The world is a mask that hides the real world.
That’s what everybody suspects, though the world we see won’t let us dwell on it long.
The world has ways - more masks - of getting our attention.
The suspicion sneaks in now and again, between the cracks of everyday existence…the bird song dips, rises, dips, trails off into blue sky silence before the note that would reveal the shape of a melody that, somehow, would tie everything together, on the verge of unmasking the hidden armature that frames this sky, this tree, this bird, this quivering green leaf, jewels in a crown.…
As the song dies, the secret withdraws.
The tree is a mask.
The sky is a mask.
The quivering green leaf is a mask.
The song is a mask.
The singing bird is a mask.


Thursday, October 13, 2005

flying pre-historic raptors

Oldest South American Raptor Found
Fossil Suggests That Flight Evolved Twice

by Guy Gugliotta, Washington Post, 13 October 2005

Paleontologists working in northwestern Patagonia have unearthed the nearly complete skeleton of a small dinosaur whose birdlike appearance suggests that flight may have evolved twice -- not only in birds but also among the prehistoric raptors of the southern hemisphere.

The newly discovered fossil, of a rooster-size carnivore known as a dromaeosaur, lived 95 million years ago and is the oldest raptor ever found in the southern continents. Its discovery may signal that dromaeosaurs are much older than previously thought.

"We're really just scratching the surface," said Peter J. Makovicky, dinosaur curator of Chicago's Field Museum and lead author of a report on the find published yesterday in the journal Nature. "The evidence is that we have a distinct lineage [of dromaeosaurs] -- the southern lineage."

Makovicky and a team of Argentine paleontologists led by Sebastian Apesteguia of Argentina's Natural History Foundation collected the fossil from a famous site known as La Buitrera, "The Vulture's Nest," in Rio Negro province, about 700 miles southeast of Buenos Aires.

The team named the new find Buitreraptor gonzalezorum , after brothers Fabian and Jorge Gonzalez, who found the fossil. Prior to Buitrerapto r, a few teeth and other bone fragments were the only dromaeosaur remains known in the southern hemisphere.

This scarcity contrasted sharply with the relatively abundant deposits in North America and Asia of such well-known dromaeosaurs as velociraptor, Utahraptor and smaller species unearthed in China.

Paleontologists generally regard the northern raptors, especially the Chinese fossils, as part of modern birds' evolutionary lineage. Archaeopteryx , regarded as the first true bird, is 145 million years old, while the feathered raptors of Liaoning, China, are dated at 130 million years.

Although Buitreraptor is considerably younger, its location deep in South America's southern cone suggests that dromaeosaurs generally may be 180 million years old, dating to when Earth's single land mass split into northern and southern pieces. Today's continental arrangement took form 70 million years ago.

"To say dromaeosaurs are 180 million years old is not a stretch at all," said paleontologist Matthew Lamanna of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, in Pittsburgh. "You look at the fossil record and see Archaeopteryx is 150 million years old, so dromaeosaurs should already be around."

Makovicky noted, however, that unlike northern dromaeosaurs, Buitreraptor has a long, heronlike skull and teeth without serrated edges: "These are unusual features, and we think we have a predator of small prey," Makovicky said.

Lamanna said that the differences between the northern and southern species also come as no surprise. Once researchers established that dromaeosaurs were evolving on two separate super-continents, "the fact that they come to be different is what we would expect. It would have been surprising to find velociraptor in Patagonia."

On the other hand, Makovicky said Buitreraptor is clearly a dromaeosaur, displaying many typical characteristics, including a spiked middle toe for gutting prey, heavy hind limbs for fast running, a long tail and powerful forelimbs -- but not powerful enough to fly.

Makovicky and the research team also noticed that Buitreraptor shared characteristics with an unusual 65 million-year-old fossil from Madagascar known as Rahonavis -- thought to have been a primitive, long-tailed bird.

"It looks like A rchaeopteryx , but if you examine the hip region, it pushes them toward the dromaeosaurs," Makovicky said. "So now we have evidence that Rahonavis is not a bird, but perhaps a flying dromaeosaur."

This does not necessarily mean that Rahonavis evolved into a bird, Makovicky said. "It was probably an evolutionary dead end," he said, but its kinship with Buitreraptor "may indicate a second origin of powered flight," apart from the lineage that included Archaeopteryx and the northern raptors.
© 2005 The Washington Post Company

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

squirrel defends human companion

Drug Suspect's Pet Squirrel Attacks Officer
Officer: 'The Claws Are Very Sharp'


A police officer in Massachusetts was treated at a hospital after a drug suspect's squirrel attacked him during an attempted arrest, according to a Local 6 News report.

"The claws are very sharp, I guess he mistook me for a tree," officer Dwayne Flowers said. "The squirrel was moving at such speed, I didn't see it and neither did my partner standing shoulder-length away from me."

Officer Dwayne Flowers said he and his partner were attempting to arrest a woman wanted on drug charges in Leominister, Mass., when her loose pet squirrel attacked.

Flowers drove to a hospital after the attack while other officers captured Spanky the squirrel and arrested its owner.

After the arrest, Flowers' partner laughed at the attack.

"He had a good chuckle," Flowers said. "I tried raising him on the radio but they couldn't answer their radio call because they were too busy laughing"

Flowers injuries from the attack were considered minor.

Watch Local 6 News for more on this story.

payback

Reuters (via Yahoo!), today:
China bear bile farmer eaten by own animals

A Chinese man who raised bears to tap them for their bile, prized as a traditional medicine in Asia, has been killed and eaten by his animals, Xinhua news agency said Tuesday.

Six black bears attacked keeper Han Shigen as he was cleaning their pen in the northeastern province of Jilin on Monday, Xinhua said.

"The ill-fated man died on the spot and was eaten up by the ferocious bears," it said, citing a report in the Beijing News.

In practices decried by animal rights groups, bile is extracted through surgically implanted catheters in the bear's gall bladders, or by a "free-dripping" technique by which bile drips out through holes opened in the animals' abdomens.

More than 200 farms in China keep about 7,000 bears to tap their bile, which traditional Chinese medicine holds can cure fever, liver illness and sore eyes.

Bear farming was far more widespread before the cruelty involved came to light and Beijing introduced regulations to control the industry in 1993.

Animal welfare groups have called on China to completely ban bear farming, arguing that traditional herbal medicines can serve the same purposes as bear bile.

Xinhua said police sent to the scene of Monday's killing injected one of the bears with tranquilizers "but failed to tame the mad animal."

Police then threw meat into the bears' pen to distract them so they could recover Han's remains, it said without elaborating.




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