Monday, September 28, 2009

Shag Bands...

Underage Sexuality... and Kids and Sexuality



Primary school kids wearing "shag bands"

Each colour represents a sexual act
Wearer must perform act if band breaks

THEY look like a symbol of childhood innocence. But these colourful bracelets are behind an "insidious" craze of primary school kids performing sex acts that it is feared will soon sweep through Queensland.
Rather than a mere fashion statement, the so-called "shag bands" are linked to gradations of sexual behaviour. A Facebook page about the innocuous-looking bands has already been inundated with more than 12,000 fans.
The game involves a boy or girl trying to break the rubber band off the wearer's wrist. If it snaps, the wearer has to perform the favour corresponding to the colour.
Snap an orange band and get a kiss, snap a yellow and get a hug. But snap a black, light blue or light green band, and the "prize" is something far more sinister.
A gold-coloured bracelet opens the way to all the favours.
Parent and family groups are horrified by what is represented by the bracelets, which can be bought at Diva chain stores.


Herald Sun, 3 Jul 2009
When primary-school-aged girls on Facebook's shag band fan page were asked "what colour would you snap", replies included: "yellow, because I like hugz", and "light pink because only a kiss".

But the innocent comments were interspersed with other answers, such as, "black coz u get to shag someone". UrbanDictionary.com defines the rubber wrist bands as "jelly bracelets" and lists the entire repertoire of sexual favours.

Social commentator Melinda Tankard-Reist, who has has just edited Getting Real: Challenging the Sexualisation of Girls, said the so-called shag bands set young girls up for "sexual consumption".

"It's just setting up girls as service stations for boys," she said. "This is another example of young women expected to be publicly sexual, to advertise their sexual repertoire.
"It's insidious . . . it's damaging to girls and their worth."
Australian Childhood Foundation chief executive Joe Tucci said that early sexualisation was worrying.
"All this is selling the idea of sexualisation is a way to negotiate relationships," Dr Tucci said.
"What's happened to just playing?"
Dr Tucci said if parents saw their children wearing the bands it was an opportunity to talk about tricky subjects such as sexuality.

Polanski Arrest sparks Shock and Outrage



Sex with Underaged and Minors..Should Old Cases Be Brought Up?
Should Famous People be pardoned?

Government ministers, movie directors, writers and intellectuals have expressed shock and outrage after the detention of Oscar winning director Roman Polanski in Switzerland on three-decade-old child sex charges.

France and Poland are to ask the United States to drop the charges and consider a presidential pardon over the case, Poland's PAP news agency said on Sunday, though Polanski has already acknowledged he had sex with the 13-year-old girl in Los Angeles in 1977.

Polanski, 76, was detained in Switzerland on Saturday as he arrived to attend the Zurich film festival, where he was due to receive a special award on Sunday.
Switzerland's Justice Ministry has said Polanski could be extradited following a US request for his detention.

The Polish and French foreign ministers Radoslaw Sikorski and Bernard Kouchner discussed the arrest of the French-Polish national by telephone and agreed to make a joint approach to the US authorities, PAP reported.

They will ask US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton "to ask Switzerland to release Roman Polanski, detained pending extradition, and for her to envisage the possibility of a pardon from President Barack Obama", PAP quoted Sikorski as saying.

French Culture Minister Frederic Mitterrand condemned the arrest of the film-maker, who lives in Paris, and said he has discussed the matter with President Nicolas Sarkozy.
Mitterrand said he had "learned with astonishment about the process launched against Roman Polanski", his ministry said in a statement.

Sarkozy, "is following the matter with great attention and shares the hope... of a quick resolution to the situation," the statement said.
Mitterrand told a press briefing that the arrest is "absolutely horrifying" and the case is "an old story which doesn't really make any sense."

"We know the conditions that this happened in, and while there is a generous America that we like, there is also a side of America which scares and that side has just showed us its face," he told reporters.

Questioned about the case in Warsaw, Poland's President Lech Kaczynski said he's "surprised" and that he wants to speak with US officials about the case, but added that they are "devilishly difficult" to deal with.

