I’ve generally been avoiding the American news, but I know readers are following it, especially since the Democratic National Convention, whose conclusion is foregone, has started in Chicago. (I’m glad I’m not home, as there will be tons of protests and disruption. I had enough of that in 1968.)
So here’s a discussion thread about politics, or anything else you want to get off your chest. I’ll start it off with a headline from today’s NYT. I dare not even mention my own views any more, as I’ll be given a hiding for saying that I don’t want to vote for either Presidential candidate, and be told off for thereby helping Trump (a misguided view for sure).
Click on the link below to read, or find the article archived here. I’ll give an excerpt. Talk about the election, politics, or anything you want.
An excerpt:
When Hillary Clinton ran for president in 2016, she had more than 200 distinct policy proposals. Four years ago, Joseph R. Biden Jr. had a task force write a 110-page policy document for his White House bid.
Now, Vice President Kamala Harris does not have a policy page on her campaign website.
A last-minute campaign born of Mr. Biden’s depreciated political standing has so far been running mainly on Democratic good feelings and warmth toward Ms. Harris, drafting off legislation and proposed policies from the man she is hoping to succeed.
Democrats’ problem for most of this year appeared to be Mr. Biden himself, rather than his policies. For more than a year, as his poll numbers sank, his aides and loyalists insisted that his legislative record and priorities were viewed favorably by Americans and would ultimately carry him to another term.
Ms. Harris is now testing that original theory — but with a younger, more spirited messenger.
On policy, she has essentially cherry-picked the parts of the Biden agenda that voters like most while discarding elements like his “Bidenomics” branding on the economy. She has emphasized what allies call the “care economy”: child care, health care and drug prices, which directly affect voters’ lives.
The link to the whole article is above. Didn’t Harris propose some kind of ban on high grocery prices?
As I said, you can talk about anything here, not just politics, but do not diss other commenters or your host, and BE CIVIL. (If you’re a newbie, I recommend reading the posting rules.
Have fun! I’m off to see the animals.
Wildlife sightings were a bit slim in the bush this morning, but yesterday we had two great highlights: one was an invasion of our swimming pool area by a large breeding herd of nearly two dozen elephants, parched in the heat and eager to drink the water (which is unchlorinated and runs continuously over the pool’s far edge, where excess water fills a smaller pool from which the pachyderms drink). For that we didn’t have to leave the lodge.
The second was our third sighting of a leopard, as well as a new cat for me: the cheetah. We saw both cats within just an hour of setting off on our three-hour afternoon drive. All of these are documented below.
Before lunch every day, they set the tables and put out a plate of bread and rolls. I swear to Ceiling Cat that the the vervet monkeys know when lunchtime is, and are aware of the tempting breadstuffs. This onr, whom I photographed before his Big Theft, ran into the dining room, and before anyone could stop her (I don’t know the sex, but without balls it seems to be a female), grabbed two pieces of bread, stuffing one in her mouth and holding the other in her hand. She then hied off and ran up a tree while the leader of a group of young Italian visitors, about to sit down at the table, yelled at the vervet. The leader then returned the plate to the kitchen, asking for a replacement (I wouldn’t have asked). The lucky primate then sat in the tree, stuffing herself with carbs.
After lunch the elephants began show up at the pool to drink, for the day was hot.The big one to the right is, I’m told, probably the matriarch of a breeding group that appears to be largely female (yes, elephants have, like all animals, only two sexes).
This gave one Italian visitor the chance to importune her boyfriend for the selfie of a lifetime:
The elephants started showing up individually or in small groups, so that eventually there were 21 of them, all vying to drink! They were of all sizes and ages, but so far as I can tell nearly all were female. Rosemary will, I think, do her best to verify or disconfirm this in the comments.
You can see the small runoff pool where most of the elephants drink, while the bigger one can reach their trunks into the larger and cleaner pool to the left (the regular swimming pool). It’s wonderful that the designers of this lodge provided for the elephants in this way:
All sizes were there; check out the little one under the matriarch. Its trunk could barely reach even the smaller pool.
Adult and infants get a drink of cool water:
What a sight! One of the employees told me that when it’s hot they often get this many elephants. The new human visitors to the lodge were stupefied at the sight.
