Sunday, October 24, 2010

Pictures: 12 Ancient Landmarks on Verge of Vanishing

LAMU ISLAND, KENYA - Cluster of tightly packed rooftops.

Swahili Settlement

Photograph by Bobby Haas, National Geographic

A mosaic of tightly clustered rooftops decorates an aerial view of Lamu, Kenya, one of the oldest and best preserved Swahili settlements in East Africa. A UNESCO World Heritage site, the old town of Lamu dates back to the 12th century and still boasts many traditional architectural styles of Swahili culture.

Major threats to the site include a proposed port project and infrastructure for the oil industry. The   development "would result in unprecedented new levels of population growth and put strong pressures on both the cultural and natural values of the region," according to the Global Heritage Fund report.

Posted via email from Web Stream - Vishal Shah (goldenV)

Rooftop Golf Photo, New York Picture – National Geographic Photo of the Day

Pictures: 12 Ancient Landmarks on Verge of Vanishing

Pictures: 12 Ancient Landmarks on Verge of Vanishing

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Friday, October 08, 2010

Pictures: Tube-Nosed Bat, More Rare Species Found

Picture of a well-camouflaged brown frog, a new species, resting next to a few small mushrooms in Papua New Guinea.

Tiny New Frog

Photograph courtesy Piotr Naskrecki, Conservation International

A frog small enough to sit on a thumbnail rests on a leaf in Papua New Guinea's Muller Range in 2009.

This species "nearly eluded the RAP team altogether," as the scientists had to search the forest floor in pouring rain to trace the sound of the "soft, scratching, cricket-like" call, according to a Conservation International statement.

The frog and all its closest relatives are found only on the island of New Guinea.

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Friday, October 01, 2010

First Truly Habitable Planet Discovered, Experts Say

First Truly Habitable Planet Discovered, Experts Say

Earthlike world in elusive "Goldilocks zone."

Star Gliese 581.
The new planet Gliese 581g bears Earthlike blues and greens in an artist's conception.

Illustration courtesy Lynette Cook

John Roach

for National Geographic News

Published September 29, 2010

Astronomers studying a nearby star say they've found the first potentially habitable planet—likely a rocky place with an atmosphere, temperate regions, and crucially, liquid water, considered vital for life as we know it.

Other extrasolar planets have been called Earthlike, but, astronomer Paul Butler assured, "this is really the first Goldilocks planet"—not too hot, not too cold.

Orbiting the red dwarf star Gliese 581 about every 37 days, the new planet, named Gliese 581g, is "just the right size and just at the right distance [from its star] to have liquid water on the surface," added Butler, of the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, D.C., during an online press briefing today.

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Monday, September 27, 2010

Being Jane Goodall - National Geographic Magazine

Being Jane Goodall

Jane Goodall

Fifty Years at Gombe

In 1960 a spirited animal lover with no scientific training set up camp in Tanganyika’s Gombe Stream Game Reserve to observe chimpanzees. Today Jane Goodall’s name is synonymous with the protection of a beloved species. At Gombe—one of the longest, most detailed studies of any wild animal—revelations about chimps keep coming.

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Friday, September 24, 2010

Inside Wild Blog- Nat Geo Wild

blog post photo
A colossal cane toad – measuring twice the length of a man's hand and weighing just under two pounds – was recently discovered in northern Australia. Just one lick of Toadzilla's dry, warty skin is potent enough to kill a snake in seconds.

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Thursday, September 23, 2010

The Solvable Problem of Energy Poverty

The Solvable Problem of Energy Poverty

Spread of Electricity Need Not Harm Climate, says UN Report

Traditional way of making the staple starch, enjera.

Respiratory illness from cooking on primitive stoves, like this one in Ethiopia, will be causing 4,000 premature deaths each year by 2030 if nothing is done to address the problem.

Photograph by Lynn Johnson, National Geographic

Marianne Lavelle

National Geographic News

Published September 21, 2010

This story is part of a special series that explores energy issues. For more, visit The Great Energy Challenge.

The United Nations’ goals for fighting extreme poverty—an effort being assessed at a summit this week in New York—will fall short unless nations also work to bring electricity and modern, safe cooking technology to the billions of “energy-poor” people around the globe, a new report says.

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