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tetrapod zoology his podcast is amazing..a someone from nhm london said..if there were plesiosaurs in loch ness..there would be a big breeding population..i.e. constant sightings..no fossil record continuation, no breeding populations, not enough prey item in loch ness for thousands of 30 ft predators..did zoo work for years..we did conservation programmes with a lot of species..there wouldnt be ONE living pterosaur in texas or 20 in new guinea..i do adder monitoring surveys in the cotswolds..6 adders is not a population likely to survive due to predators, poor breeding and genetics etc..one book described lake monsters in uk rivers for f sake..new discoveries out there..but not 40 ft bipedal therapods in austalia...the big no no for loch ness is the fact of the ice age glacier with the loch forming..so plesiosaur survives extinction then ice age and manages to get by lol
This is deceptive. Just because one coral reef is doing ok, doesn't mean the oil and gas industry got a bad wrap. Seriously, most of you probably will feel relief because of this video...
vacuum decay would be unnoticeable unless you'd been studying a particular galaxy umpteen-million light years away, then you, quite unexpectedly, can no longer locate it
She needed 25 years researching to learn babies will learn gradually to handle their environment. WOW! Now I guess I have seen everything. Next in the series: " The mathematician who spent 25 years to finally conclude 2+2=4 "
Nobody has put any pressure on these farmers to increase the supply. As you note, they'll receive less money for the cashmere by increasing the supply. They'll also make their own industry unsustainable as goats are famous for eating everything in sight. Goat numbers should be limited accordingly, which would increase the value of those left. It would be a win-win for the farmers, albeit a loss for the customer.
The same techniques used for water retention and irrigation near the saharra and nile river can be used here. Sounds like the people of the land are bad farmers and short term profit chasers
@@therabbithat I'm talking about the highlighting every second. Very irritating to look at, or, trying to NOT look at it. I don't want to look at the subtitles, I'm trying to look at the video.
@@BasvanderVeeken there's not much to look at, cheap stock footage of goats and barren Mongolia. The story is in the narration, and the simple subtitles help some people learn English.
One of the most interesting things about being able to study both the beginning and the end of the universe with so much detail is how close they feel in spite of how inconceivably distant they truly are.
"Trying to give it a proper identification." My mind went straight to thinking, welll that's ominous. What happens if even these people can sometimes only "try" to identify illegal plant stuffs? Do they have a back room of unidentified, potentially anomalous plant things?