Polish film directors, led by Andrzej Wajda, an honourary Oscar winner, sent a letter to the Polish government calling for official help for Polanski, saying he faces a "judicial lynching".
Irina Bokova, incoming head of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), called the arrest "shocking" in an interview with French television.
The Swiss film screenwriters and directors association, the ASSR, called the arrest "a judicial scandal which will tarnish Switzerland's reputation around the world".
Polanski has been working on a film version of The Ghost, a political thriller by British writer Robert Harris, and Harris told Sky News television he's amazed by events.
"The warrant is 31-years-old and Roman Polanski has a house in Switzerland. I have worked with him there two or three times in the last year or so.
"He has travelled freely throughout Europe and in Switzerland - filming has been based in Germany. He has just come back from a holiday in Greece.

"I'm amazed this should happen now, and I cannot begin to fathom what reason lies behind it."

Man Marries Four Wives at the same Time



Polygamous Marriages

Milton Mbhele showed up for his wedding in a white limousine — with four brides.


The women in white gowns each received rings and a kiss from the groom at a ceremony Saturday attended by hundreds of people. On Sunday, the families gathered for a second traditional Zulu wedding and planned to exchange gifts on Monday.
South African law recognizes traditional polygamous marriages — even President Jacob Zuma has three wives. Yet while polygamy remains common among several tribes including the Zulus and Swazis, simultaneous weddings are rare.
Mbhele, 44, a municipal manager in nearby Indaka, said the joint celebration saved money by combining the festivities.
Mbhele has already been married to Thobile Vilakazi for 12 years and has 11 children, but did not specify who their mothers are.
"I want her to be happy," he said of Vilakazi, who was also given a golden wristwatch at Saturday's ceremony. "I think getting married to her for the second time would make her happy since I will be taking in three other wives so this will relieve her in some way."
His "middle wives" — as he described them — are Zanele Langa and Happiness Mdlolo, both 24.
The youngest wife, 23-year-old Smangele Cele, said she was looking forward to marrying Mbhele, even though it means she'll have to share him. She said the wives planned to live separately, with their husband rotating between them.

"It is because of the way in which he shows his love for me. He loves me in all ways," she said, adding: "We will not be living in the same house and we take each other as friends."

Friday, September 25, 2009

Co-Workers find out they are longlost brothers

Since Gary Nisbet started working at Dow Furniture in Waldoboro, Maine two months ago, he’d been going out on delivery runs with long-time employee Randy Joubert. And every time they pulled up to a customer’s house, they’d receive a surprising question: “Are you brothers?”


With their bulky builds and golden-brown goatees, the two men looked a lot alike. But they’d grown up in separate towns, and had never met until the day Nisbet began working at the furniture shop.

Still, after hearing the question again and again, Joubert got a hunch. He had been adopted, and knew his birth parents’ names. He also knew that he had a younger brother, who had been adopted by another family. It seemed unlikely, but he figured it couldn’t hurt to ask Nisbet about his family history.

“Don’t think I’m weird,” Joubert warned, before launching into a series of questions. Was Nisbet adopted? As it turned out, he was. Did he know his birth parents’ names? He did—and they were the exact same names as the ones on Joubert’s own birth certificate.

The two men sat in stunned silence for a moment. Then “I said, ‘Gary, do you understand what I am telling you? We are brothers,’” Joubert told the Bangor Daily News. “I think I kept saying that. We had a few more deliveries and it was just the Twilight Zone.”

But the remarkable story doesn’t end there. Last week, after learning about the adoptive brothers’ surprise reunion, a woman named Joanne Campbell showed up at their workplace, birth certificate in hand. As it turned out, the family was about to get another new member: Campbell was their half sister.

“I’m really awestruck,” Campbell said. “After all of these years, here I am 41 and now I finally found my brothers.”

The siblings may have missed out on spending their formative years together, but now, thanks to these surprising circumstances, they’ll have the rest of their lives to become a family.

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Do you know of any other adoption stories?

A television series in Australia find families of those who are adopted or have lost their families and some amazing links and stories have turned up.

Why do people adopt children?
Why do people give children for adoption?

Do you know anyone who is adopted?


Do you have an adoption story to share??



Australia Under Stress of Volcanic Eruption


SYDNEY: Three Australian states are at risk from a major volcanic eruption which geological history indicates is "well overdue" an expert warned this week.

