dolphin’s

November 24th, 2007



dolphin's The dolphin’s eyes produce a special slippery secretion which protects the eyes from foreign objects and water friction. To sleep, a dolphin must shut down only half of its brain, as its breathing is under voluntary control. Dolphins take short cat-naps, floating just below the surface, then slowly rising to breathe. Often dolphins are very active during night time, for some this is their main feeding time.

dolphin'sThe dolphin’s skin is completely smooth allowing the dolphin to move easily through the water, and also reduce heat loss. Their skin may bear rake marks from other dolphins teeth during play or mating, and can easily become badly sunburnt if they strand. Their bodies are very streamlined so they may swim at high speeds through the water, and an example of this is their ears. Dolphin’s ears are barely noticeable marked only by a small hole just behind the eye. In a bottlenose dolphin the ear is about 5-6 cms behind the eye and only 2-3 mm in diameter.

Dolphins are able to dive to great depths, and also leap to great heights. They may leap to avoid predators or to show how powerful they are to females at mating time. Noisy splashing jumps may also be used to herd fish. Bottlenose dolphins can dive to depths of over 1,640 ft (500m).

 
dolphin's

Types of Poisonous Snakes

November 19th, 2007



Two families of venomous snakes are native to the United States. The vast majority are pit vipers, of the family Crotalidae, which include rattlesnakes, copperheads and cottonmouths (water moccasins). Pit vipers get their common name from a small "pit" between the eye and nostril that allows the snake to sense prey at night. They deliver venom through two fangs the snake can retract at rest but can spring into biting position rapidly. About 99 percent of the venomous bites in this country are from pit vipers. Some–Mojave rattlesnakes or canebrake rattlesnakes, for example–carry a neurotoxic venom that can affect the brain or spinal cord. Copperheads, on the other hand, have a milder and less dangerous venom that sometimes may not require antivenin treatment.

The other family of domestic poisonous snakes is Elapidae, which includes two species of coral snakes found chiefly in the Southern states. Related to the much more dangerous Asian cobras and kraits, coral snakes have small mouths and short teeth, which give them a less efficient venom delivery than pit vipers. People bitten by coral snakes lack the characteristic fang marks of pit vipers, sometimes making the bite hard to detect.

Though coral snakebites are rare in the United States–only about 25 a year by some estimates–the snake’s neurotoxic venom can be dangerous. A 1987 study in the Journal of the American Medical Association examined 39 victims of coral snakebites. There were no deaths, but several victims experienced respiratory paralysis, one of the hazards of neurotoxic venom.

Some nonpoisonous snakes, such as the scarlet king snake, mimic the bright red, yellow and black coloration of the coral snake. This potential for confusion underscores the importance of seeking care for any snakebite (unless positive identification of a nonpoisonous snake can be made).

The bites of both pit vipers and coral snakes can be effectively treated with antivenin. But other factors, such as time elapsed since being bitten and care taken before arriving at the hospital, also are critical.

Honda Siel Cars India Ltd

November 6th, 2007




HondaHonda Siel Cars India Ltd., (HSCI) was incorporated in December 1995 as a joint venture between Honda Motor Co. Ltd., Japan and Siel Limited, a Siddharth Shriram Group company, with a commitment to providing Honda’s latest passenger car models and technologies, to the Indian customers. The total investment made by the company in India till date is over Rs. 800 crores.

While the company sold its first 50,000 units in nearly five years, it is today geared to sell more than 50,000 units in a single year. The Honda City, its first offering introduced in 1997, revolutionized the Indian passenger car market and has ever since been recognized as an engineering marvel in the Indian automobile industry. Thereafter, HSCI launched its high-end models the Accord and the SUV, CRV. The City ZX, introduced in its new avatar in 2003, replicated the success of the earlier car. The Honda Civic, launched in India in July 2006, too has matched the success of other Honda models and has proved an instant hit with Indian customers.

Showcase Manufacturing Facility

HSCI’s state-of-the-art manufacturing unit was set up in 1997 at Greater Noida, U.P with an investment of Rs. 450 crore. The green-field project is spread across 150 acres of land (over 6,00,000 sq. m.).

