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Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts

Friday, October 24, 2014

Exocoetidae: The Fish That Flies

XPlanet - 10/24/2014 08:50:00 PM
Exocoetidae, commonly called Flying Fish, is a family of fishes aptly named for their ability to emerge out of the water and glide for long distances with their outstretched pectoral fins. Their streamlined torpedo shape helps them gather enough underwater speed to break the surface, and their large, wing-like fins get them airborne. Once in the air, these fishes can glide over considerable distances. Their flights are typically around 50 meters, but some fishes have been recorded to fly up to 200 meters or more. Some species of flying fish have enlarged pelvic fins as well as enlarged pectoral fins, which allows them to fly further than two winged gliders (up to 400 meters), and have far greater maneuverability. These fishes are known as four-winged flying fish.

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To glide upward out of the water, a flying fish moves its tail up to 70 times per second. It then spreads its pectoral fins and tilts them slightly upward to provide lift. At the end of a glide, it folds its pectoral fins to reenter the sea, or drops its tail into the water to push against the water to lift itself for another glide, possibly changing direction. The curved profile of the "wing" is comparable to the aerodynamic shape of a bird wing. The fish is known to take advantage of updrafts created by air currents to increase its time of flight.

Flying fish are thought to have evolved this remarkable gliding ability to escape predators, of which they have many. Their pursuers include mackerel, tuna, swordfish, marlin, and other larger fish. Unfortunately, this evasive maneuver is not enough to escape the biggest predator on earth – humans.
Flying fish is commercially fished in Asian countries such as Japan, Vietnam and China, including the Caribbean where it’s a coveted delicacy. In Japanese cuisine, the fish is used to make some types of sushi. It is also a staple in the diet of the Tao people of Taiwan. In Barbados, flying fish were threatened by pollution and overfishing, changing the occurrences of flying fish in the waters off of Barbados. This sparked a fishing controversy between Barbados, and Trinidad and Tobago.

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Sources: WikipediaNat GeoEOL

Clouds That Look Like Things

XPlanet - 10/24/2014 08:44:00 PM
Spotting shapes in clouds is a delightful way to pass a lazy afternoon. There's even a society dedicated to cloud spotting. It’s called the Cloud Appreciation Society, founded by Gavin Pretor-Pinney to foster understanding and appreciation of clouds, and to fight “blue sky thinking”.

A clear blue sky has always been associated with good, happy weather – a perfect summer’s day, while cloudy skies are regarded as a metaphor for doom. Nothing could be more depressing, it seems, than to have ‘a cloud on the horizon’. Gavin Pretor-Pinney decided that this has to stop. “Someone needs to stand up for the clouds”, he says. So in 2004, he started the Cloud Appreciation Society and few months later launched a website. People sent in their cloud photograph, which he put up on the gallery pages for others to look at. The early trickle of submission soon swelled to a torrent. Today, it has over 29,000 members worldwide from 83+ different countries, and many thousands of amazing images.

Below is a collection of some of the most peculiar cloud formations.

