01.24.2007, 05:29 AM | #981 |
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yeh i try not stone it at partys, get to paranoid and boring, i like to be up grooving having fun. But she is into smoking sometimes so thats all good.
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01.24.2007, 05:30 AM | #982 |
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ok too much advice and you might fuck it up. just be yourself and have fun. talk to her and if she likes you then get it on, otherwise just have fun at the party.
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01.24.2007, 08:40 AM | #983 |
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LONDON (Reuters) - Flora, a Komodo dragon who has never mated or even mixed with a male, is the proud mother and father of five baby dragons, scientists said on Wednesday.
Both Flora and her babies, which measured 40-45 cm (15-18 inches) and weighed up to 125 grams (4.4 ounces) when they were hatched at the Chester Zoo are doing fine. Two fertilised eggs are still in an incubator. "Flora is oblivious to the excitement she has caused but we are delighted to say she is now a mum and dad," said Kevin Buley a curator at the zoo. "When the first of the babies hatched, we didn't know whether to make her a cup of tea or pass her the cigars..." Scientists announced in December in the journal Nature that Flora had fertilised the eggs herself, without any male help, in a process culminating in parthenogenesis or virgin birth. Other lizards do this, but Buley and his team said it was the first time it has been shown that Komodo dragons, the world's largest lizards, can also accomplish it. The baby dragons, all males, are being cared for in a special area of the zoo and feasting on a diet of crickets and locusts. "We haven't made a decision on names yet -- as Komodo dragons can live for over 40 years, we want to get the names just right," Buley added. |
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01.24.2007, 08:47 AM | #984 |
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^ There is a similar recent story about Chester Zoo:
...A British zoo announced Wednesday the virgin birth of five Komodo dragons, giving scientists new hope for the captive breeding of the endangered species. In an evolutionary twist, the newborns' eight-year-old mother Flora shocked staff at Chester Zoo in northern England when she became pregnant without ever having a male partner or even being exposed to the opposite sex... http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servl...y/Science/home Chester Zoo is a favourite place of ours. We can be found there often.
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01.24.2007, 09:32 AM | #985 |
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Interesting read, but virginal conception sounds very dull though.
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01.24.2007, 10:59 AM | #986 |
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http://www.sendspace.com/file/p2rqm8
me playing a bit of 'new hampshire', its not all right and stuff, its just the basic idea of it, and it was rushed so i dont think its a comment on my proper playing
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01.24.2007, 03:02 PM | #987 |
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'By jove, I think I just saw someone on the Sonic Youth Forum actually talking about Sonic Youth.' 'It can't be Foggy. Someone talked about them last week. It'll be a while 'till they're mentioned again.' 'Ay-up, Foggy, he's right. It'll be all goth bands and cheese and weather and cock.' 'Perhaps you're right. We'll stay stationed here on the lookout, just in case.'
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01.24.2007, 03:07 PM | #988 |
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The world's best graph is back. Look at its lovely form:
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01.25.2007, 07:37 AM | #989 |
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Andes field trip reveals new species of climbing rodent
By Steve Connor, Science Editor Published: 25 January 2007 Zoologists have discovered a new species of squirrel-like mammal, which they have described as a strikingly unusual creature, in the high mountains of Peru. The nocturnal animal looks similar to a squirrel, and is about the same size, but DNA tests have shown that it is more closely related to a family of South American spiny rats, whose fur bristles with spines. The new species is a climbing rodent with strange-looking, long, dense fur, a broad head and thickly furred tail tipped with white. It also has a distinctive blackish crest of fur on its crown, nape and shoulders. Scientists discovered the rodent during a field survey in 1999 of Peru's Manu National Park and Biosphere Reserve Mountains on the lush eastern slopes of the Andes in southern Peru, which is one of the richest regions in the world for wildlife. Its formal scientific description and official naming has only now been made public with the publication today of a description of the Manu reserve findings in the journal Mastozoologia Neotropical. The same field trip, which extended from 1999 to 2001, uncovered 11 additional species new to science, namely one opossum, seven bats and three other rodents. "Like other tropical mountain ranges, such as the Himalayas, the Andes support a fantastic variety of habitats. These in turn support some of the richest faunas on the planet," said Bruce Patterson, the curator of mammals at the Field Museum in Chicago, who led the research team. "The new species is not only a handsome novelty. Preliminary DNA analyses suggest that its nearest relatives, all restricted to the lowlands, may have arisen from Andean ancestors," Dr Patterson said. "The newly discovered species casts a striking new light on the evolution of an entire group of arboreal rodents," he added. Little is known about the species - which has been named Isothrix barbarabrownae after a Field Museum scientist called Barbara Brown - except that it lives in the cloud forests at an altitude of 6,200 feet and probably feeds on seeds, nuts, berries and small insects. Subsequent attempts to find further specimens of the rodent have failed. The species is known to have five other close relatives belonging to the same genus living in South America. The Manu reserve extends from the lowland forests of the Amazon basin to open grasslands above the Andean tree line. It is home to more species of mammals and birds than any other area of the world of comparable size. In total, the team recorded 222 species of mammals, 94 of which were bats, and 1,003 species of birds, twice the number of breeding bird species in North America, during the three-year field trip. Sam Turvey, a research fellow at the Zoological Society of London, said that this region of South America is renown for being one of the richest regions in the world for biodiversity. "It covers an area from low to very high altitude, which supports many different kinds of ecosystems. It's very much a centre for biodiversity," Dr Turvey said. "People think it's very unusual to describe a new species of mammal such as this one but in fact several new mammals and birds are routinely reported each year. There's still a lot of new species of relatively large animals in the world left to be described, certainly more than we think."
