Posts Tagged: ‘Africa’

This is the bat-eared fox and it can hear larvae chewing.

It’s no wonder it can hear larvae chewing when its ears are almost half as tall as its little body. Ears = 5.3 inches (13.4 centimeters). Body up to the shoulders = 11 to 15 inches (28 to 28 centimeters).

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So, what if Earth could make its own video diary?

Well, it did. On Oct. 10, 2010, thousands of videographers in every single nation on Earth turned on their cameras and filmed what was happening in their necks of the woods that day. Thanks to the efforts of the One Day on Earth project, those folks were then able to upload their videos to one central Web site for everyone to watch them.

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I always thought “travel” was just, like, when you go somewhere.

But not everybody thinks every kind of “going somewhere” is worthy of the word. For example, travel writer Paul Theroux thinks you can’t even call travel “travel” unless, during the trip, you “endure a kind of alienation and panic.”

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Last week, when I blogged about the Chocolate-Hills-not-made-of-chocolate, I came across a tiny, hoofed creature called the mouse deer, which is the size of a mouse/rabbit, BUT IT HAS HOOFS.

The endangered Philippine mouse deer, which is endemic to the Balabac, Bugsuc and Ramos Islands and is the smallest hoofed creature around, reminds me of another tiny hoofed animal that’s cute as buttons: the dik-dik …

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There’s no denying that China has major investments in countries across Africa, but what does it mean in the long-term? Tune in to learn why some politicians and conspiracy theorists believe that China is actually colonizing Africa.

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There’s probably nothing more unsettling than a Congolese rebel leader with a bent toward magic coming at you with a straight razor. I don’t know this personally (though I strongly suspect I’m right) but a guy named Dr. Mario Zarza Manresa has firsthand knowledge of just this scenario.

Zarza Manresa was traveling on vacation down the Congo River when his boat was pirated by rebels from the Enyele ethnic group. The doctor was taken hostage, and he is still held by his captors. He is, however, alive and well — the Telegraph reports that a fisherman saw him — although he is now hairless.

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Tonight from 7 to 8:30 (EST), enjoy a live webcast from The Carter Center. The event is titled “Africa: Elections Aren’t Enough,” and the panel discussion will be led by award-winning author Paul Collier.

You’ll find a link to the webcast on the home page at www.cartercenter.org.

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I love old animated Disney movies, as well as the gruesome Brothers Grimm stories or Perrault fairy tales that most come from. One of the best has got to be “Cinderella,” with its talking mice and bad cat in the 1950 film and the grisly, on-the-fly foot surgery in the Grimm’s version.

So I was pleased to see the cachet of a nice fairy tale title extended to the world of agriculture. “Cinderella species,” like their namesake heroine, are diamonds in the rough, underappreciated beauties still hidden in the obscurity of the wild. More specifically, they’re the 3,000 species of wild fruit trees that grow in areas of west Africa, southern Africa and the Sahel, largely uncultivated.

But that’s been changing since the mid-1990s, when researchers at the World Agroforestry Centre surveyed residents on which indigenous trees they found most valuable. Instead of putting timber species at the top of the list, most people chose fruit trees as valued delicacies, staples or even famine food.

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Hillary Clinton’s recently visited the Democratic Republic of Congo (aka, the DRC, Congo, Zaire), a nation that has seen an internal war result in the death of five million inhabitants (more than six percent of the DRC’s current population) since 1996. Clinton’s visit was intended to spotlight the increasingly growing problem of rape as a tool of cultural control and torture among the Congolese. NPR reported that from a refugee camp, Secretary Clinton pledged $17 million in aid to combat rape in the DRC. That amount should help tremendously, but it also seems wincingly paltry in the era of TARP and $2 billion in Cash for Clunkers vouchers.

I can’t think of too many things more insidious than rape as a weapon or tool of war. It’s arguably much worse than murder: the dead move on; the raped are disowned by their families and ostracized by their communities. Somewhere around 200,000 women and girls have been raped in the villages and cities of the Congo by factions on both sides of the conflict over the past 12 years. That figure got me to wondering exactly which war-torn nation had the dubious title of the rape capital of the world. Perhaps it was the DRC, perhaps Sudan. I found after a moment’s research that I actually live in a nation ranked by NationMaster per capita near the top.

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Lakes are usually tranquil bodies of water, but in rare instances, they can be deadly. Tune in to this podcast from HowStuffWorks.com to hear Josh and Chuck discuss lakes that have exploded — and the factors that create a killer lake.

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