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This Week In the News
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Mummies
Of Dogs Found Buried Alongside Owners In Peru
September
25, 2006 11:30 a.m. EST
Nidhi
Sharma - All Headline News Staff Writer
Lima, Peru (AHN) - Archaeologists in Peru
have found the mummies of dogs buried alongside their
owners dating back to 1,100 years ago.
The dogs were valued by the Chiribaya civilian hundreds of years before
the European conquest of South America. They valued them
so highly that when one died it was buried alongside
family members.
The ABC net reports that the dogs are called Chiribaya shepherds for
their lama herding abilities. Their death indicated the
belief that the animal had an afterlife.
The dogs were not sacrificed as in other ancient cultures, but buried
with blankets and food in human cemeteries. To date,
archaeologists have discovered the remains of more than
40 dogs which were naturally mummified in the desert
sands of Peru's southern Elo Valley.
Source:
http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7004969929
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By
Daniel
B. Wood
| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
BERKELEY,
CALIF.
This is a story about man and nature, wilderness and civilization, and
the blind ruthlessness of unchecked fire.
It's about the move to embrace ancient, rural
technology to solve a modern urban/suburban problem - and how to get
more bang for the buck.
This is a story about goats. Hoofed, horned,
don't-stare-at me-while-I'm-chewing goats.
At the intersection of Grizzly Peak Boulevard and
Centennial Drive - adjacent to a public university and a posh suburb
- 350 flop-eared, paunch-bellied, teeth-gnashing examples of
nature's least-discriminating epicurean are hard at work.
The "work" is vegetation removal - grass,
weeds, manzanita, poison oak - by molar and mandible. While these
rented Angoras, Nubian, Spanish, and other goats do what comes
naturally - gnaw and bleat - Tom Klatt is saving $800 per day over
his alternative: humans armed with noisy weed whackers.
He's the head of the office of emergency
preparedness at the University of California, Berkeley. It uses
goats so that one of America's most fire-prone regions doesn't have
a repeat of the country's most costly fire that consumed 3,500 homes
(one every 11 seconds) in an afternoon in 1991.
Fifteen years after that blaze killed 25 people and reduced several
hillsides to charred chimney farms, Mr. Klatt and others say the
hired goats are a key reason that a fire of that magnitude hasn't
occurred again. That assessment comes just months after another
method of grass removal - prescribed burning - scorched 20,000 acres
in southern California.
"Goats are a 24-hour mini-weed-eater,"
says Deputy Fire Chief David Orth of the Berkeley Fire Department.
"For decades, we have been trying to break this region's cycle
of having a giant fire every 10 years or so ... and at this point
goats are playing a bigger part in that every year."
In 14 area fires since 1923, it's been the same
pattern. Steep canyons draw 60-mile-per-hour hot, dry offshore winds
from the northeast over the highly flammable built-up brush and
nonnative eucalyptus trees. Fires leap from underbrush to tree
canopies while winds fan them through dense housing communities that
firefighters find difficult to reach due to narrow, winding roads.
After 1991, eight local fire agencies formed the
Hills Emergency Forum to better coordinate regional prevention and
response strategies. Since then, the use of goats to eradicate
vegetation has increased. Research has found that goats cost less
(about $700 per day per herd), are more versatile and effective, and
have the public's affection.
"The public loves them.... There is something
about watching animals graze, seeing a very rural activity right in
the middle of their community," says Cheryl Miller of the Hills
Emergency Forum.
Before the fire-prone months of September and
October, people may see as many as three different herds of more
than 300 in parks and fields in Berkeley and Oakland. Homeowners
sometimes use a goat or two for the afternoon. But that can be a
problem because a goat will devour anything edible, including patio
furniture and house siding. There is also "the good
old-fashioned barnyard smell" to consider, says Ms. Miller.
But for the most part, "[people] love seeing
the goats, the dogs that herd them, and the sheep herders as well,
as long as they are not downwind," she says.
The goats are contained by electric fences, which
hired herders put in place. They move fast, about an acre per day.
Border collies and other guard dogs move the goats from site to site
- and stick around to protect them from predators.
Besides manzanita and poison oak, the goats feast on
yellow star thistle, mountain misery, and pampas grasses. They
balance on the steep, rocky banks, standing on hind legs to reach
low-hanging branches.
Fire officials like the fact that goats eliminate
"the natural fire ladder" - vegetation below eight feet
that allows brushfires to run up taller trees to the high leaf
canopies, which send embers into the air, endangering areas
downwind.
Because goats eat the tops of plants rather than the
roots, they are considered less damaging to native plants than other
grazing animals. Thinning the plants also causes less erosion from
over- stripping and helps till and fertilize the soil.
"We are absolutely happy with what the goats
do," says Klatt. "We are not preventing the occurrence of
wildfires, but we are making them more manageable so we can stop
them before they get to homes."
More important, say Klatt and others, is what the
use of goats says to homeowners. New regulation and enforcement have
greatly reduced the risk of fire here since 1991, but violations
still exist.
"Residents drive by and see the goats each
season and get an outside reminder of the absolute vulnerability of
these communities to fire," says Miller. "It serves notice
that it's time to get their own acts together."
SOURCE: http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0918/p01s03-ussc.html

