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Sunday, 11 March 2012

BEST EARTH IMAGES OF THE WEEK II


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Best Earth Images of the Week – March 9, 2012
By
Our Amazing Planet, 9 March 2012.

Lighting, Clouds, Sharks and More…

Hatching eggs, record-setting ocean dives and amazing shows in the sky. These are just a few of the photos we picked for this week. Check these out.


1. Webcast - Condor Cam
Webcast — Condor CamCredit: Tammy Spratt, San Diego Zoo Safari Park.

A California condor chick is ready to hatch at the San Diego Zoo and anyone who want to see it can watch live via webcam.

The zoo's Condor Cam gives the public the first-ever opportunity to see this process - usually only witnessed by zookeepers and wildlife biologists - live. You can also see parents Sisquoc and Shatash taking turns incubating the egg.




2. Eco-Tourism Aids Sharks
Eco-Tourism Aids SharksCredit: Image courtesy Jim Abernethy.

Imagine swimming in crystalline ocean waters shot through with sunlight when one of Earth's most notorious predators swims into view - a very close view.

Such pulse-quickening encounters are, in fact, the whole point for visitors to Tiger Beach, an idyllic spot in the Bahamas where eco-tourists can get up close and personal with tiger sharks - indiscriminate eaters known to devour everything from sea turtles to kegs of nails (and occasionally a few unlucky humans).

One of a few concerns is that all the free food might disrupt the sharks' natural wanderings, and artificially limit their movements to areas close to tourist sites. Since sharks are apex predators - a bit like the Godfathers of the ecosystem - and keep potentially disruptive ecological usurpers in check, such a change could have negative effects.




3. Sights Set for Deepest Dive
Sights Set for Deepest DiveCredit: © Mark Thiessen/National Geographic.

Filmmaker and explorer James Cameron has unveiled plans to visit the deepest place on planet Earth in the coming weeks, aboard a state-of-the-art, deep-diving craft built beneath a veil of secrecy in Australia.

If successful, the dive will mark only the second time that humans have ever visited the bottom of the Mariana Trench, some 7 miles (11.2 kilometres) beneath the surface of the Pacific Ocean.

Cameron plans to spend six hours at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean trench, which lies about 200 miles (322 km) southwest of Guam, to collect samples for research in marine biology, microbiology, astrobiology, marine geology and geophysics.




4. Guessing Game
Guessing Game
Credit: Jennifer Zoon, Smithsonian's National Zoo.

These are not the feet of a mythical beast featured in the pages of a Harry Potter book.

The luxurious fur and claw-like toes belong to an animal that needs both for its high-mountain lifestyle: an alpaca.




5. Seeing Spots
Seeing SpotsCredit: California Academy of Sciences.

Scientists have announced the discovery of a new species of spotted, bottom-dwelling shark near the Galapagos Islands, where astonished researchers saw it from a submersible.

The newly named species, Bythaelurus giddingsi, is a kind of catshark. Such animals had never been seen near the famed Eastern Pacific archipelago until researchers descended some 1,600 feet (500 meters) to the ocean floor.




6. Bizarre Creatures of the Deep
Bizarre Creatures of the DeepCredit: Scripps Institution of Oceanography.

Scientists have discovered a strange and rare hybrid site in the deep sea where two extreme seafloor environments exist side by side, and are home to a parade of weird hybrid creatures seemingly adapted to the hardships posed by both intense environments.

Researchers discovered hydrothermal vents and cold methane seeps in a swath of the the deep sea off Costa Rica in 2010, and found a host of unknown species living there.




7. Intensity at Ikaria Island
Intensity at Ikaria IslandCredit: Chris Kotsiopoulos / www.greeksky.gr

A lucky photographer captured an amazing photo of an intense lightning storm over Ikaria Island, Greece.

Photographer Chris Kotsiopoulos had set out to document the total lunar eclipse on June 15, 2011, but he got more than he bargained for.

"This was an extraordinary storm that took place the night of the total lunar eclipse," Kotsiopoulos told OurAmazingPlanet. "The night started ideally as I managed to capture the lunar eclipse and some lightning at the same shot. After the end of the eclipse I noticed that the storm was insisting."



8. Totally Tubular
Totally TubularCredit: Capt. Andreas M. van der Wurff.

A photo taken near Brazil captures a rare and beautiful "roll cloud," a tubular cloud that seems to tumble across the sky.

The spectacular photo, captured last month, was just released by NASA's Earth Science Picture of the Day blog.

Roll clouds aren't dangerous in themselves, though, and many roll clouds form in relatively calm weather as a result of sea breezes. One of the most famous spots for these coastal roll clouds is off the coast of Queensland, Australia, where the so-called Morning Glory roll cloud forms regularly in fall months.

This roll cloud photo was taken by Capt. Andreas M. van der Wurff from a ship en route from Paranagua, Brazil, to Montevideo, Uruguay, on Feb. 6.



[Source: Our Amazing Planet. Edited. Top image added.]









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