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MethrenRaf

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 Fara was born on the morning of January 31. Her mother is 17-year-old Kitani and her father is 15-year-old Sammy. Sadly, due to poaching, there are only 650 Eastern Black Rhinos remaining in the wild. Here   a 50-second video of the bi stanley canada rth, including the first tender moments as Kitani overlooks her newborn calf:  Chester Zoo mammal curator Tim Rolands had this to say: Kitani   delivery was textbook. We got a maternity suite ; ready for her with deep sandy floors and beds of hay but ultimately she chose her own spot. The footage has enabled us to witness this really special moment and both mum and youngster are doing really, really well. Every birth is cause for great celebration but given that Eastern black rhino face a real threat of extinction our new arrival is even more significant.  stanley cupe The calf is super important to the breeding programme in Europe and her arrival is another step towards sustaining a black rhino population which, in the wild, is being ravaged by poachers on an almost daily basis. Fara has an older sister, Asani, who was born at the zoo in 2008. More here.                                                        AnimalsBiologyconservationPoachingScience                                                                                                                            mugs stanley                                                                                    Daily Newsletter                                                                      Eaqk These Gummy Bears Are Actually a Painting
 Swift and Deadly A very simple device, the hul ;che is a wooden shaft with a bur at the end of that supports the end of a dart or arrow. The device resembles a forked branch, and it is quite possible that a stick plucked from the ground became the first hul ;che. The Mayans used hul ;che to take advantage of additional leverage gained from an overhand motion to increase the amount of force placed on an arrow or da stanley hrnek rt. Relying on finger placement and the motion of a skilled thrower, the hul ;che saw use in stanley cup  hunting and combat when the Mayans battled nearby polities. Due to the skill-based aspect, both Mayan men and women used the hul ;che for hunting. Modern recreations of the hul ;che can fling darts over 250 meters at a velocity of over 150 meters per second, with distances of 150 meters more common for an average thrower. One weapon, many names A weapon similar to the hul ;che shows up in several cultures. The Aztecs used an almost identical weapon, the atlatl, a device gaining in popularity a stanley polska mong modern sport hunters. The Nahuatl term atlatl is now commonly used for the wooden device, regardless of origin. French, Spanish and German variations are known, with extremely old specimens making use of reindeer antlers to create a bur connecting to a dart. Whether the atlatl/hul ;che is the product of independent discovery on the part of several different groups of people separated by continents or an example of early information transmissio