As it was hot, some of them used the water to spray their backs, like this one. Many also fanned their blood-rich ears to cool off. And they clearly enjoyed playing in the water. One of them even blew bubbles into the small pool.
Within the first two hours of the afternoon drive yesterday, we saw two rare species of cat. The first was the same leopard we saw yesterday, now resting on the ground and apparently unperturbed by our vehicle:
Soon thereafter, our vehicle, which held eight plus local driver/guide Dan (two Italians, a family of four Frenchmen, and two Americans, including me and an astronomer from Baltimore), came upon a great species The French paterfamilias was good at spotting animals, and cried out late in the afternoon. He had seen something in the distance lying atop a large, defunct termite mound.
This is what it was:
Yep, a hard-to-find cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus), the world’s fastest land animal. How fast is it? As you can imagine, its flat-out speed is hard to measure, but it’s about a mile a minute, attaining this speed from a standstill in just a few seconds. Wikipedia says this (bolding is mine):
The cheetah is the world’s fastest land animal. Estimates of the maximum speed attained range from 80 to 128 km/h (50 to 80 mph). A commonly quoted value is 112 km/h (70 mph), recorded in 1957, but this measurement is disputed. In 2012, an 11-year-old cheetah from the Cincinnati Zoo set a world record by running 100 m (330 ft) in 5.95 seconds over a set run, recording a maximum speed of 98 km/h (61 mph).
Cheetahs equipped with GPS collars hunted at speeds during most of the chase much lower than the highest recorded speed; their run was interspersed with a few short bursts of a few seconds when they attained peak speeds. The average speed recorded during the high speed phase was 53.64 km/h (33.3 mph), or within the range 41.4–65.88 km/h (25.7–40.9 mph) including error. The highest recorded value was 93.24 km/h (57.9 mph)
. . . Cheetahs have subsequently been measured at running at a speed of 64 mph (103 km/h) as an average of three runs including in opposite direction, for a single individual, over a marked 200 m (220 yd) course, even starting the run 18 m (59 ft) behind the start line, starting the run already running on the course. Again dividing the distance by time, but this time to determine the maximum sustained speed, completing the runs in an average time of 7 seconds. Being a more accurate method of measurement, this test was made in 1965 but published in 1997. Subsequently, with GPS-IMU collars, running speed was measured for wild cheetahs during hunts with turns and maneuvers, and the maximum speed recorded was 58 mph (93 km/h) sustained for 1–2 seconds. The speed was obtained by dividing the length by the time between footfalls of a stride. Cheetahs can go from 0 to 97 km/h (0 to 60 mph) in less than 3 seconds.
I think the one we saw (below) is a female though I couldn’t see teats. But testes should be visible if it were a male. It is slim and graceful, much thinner than the leopard shown above. Its figure shows the need for speed:
More from Wikipedia:
The cheetah lives in three main social groups: females and their cubs, male “coalitions”, and solitary males. While females lead a nomadic life searching for prey in large home ranges, males are more sedentary and instead establish much smaller territories in areas with plentiful prey and access to females. The cheetah is active during the day, with peaks during dawn and dusk. It feeds on small- to medium-sized prey, mostly weighing under 40 kg (88 lb), and prefers medium-sized ungulates such as impala, springbok and Thomson’s gazelles. The cheetah typically stalks its prey within 60–100 m (200–330 ft) before charging towards it, trips it during the chase and bites its throat to suffocate it to death.
What a lovely cat!
Now birds. Rita and Martim, as well as Dan, identify the large woven nests below as the product of the red-billed buffalo weaver (Bubalornis niger), a denizen of dry savanna. Here are three colonial nests in one tree, a tree with bark partly removed by elephant scratching (reddish area near the ground).
Wikipedia describes the nests:
Red-billed buffalo weavers breed in colonies. The nests are composed of an enormous mass of thorny twigs. These twigs are divided into separate lodges (compartments), each with multiple egg chambers. Each chamber has a smaller nest, typically built by the female (unless they are part of a cooperative breeding colony). The smaller nest is composed of grass, leaves, and roots. The whole nest is usually found in a thorny tree or in a windmill near areas inhabited by humans.
Two ways of looking at zebras:
To our best knowledge, as I’ve reported several times, the stripes evolved mainly as a deterrent to biting flies, which simply don’t like landing on striped substrates. They don’t seem to be any kind of camouflage or a deterrent to predation by carnivores.
