While in San Francisco, my family and I decided to check out the nearby Marine Mammal Center, and boy are we glad we did! It was a really, really cool place, and we got to learn all about the local marine mammals, as well as what is being done to conserve and preserve them! In the picture below, you can see my sister standing next to a life-size statue of an elephant seal!
We also got to see all of the enclosures where the various seals and sea lions are kept while they are being rehabilitated.
We also got to watch (and, in the case of my sister, be a part of!) a really cool and interesting demonstration about how the people who work at the Marine Mammal Center are able to capture wounded and injured seals and sea lions, and bring them in to the center for care!
Photo credit for all of the photos in this post goes to Julie Neher.
Showing posts with label Sea Lion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sea Lion. Show all posts
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Friday, February 8, 2013
Pier 39
In San Francisco, California, one major attraction is the sea lions of Pier 39. Every day, hundreds of these pinnipeds will haul themselves out onto the docks to sun themselves and relax. They have been quite the local attraction, and people get a huge thrill out of seeing them!
Photo credit for all of these pictures goes to Julie Neher.
Photo credit for all of these pictures goes to Julie Neher.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Georg Wilhelm Steller
As of tomorrow, a man named Georg Wilhelm Steller passed away 266 years ago. Steller, as we talked about a few weeks ago, discovered a few very interesting animals, and was the first non-native (at least that we know of) to set foot in Alaska, in 1741. He was therefore the first European naturalist to discover, as well as describe, a number of animals in the area.
Many of the members of the crew of the boat that he was on were coming down with scurvy, and Steller attempted to cull the growing epidemic by feeding berries and leaves to the crew. No one really heeded his advice, which was why, on the returning journey, they all became shipwrecked, as only 12 crew members were actually able to physically move. During the voyage almost half of the crew had died due to scurvy, and many, including the captain, died following the shipwreck. With very little food and water, the survivors created a camp, suffering frequent raids by the arctic fox, which only served to increase their peril.
Nevertheless, Steller, apparently the stoic type, continued to learn more about the natural world of Alaska. He recorded a good deal of information in regards to the Steller's sea cow (a relative of the manatee), which, as a species, only survived about 25 years after Steller first discovered them. Other animals that he discovered, described, or both include the Steller's eider (a type of duck), the spectacled cormorant (like the sea cow, now extinct), the sea otter, Steller's sea lion, and the northern fur seal.
In 1742, the survivors were eventually able to build a new boat from the salvage, and returned to Avacha Bay in Russia. Steller continued to explore the Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia for the next two years, but died in 1746 in transit to St. Petersburg.
One final thing that I find interesting about Steller has to do with the post-mortem publication of his journals. They were published by the German zoologist and biologist Peter Simon Pallas who, you guessed it, is the namesake of the Pallas cat, or Pallas's cat, who was the first person to describe the animal in 1776. These journals proved to be useful to other explorers of the same region such as Captain Cook.
Many of the members of the crew of the boat that he was on were coming down with scurvy, and Steller attempted to cull the growing epidemic by feeding berries and leaves to the crew. No one really heeded his advice, which was why, on the returning journey, they all became shipwrecked, as only 12 crew members were actually able to physically move. During the voyage almost half of the crew had died due to scurvy, and many, including the captain, died following the shipwreck. With very little food and water, the survivors created a camp, suffering frequent raids by the arctic fox, which only served to increase their peril.
Nevertheless, Steller, apparently the stoic type, continued to learn more about the natural world of Alaska. He recorded a good deal of information in regards to the Steller's sea cow (a relative of the manatee), which, as a species, only survived about 25 years after Steller first discovered them. Other animals that he discovered, described, or both include the Steller's eider (a type of duck), the spectacled cormorant (like the sea cow, now extinct), the sea otter, Steller's sea lion, and the northern fur seal.
In 1742, the survivors were eventually able to build a new boat from the salvage, and returned to Avacha Bay in Russia. Steller continued to explore the Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia for the next two years, but died in 1746 in transit to St. Petersburg.