The initial installed capacity of the plant was 30,000 cars per annum, which was recently increased to 50,000 cars on a two-shift basis. The capacity expansion was necessitated by the excellent performance of all the Honda models in India. The expansion process involved an investment of Rs.150 crores, with the covered area increasing from 55,000 sq. m. to 1,07,000 sq. m. The covered area now constitutes 17 per cent of the total land area of the plant.

The enhanced production facility of Honda Siel Cars India accommodates the Honda Civic, which was launched in India in July 2006, this was followad by CR-V launched in Nov and Accord launched in Jan 2007. The company plans to further raise its capacity to 100,000 units per annum by the end of 2007 and 150,000 units per annum by 2010.

HSCI currently produces the Honda City, Civic and Accord models in India and the CRV is sold as a full import from Japan. The company operates under the stringent standards of ISO 9001 for quality management and ISO 14001 for environment management.

Sales and Distribution Network

Honda Siel Cars India has a strong sales and distribution network spread across the country. The network includes 56 facilities in 41 cities.

Having established itself as a leading brand in the metros, the company is now focusing on increasing its presence in tier-II towns and cities and plans to increase its dealership network to more than 100 by the end of 2008-09 fiscal year.

The company is targeting 100 dealer outlets across India by 2009, as per their expansion strategy which is based on the ‘1 dealer per 1000 cars’ formula.

Sales Performance

HSCI, registered an all-time high sales of 61,327 units in the financial year 2006-07. This translates to a phenomenal growth of 43.5% over the last fiscal year where the company sold a total of 42,727 units.

HSCI also closed the financial year on an upbeat note with record sales in March 2007. The company sold 8,489 units in the month- an increase of 38.7% over March 2006 where it sold 6,120 units.

Honda Civic sold a total of 16,262 units in a period of nine months since its launch in India in July 2006. Honda City ZX, accounted for 40,464 units in the year. Total Accord and CR-V sales for 2006-07 stood at 2,728 and 1,873 units respectively.

We hope that this growth will continue in the current fiscal as well.

king cobra

November 4th, 2007



king
king


Get a taste of what awaits you in print from this compelling excerpt.

As if lit from within, the mist-drenched rain forest of Borneo’s Danum Valley awakens with me before sunrise. Somewhere below stirs the king cobra—the inspiration for my journey to the villages and forests of Southeast Asia. The longest venomous snake, it produces startling amounts of neurotoxin—enough to kill an elephant with a single bite. But this serpent that can stand up like a man in a terrifying pose is shy and retreating, aggressive only if provoked. We know little about its populations, but fragmented forests and illegal wildlife trade may be putting it at risk. Though snakes strike fear in many Westerners, in the East the cobra is often an object of worship and reverence—and, in some places, a part of peoples’ livelihoods. So I have come here to pay my respects to Ophiophagus hannah, with hopes that I might observe this king of snakes in its natural realm.

Once fearful of all that slithered in their wild, brimming forests, the villagers of Ban Khok Sa-nga for decades made use of venomous snakes by killing and eating them. Today locals, who rely on rice cultivation and a diminishing supply of wood, bring in much needed income by entertaining with, rather than stir-frying, the deadly king cobra. Waving and yelling “King cobra!” in Thai and English, roving shills enticed me and other passersby into a small building where, for 10 baht (about 25 cents), we watched the ladies of the King Cobra Club dance holding snakes’ heads in their mouths (below). No one could tell me the origins of the performance, but it makes economic sense—and sends chills through an uninitiated crowd.

A man for whom cobras are family, village elder Komchai Pimsaimoon has spent years learning the rhythms of the serpent—what calms it and what makes it fighting mad. Mad was in force back at the boxing ring, where a now rested king whipped toward me on release from its wooden enclosure. Though I managed to skirt its strike, I took some comfort knowing I had cobra antivenom in my pack. Locals assured me that their herbal remedy was also on hand—just in case mine failed to work.