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alexmonkey
A cloud monkeying around over Bangkok. Photo by Alex Cliff
alien
Cloud Alien ahead.....Eagle River Valley, Colorado. U.S. Photo by Terry Robinson.
Aladdin's lamp, spotted over The Torres del Paine National Park, Chile. Photo by Andrea Andreoli.
baby
A baby floats over Zurich, Switzerland. Photo by Danièle Siebenhaar.
chicken
The big chicken on the roof of Manor Market in Bishop California, is being mirrored in the clouds. Photo by Andrew Kirk.
dog
dolphin cloud hastings sussex
A dolphin leaping from an inky black sea over Sussex, UK. Photo by Beryl Pratt.
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Dolphins at play, Sausalito, California. U.S. Photo by David Holbrooke.
Dougheart
A heart in the clouds over Norwich, UK. Photo by Doug Taylor
DOVEPAULES
A Dove over Kent, UK. Photo by Pauline Reay-Earnshaw
eagle cloud
Eagle soars over Cambridge. U.K. Photo by Christie Nel.
elephant
Elephant in a storm cloud, taken on holiday at Patong Beach, Phuket, Thailand. Photo by Graham Blackett.
feather
A feather over Brockenhurst in the New Forest, Hants., UK. Photo by Chris Gleed-Owen
heart
A heart over SuperDevoluy, Saint Etienne en Devoluy, France. Photo by Emily Morus-Jones
hummingbird
A hummingbird over Berryton, Kansas, US. Photo by Shannon Franks
JackPalanceCloseUp
Jack Palance, spotted over Loudonville, Ohio, US. Photo by Catherine Wilson
jellyfish
A jellyfish over Berry, New South Wales, Australia. Photo by Mark Muirhead.
kitty
A cumulus called Kitty, Western New York. U.S. Photo by Diane Mariotti.
man with flowers
A man running with a bouquet of flowers. Spotted over France. Photo by Rudolf Wehrung.
mushroom
A giant Mushroom over North Jutland, Denmark. Photo by Jan Hertoghs
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Poodle spotted over Sanderstead, Surrey. U.K. Photo by Alex Brooker.
poodle
A poodle with shades enjoys a day by the sea over Blackpool, Lancashire, UK. Photo by Bill Williamson.
rabbit chilwell
A rabbit hopping over Nottinghamshire, UK. Photo by Andy Jamieson.
rat
Shhhhhh dont tell anyone. There's a monster rat over Tortona, Alessandria, Italy. Photo by Pietro Cordelli.
smiley
A sunset smile over West Hollywood, California, US. Photo by Christine Murphy.
smoking
Little Cumulus cloud from East Texas, US, smoking. Photo by Jan Morris Marek.
snail
A snail, spotted just before sunrise over Anglesey, UK. Photo by John Rowlands
Turtlecrocodile
A turtle travelling on the back of a crocodile over the border between France and Spain. Photo by Jean-Francois Guillot
witch
A witch or the grumpy old man in the muppets over Bangkok. Photo by Alex Cliff.
yourefired

The iconic scene from TV programme The Apprentice, when Lord Sugar says "you're fired", acted out over Bangkok. Photo by Alex Cliff

Punch Hole Clouds

XPlanet - 10/24/2014 08:43:00 PM
Punch hole clouds, also known as fallstreak hole are large circular clearings that can appear in cirrocumulus or altocumulus clouds. Such holes are formed when the water temperature in the clouds is below freezing but the water has not frozen yet due to the lack of ice nucleation particles. When a portion of the water does start to freeze it will set off a domino effect causing the water vapor around it to freeze and fall to the earth as well. This leaves a large, often circular, hole in the cloud.

Punch hole clouds have been puzzling sky gazers and scientists alike since the 1940s. A 1968 article in the magazine Weatherwise called them “A Meteorological Whodunit?”.

Because of their rarity and unusual appearance, fallstreak holes are often mistaken for or attributed to UFOs. It is only during the last decade the cause of formation of these clouds has been somewhat understood.

It is believed that a disruption in the stability of the cloud layer, such as that caused by a passing jet, may induce the domino process of evaporation which creates the hole. Such clouds are not unique to any one geographic area and have been photographed from the United States to Russia

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See more pictures of Punch Hole Clouds at WeatherVortex

The Dark Hedges in Ireland

XPlanet - 10/24/2014 08:39:00 PM
The Dark Hedges is a unique stretch of the Bregagh Road near Armoy, in Ireland, that looks like something from a Tim Burton movie. Over the past 300 years or so, the Beech trees guarding either side of the lane have reached up and across to each other, becoming heavily intertwined to create a natural arched tunnel where shadow and light plays through entwined branches.

This beautiful avenue of beech trees was planted by the Stuart family in the eighteenth century. It was intended as a compelling landscape feature to impress visitors as they approached the entrance to their Georgian mansion, Gracehill House, which is now a golf club. Two centuries later, the trees remain a magnificent sight and have become one of the most photographed natural phenomena in Northern Ireland.

Legend tells that a supernatural ‘Grey Lady’ haunts the thin ribbon of road that winds beneath the ancient beech trees. She silently glides along the roadside and vanishes as she passes the last beech tree. Some say the specter is the ghost of a maid from the nearby house who died in mysterious circumstances centuries ago. Others believe that she is a lost spirit from an abandoned graveyard that is thought to lie hidden in the fields nearby. On Halloween night, the forgotten graves are said to open and the Grey Lady is joined on her walk by the tormented souls of those who were buried beside her.

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Source: VisitBallMoney

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