One final thing that I find interesting about Steller has to do with the post-mortem publication of his journals. They were published by the German zoologist and biologist Peter Simon Pallas who, you guessed it, is the namesake of the Pallas cat, or Pallas's cat, who was the first person to describe the animal in 1776. These journals proved to be useful to other explorers of the same region such as Captain Cook.
An excellent picture that I took of the Pallas cat (if I do say so myself) from the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo |
Labels:
Alaska,
Arctic Fox,
Asia,
Canine (Dog),
CMZ,
Cormorant,
Europe,
Feline,
Fox,
G. W. Steller,
Manatee,
North America,
Otter,
P. S. Pallas,
Pallas Cat,
Russia,
Sea Cow,
Sea Lion,
Sea Otter,
United States
Thursday, October 11, 2012
The Denver Gem and Mineral Show Part 2: The Piscivores (Excepting Penguins)
As we started talking about a few weeks ago, my friend Masaki Kleinkopf and I were able to visit the Denver Gem and Mineral Show at the Denver Merchandise Mart. Last time, we talked about the giant ammonites, the baby eryops that Dr. Robert Bakker was working on, the gliding Indonesian lizards of the genus Draco and the pterosaurs that evolved from creatures purportedly much like this millions of years ago. Today, we are going to talk about all of the piscivorous animals that we saw there, except for the fossil penguin that I saw there. Knowing me, that would easily take up one whole post of its own there. Keep in mind throughout this post that I'm not certain for all of these animals that they actually eat fish, I just know that the large groups that they belong to often eat fish. Today, we are going to be looking at the mosasaurs, crocodilians, pterosaurs, sea lions, other fish, sharks, and the dreaded piscivorous dinosaur Spinosaurus.
MESSAGE FROM ZACK FROM THE FUTURE: Hello, everyone. This is Zack Neher. I have travelled to this post from the future. I wanted to give you a link to the Homebase for these posts. I am like Rose Tyler, leaving clues in the form of Bad Wolf. Except this is not quite like that at all really. Anyways. The Homebase for the series is HERE.
Myself next to a gigantic mosasaur skull |
I am pretty sure that this is the skull of a mosasaur , anyway.....it looks more like a mosasaur skull than the skull of a crocodilian, if you ask me |
A mosasaur jaw, from Morocco by the looks of it |
A mosasaur skull (Platecarpus, if memory serves, but it is entirely possible that I am wildly off) in front of a fossil ray |
Another huge mosasaur skull |
We also got to see the teeth of a piscivorous pterosaur. The teeth of a piscivore are usually different from those of other carnivorous animals due to their conical shape. The teeth of the fish eaters, like those of crocodilians and dolphins, are usually conical in shape, to prevent prey from struggling out of their grasp.
The teeth of a piscivorous pterosaurs |
Below are the skulls of various crocodilians.
The skulls of these dudes seem like they should be out of a cartoon or something, they are so weird and comic looking! |
Imagotaria sp., from the Miocene to Pliocene in the Atacama region of Chile |
Imagotaria sp., from the Miocene to Pliocene in the Atacama region of Chile |
Next, a picture of a pair of fossil jellyfish!
Fossil jellyfish! |
be. (Did you see that alliteration? My language arts teacher would be most impressed). I discuss both Spinosaurus and Carcharodontosaurus in two previous posts, which you can look at HERE FOR SPINOSAURUS and HERE FOR SPINOSAURUS AND CARCHARODONTOSAURUS.
The teeth of Spinosaurus. Actually in this shot, it looks as if most or all of these teeth belong to Spinosaurus. |
And now for some pictures of the teeth of Megalodon, the largest shark that is ever known to have lived! I have talked about Megalodon in the past, click HERE to learn more.
Now for some random ones.
It's a fish eat fish world out there |
A pair of shark jaws. I am not certain as I don't remember at all and they are unlabeled, but I believe them to be jaws of sand tiger sharks. Again, I could be totally off on this! |
Labels:
Africa,
Chile,
Cretaceous,
Crocodilian,
Denver Gem and Mineral Show,
Dinosaur,
Fish,
Megalodon,
Miocene,
Morocco,
Mosasaur,
Piscivore,
Pliocene,
Pterosaur,
Sea Lion,
Shark,
Spinosaurus,
United States
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