African Elephant

November 4th, 2007



African Loxodonta africana  
Threatened  
    The African elephant is the largest living land animal and weighs up to 5,400 kg. It inhabits the Savannah, brush, forest, river valleys, and semi-desert regions of Africa south of the Sahara Desert. Besides its greater size, it differs from the Asian elephant in having larger ears and tusks, a sloping forehead, and two "fingers" at the tip of its trunk, compared to only one in the Asian species.  
    As vegetarians, elephants require much food, sometimes consuming more than 225 kg of plant matter a day. Their trunk is employed to pull branches off trees, uproot grass, pluck fruit, and to place food in their mouths. The trunk is also used for smell, touch and in drinking, greeting or throwing dust for dust baths. In both sexes, the two incisor teeth of the upper jaw grow to form tusks, and it is for this ivory, used at one time in the manufacture of piano keys, billiard balls, and other objects, that hunters have slaughtered thousands of these magnificent animals. 

Vijay’s Auto Deepavali

November 3rd, 2007



 

 
  Vijay's "Auto" Deepavali
 
November 3, 2007

Vijay, the darling of the masses, celebrated a early Deepavali with the masses. On Thursday, he distributed sweets, clothes and crackers to the families of over 200 autodrivers in the Chennai city.

It has been a practice with the actor to celebrate the festival with the common man. Several autodrivers along with their families wished the actor and expressed their thanks for making the festival of lights a special occasion for them.

Vijay’s biggest gift to his fans is the release of his film Azhagiya Tamil Magan on the eve of Deepavali.

Elephant

November 3rd, 2007



Elephant

Elephants are the largest land-dwelling mammals on earth. They are brown to dark gray in color and have long, coarse hairs sparsely covering their bodies. They have very thick skin that keeps them cool. Elephant trunks serve as another limb. A fusion of the nose and upper lip, the trunk may contain more than 40,000 muscles that help the elephant use it to gather food and water. They also sport large ears and thick tree-trunk-like legs to support their great weight.

There are two distinct species of elephants: the African elephant (genus: Loxodonta) and the Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). There are a number of differences between the two species – overall size, ear size, tusks and shape of the back and forehead among others.

Of these two species, African elephants are divided into two subspecies (savannah and forest), while the Asian elephant is divided into four subspecies (Sri Lankan, Indian, Sumatran and Borneo). Asian elephants have been very important to Asian culture for thousands of years – they have been domesticated and are used for religious festivals, transportation and to move heavy objects.

Height 5-14 ft at shoulders (males); females of all subspecies are smaller than males
Length Up to 30 ft trunk to tail
Weight 6,000-15,000 lbs (males)

Lifespan Up to 70 years

Diet

Staples Grasses, leaves, bamboo, bark, roots
Also known to eat crops like banana and sugarcane which are grown by farmers. Adult elephants eat 300-400 lbs of food per day.

Population

At the turn of the 20th century, there were a few million African elephants and about 100,000 Asian elephants. Today, there are an estimated 450,000 - 700,000 African elephants and between 35,000 - 40,000 wild Asian elephants.

Range

African savannah elephants are found in savannah zones in 37 countries south of the Sahara Desert. African forest elephants inhabit the dense rain forests of west and central Africa. The Asian elephant is found in India, Sri Lanka, China and much of Southeast Asia.

Behavior

Elephants form deep family bonds and live in tight matriarchal family groups of related females called a herd. The herd is led by the oldest and often largest female in the herd, called a matriarch. Herds consist of 8-100 individuals depending on terrain and family size. When a calf is born, it is raised and protected by the whole matriarchal herd. Males leave the family unit between the ages of 12-15 and may lead solitary lives or live temporarily with other males.

Elephants are extremely intelligent animals and have memories that span many years. It is this memory that serves matriarchs well during dry seasons when they need to guide their herds, sometimes for tens of miles, to watering holes that they remember from the past. They also display signs of grief, joy, anger and play.

Recent discoveries have shown that elephants can communicate over long distances by producing a sub-sonic rumble that can travel over the ground faster than sound through air. Other elephants receive the messages through the sensitive skin on their feet and trunks. It is believed that this is how potential mates and social groups communicate.

