
Statistics - We've all been in this situation before – the meeting's in 5 minutes, and your boss asked you to find a statistic online to prove a point. Like that the tobacco consumption in Brazil is decreasing, or that most seniors prefer cats to dogs. Whatever it is, we're now here to help you create valid-looking statistics in an instant!
The Forbidden Knowledge - Conspiracy Theory
World's most expensive cars 2006
Instructables - step-by-step collaboration.

Fun:
Cityscape - is a game where you have been assigned to create a new city in a recently discovered region that's prime for development. Using the 18 urban aspects at your disposal, you are able to build your city, but only those who build them in the proper order will achieve the highest ranking: a teeming Cityscape.
Skip Intro
Extreme Survival Quiz - Test your survivial acumen in some extreme circumstances.
So You Wanna Build a Macquarium + Glow in the dark Fish = It's a good match!
Monty Python's Silly Walks Generator - ROFL!
Plane Banner Generator - Cool!
Play Free Online Games - Role Playing Games
How to Fold Paper Into a Secret Note Square - Some people have trouble opening this type of note, so it's perfect for passing secret notes to your friends.
Sketch Swap - Draw One to Get One.
Origami - Cool!
Mystic Pig - Ask the Pig...he knows...lol
The Cleaning Hunk
WALL OF MEMEORY - Walls last a very long time. If you want to remember something forever, scratch it into the wall of memory.
Brittlelactica - Got Milk?

Internet:
Google's Domains - Google this google that, you hear google everywhere. Yes, it is a very useful search engine, but don't you get tired of typing w.w.w...g.o.o.g.l.e...c.o.m every time? the domain name gets boring :smile: So, what to do? Google owns a lot of funny names that point to their site!
Nothing for Sale Site - Name your own price.
Chatzy - Chatzy is a free private chat service. Fill out the form to create a chat room immediately - only for you and the people you invite!
FeedYes.com gives rss feeds to websites without feeds - Just type the url of any page, and FeedYes gives you the feed.
Kaboodle - Collect, Save items from across the web onto a single page.
AjaxTrans - Real time translation as you type!
StanaPhone - Free and unlimited calls to any other Stanaphone subscriber, anywhere in the world.
Email graphic traceroute - Paste an email with full headers (we need the 'Received' lines -- we don't need your email addresses, digg). The app will (we hope) trace the path your email message took as it passed through various servers, on Google maps.
Way Back Machine - The Internet Archive is building a digital library of Internet sites and other cultural artifacts in digital form. Like a paper library, we provide free access to researchers, historians, scholars, and the general public.
Find out what Google thinks of you.
Project IP - In addition to your IP address projected above, Project IP lists just about everything a webserver can find out about your computer.
Amazing Webpage Emailer - Very neat toolbar which lets you email a web page, without the adverts and rubbish, with the proper formatting and even if it’s locked behind passworded doors. Fast too. Plug-ins for IE, Firefox and Netscape. They do ask you for your email address while sending though, so be prepared.
Mailnation Email - Free 1000GB Email Services.
Ning -The new free and easy way for you to create your own Social Web Apps - so let the fun begin!
Zeitgeist - Search patterns, trends, and surprises.
Searchdon - Make Personal Search Engine with Famous Themes
How to protect your privacy and security when browsing the web
Comparison Of Web Browsers - From Wikipedia
Wikipedia - What Wikipedia is not

Photography:
Tiltomo - Here you can play with our Visual Search code using two sample databases from flickr.
World In Motion VR - Take a unique trip to some of the most amazing places on Earth with World in Motion VR.
Drop Shot - Video Sharing
JP Trenque - Photography
Lomography - Yup Yup Yup...lol
MyHeritage - MyHeritage.com is one of the world's first services to apply advanced face recognition technology to personal photos and family history; and it's free!
Things that make you go aahh - And awwwwww.....lol
Snowflake and Snow Crystal Photographs - These pictures show real snow crystals that fell to earth in Northern Ontario, Alaska, Vermont, the Michigan Upper Peninsula, and the Sierra Nevada mountains of California. They were taken by Kenneth G. Libbrecht using a specially designed snowflake photomicroscope.`
BubbleShare - Your photos + Your voice = Your Story

Science:
Rainbows - Rainbows have many forms. Multiple bows, bows that cross, red bows, twinned bows, coloured fringes, dark bands, spokes and more. Find out about them here.
Live Science
Encyclopedia Smithsonian
"Lost World" - Found in Indonesia Is Trove of New Species
The Transparent Butterfly

Geography:
Paleogeography and Geologic Evolution of North America
GeoNames
Sacred Destinations — a free online travel guide to the history, significance and features of over 1,100 sacred sites, holy places, pilgrimage destinations, historical religious sites and places of worship around the world.
Saharan Prehistory & Rock Art - Really Nice Site!
World History - Interesting....
Stone Pages - Web guide to Megalithic Europe :Over the last 14 years we have personally visited and photographed all 529 archæological sites you will find in these pages (117 in the six national sections and 412 in our Tours section), creating the first Web guide to European megaliths and other prehistoric sites, online since February 1996
The Roman Empire