University of Melbourne geologist Bernie Joyce said the threat of volcanic eruption in Victoria, South Australia and Queensland should be given more attention by emergency management authorities.

"The geological record shows that new volcanoes in these areas have erupted perhaps every 2,000 years in the past 40,000 years — and given there has not been a major eruption there for the past 5,000 years, a significant eruption seems well overdue," he said.

Melbourne in the firing line

A volcanic eruption in Victoria's Western Uplands could potentially see lava flows and ash falls impacting on Melbourne, Joyce told Cosmos Online.

"There is also similar volcano risk present in various provinces in Far North Queensland, stretching from south-west of Townsville to near Cairns and up to Cooktown in the Far North.

"There are more than 380 volcanoes in total across this part of Queensland," said Joyce, who will receive the Selwyn Medal for significant contributions in the Earth Sciences tomorrow at the Geological Society of Australia's annual Selwyn Symposium.

Joyce said that research at the University of Melbourne had given new dates to some of the volcanic deposits in Victoria. These findings pointed to 20 or so young volcanoes in a cluster near the Victoria border and there could be a new eruption in this area, he said.

Worst-case scenario

"While any future volcanoes may discharge only small amounts of lava and ash, the real possibility remains that there could be a significant eruption — and it makes sense that the population centres potentially affected should be well-prepared for that worst-case scenario," he said.

"To this end, eruption response plans should be developed and publicised by the emergency management authorities."

In New Zealand, there is a greater focus on the need to educate the public about volcano risk, Joyce said. Auckland, New Zealand's largest city, sits on an active hot spot, while nearby plate tectonics drives active volcanoes such as Mt Ruapehu
Australian volcanism stems from a different cause which may be related to buckling of the rocks as Australia inches its way towards North America, said Joyce. This buckling could allow packets of magma to force their way up through the crust.

Geologist and Curator of the Museum of Victoria, Bill Birch, who has studied the volcanic rocks of Victoria, said that while the risk was "worth noting", it "wasn't necessary to plan for it in detail", given that the next volcano might erupt in 100 years or 1,000 years' time.

He said research published in the Australian Journal of Earth Sciences had indicated that the Victorian risk was in decline. "If there's been an eruption, 40, 30, 20 or 5,000 years ago then there's no reason why there can't be another one - but it's a statistical thing," said Birch.

"Statistical thing"

There was a localised risk of volcanic eruption in these areas in the same sense that there was a risk of earthquake, which would involve evacuating people nearby, he said. But there'd "probably be more warning than you'd have for a bushfire," he added.

“While the risk of a significant volcanic eruption is considered remote, both state and Australian Government emergency agencies have well-tested plans in place to handle the impact of rapid-onset disasters,” commented Daniel Gleeson, an Australian Federal Government spokesperson in the Attorney General’s Department.

He said that in the event of an eruption, specialist organisations such as Geoscience Australia and the Bureau of Meteorology would be ready to provide essential information to the government and the public.

“The Australian community can be assured that this country is prepared for any emergency or disaster… with plans in place for response agencies and departments to be activated quickly and effectively.”

Drinking Tea Soothes Stress

SYDNEY: Daily cups of tea can help you recover more quickly from the stresses of everyday life by affecting levels of the stress hormone cortisol, a new British study shows.

Published in the international journal Psychopharmacology, the study found that people who drank tea were able to de-stress more quickly than those who drank a tea substitute. Following a stressful event, tea-drinkers also had lower levels of cortisol in their blood when compared with a control group who drank placebo tea.

"Drinking tea has traditionally been associated with stress relief," said co-author Andrew Steptoe, of the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at University College London. Until now, however, scientific evidence for the relaxing properties of tea has been quite limited, he said.

The study involved 75 young male tea drinkers who all gave up their normal tea, coffee and caffeinated beverages for the duration of the study. Instead, they consumed a tea concoction four times a day for six weeks.

Participants were divided into two groups: one group was given a fruit-flavoured caffeinated tea mixture made up of the constituents of an average cup of black tea; the other group - the control group - was given a caffeinated placebo, identical in taste but devoid of active tea ingredients.