. . . and a blue wildebeest:
Now from this morning. These holes appeared overnight in the packed-earth parking lot, and we were told they were made by termites. I’m not sure what’s going on here, but I have inquired of an entomologist:
It was chilly and partly cloudy this morning, and this is an unmanipulated shot of the bush, which really is a black-and-white view at sunrise:
Pickings were slim on this morning’s drive (this is why you must stay at a place like this for, I think, at least four days). Dan livened things up by propping up the skull of a dead hippo (I showed the skeleton before). He said this hippo had been badly mauled in a battle with another hippo, and died from bleeding out:
We had a rare “sunupper” today (the coffee we get near the end of a morning’s drive): we got to get out of the car and drink our java right near wildlife: a trio of giraffe. They were quite curious about us and looked at our group of nine intently for a long time:
Now that is what I call a coffee break!
Nearby, concentric species of dung: the darker and smaller droppings from a zebra surrounded the larger brownish ones from an elephant:
Every day we see one ostrich, and it’s always crossing the road. One might think it was confecting a joke:
Finally, Dan spotted rhino tracks (see below) and spent a long time trying to find rhinos for us. I’d already seen one, but as the longest resident of the lodge now—I’ve been here four days—none of the others had. Dan always tries hard to find hard-to-see species, but despite his getting out of the car and combing the bush, we found nada except for these prints:
But I have two more 3-hour drives (the animals I have yet to see include the Cape buffalo—my last of the Big Five—a hippo out of water, and the lilac-breasted roller (Coracias caudatus), one of the world’s most beautiful birds. I’ve actually seen the species twice, but they always fly away before I can take a photo. Here’s a shot taken from Wikipedia, as I doubt I’ll be able to photograph one properly: they’re not uncommon, but are also skittish:
The caption says that this one was photographed at Kruger National Park, which is right next door.
Charles J. Sharp, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia CommonsMeanwhile, in Dobrzyn, Hili is concerned about health and safety:
Hili: You have to remove these roots.
A; Why?
Hili: Because somebody might stumble on them.
Hili: Musisz usunąć te korzenie.
Ja: Dlaczego?
Hili: Bo ktoś może się o nie potknąć.
Nature Reviews Cancer published a propaganda piece disguised as commentary promoting "integrative oncology," or what I like to call "integrating" quackery with oncology.
The post Revisiting “integrative oncology”: The battle to integrate quackery with oncology continues first appeared on Science-Based Medicine.Today’s post covers the drives yesterday afternoon and this morning. Don’t forget to click the photos to enlarge them. And we saw another leopard!
I won’t put up a link or the Latin binomials for animals I’ve done that for already.
At lunch yesterday a vervet monkey (Chlorocebus pygerythrus) somehow found its way into the dining room and made for my plate (I was writing on this site in the adjacent room). But I’d eaten all my lunch, and so it thrust its hand into my water glass and licked off the drops (much like the black cat Toon in Amsterdam). Vervets are social primates that range widely in East and South Africa, and have been extensively studied by biologists. Here’s a photo of the little guy, who was adorable but skittish:
Another day, another herd of impala, perhaps the most common antelope in the reserve. The males are the ones with horns, but they are very skittish and I’ve had trouble getting a front-on picture of the impressive males. I’ll try again this afternoon.
We’ve not seen many common ostriches in the park—just this one. Like the one near the Cape of Good Hope, it crossed the road, giving rise to an obvious joke:
A couple of elephants yesterday afternoon. It’s amazing to come upon one of these all of a sudden; sometimes I can’t spot them until we’re very close to them, as they often stand still.
A blue wildebeest, one of only two sister species in the genus Connochaetes, the other. being the black wildebeest. Both are mammals formerly known as gnus. I asked our guide and driver, Dan, why this one let us get to close to him. Dan replied that this wildebeest was an old friend of his.
Wildebeest poop: extraordinarily small (about goat-poop sized, or the size of blueberries) for an animal this large. I’m told that this is because wildebeest have the four classic stomach compartments of many ruminants, and thus digest the short grass they eat very thoroughly, leaving only small, hard remnants of their food.
In contrast, elephants have poor ability to digest grass and foliage, and their droppings are huge, as we discover when we walk to and from our tents (the camp is crawling with elephants night and day). I’m trying to make a photographic collection of animal droppings for your delectation.
