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"crocodiles" - 10 õppematerjali

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New Guinea (inglise keeles)

...............................................5 The problem with trading wildlife.....................................................................................................6 Animals of the lowlands....................................................................................................................8 Reptiles...................................................................................................................................................8 Crocodiles, leaving New Guinea as skins and back straps ...............................................................9 Vital waterways for people and wildlife..............................................................................................10 2 Introduction If you were asked to show on a world map the regions with the most biodiversity,

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St. James Park

St. James Park History St James’s Park is the oldest Royal Park in London. On James I's accession to the throne in 1603, he ordered that the park be drained and landscaped, and kept exotic animals in the park, includingcamels, crocodiles, and an elephant, as well as aviaries of exotic birds along the south. Charles II opened the park to the public, as well as using the area to entertain guests. On his desire had the park redesigned in a more formal style, probably by the French landscaper André Mollet. At the end of the 17th century and early 18th century were the cows in the park and could to buy fresh milk in "Lactarian". Location: The park is located in central London. This is 23 hectare large. St

Keeled → British culture (briti...
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Report of Austraalia

Mustamäe College AUSTRALIA Report Compiled by Denis Doborovits 5A Tallinn 2009 Contents 1. Introduction 2. Australia 3. Animals 4. Cities 5. Economy 6. Summary Introduction I'll tell you a little about Australia. Australia is a continent In the southern hemisphere. The area is 7.7 million square km. The capital of Australia is Canberra. The population is 17 million. The official language is English. Australia The Outback is more than two-thirds of Australia, but its population is less than 100,000. Many people live on sheep or cattle stations which are enormous farms. There are a few catt...

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Natural zones and flora of Australia

When the young come out of the eggs , they start eating the milk that comes through the mother's stomach skin.The platypus is a good swimmer and gets its food mainly from the river.It has a strong tail. It lives in the rivers of East Australia mostly. The echidna or a spiny ant-eater is the other egg-laying mammal that lives in Australia.It feeds on termites using its long, trunk-like nose to get them. In the seas and rivers of northern Australia you can find crocodiles that are five or six metres long. There are more than eight hundred kinds of birds in Australia. The emu, which is two metres tall, is the second largest bird in the world.It cannot fly at all, but it can run at fifty kilometres an hour. Then there is the kookaburra,whose cry sounds like someone laughing, and the budgerigar,a little blue or yellow bird that people keep in their homes all over the world. The lyrebird has got its name from the lyre-like tail of the he-bird

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Topic – Australia

All of the top ten most venomous snakes are native to Australia, [2] and the world's largest reptile, the Saltwater Crocodile is native to Australia. It is often said to be the most dangerous to humans. This crocodile is an opportunistic predator capable of taking animals up to the size of a water buffalo, either in the water or on dry land. The larger the animal grows, the greater the variety of items that it includes in the diet. Saltwater crocodiles can take monkeys, wild boar, dingoes, domestic livestock, water buffalo, sharks and sometimes humans. It typically loiters in the water or basks in the sun through much of the day, usually preferring to hunt at night. It is, however, capable of moving with astonishing speed when required. Adult male saltwater crocodiles are typically 5 metres long, weigh around 680 kg. Females are much smaller than males, with typical female body lengths in the range of 2.5­3 metres.

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Austraalia referaat inglise keeles

Their babies develop inside their mother's pouch. About half of Australia's 230 mammal species are marsupials. As well as meateating Tasmanian devils, possums, bandicoots and ofcourse kangaroos, wombats and koalas. The largest meateating marsupial Tasmanian Tiger is probably extinct. Most of Australian native animals move around at night. But the birds which are very colourful are easy to see. There are about 750 species ofbirds in Australia. Two types of crocodiles, the saltwater crocodile and the freshwater crocodile can be found in the north. The dingo or the native dog is not really an Australian native. It has brought from Asia around 3500 years ago. The dingo is an efficient sheep hunter. To protect sheep the dog fence was built in 1964. Climate Australia is the driest continent in the world except Antarctica. It has very low average rainfalls. About 70 per cent of the country is arid or semiarid and cannot support agriculture

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Australia

travel at seventy kilometres an hour. Kangaroos eat grass and leaves and live in groups about twelve. Everyone loves the sleepy gray koalas. Like kangaroos, they have s pouch on their fronts for their babies. After six months there, baby koalas ride on their mother's back. They live in eucalyptus trees, sleeping for eighteen hours, and eating one kilo of leaves, each day. They drink almost nothing. The word koala means "no water." In the seas and rivers of northern Australia crocodiles can be found. They are five or six metres long. They eat fish, animals, kangaroos - and sometimes people. There are more than 800 kinds of birds in Australia. The emu, which is two metres tall, is the second largest bird in the world. It cannot fly at all, but it can run at fifty kilometres an hour. Then there is the kookaburra, whose cry sounds like someone laughing, and the budgerigar, a little blue or yellow bird that people keep in their homes all over the world.

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Austraalia kohta inglise keelne referaat

marsupials too. Their babies develop inside their mother’s pouch. About half of Australia’s 230 mammal species are marsupials. As well as the meat-eating Tasmanian devil, possums, bandicoots and of course kangaroos, wombats and koalas. The large meat eating marsupial, the Tasmanian tiger is probably extinct. Most of Australian native animals move around at night. But the birds which are very colourful are easy to see. There are about 750 species of birds in Australia. Two types of crocodiles, the saltwater and the freshwater crocodile can be found in the north. The dingo or the native dog is not really an Australian native. It was brought from Asia around 3500 years ago. The dingo is an efficient sheep hunter. To protect sheep The Dog fence was built in 1946. Population About 20, 2 million people live in Australia. Mainly they live on in the eastern and southeastern part of the country, because the middle part of the country is mainly plains and deserts

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ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS

would survive to adulthood. Many would simply lose their mothers in densely packed sea of animals, and fall easy (E) prey to predators. Often a new-born calf would become separated from its mother before it had learned to recognise her. Then the infant would attach itself to anything that moved, sometimes even (F) tottering hopefully towards a waiting lion. When the great migration began, many more youngsters would be swept away and drowned during the massed river crossings, dragged down by crocodiles or trampled beneath the (G) frantic press of bodies from which others would emerge (H) hobbling on broken limbs to await the inevitable hyenas. And always there were the ravenous hunters; the packs of brindled wild dogs whose sudden appearance, (I) loping over the dawn horizons, threw the herds into headlong panic; the rangy cheetahs with their devastating (J) stride; and the ever-watchful prides of lions through whose territories the wildebeest would have to pass.

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The 4-Hour Body - An Uncommon Guide to Rapid Fat-Loss, Incredible Sex, and Becoming Superhuman - Timothy Ferriss

5% of a perfect finite body of knowledge, but the most empirically valuable 2.5% of what we know now. FUNDAMENTALS-- FIRST AND FOREMOST THE MINIMUM EFFECTIVE DOSE From Microwaves to Fat-Loss Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away. --Antoine de Saint-Exupéry A rthur Jones was a precocious young child and particularly fond of crocodiles. He read his father's entire medical library before he was 12. The home environment might have had something to do with it, seeing as his parents, grandfather, great-grandfather, half- brother, and half-sister were all doctors. From humble beginnings in Oklahoma, he would mature into one of the most in uential gures in the exercise science world. He would also become, in the words of more than a few, a particularly "angry genius."

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