All drinks were tea-coloured, but were designed to mask some of the normal sensory cues associated with tea drinking (like smell, taste and familiarity of the brew) to eliminate confounding factors such as the 'comforting' effect of drinking a cup of tea.

Both groups were subjected to stressful tasks while their blood cortisol, blood pressure, blood platelet and self-rated levels of stress were measured.

In one task, volunteers were exposed to a stressful situation - either the threat of unemployment, a shop lifting accusation or an incident in a nursing home - and had to prepare a verbal defence and argue their case in front of a camera.

The tasks triggered substantial increases in blood pressure, heart rate and subjective stress ratings in both of the groups. However, 50 minutes after the task, cortisol levels had dropped by an average of 47 per cent in the tea drinking group compared with 27 per cent in the fake tea group.

UCL researchers also found that blood platelet activation - linked to blood clotting and the risk of heart attacks - was lower in the tea drinkers, and that this group reported a greater degree of relaxation in the recovery period after the task.

"We do not know what ingredients of tea were responsible for these effects on stress recovery and relaxation," said Steptoe. "Nevertheless, our study suggests that drinking black tea may speed up our recovery from the daily stresses in life.

"This has important health implications, because slow recovery following acute stress has been associated with a greater risk of chronic illnesses such as coronary heart disease."

You Really Can Die of a Broken Heart

SYDNEY: People mourning the loss of a loved one are six times more likely to suffer cardiac arrest, potential proof that you can die of a broken heart, say Australian researchers.

According to an Australian Heart Foundation study of the physical changes suffered immediately after a profound loss, grieving people are at significantly higher risk of heart problems.

"We found higher blood pressure, increased heart rate and changes to immune system and clotting that would increase the risk of heart attack," said lead author Thomas Buckley a nurse and medical scientist at the University of Sydney.

Flood of stress hormones

The results were published in a recent edition of the Internal Medicine Journal and presented last month to a meeting of the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Of the 160 people studied, half were mourning the loss of a partner or child, and their risk of heart attack increased six-fold, Buckley said. The risk, which was evident in people as young as 30, reduced after six months and levelled out after two years.

A sudden flood of stress hormones, such as cortisol, is believed to be behind the grief-induced heartache, a condition that earlier studies have found is more likely to affect women.

Specific to grief

Buckley cautioned that these results should not be extended to acute life stressors, other than grief, since there is a degree of irreversibility in death, which may not factor in the other situations.

"The study certainly confirms both empirical research and the clinical experience of many bereavement practitioners," commented Christopher Hall, psychologist and director of the Australian Centre for Grief and Bereavement, in Melbourne. "The work is important because it challenges deeply embedded cultural notion that grief is a short-term emotional reaction."

"Bereavement is a health issue that really hasn't got enough attention. Its been seen as being like a flu, with short-term emotional symptoms rather than a serious mental health issue," he

You Really Can die of a Broken Heart

SYDNEY: People mourning the loss of a loved one are six times more likely to suffer cardiac arrest, potential proof that you can die of a broken heart, say Australian researchers.

According to an Australian Heart Foundation study of the physical changes suffered immediately after a profound loss, grieving people are at significantly higher risk of heart problems.

"We found higher blood pressure, increased heart rate and changes to immune system and clotting that would increase the risk of heart attack," said lead author Thomas Buckley a nurse and medical scientist at the University of Sydney.

Flood of stress hormones

The results were published in a recent edition of the Internal Medicine Journal and presented last month to a meeting of the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Of the 160 people studied, half were mourning the loss of a partner or child, and their risk of heart attack increased six-fold, Buckley said. The risk, which was evident in people as young as 30, reduced after six months and levelled out after two years.

A sudden flood of stress hormones, such as cortisol, is believed to be behind the grief-induced heartache, a condition that earlier studies have found is more likely to affect women.

Specific to grief

Buckley cautioned that these results should not be extended to acute life stressors, other than grief, since there is a degree of irreversibility in death, which may not factor in the other situations.

"The study certainly confirms both empirical research and the clinical experience of many bereavement practitioners," commented Christopher Hall, psychologist and director of the Australian Centre for Grief and Bereavement, in Melbourne. "The work is important because it challenges deeply embedded cultural notion that grief is a short-term emotional reaction."