Mating Season Mostly during the rainy season
Gestation 22 months
Litter size 1 calf (twins rare)
Calves weigh between 200-250 lbs at birth. At birth, a calf’s trunk has no muscle tone, therefore it will suckle through its mouth. It takes several months for a calf to gain full control of its trunk.

Threats

Habitat loss is one of the key threats facing elephants. Increasing conflict with human populations taking over more and more elephant habitat and poaching for ivory are additional threats that are placing the elephant’s future at risk.

Defenders of Wildlife is working through the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) to maintain a ban on the sale of ivory as well as on regulations that govern worldwide elephant protection.

Legal Status/Protection

*Endangered Species Act, **CITES Appendix I (except in Zimbabwe, Botswana and Namibia where the African elephant is listed as an Appendix II species), African Elephant Conservation Act

* The Endangered Species Act requires the U.S. federal government to identify species threatened with extinction, identify habitat they need to survive, and help protect both. In doing so, the Act works to ensure the basic health of our natural ecosystems and protect the legacy of conservation we leave to our children and grandchildren.

*Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, an international treaty with more than 144 member countries. Appendix I listed species cannot be traded commercially. Appendix II listed species can be traded commercially only if it does not harm their survival.

list of female billionaires

November 1st, 2007



This list of female billionaires is based on an annual ranking of the world’s wealthiest people compiled and published by Forbes magazine in March 2007,[1] based on the closing stock prices and exchange rates on 9 February 2007. The list includes only females and their associated families.

#  list Name  list Net worth  list Citizenship  list Source  list
1 Liliane Bettencourt US$20.7 billion   France L’Oréal
2 Alice Walton US$16.6 billion   United States Wal-Mart
3 Abigail Johnson US$13.0 billion   United States Fidelity Investments
4 Anne Cox Chambers US$12.6 billion   United States Cox Enterprises
5 Birgit Rausing and family US$11.0 billion   Sweden/ Switzerland Tetra Laval
6 Jacqueline Mars US$10.5 billion   United States Mars, Incorporated
7 Susanne Klatten US$9.6 billion   Germany Altana
8 Maria-Elisabeth Schaeffler and her son Georg US$8.7 billion   Germany Schaeffler Group
9 Charlene de Carvalho-Heineken US$7.2 billion   Netherlands Heineken
10 Johanna Quandt US$6.7 billion   Germany BMW
11 Antonia Johnson US$6.6 billion   Sweden A. Johnson & Co.
12 Esther Koplowitz US$5.6 billion   Spain Fomento de Construcciones y Contratas
13 Madeleine Schickedanz US$5.5 billion   Germany Quelle Versand
14 Alicia Koplowitz US$5.0 billion   Spain Investments
15 Shari Arison US$4.3 billion   Israel Carnival Corporation
16 Nina Wang US$4.2 billion   China Real Estate Investments
17 Joan Tisch US$3.7 billion   United States Loews
18 Heidi Horten US$3.4 billion   Austria Department Store Chain
18 Rosalia Mera US$3.4 billion   Spain Inditex
20 Elena Baturina US$3.1 billion   Russia Inteko
21 Martha Ingram US$2.9 billion   United States Ingram Industries
22 Barbara Piasecka Johnson and family US$2.8 billion   United States Johnson & Johnson
22 Giuliana Benetton US$2.8 billion   Italy Benetton
24 Ann Walton Kroenke US$2.7 billion   United States Wal-Mart
25 Leona Mindy Rosenthal Helmsley US$2.5 billion   United States Real Estate
25 Ronda Stryker US$2.5 billion   United States Stryker Corp
27 Mary Alice Dorrance Malone US$2.3 billion   United States Campbell Preserve Company
28 Dinara Kulibaeva US$2.1 billion   Kazakhstan Halyk
28 Penny Pritzker US$2.1 billion   United States Hyatt & Marmon
28 Wilma Tisch US$2.1 billion   United States Loews
31 Barbara Carlson Gage US$2.0 billion   United States Carlson Cos
31 Karen Pritzker US$2.0 billion   United States Hyatt
31 Liselott Persson US$2.0 billion   Sweden Hennes & Mauritz
31 Leonore Annenberg US$2.0 billion   United States Inheritance
31 Linda Pritzker US$2.0 billion   United States Hyatt
31 Margaret Magerko US$2.0 billion   United States Retail
31 María Asunción Aramburuzabala and family US$2.0 billion   Mexico Grupo Modelo
31 Marilyn Carlson Nelson US$2.0 billion   United States Carlson Cos
39 Sylvia Ströher US$1.9 billion   Germany Inheritance
40 Dorothéa Steinbruch US$1.8 billion   Brazil Companhia Siderúrgica Nacional
41 Helen Johnson-Leipold US$1.6 billion   United States S. C. Johnson & Son
41 Imogene Powers Johnson US$1.6 billion   United States S. C. Johnson & Son
41 Nancy Lerner US$1.6 billion   United States Inheritance
41 Norma Lerner US$1.6 billion   United States Inheritance
41 Phyllis Taylor US$1.6 billion   United States Taylor Energy
41 Winnie Johnson-Marquart US$1.6 billion   United States S. C. Johnson & Son
47 Oprah Winfrey US$1.5 billion   United States Harpo Productions
48 Marguerite Harbert US$1.4 billion   United States Inheritance
49 Anneliese Brost US$1.3 billion   Germany Newspaper Empire
49 Anne Windfohr Marion US$1.3 billion   United States Inheritance
49 Charlotte Colket Weber US$1.3 billion   United States Campbell Preserve Company
49 Chu Lam Yiu US$1.3 billion   China Huabao International Holdings
49 Hope Hill Van Beuren US$1.3 billion   United States Campbell Preserve Company
49 Margaret Whitman US$1.3 billion   United States Ebay
55 Suna Kirac US$1.2 billion   Turkey Koc Group
56 Dorrance Hamilton US$1.1 billion   United States Campbell Preserve Company
56 Mary West US$1.1 billion   United States West Corp
58 JK Rowling US$1.0 billion   United Kingdom Harry Potter Books and Movies
58 Lily Safra US$1.0 billion   Monaco Inheritance
58 Mary Anselmo US$1.0 billion   United States PanAmSat
58 Weili Dai US$1.0 billion   United States Marvell Semiconductor

