Polar bear Ursus maritimus or the "sea bear." Polar bears live near the circumpolar at north in areas where they can hunt seals at open leads. Scientists estimate that there are between 22000 to 27000 polar bears. Its closest relative is the brown bear. Adult male polar bears are 2,5 to 3 meters tall. They weigh 250 to 770 kilograms. Adult female bears are smaller. They are about 1,8 to 2,5 meters tall and weigh 90 to 320 kilograms. Polar bears usually eat seals usually the ringed seasl, but sometimes the bearded seals. When hunting is good, polar bears will typically eat only the fat and leave the rest of the carcass for scavengers including arctic foxes, ravens, and younger bears. Polar bears also sometimes kill and eat both walrus and beluga whales. They have even hunted short-legged reindeer and sometimes even birds and bird eggs. Polar bears are top of the food chain in the Arctic
Its body can measure up to 16 inches across, and up to 12 feet from claw to claw and whole the crab is weighing up to 40 pounds. It has an orange body and white spots on their legs. Japanise Spider Crab eats shellfish and animal carcasses and may live up to 100 years. Also they are collected for food. 16 inches = 41 cm 12 feet = 3.6 meters 40 pounds = 18.2 kilograms Watch video to get more information about Japanise Spider Crab: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y8P_OV8DFSk&feature=youtu.be
• Who he is? • Cat • He like to • Family • Looks • Eat • Friends • Odher pets • Why I like it WHO HE IS? • He is cat • He name is Pauli • He is a half- Siamese cat PAULI`S PICTURE CAT • He is a two and a half years • He was a three-day when got it . HE LIKE TO • He likes to play with me • He like to eat • He ike walking LOOKS • It weighs six kilograms. • He is brown, white and black spotted cat. FAMILY • He is a mother of shelter • He also had a brother, but all three were killed • He has his father's log EAT • He eats food castrated cats • He drinks milk HE DOES NOT LIKE • He does not like strangers whom he sees for the first time (adults) FRIENDS • He was many friends • It's me and a friend to many cats in our house but
Wife carrying is a contest in which male competitors race while each carrying a female teammate. The objective is for the male to carry the female through a special obstacle track in the fastest time. The sport was first introduced at Sonkajärvi, Finland. Rules The wife to be carried may be your own, or the neighbor's, or you may have found her further afield; she must, however, be over 17 years of age. The minimum weight of the wife to be carried is 49 kilograms. If she weighs less than 49 kg, she will be burdened with a rucksack containing additional weight to bring the total load to be carried up to 49 kg. Each contestant takes care of his/her safety and, if deemed necessary, insurance While the International rules are the basis for all competitions Equipment The only equipment allowed is a belt worn by the carrier and a helmet worn by the carried. Prize for winners The prize to the winner is a mobile phone, and
The Australian Terrier stands around 25 centimeters high at the withers and weighs around 7 kilograms. It is a low-set dog; the length of its body is longer than its height at the withers. The Aussie has a high-set tail that is now not docked in Australia.The head of the Australian Terrier is elongated, with a slight stop and pricked ears. The ANKC breed standard describes the dog's look as "hard bitten" and "rugged". The eyes are small, dark, and oval and must have a keen terrier expression. The leather of the nose runs up to the bridge of the muzzle, which is described as "strong"
GREENHOUSE GASES 18 PER CENT OF GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ARE CAUSED BY ANIMAL AGRICULTURE CARBONDIOXIDE METHANE NITROUS OXIDE LIVESTOCK AND THEIR BYPRODUCTS ACCOUNT FOR AT LEAST 32,000 MILLION TONS OF CARBON DIOXIDE (CO2) PER YEAR, OR 51% OF ALL WORLDWIDE GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS. METHANE (and nitrous oxide) „THE MAIN SOURCES OF METHANE ARE THE ENTERIC FERMENTATION OF RUMINANTS AND RELEASES FROM STORED MANURE“ WASTE EVERY M I N U T E, 3.5 MILLION KILOGRAMS OF MANURE ARE PRODUCED BY ANIMALS RAISED FOR FOOD IN THE US. WATER 20-33% OF ALL FRESH WATER CONSUMPTION IS USED IN ANIMAL AGRICULTURE. HUMANITY WE ARE CURRENTLY GROWING ENOUGH FOOD TO FEED 10 BILLION PEOPLE. 82% OF STARVING CHILDREN LIVE IN COUNTRIES WHERE FOOD IS FED TO ANIMALS, AND THE ANIMALS ARE EATEN BY WESTERN COUNTRIES. Livestock or livestock feed occupies 1/3 of the earth’s ice-free land. References 1. Steinfeld H., Gerber P
In some cases cattle were raised on the grassland instead of sheep. But beef and butter are not as easy to ship as wool. The Gold Rush Gold was discovered in southeastern Australia in 1851. There was a great gold rush. Thousands of people went to the new land to find their fortunes. Gold was dug by hand, without any mining machinery. There was so much of it in the ground that some lucky gold- diggers found twenty to thirty kilograms of gold in an hour. By 1852 the country was gold-mad. Everybody was leaving for the goldfields, and all normal work stopped. In the countryside the cattle were left to starve and the crops were not harvested. In the towns all shops were shut, no letters were delivered, no newspapers appeared. Soon it became so difficult to get food that men had to fight for it. They had plenty of gold, but they had nothing to eat. As there was no transport, they could not leave the