"Bereavement is a health issue that really hasn't got enough attention. Its been seen as being like a flu, with short-term emotional symptoms rather than a serious mental health issue," he added.

Anglo Saxon Treasure found in the UK



http://au.news.yahoo.com/a/-/world/6099253/massive-anglo-saxon-treasure-found-in-uk/

An amateur treasure hunter prowling English farmland with a metal detector stumbled upon the largest Anglo-Saxon treasure ever discovered, a massive seventh-century hoard of gold and silver sword decorations, crosses and other items, British archaeologists said on Thursday.

One expert said the treasure would revolutionise understanding of the Anglo-Saxons, a Germanic people who ruled England from the fifth century until the Norman conquest in 1066. Another said the find would rank among Britain's best-known historic treasures.

"This is just a fantastic find completely out of the blue," Roger Bland, who managed the cache's excavation, told The Associated Press. "It will make us rethink the Dark Ages."

Bland said the hoard was unearthed in what was once Mercia, one of five main Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, and is thought to date to 675-725 AD.

A total of 1,345 items have been examined by experts and 56 lumps of earth were found to contain metal artefacts detected by an X-ray machine, meaning the total will likely rise to about 1,500.

"I think wealth of this kind must have belonged to a king but we cannot say that for absolute certain," Bland said.

The Anglo-Saxons were a group of Germanic tribes who gradually invaded England by sea starting in the fifth century in the wake of the collapse of the Roman Empire. Originally, they came from what is now the coastal region of northwest Germany.

Their artisans made striking objects out of gold and enamel and they also created poetry that still amazes people today. Their best-known literary work is Beowulf, an anonymous epic poem about a warrior who does battle with monsters and a dragon.

Their language, Old English, is a distant precursor of modern English. It supplies many of the structurally important words such as pronouns and prepositions as well as words for everyday concepts.

Unfortunately, much of their literature and artwork have been lost through warfare, looting, upheavals and the passage of time. Scholars must deduce what their culture was like using often scanty evidence.

Leslie Webster, the former curator of Anglo-Saxon archaeology at the British Museum, said the amount of gold uncovered - about 5kg - suggested that early medieval England was a far wealthier place than previously believed.

She also said the crosses and other religious artefacts mixed in with the mainly military items, such as sword pommel caps, might shed new light on the relationship between Christianity and warfare among the Anglo-Saxons.

The seventh-century hoard found by 55-year-old Terry Herbert in western England, consists of at least 650 items of gold and 530 silver objects, along with some copper alloy, garnets and glass.

Most of the objects are ornaments for weapons and other military artefacts, some inlaid with precious stones.

Herbert, from the town of Burntwood, found the gold on a friend's farm on July 5 and spent the next five days scouring the field for the rest of the hoard.

Herbert recovered the first items before professional archaeologists took over the excavation.

"Imagine you're at home and somebody keeps putting money through your letterbox, that was what it was like," Herbert said. "I was going to bed and in my sleep I was seeing gold items."

One of the most intriguing objects is a small strip of gold inscribed with a warlike Latin quotation from the Old Testament, which translates as: "Rise up, O Lord, and may thy enemies be dispersed and those who hate thee be driven from thy face."

Most of the other treasures unearthed in the hoard appear to be military-related, and the strip may have been fastened to a shield or a sword belt.

The hoard was officially declared treasure by a coroner, which means it will now be valued by a committee of experts and offered up for sale to a museum. Proceeds would be split 50-50 between Herbert and his farmer friend, who has not been identified. The find's exact location is being kept secret to deter looters.

Bland said he could not give a precise figure for the worth of the hoard, but he said the treasure hunter could be in line for a "seven-figure sum".

Herbert said the experience had been "more fun than winning the lottery," adding that one expert likened his discovery to finding Tutankhamen's tomb.

"I just flushed all over when he said that. The hairs on the back of my neck stood up," Herbert said.

The hoard is in storage at the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery. Some of the items are due to go on display starting on Friday.

"The quantity of gold is amazing but, more importantly, the craftsmanship is consummate," said archaeologist Kevin Leahy, who catalogued the find. "This was the very best that the Anglo-Saxon metalworkers could do, and they were very good."