Mother and baby elephant:
Surprised by another elephant standing behind a tree:
A giraffe stood nearby as we had our “sundowner” drinks outside the vehicle. Some misguided zoologists have revised the single species Giraffa camelopardalis into four species based on genetic differences alone. Since no two of them occur in one locality, one can’t use the biological species concept, but my guess is that there’s only one species of giraffe and all the subspecies would interbreed and produce fertile hybrids if they occurred in one locality (see posts here and here).
And two sundown photos of the giraffe:
We left this morning heading for a pride of lions that had been spotted, but when Dan got out of the vehicle to look for them in a ravine, he accidentally spooked them. But we had some serendipity: he saw a leopard sleeping in a tree above him, (the guy can find stuff, I tell you). We maneuvered around the other trucks, which didn’t seem to disturb the cat, until we were right below it.
It looked comfortable as hell, with its legs hanging down as it snoozed away. Two leopard spottings in two days: that’s fantastic.
On the way out, the ever-vigilant Dan, who was driving, nevertheless spotted some leopard tracks in the sand. He circled one of them for me:
A female greater kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros) either urinating or defecating. They’re relatively uncommon, so I may not get another picture. I’ve put a Wikipedia picture of the male below mine:
A photo of a greater kudu male from Wikipedia. Its spiral horns are striking:
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license. Attribution: © Hans HillewaertThis is more of less what “the bush” looks like around here, though this patch has a bit more trees than usual. It’s dry as it’s winter, and the rains come in summer; but this year summer was extraordinarily dry and the animals therefore stressed for food.
A panoramic shot of the bush. Click to enlarge:
h/t: Rosemary for IDs and information
Galaxies are some of the largest clearly defined structures in space. There are trillions of them, and many are clustered around each other. But how does that clustering affect them? That’s been a question for a while, and older papers have yielded contradictory results. Now, a new paper analyzing millions of galaxies from researchers at the University of Washington, Yale, and several other institutions shows a clear pattern that had been debated before – galaxies surrounded by other galaxies tend to be larger.
The path to that conclusion was a long one. Several other surveys showed that galaxies in “dense environments” were both larger and smaller. However, these studies were only conducted using a relatively limited dataset of hundreds or thousands of galaxies. So, the researchers in the new paper, led by Aritra Ghosh, a postdoc at UW, thought, “Why not get more data?”
So they did, using the Subaru telescope’s Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program. This survey captured high-quality data on millions of galaxies for the first time, so the researchers were able to select 3 million galaxies with the best datasets from the cream of the crop.
Massive datasets on galaxies are becoming more common – Fraser discusses another survey of millions of galaxies.They then drew “circles” of about 30 million light-years around each of the three million galaxies and assessed how densely packed their local neighborhood was. Statistically, the correlation was obvious – galaxies in more dense spatial neighborhoods were larger than their more isolated cousins.
Saying the researchers drew circles around 30 million galaxies isn’t accurate, though – they used one of the myriad new machine-learning tools popping up in the astronomical community. This one, called the Galaxy Morphology Posterior Estimation Network, or GaMPEN, was the focal point of Dr. Ghosh’s PhD thesis at Yale. It specializes in estimating galaxy size and accounting for uncertainties in the measurement.
With the tool’s results, the question became, what does this mean? The idea that galaxies are larger in dense areas doesn’t fit well with astronomers’ current conception of how galaxies form. So, it’s time for a new theory to fit the data Subaru has collected, and the paper has analyzed.
Fraser discusses globular clusters, one of the dense states galaxies can find themselves in.Several theories put forward in a press release could explain the observations. One is that densely clustered galaxies are simply larger from the start. Another is that perhaps they are more effective at merging with closely proximate galaxies to create larger supergalaxies than the two originals.
A third, more intriguing possibility is that dark matter might be involved. But since scientists still don’t understand what dark matter actually is, this is akin to waving a magic wand to explain data that otherwise doesn’t fit the cosmological model.
Regardless of the reason, the study is an excellent example of how large datasets and AI-enabled tools will change astronomy shortly. In some cases, it will confirm existing theories, and in some cases, like the relationship between galaxy density and size, it will call for a new theoretical framework. Either way, it’s exciting to be around for all these new discoveries, whether AI-powered or not.