By Lester
Haines
Published Tuesday 26th September 2006
15:22 GMT
A
teddy bear dropped into a pool in a New Hampshire fish farm managed
to kill 2,500 trout, The Mercury News reports.
The
killer cuddly toy, "dressed in a yellow raincoat and hat",
blocked a drain at the Fish and Game Department's hatchery in
Milford and suffocated the pond's piscine residents.
Supervisor
Robert Fawcett told the paper: "We've had pipes get clogged,
but it's usually with more naturally occurring things, like a dead
frog or a muskrat.
"This
one turned out to be a teddy bear and we don't know how it got
there. It's kind of a cute little teddy bear and people wouldn't
think that a cute little teddy bear would be able to kill
fish."
To
combat the teddy bear menace, the fish farm has put up a no-nonsense
sign reading: "Release of any teddy bears into the fish
hatchery water is not permitted." Those who accidently drop
teddy bears into a pool were urged by Fawcett "to find a fish
farmer and ask them to remove it". He added: "They might
save your teddy bear and keep it from becoming a killer." ®
Original URL: http://www.theregister.com/2006/09/26/teddy_bear_slaughter/

Pets
orphaned by war in Lebanon to be airlifted to U.S. for adoption
By
The Associated Press
They
endured a summer of war - ground-shaking airstrikes, and abandonment
by their owners who fled the Israel-Hezbollah conflict. Now
Lebanon's unlikely victims of war - its pets - are being airlifted
to the United States on Monday for adoption.
For Mona Khoury, who has helped take care of the
animals for the past few weeks, the rescue operation is tinged with
sadness.
"I've grown attached to them and I'm very,
very sad that they're leaving. But I know they'll be in good hands
and have a better life there," she said.
Khoury is co-founder
of BETA, the humane society Beirut for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals, which partnered on the project with the American animal
society Best Friends.
BETA has gathered up many pets left behind by the
tens of thousands of foreigners, or Lebanese with foreign passports,
who fled the country in July and August. Many left on the
recommendations of their governments, which organized evacuations by
land and sea.
But the U.S. Embassy and others told evacuees that
pets would not be allowed on the ships and helicopters carrying them
to safety, and many families were forced to abandon their animals or
leave them with friends who later got rid of them. Some 300 of those
dogs and cats, including a few stray animals, will be flown out
Monday.
"This is certainly the largest animal airlift
operation we've ever done overseas," says Michael Mountain,
president of the Utah-based Best Friends, America's largest refuge
for abused and abandoned pets. In a telephone interview, he said the
homeless pets from Beirut would be airlifted on a special Emirates
cargo plane Monday to the U.S.
There will be two refueling stops - one in
Manchester, England, and another at New York's JFK Airport - before
arriving in Las Vegas, where the orphaned pets will be put on Best
Friends trucks for the 3.5-hour ride to temporary housing at the
Best Friends Animal Sanctuary in Kanab, southern Utah.
"Once there, the pets will undergo a final
health and behavior evaluation before they're off to their new,
permanent homes," Mountain said. "We've already had a lot
of offers to adopt these cats and dogs," he added.
He said their entire Middle East operation is
costing around US$250,000, most of it from donations raised by
animal activists.
Volunteers at the sanctuary have been hard at work
building temporary houses for the pets arriving from Lebanon.
"This is for the animals," said Alberto
Nunez, one of the construction team. "When I think of their
situation over there, it makes me so sad. I want to work for
them," he said, according to the Best Friends Web site.
Best Friends arranged a similar operation just a
year ago in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, when it brought more
than 6,000 animals out of the disaster-stricken zone and to new
homes. The society has also been assisting animal groups in Israel,
where people were also evacuated without their pets.
But the major crisis for animals has been in
Lebanon.
On July 12 at the start of the 34-day war, BETA
had to move dogs and cats from a shelter near a Hezbollah stronghold
in Beirut that was repeatedly hit by Israeli warplanes. The animals
took refuge in an abandoned hilltop pig farm in Monteverde, in the
hills overlooking Beirut. Other BETA shelters were also damaged.
At the height of the war, they were featured on
ABC's "Good Morning America," after which adoption offers
from the U.S. "started coming down on us by the hundreds,"
said Khoury.
Jutta Sold, a 36-year-old animal activist who is
also a BETA volunteer, said the airlift to the U.S. is "a very
good thing."
"It's sad for me, I knew some of these dogs
when they were just puppies, but I'm very hopeful that their chances
for adoption are much better over there," said the Germany
citizen who adopted one of the canines herself.
She said people in Lebanon don't have much
connection with animals. "The attitude here is very different
from Europe or the United States. A lot of people are afraid of
animals, they kick them around."
She also noted there are no laws to protect
animals, and chances of them being adopted were much higher in the
West.
Source: http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/766392.html