Leahy said there was still much to learn about the treasure, its purpose, and its origins.

"It looks like a collection of trophies, but it is impossible to say if the hoard was the spoils from a single battle or a long and highly successful military career," he said. "We also cannot say who the original, or the final, owners were, who took it from them, why they buried it or when. It will be debated for decades."

Bland agreed, saying that archaeologists were still baffled by the function of many of the pieces they found.

"There's lots of mystery in it," he said.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Humpback Whales

Threatened whale species

Five whale species — the humpback, blue, fin, sei and southern right — are considered at risk and are listed as threatened species by the Australian Government. Recovery Plans have been developed for these species. A Recovery Plan aims to ensure the long-term survival in the wild of a threatened species by identifying the threats to the species, and by setting out actions necessary to stop the decline of the species.

Read the recovery plans for the:

Australia is fortunate to have many sites around our coastline that are ideal for whale and dolphin watching. Whale and dolphin watching is a growing industry in Australia and as of 2003 was estimated to be worth close to $300 million* a year to the Australian economy. During the past five years the industry has grown by 15 per cent per year.

 

Australia is fortunate to have a number of great whale and dolphin watching sites. There are numerous whale and dolphin watching operations around Australia that offer excellent opportunities to see animals in the wild. There are also many land-based sites where whales and dolphins come within meters of the coastline. Land-based whale and dolphin watching is an inexpensive way of seeing these magnificent animals in their natural environments.

 

 

Humpback Whales

Humpback Whales belong to the group of whales known as rorquals, a group that includes the Blue Whale, Fin Whale, Bryde's Whale, Sei Whale, and Minke Whale. Rorquals have two characteristics in common: dorsal fins on their backs, and ventral pleats running for the tip of the lower jaw to the navel area. They are characterised by the possession of baleen plates for sieving the krill upon which they feed. Humpback Whales are regular visitors to the coastal waters off southern Queensland. Each year, during winter, humpback whales migrate from Antarctic waters, pass through South Island New Zealand , to the warm waters of the tropics for calving.

Many humpback whales arrive in Hervey Bay from late July and remain until November when they begin their return to the southern ocean. Whale watching in Hervey Bay has become an important attraction for tourists and naturalists. In recent years visitors to Hervey Bay, from mid-July to early November, have discovered the awe inspiring experience of watching the majestic humpback whale, and their encounters with the whales on the waters of Hervey Bay have been unforgettable. These majestic creatures have made Hervey Bay a regular stop on their annual migration to Antarctica after giving birth in the warm waters of north Queensland

Mothers and calves are now relaxed and at home with the whale watching boats which carefully approach their playground, and the guaranteed sightings are counted as "an experience of a lifetime". The humpbacks have made Hervey Bay their own, and as one of the most active and acrobatic of species they provide an awesome sight with their antics, including spectacular displays of breaching, tail flapping and pectoral slapping.

About 20 operators offer whale watching tours, all vessels leaving from the Urangan Boat Harbour with the fleet offering many variations in size, carrying capacity and various other appointments.

Some vessels have sound systems to enable passengers to hear the whales sing, offer educational videos on the journey to the Hervey Bay Marine Park.


[touching a whale]
  All vessels have experienced crew who provide knowledgeable commentary which provides a greater interpretation of these gentle creatures.

As the years go by, the whales seem increasingly comfortable with the cruise vessels and often come so close you can almost reach out and touch them. Of course, tour operators adhere strictly to Environmental Protection Agency guidelines, designed in consultation with the Hervey Bay operators, to protect the whales and keep them coming back to Hervey Bay year after year. Other marine life which can be sighted during a day's whale watching include dolphins, turtles, and occasionally dugong.

Humpback Whale Facts

  • The humpback whale takes its name from the habit of breaking the water surface with a large area of its back when diving.
  • Approximately 3,000 Humpback whales will migrate this season between Antarctica and the Great Barrier Reef
  • Humpbacks are still the third most endangered species of all the big whales, but now their numbers are increasing 13% each year.
  • They are the fifth largest animal on this planet, growing up to 15 metres in length with a weight of up to 45,000kg (99,000lbs) - equivalent to 11 elephants or 600 persons each!
  • Humpbacks are the most acrobatic of all of the great whales
  • The species displays a wide variety of leaping, rolling and breaching movements which provide fascinating viewing for whale watchers.
  • The humpback whale is also well known for its complex underwater vocalisations or whale songs particularly during breeding.
  • Adult whales have been seen to breach 20 - 30 times within 5 minutes, displaying awesome grace and power.