Mumbai Bomb Blast

November 1st, 2007



MumbaiAt least 184 people were killed and around 714 injured, many seriously, as seven powerful blasts ripped through packed train cars and on stations during rush hour here Tuesday evening in the worst terror attack in India in over a decade.

Dazed survivors, blood on their faces, stared blankly at the explosion sites, some trying desperately to speak to their families on mobile telephones held by young men who came rushing from neighbourhood buildings. All this while it kept raining all over the city, making the situation much more grim and difficult.

Terror and mayhem struck Mumbai and Srinagar, two cities 1600 km apart in the west and north of India, killing at least 143 people, the majority of them in suburban trains in the country’s financial and entertainment capital.

The targets of bombings in Mumbai during the evening rush hour were the suburban train service that is the lifeline of the city. The stations that were targeted were Khar, Mahim, Matunga, Jogeshwari, Borivili, Bhayandra (Mira Road) and the Khar-Santa Cruz subway.

Electronic Stethoscope

November 1st, 2007



Stethoscopes  

Electronic

 

The Littmann Electronic Stethoscope Model 4100 features amplification and proprietary Ambient
Noise Reduction (ANR) technology allowing
you to reduce ambient noise by an average of 75% (-12dB) without eliminating critical body sounds. Three frequency modes are available for
listening to heart, lung, and other body ounds. In addition, digital signal processing offers
recording, storage, and playback capabilities,
as well as the ability to transfer recorded sounds via an infrared transmission to another Model 4100 or Model 4000 or IBM-compatible computer or hand-held device.

When combined with the 3M™ Sound Analysis Software you have an exquisite, state-of-the art auscultation system, which allows you to see what you are hearing via visual display of a phonocardiogram . This “hardware” and “software” combination will enhance teaching opportunities, serve as a diagnostic aid and help you make more effective use of telemedicine.