A
Common Variety of Fish Is Used to Detect Terror Attacks on Municipal
Water Supplies
By
MARCUS WOHLSEN
The
Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO - A type of
fish so common that practically every American kid who ever dropped
a fishing line and a bobber into a pond has probably caught one is
being enlisted in the fight against terrorism.
San
Francisco, New York, Washington and other big cities are using
bluegills also known as sunfish or bream as a sort of canary in a
coal mine to safeguard their drinking water.
Small
numbers of the fish are kept in tanks constantly replenished with
water from the municipal supply, and sensors in each tank work
around the clock to register changes in the breathing, heartbeat and
swimming patterns of the bluegills that occur in the presence of
toxins.
"Nature's
given us pretty much the most powerful and reliable early warning
center out there," said Bill Lawler, co-founder of Intelligent
Automation Corporation, a Southern California company that makes and
sells the bluegill monitoring system. "There's no known manmade
sensor that can do the same job as the bluegill."
Since
Sept. 11, the government has taken very seriously the threat of
attacks on the U.S. water supply. Federal law requires nearly all
community water systems to assess their vulnerability to terrorism.
Big
cities employ a range of safeguards against chemical and biological
agents, constantly monitoring, testing and treating the water. But
electronic protection systems can trace only the toxins they are
programmed to detect, Lawler said.
Bluegills
a hardy species about the size of a human hand are considered more
versatile. They are highly attuned to chemical disturbances in their
environment, and when exposed to toxins, they experience the fish
version of coughing, flexing their gills to expel unwanted
particles.
The
computerized system in use in San Francisco and elsewhere is
designed to detect even slight changes in the bluegills' vital signs
and send an e-mail alert when something is wrong.
San
Francisco's bluegills went to work about a month ago, guarding the
drinking water of more than 1 million people from substances such as
cyanide, diesel fuel, mercury and pesticides. Eight bluegills swim
in a tank deep in the basement of a water treatment plant south of
the city.
"It gave us the best of both
worlds, which is basically all the benefits that come from nature
and the best of high-tech," said Susan Leal, general manager of
the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission.
New
York City has been testing its system since 2002 and is seeking to
expand it. The New York City Department of Environmental Protection
reported at least one instance in which the system caught a toxin
before it made it into the water supply: The fish noticed a diesel
spill two hours earlier than any of the agency's other detection
devices.
They
do have limitations. While the bluegills have successfully detected
at least 30 toxic chemicals, they cannot reliably detect germs. And
they are no use against other sorts of attacks say, the bombing of a
water main, or an attack by computer hackers on the systems that
control the flow of water.
Still,
Lawler said more than a dozen other cities have ordered the
anti-terror apparatus, called the Intelligent Aquatic BioMonitoring
System, which was originally developed for the Army and starts at
around $45,000.
San
Francisco plans to install two more bluegill tanks.
"It
provides us an added level of detection of the unknown," said
Tony Winnicker, a spokesman for the city's Public Utilities
Commission. "There's no computer that's as sophisticated as a
living being."
Copyright
2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Copyright
© 2006 ABC News Internet Ventures
Source: http://abcnews.go.com/US/print?id=2459169

Adopted
dog helps teen escape fire
Associated Press
Oct. 2, 2006 10:23 AM
FORT MEYERS, Fla. -
A pit bull who was recently adopted by a family after
wondering onto a construction site may have saved a teen girl
from a house fire on Friday.
Jerrica Seals, 17, was already safely out of the house by the
time firefighters arrived, the News-Press of Fort Meyers
reported.
"She called me screaming," said Leticia Vega, 36,
the sister of Seals' boyfriend Javier Garcia, 23, who owns the
home. "She said the dog woke her up barking, jumped on
the bed and bit her on the leg."
Seals was taken to the hospital for a checkup, but Garcia said
she was going to be fine.
Deputy fire Chief Steve Clyatt said blaze appears to have been
caused by a bad extension cord on a window air conditioner.
Vega said her oldest brother, Gabriel Garcia, found the dog
while he was working.
"He didn't pay no mind to it," Vega said. "He
just kept working and the dog just stayed there so he brought
it home. He doesn't usually bark. He's real friendly."

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