 

Although they have the general shape of a fish, Humpback Whales are mammals. They are warm blooded, breath air and bear live young and nurse them with milk.

  The humpback whale Megaptera novaeangliae is aptly named from the Greek megas meaning great and pteron, a wing, because of its huge wing like flippers. The pectoral fins of the Humpback Whale are up to 5 metres (15 feet) in length, one third of the animals total length.


breaching whale showing throat pleats
  These marine mammals are superbly adapted to a life of swimming and diving, and are playful and inquisitive by nature. Their size belies their grace in the water. There are no more than 5000 individuals in the Southern Hemisphere. They are the third most endangered whale species in the world, after the bowhead and right whales and are totally protected.
They grow up to 15m (50 feet) long and can weigh up to 45,000kg (99,000lbs) - equivalent to 11 elephants or 600 persons each. They have a stocky body with a broad, rounded head and extremely long flippers, which can be up to one-third of the animal's total length.

 


whale showing its pectoral fins
  colour is generally blackish with a white area covering the throat grooves. They have up to 22 throat grooves running along the belly from the chin to the navel. The flippers are almost pure white below and mottled black and white above.

 


whale flukes
  The underside of the tail flukes is marked with a variable pattern of white, making each whale recognisable at the surface as it throws its tail into the air before sounding.

 

 

 


humpback whale head
 
A series of knobby protuberances on the head, jaws and flippers often have large barnacles growing on their summits. Each bump has a long coarse hair growing from its centre. These are believed to act as sensors.

 


Work Gender Pay Gap

http://au.biz.yahoo.com/090830/31/28an8.html

Gender pay gap 'should be declared'

The Federal Government is being pressured to force companies to reveal how their pay rates for men and women compare.

The Equal Pay Alliance, comprising more than 130 business and community groups, has sent an open letter to Tanya Plibersek, the Minister for the Status of Women, demanding mandatory audits of pay rates.

The Australian Council of Trade Unions is among the letter's signatories and its president, Sharan Burrow, says Australia has a culture of discrimination which undervalues women's work.

"We'd like to see pay equity audits mandated so that there is a transparency [and] people know what the pay rates for grades right up to management are," she said.

She says it takes a woman 14 months on average to earn what a man earns in a year, and women retire with half the amount of savings.

Sex Discrimination Commissioner Elizabeth Broderick, also a member of the alliance, says companies in the United Kingdom already reveal male and female pay rates in their annual reports.

"That is legislation that has only been brought in recently so there are different solutions which we might look to internationally," she said.

Marie Coleman, from the National Foundation for Australian Women, says the Federal Government should at least begin mandatory pay reporting in the public sector.

"They can certainly promote, in the private sector, more vigorous approaches towards equal pay and equal opportunity," she said.

"It would be perfectly possible for government contracts to only be available to businesses which could demonstrate that they had effective equal-opportunity and equal-pay strategies in place."

 


Work Annual Hours of Work

Annual hours over eight centuries

Year

Type of worker

Annual hours

13th century

Adult male peasant, UK

1620 hours

14th century

Casual laborer, UK

1440 hours

Middle Ages

English worker

2309 hours

1400-1600

Farmer-miner, adult male, UK

1980 hours

1840

Average worker, UK

3105-3588 hours

1850

Average worker, U.S.

3150-3650 hours

1987

Average worker, U.S.

1949 hours

1988

Manufacturing workers, UK

1855 hours

2004

Average worker, Germany

1364 hours

2008

Average worker, India

2817 - 3443 hours

[5]

[edit] Importance

Working time is a quantity that can be measured for an individual or, in the aggregate, for a society. In the latter case, a 40-hour workweek would imply that employed individuals within the society, on average, worked 40 hours per week. Most often, the concern of sociologists and policy-makers focuses on the aggregate variables.

