Nov 03, 2009 -
By David Henry
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601088&sid=aY43vBHLDM6I
Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Claude Levi-Strauss, the French social anthropologist who influenced generations of intellectuals with his ideas on culture and said the human species would become extinct, has died. He was 100.
- 16 Comments
Sep 08, 2009 -
Robert Booth
The Guardian, Monday 7 September 2009
A lost world populated by fanged frogs, grunting fish and tiny bear-like creatures has been discovered in a remote volcanic crater on the Pacific island of Papua New Guinea.
A team of scientists from Britain, the United States and Papua New Guinea found more than 40 previously unidentified species when they climbed into the kilometre-deep crater of Mount Bosavi and explored a pristine jungle habitat teeming with life that has evolved in isolation since the volcano last erupted 200,000 years ago. In a remarkably rich haul from just five weeks of exploration, the biologists discovered 16 frogs which have never before been recorded by science, at least three new fish, a new bat and a giant rat, which may turn out to be the biggest in the world.
- 16 Comments
Jan 26, 2009 -
RAINFORESTS
Rainforests once covered 14% of the earth's land surface;
now they cover 6%.
**
One hundred and thirty seven plant, animal and insect
species are being lost every single day due to rainforest
deforestation.
**
The howler monkey is the loudest animal living in the
rainforests of South America.
- 4 Comments
May 29, 2008 -
SOURCE: Survival - The Movement for Tribal Peoples
Members of one of the world’s last uncontacted tribes have been spotted and photographed from the air near the Brazil-Peru border. The photos were taken during several flights over one of the remotest parts of the Amazon rainforest in Brazil’s Acre state.
‘We did the overflight to show their houses, to show they are there, to show they exist,’ said uncontacted tribes expert José Carlos dos Reis Meirelles Júnior.
- 14 Comments