Astronomy:
Nordlys - Of all naturally occuring heavenly phenomena, few come close to a night
with a magnificent northern lights display. Flickering curtains of dancing
light against the dark skies, northern lights is certainly one of the most
spectacular of nature's phenomena.
How to discover asteroid impacts - The story of the discovery of two impact craters.
Virtual Reality Moon Phase Pictures
Comet dust sparks scientific intrigue - Samples hint at ancient origins, with tentative signs of organic compounds.
Solar System Simulator

Free Downloads:
Desk Projection v1.0.6 - Allows you to project a transparent image of your choice on top of your desktop using alpha blending. I can be controlled either through a tray icon or with comand line arguments.
NoSleep! v2.18 - Allows you to temporarily deactivate the screen saver and any standby feature directly from the system tray. NoSleep! is minimal in size, yet provides remote control capabilities, a full (un)installation routine and - as a bonus feature - Swatch Internet Time.
TheBeat v1.07 - Displays the Internet Time from Swatch as a system tray icon (near Windows' own clock).
fd's Flickr Toys - Helping you do fun things with your digital camera since 2005. ;-)
OldVersion.com
Torrents sites - WEB OF KNOWLEDGE
Open Source Windows - Free and open-source software is good for you and for the world. This is the best Windows software that we know of. No adware, no spyware, just good software.
Peer to Mail - Store and Share files on any Web-Mail account!
Microsoft USB Flash Drive Manager (Standard)- Use this application to backup and restore presentation, pictures, songs and applications from and to USB Flash Drive devices and take them with you. Use USB Flash Drives to store personal data, to keep your network configuration and to share information with your friends. Microsoft USB Flash Drive.
List of open source software packages - From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Assassin II - When malicious software invades your system, the most invasive ones will ensure that they are malignant. Some malware can even startup with the system in Safe Mode and regenerate using a new set of credentials. Thus, your everyday scanner will fail to remove these processes. However, Assassin v2.0.0 has been equipped with the necessary features one will need to terminate and remove almost any hostile process from ones system within minutes and all without rebooting or changing the system configurations.
FastKake - Will create a set of handy and useful shortcuts which will give you full control of your Windows operating system and simplify your computing life.
Public Domain Torrents - Lot's of Free Movies and Legal too.
tinySpell - Spell checker.
Outlook Express Tweaker 1.01 - Some useful Outlook Express settings are not exposed in its Options dialog and the only way to change them is to tinker with registry. That is if you don't have OE Tweaker. Once you get this handy utility customizing the hidden Outlook Express settings becomes a snap.
Sun Clock 6.5 - world map is subtly different every day. As the seasons change watch the polar sea-ice expand and contract, the snow cover on land extend and recede, and the vegetation of the Amazon jungle, sub-Saharan Africa, and elsewhere change in intensity. Using satellite imagery taken throughout 2004 the annual cycle is simulated.
Nullsoft Beep - is an application that makes your computer sound like computers sound in the movies. It requires Windows 95 or later with DirectX 3 or later.

Portable Apps:
Portable USB Drive Apps - Wiki Wiki Wiki
Dirk Loss' Win-Tools
Portable Freeware
SysInternals
Tinyapps
del.icio.us tag usb

Government:
RFID Tags in New US Notes Explode When You Try to Microwave Them - This article has been linked all over the Internet. We want to make it clear that $20 bills will only 'pop' or 'explode' in certain microwaves. We've had E mails saying they do, they don't, 'you're all kooks' etc etc. What is confirmed is the public policy to embed US and European money with high tech tracking devices as part of the hulking surveillance society.
Immigration and Nationality Act (8 USC)
Ellis Island - Passanger Records

Dogs:
Mystic Dog - Dog Horrorscopes
Doggles - Sun Glasses For Cool Dogs.
Peta Catalog - 'Songs to Make Dogs Happy' CD :Hehehe...should get Sitara one of these...lol
Making Bath Times Fun for You and Your Dog

Gadgets:
HAL - Control Your Home by Voice From Anywhere!
LAZER SCISSORS - Laser Scissors You can cut a straight line! Just aim the pin-point laser and follow the line. No marking, no crooked cuts.
Tiny USB IrDA Adapter - Talk about small!

Computer:
Images: Windows Vista - Here's the new stuff.
Browser Security Test - How did you do ?

Books:
BRAVE NEW WORLD - Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)
Blurb Home

Food:
Monterey Bay Aquarium: Seafood Watch Program - All Seafood List

Music:
Find Music You'll Love - Pandora
Star Trek Music
Desktop Blues

Mobile Phone:
Skweezer - Is both a mobile-optimized browser and a fully functional Web portal, with features such as e-mail, contacts list, RSS reader, and more.
Gadget17 - Series 60 Freeware

RSS:
FeedYes - gives rss feeds to websites without feeds.
Feed43 - Your favorite site doesn't provide news feeds? This free online service converts any web page to an RSS feed on the fly.
FeedBlitz - RSS, Blogs, XML, readers and aggregators can be confusing. Adding email services to your blog isn't. Email RSS feed and blog subscriptions powered by FeedBlitz.
May 2008
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