The Gunpowder plot conspirators were interrogated in the Tower before being executed. The Tower is famous as home of the Crown Jewels. Today they can be viewed in their special jewel house ( built in 1967) from a moving pavement. They include the Crown of Queen Elisabeth the Queen Mother which contains the celebrated Indian diamond, the Koh-I- noor and St .Edward's Crown which is used for actual crowning of the monarch and weighs over two kilograms. The Imperial State Crown was made for Queen Victoria and first used at her coronation in 1838. It is possibly the most valuable crown in the world, containing many precious diamonds, rubies, emeralds and sapphires. For centuries the Tower of London has been the main arsenal in the kingdom from which the royal armies and fleets were equipped. It also housed king's personal armours and weapons. Among the armour on display in the White Tower Armoury are four suits of Henry VII
In most of the countries where biogas is produced, the excreta of the cattle and other farm animals are used. In India gobar or cow dung is used for the purpose of making biogas. 20% of the excreta of animals are made up of dust particles that are inorganic in nature. The percentage of the inorganic dust particles is brought down by combining water with the excreta in a 1:1 ratio. The rate of feeding of any biogas manufacturing plant that is based on dung is 3,500 kilograms per day. Under normal circumstances the microbial content of the biogas is maintained by the addition of 2% of the expended slurry of the slurry of the fresh dung. 1% calcium ammonium nitrate of the dung is combined with the slurry in such cases. At times waste of kitchens and excrement of human bodies is used in these processes. The human excreta are supposed to occupy, at the most, 3% of the slurry. The addition of human excreta is crucial in this context as it increases the amount of
By definition, if a current of one ampere flows in a pair of ideal infinitely long parallel conductors that are separated by a distance of one meter, then the magnitude of the force on each meter of those conductors will be exactly 0.2 micro-newtons. Furthermore, in general, the force will be proportional to the square of the magnitude of the current and inversely proportional to the distance between the conductors. It also follows that, for railguns with projectile masses of a few kilograms and barrel lengths of a few meters, very large currents will be required to accelerate projectiles to velocities of additions of 1000 m/s. 5 A very large power supply, providing on the order of one million amperes of current, will create a tremendous force on the projectile, accelerating it to a speed of many kilometers per second (km/s). Although these speeds are possible, the heat generated from the propulsion of the object
thinking habits. In the 4HB, the following mental models, pulled from a variety of disciplines, are what will separate your results from the rest of mankind. New Rules for Rapid Redesign NO EXERCISE BURNS MANY CALORIES. Did you eat half an Oreo cookie? No problem. If you're a 220-pound male, you just need to climb 27 flights of stairs to burn it off. (Remember: skip the "GA" boxes if you don't like the dense stuff.) Put another way, moving 100 kilograms (220 pounds) 100 meters (about 27 ights of stairs) requires 100 kilojoules of energy, or 23.9 calories (known to scientists as kilocalories [kcal]). A pound of fat contains 4,082 calories. How many calories might running a marathon burn? 2,600 or so. The caloric argument for exercise gets even more depressing. Remember those 107 calories you burned during that kick-ass hour-long StairmasterTM session? Don't forget to subtract your
546 = Litres (l) x 0.22 = Imperial gallons (Imp gal) Imperial gallons (Imp gal) x 1.201 = US gallons (US gal) x 0.833 = Imperial gallons (Imp gal) US gallons (US gal) x 3.785 = Litres (l) x 0.264 = US gallons (US gal) Mass (weight) Ounces (oz) x 28.35 = Grams (g) x 0.035 = Ounces (oz) Pounds (lb) x 0.454 = Kilograms (kg) x 2.205 = Pounds (lb) Force Ounces-force (ozf; oz) x 0.278 = Newtons (N) x 3.6 = Ounces-force (ozf; oz) Pounds-force (lbf; lb) x 4.448 = Newtons (N) x 0.225 = Pounds-force (lbf; lb) Newtons (N) x 0.1 = Kilograms-force (kgf; kg) x 9.81 = Newtons (N) Pressure Pounds-force per square inch x 0.070 = Kilograms-force per square x 14
standard. Standard Units Information passed from an IEEE 1451 STIM must be in standard units. The actual sensor may be measuring temperature, voltage, current pressure, veloc- ity, or any other real-world parameter. Whatever is being measured is con- verted to a standard unit before it is transmitted to the controlling processor via the IEEE 1451 interface. The IEEE 1451 standard permits sensors to support the following units: length (in meters) mass (in kilograms) time (in seconds) current (in amps) temperature (degrees kelvin) amount of substance (mole) luminous intensity (candela) plane angle (radians) solid angle (meters2) Whatever unit the sensor measures in, it must be converted to these standard units. A sensor may be measuring speed in miles per hour or furlongs per fortnight, but it must be converted by the STIM microprocessor to meters per second before transmission over the IEEE 1451 interface.