Learn More:
UW – Galaxies in dense environments tend to be larger, settling one cosmic question and raising others
Ghosh et al. – Denser Environments Cultivate Larger Galaxies: A Comprehensive Study beyond the Local Universe with 3 Million Hyper Suprime-Cam Galaxies
UT – This Distant Galaxy Cluster is Totally Relaxed, Unharassed for a Billion Years|
UT – A Collision Between Gigantic Galaxy Clusters. Too Big, Too Early
Lead Image:
Image of Abell 2218, a dense galactic cluster approximately 2 billion light-years from Earth.
Credit – NASA/ESA/Johan Richard
The post Galaxies in Dense Environments Get Larger appeared first on Universe Today.
Areas of space have wildly different temperatures depending on whether they are directly in sunlight or not. For example, temperatures on the Moon can range from 121 °C during the lunar “day” (which lasts for two weeks), then drop down to -133 °C at night, encompassing a 250 °C swing. Stabilizing the temperature inside a habitat in those environments would require heating and cooling on a scale never before conducted on Earth. But what if there was a way to ease the burden of those temperature swings? Phase change materials (PCMs) might be the answer, according to a new paper from researchers at the Universidad Politecnica de Madrid.
PCMs have been known for some time and are currently used in several industries, including batteries, solar power plants, heat pumps, and even spacecraft. Perhaps most interestingly, they’ve been used to cool and heat the interiors of buildings on Earth.
They do so by absorbing heat during the hot parts of a period (whether a day or season) and emitting that heat in the cooler parts of a later period. They act like a giant thermal “sink,” making it take longer to heat or cool and providing insulation to anything it surrounds.
Two-bit DaVinci explains how PCMs work on terrestrial houses.Another way to think of this is through the concept of thermal inertia. When an object, like a building, is in the Sun, it is directly impacted by the Sun’s rays, causing it to heat up. Alternatively, if it is no longer in the Sun but still contains a lot of thermal energy, it will start radiating some of that heat away. In vacuums, radiative energy is transmitted through infrared light like space.
PCMs have such large thermal inertia because they either absorb or emit lots of energy as they change between phases, such as between solid and liquid or liquid and gas. For example, the paper describes using n-octadecane as one of the PCMs being considered. It switches state around 28 °C, slightly above room temperature. Which makes it perfect for holding a room at right about that temperature.
Changing the temperature of something built with PCMs is much more complicated, and that challenge can make it easier to regulate the temperature inside a space habitat. The researchers modeled what would happen if a space habitat were built with PCMs inside the walls, and they found a significant decrease in the heating and cooling required to keep the habitat within the temperature range of being comfortable for humans.
Thermal control is one of the aspects of a self-sustaining space habitat, as Fraser discusses with Dr. Annika Rollock.Other factors were included in the calculation, such as the reflectivity of the outer surface of the wall and the part of the solar cycle the Sun was experiencing. However, the authors found that given optimal conditions; designers could completely passively heat and cool a space habitat using only PCMs.
That is a pretty impressive feat, though the optimal conditions are improbable to ever happen in practice. Still, any energy savings the materials might provide will be welcome on a habitat that will likely be energy-starved when it starts. However, many different ideas exist for how those habitats should be built, including using regolith on the Moon. It is unclear how feasible it would be to include PCMs in cave walls or other structures involving local materials. The sheer amount of PCMs necessary to thermally control a massive human habitat might also be prohibitively expensive to launch at current prices.
However, materials keep improving, and there are obvious advantages to using these materials in this context. While they might not be integrated into some of the early habitats humanity builds in space, they will undoubtedly be used in future ones, and this paper is one step towards that.
Learn More:
Kachalov et al – Preliminary Design of a Space Habitat Thermally Controlled Using Phase Change Materials
UT – The Future of Space Colonization – Terraforming or Space Habitats?
UT – Where Could Humans Survive in our Solar System?
UT – Watch a House-Sized Space Habitat (Intentionally) Burst
Lead Image:
Artist’s depiction of a habitat on the Moon.
Credit: ESA/Foster + Partners
The post Specialized Materials Could Passively Control the Internal Temperature of Space Habitats appeared first on Universe Today.
Meanwhile, in Dobrzyn, Hili – like many cats – is bemused:
Hili: It’s difficult to figure all of it out. A: Figure out what? Hili: I told you – all of it.Hili: Trudno się w tym wszystkim zorientować.