Some industrialized nations legally mandate a maximum work week length of between 35 and 45 hours per week, and, require 2 to 5 weeks per year of holiday. However, the actual hours of work per week cannot fall below a certain minimum without compromising a nation’s ability to produce the material standards of living to which its citizens have grown accustomed.

If the work week is too short compared to that society's ideal, then the society suffers from underemployment of labor and human capital. All else being equal, this will tend to result in lower real incomes and a lower standard of living than what could be had with a longer work week in the same society.

In contrast, a work week that is too long will result in more material goods at the cost of stress-related health problems as well as a "drought of leisure." Furthermore, children are likely to receive less attention from busy parents, and childrearing is likely to be subjectively worse. The exact ways in which long workweeks affect culture, public health, and education are debated.

Several nations have imposed limits on working time in an effort to combat unemployment. This has been done both on a national level, as in France's 35-hour workweek, and on the company-union level, for example the agreement between Volkswagen and its union to temporarily reduce the workweek to 29 hours to preserve jobs. This policy is controversial among economists.

[edit] Days of the work week

Main article: Workweek

The structure of the work week varies considerably for different professions and cultures. Among salaried workers in the western world, the work week often consists of Monday through Friday or Saturday with the weekend set aside as a time of personal work and leisure.

Several countries have adopted a workweek from Monday morning until Friday noon, either due to religious rules (observation of shabbat in Israel) or the growing predominance of a 35-37.5 hour workweek in continental Europe. Several of the Muslim countries have a standard Sunday through Thursday or Saturday through Wednesday workweek leaving Friday for religious observance, and providing breaks for the daily prayer times.

 


History of Whaling in Australia

History of whaling in Australia

Whaling in Australia commenced in the late 18th century. There is no known history of Aboriginal communities in Australia having hunted whales.

Early whaling was carried out using harpoons from small boats. Once caught the whales were towed behind the boats back to whaling stations on shore. Whale by-products were used for a number of things: whale blubber was melted down to be used as oil for lamp fuel, lubricants, candles and as a base for perfumes and soaps, Baleen (whalebone) was used for items such as corsets, whips and umbrellas.

Whaling and the export of whale by-products such as whale oil became Australia's first primary industry. One of the first commercial whaling operations in Australia was the Davidson Whaling Station located just outside of Eden on the South-East coast of New South Wales. Numerous other coastal whaling stations were established around Australia in the late 1820s to 1830s.

The development of harpoon guns, explosive harpoons and steam-driven whaling boats in the late 19th century made large-scale commercial whaling so efficient that many whale species were over-exploited and came very near to extinction. This over-exploitation eventually led to the demise of the whaling industry in Australia. As whale numbers dropped, laws were passed to protect a number of the species.

Demise of the whaling industry

Whale protection for certain whale species commenced in the 1930s after the effects of whaling on whale populations became more apparent. For example the southern right whale was protected in Australian waters as early as 1935, after more than 26 000 individuals had been taken in Australian and New Zealand waters between 1822 and 1930.

Whaling stations in Australia and New Zealand killed over 40 000 humpback whales on their migrations from the Antarctic Ocean to the warm tropical waters north of Australia. Whaling ceased on humpback whales in 1963, and they were protected worldwide in 1965 after recognition of a dramatic global decline in numbers.

Commercial whaling continued on sperm whales until 1978, with 16 000 taken from 1952 in Australian waters until the end of commercial whaling in 1978.

Commercial whaling in Australia ceased in 1978 with the closure of Australia's last whaling station, the Cheynes Beach Whaling Company, in Western Australia. In 1979 Australia adopted an anti-whaling policy, putting a permanent end to whaling in Australian waters. At the same time Australia started to focus heavily on working towards the international protection and conservation of whales. The 25th Anniversary of Australia's anti-whaling policy was celebrated in 2004.

Whales today

Since the International Whaling Commission (IWC) moratorium on commercial whaling came in to place in 1986, many whale populations have begun to recover. The Southern Right Whale, which was nearly extinct by the middle of the nineteenth century, is now showing signs of recovery. In recent years, growing numbers appear off the southern Australian coast, where breeding and socializing behavior occurs before they head south to feed in the nutrient-rich Antarctic waters.