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01.25.2007, 07:38 AM | #990 |
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i gotta make some calls
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01.25.2007, 07:39 AM | #991 |
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^ I just recieved a call. Not from jonboy, though. I have no idea who he's calling, but it sounds important.
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01.25.2007, 07:40 AM | #992 |
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it certainly is. its about a gig i am putting on.
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01.25.2007, 07:43 AM | #993 |
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01.25.2007, 10:03 AM | #994 |
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The internet is for porn.
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01.25.2007, 11:10 AM | #995 |
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soooooooooooooooooo
i just got back from the party that i was given all the advice for we kissed...i was terrible guys!! i was so nervous and i had no idea what i was doing, she said she didnt mind and said im just shy. and we kissed again when leaving
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01.25.2007, 11:14 AM | #996 |
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what are you talking about dude?
Friday, May 23, 1997 The Clinton administration has decided to commit the United States to finalizing a treaty in December 1997 that would impose legally binding, internationally enforceable limits on the production of greenhouse gases, primarily carbon dioxide (CO2). That decision was based on the belief that global warming is significant, that humans are its primary cause and that only immediate government action can avert disaster. Yet there is no scientific consensus that global warming is a problem or that humans are its cause. Even if current predictions of warming are correct, delaying drastic government actions by up to 25 years will make little difference in global temperature 100 years from now. Proposed treaty restrictions would do little environmental good and great economic harm. By contrast, putting off action until we have more evidence of human-caused global warming and better technology to mitigate it is both environmentally and economically sound. Much of the environmental policy now proposed is based on myths. Let's look at the four most common. Myth #1: Scientists Agree the Earth Is Warming. While ground-level temperature measurements suggest the earth has warmed between 0.3 and 0.6 degrees Celsius since 1850, global satellite data, the most reliable of climate measure- ments, show no evidence of warming during the past 18 years. [See Figure I.] Even if the earth's temperature has increased slightly, the increase is well within the natural range of known temperature variation over the last 15,000 years. Indeed, the earth experienced greater warming between the 10th and 15th centuries - a time when vineyards thrived in England and Vikings colonized Greenland and built settlements in Canada. Myth #2: Humans Are Causing Global Warming. Scientists do not agree that humans discernibly influence global climate because the evidence supporting that theory is weak. The scientific experts most directly concerned with climate conditions reject the theory by a wide margin.
Myth #3: The Government Must Act Now to Halt Global Warming. The belief underlying this myth is that the consequences of near-term inaction could be catastrophic and, thus, prudence supports immediate government action. However, a 1995 analysis by proponents of global warming theory concluded that the world's governments can wait up to 25 years to take action with no appreciable negative effect on the environment. T.M.L. Wigley, R. Richels and J.A. Edmonds followed the common scientific assumption that a realistic goal of global warming policy would be to stabilize the concentration of atmospheric CO2 at approximately twice preindustrial levels, or 550 parts per million by volume. Given that economic growth will continue with a concomitant rise in greenhouse gas emissions, the scientists agreed that stabilization at this level is environmentally sound as well as politically and economically feasible. They also concluded that:
Myth # 4: Human-Caused Global Warming Will Cause Cataclysmic Environmental Problems. Proponents of the theory of human-caused global warming argue that it is causing and will continue to cause all manner of environmental catastrophes, including higher ocean levels and increased hurricane activity. Reputable scientists, including those working on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the United Nations organization created to study the causes and effects of global climate warming, reject these beliefs. Sea levels are rising around the globe, though not uniformly. In fact, sea levels have risen more than 300 feet over the last 18,000 years - far predating any possible human impact. Rising sea levels are natural in between ice ages. Contrary to the predictions of global warming theorists, the current rate of increase is slower than the average rate over the 18,000-year period. Periodic media reports link human-caused climate changes to more frequent tropical cyclones or more intense hurricanes. Tropical storms depend on warm ocean surface temperatures (at least 26 degrees Celsius) and an unlimited supply of moisture. Therefore, the reasoning goes, global warming leads to increased ocean surface temperatures, a greater uptake of moisture and destructive hurricanes. But recent data show no increase in the number or severity of tropical storms, and the latest climate models suggest that earlier models making such connections were simplistic and thus inaccurate.
What about other effects of warming? If a slight atmospheric warming occurred, it would primarily affect nighttime temperatures, lessening the number of frosty nights and extending the growing season. Thus some scientists think a global warming trend would be an agricultural boon. Moreover, historically warm periods have been the most conducive to life. Most of the earth's plant life evolved in a much warmer, carbon dioxide-filled atmosphere. Conclusion. As scientists expose the myths concerning global warming, the fears of an apocalypse should subside. So rather than legislating in haste and ignorance and repenting at leisure, our government should maintain rational policies, based on science and adaptable to future discoveries. |
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01.25.2007, 11:19 AM | #997 |
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if u read up in this thread you will see what im talking about
i kissed a girl for the first time in 5 years!
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01.25.2007, 12:22 PM | #998 |
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ohh okay. were lonely creatures you and i
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01.25.2007, 12:28 PM | #999 |
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01.25.2007, 12:36 PM | #1000 |
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hmmm? mm?
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