Dr. Scott Atlas said the Great Barrington Declaration was aligned with the advice he gave to the President of the United States. He also said he never read it.
The post Dr. Scott Atlas: “I Never Read the Full Great Barrington Declaration Website and Everything”. first appeared on Science-Based Medicine.Archaeologist Elizabeth Weiss’s new book, On the Warpath, is an autobiographical account of her storied career on the front lines of the culture war in our colleges and universities. Her opposition to the reburial of Native American skeletal remains, her insistence that indigenous knowledge is not science but myth, and her fight against wokeism and political correctness in academia exposed her to numerous controversies and cancel culture campaigns, and a court case.
A photograph of Weiss with a skull — as natural to anthropologists as a doctor being pictured with a stethoscope — led to her university shutting her out of the collection and changing the locks. This became an international news story, as did the American Anthropological Association canceling one of her presentations because she explained that a skeleton’s sex is binary and not gender fluid.
This hard-hitting and often humorous book tells the story of Dr. Weiss’s fight for science against superstition, and her attempts to promote free speech and academic freedom. It also exposes the current rot in today’s universities, through the lens of her battles against day-to-day absurdities. These include an attempt to bar “menstruating personnel” (formerly known as women) from the curation facility, a campaign to ban research on ancient Carthaginian remains because the individuals concerned never consented to photography, and a plan to declare X-rays sacred, so that they can be repatriated to Native Americans (who may actually be Mexicans), prior to being burned or buried.
Elizabeth Weiss is a controversial and world-renowned anthropology professor, specializing in the analysis of human skeletal remains. For much of her career she was based at San Jose State University, where she curated one of the largest collections of skeletal remains in the US. She is the author of numerous books and articles, and she played an essential role in bringing the Smithsonian’s traveling exhibition “What Does it Mean to be Human?” to the San Francisco Bay Area. She’s been featured in the New York Times, Science and USA Today, and has been interviewed on Fox News and Newsmax. She currently lives in New York City, where she holds a visiting fellowship with Heterodox Academy.
Shermer and Weiss discuss:
If you enjoy the podcast, please show your support by making a $5 or $10 monthly donation.
NOTE: Click the pictures to enlarge them.
Here are the latest results from our twice-daily game drives at Manyeleti Game Reserve. I’ll put up photos of food, our facilities, and other such stuff later, but for me the important stuff is the animals and their behavior. This post covers the second game drive yesterday and the first one this morning.
Yesterday afternoon we came upon a breeding herd of African bush elephants (I won’t give links or species names henceforth for animals I’ve named previously). The one on the right is a female (angular head), there are two infants of indeterminate sex, and it’s unclear what sex the elephant on the left is.
Rosemary says that the elephant below is probably a male, but can’t be sure because it’s facing us and is also fairly young (ca. 10-12 years). But it is apparently both giving us an alert pose and sniffing the air to see what our vehicle is (elephants have poor eyesight):
This is definitely a female, as shown by the sharp angle of the forehead (adult males have rounder foreheads).
I asked Martim about this bird, and he said this:
I would say this is a Greater Blue-eared Starling, Lamprotornis chalybeus. Although the photo suggests a black belly (rather than blue), I guess this is an effect of the light angle.A blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus), formerly known as the brindled gnu, is a large antelope that’s common across southern Africa:
Another “lion wedding party,” as our guide Dan calls it. Same pair as yesterday (they can copulate up to 50 times a day over several days), and in the same spot. And, like yesterday, copulation took less than a minute and the mail roared halfway through (is that a lion orgasm?). He then swiped at and roared at a nearby juvenile male (“leave my wife alone!”), lit a cigarette, and then both lions rested:
Afterglow:
The female, perhaps pregnant by now:
A trio of giraffes (Giraffa sp.; they’ve named seven but I don’t believe that number). Several zebras were following them around; apparently other herbivores use giraffes, whose height allows them to see far away, as lookouts to give an alert to nearby predators.
Watch out for antelopes! A sign quickly photographed at high speed. You can see my reflection in the mirror.
Hippos (Hippopotamus amphibius) in a nearby “dam” (a big water pond). I think this is the closest we’ll get to them. There is only one species and usually you just get to see their eyes and nose. They are, I believe the closest terrestrial animal to whales. They are born and nurse underwater, and can swim before they can walk.
In the last half hour of our evening game drive, we stop, have drinks, and chat. On the house: wine, beer, soda, or gin and tonics (coffee, tea or cocoa in the morning). In the foreground is Dan, our knowledgeable and amiable driver (I’m glad I’ll have him the whole time). This ritual is known as a “sundowner”:
And. . . sundown by the lake, watching the hippos submerge and pop up again:
Last night I skipped dinner as I’ve been eating too much, and retired to my heated bed to read (The Razor’s Edge by Somerset Maugham). As I read, the lions made their “here I am calls”, which sound to me like a combination of snoring and growling. You can hear it below. They do this, apparently, to let other males in their group know where they are. Here’s a video that Rosemary found:
Reading while hearing the lions call nearby was as close to paradise as I can envision.
**********
Another day, another two drives. This covers one we had this m0rning. We started off by passing one of a gazillion termite mounds. Aardvarks use these as places to dig their dens and burrows:
Then onto one of the Two Big Events of the Day. We were clued into it by nearby trees full of vultures:
Martim identified this vulture:
White-backed vulture Gyps africanus (from your photo, the diagnostic trait separating it from the less common Cape Vulture, G. coprotheres, is its black eye)
All the trees were full of vultures! Why? Because there was a dead elephant nearby, pungently rotting away but still recognizable as an African elephant. The corpse was apparently about a week old.
It may have died of old age, but Rosemary says that elephants may die from infectious diseases like “tuberculosis, haemorrhagic septicaemia, trypanosomiasis, pyroplasmosis, foot and mouth disease, pox, bacillary necrosis, salmonellosis, streptococcosis, babesiosis, helminthiasis and ectoparasitism”, as well as rabies and tetanus.
The rotting, stinking corpse was covered with vultures who were picking at it, as well as ripping off bits made available by several hyenas who were also gorging away at this pachyderm buffet.
Note that the elephant still has its tusks, which should be removed before poachers get them.
Note the hyena to the right:
Three hyenas to the left are devouring the corpse; one has its tongue hanging out. The smell, when the wind shifted, was digusting, but I’m sure the birds and hyenas find it delectable and tantalizing:
Spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) come in just two sexes, like all mammals, despite the female having a penis-like organ containing the urethra and vagina. Note: female are NOT a “new” biological sex.
Spotted hyenas are social, live in clans, and are both hunters and scavengers. And they are strong! Wikipedia notes this:
The spotted hyena also has its carnassials situated behind its bone-crushing premolars, the position of which allows it to crush bone with its premolars without blunting the carnassials. Combined with large jaw muscles and a special vaulting to protect the skull against large forces, these characteristics give the spotted hyena a powerful bite which can exert a pressure of 80 kgf/cm2 (1140 lbf/in²), which is 40% more force than a leopard can generate. The jaws of the spotted hyena outmatch those of the brown bear in bone-crushing ability,and free ranging hyenas have been observed to crack open the long bones of giraffes measuring 7 cm in diameter.
According to Martim, the bird below is a “Juvenile Saddle-billed Stork, Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis.” He added, “I hope you get to see the adults!” Check the link above for the fantastic adult:
Our big spot of the day was a leopard (Panthera pardus), quickly surrounded by game vehicles as the drivers communicated with each other where it was. (I worry about this.) It is a rare sighting, and now I’ve seen four of the Big Five (all but the African buffalo).
But I’m not really ticking off a list, as I’d gladly see even the common animals over and over again. Their behavior is always changing and raises many behavioral and evolutionary questions (e.g. can anything take down a huge and alert giraffe? Answer: yes).
What a gorgeous cat! I was lucky to get a photo as they’re wary, skittish, rare, and there were vehicles nearly surrounding it, which clearly spooked it. But visitors also help conserve the parks, so there’s an upside, too.
Finally, a good sighting of a Burchell’s zebra (a subspecies of the Plains Zebra). They live in small groups, described by Wikipedia as “harem” or “bachelor” groups, with the former containing one male and a passel of females, and the latter comprising two to eight stallions looking for love.
And now it’s time for lunch and then another game drive. There’s no doubt that we’ll see something interesting. More when I have enough for another post.
Out of Africa,
PCC(E)