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Friday, September 28, 2007
BAKT HOR NEKHT
Bakt Hor Nekht, satu mumia Mesir purba sejak 1070 dan 712 BC., menjalani satu penelitian CT supaya ahli-ahli sains boleh mendedahkan lagi tentang kehidupan dan kematiannya.
Thursday, September 27, 2007
MUMIA KUCING
Pengurus projek Annette Welkamp memegang satu mumia kucing daripada sekitar 250 BC yang telah digunakan sebagai satu persembahan untuk Tuhan Bastet. Sebagai dewa felin dan utama, Bastet dihormati sebagai penaung kucing-kucing. Kucing-kucing mati telah dibawa untuk penguburan di kuil di Per-Bast, di-mana lebih 3,000 kucing dimumiakan disatuan yang telah digali.
PUTERI HATSHEPSUT
RAJA TUT
HOMINID CHILD
LUCY
Sunday, September 09, 2007
ALLIGATOR GAR
Aligator Gar atau nama saintifiknya Atractosteus spatula, mempunyai gigi yang besar dibahagian rahang atasnya. Giginya pula kelihatan seperti seakan gigi buaya. Dan ia mempunyai bentuk kepala seakan-akan buaya. Warnanya pula keperangan atau kelabu.
Aligator Gar boleh ditemui di perairan air tawar utara Amerika dan merupakan spesis ikan air tawar yang besar. Ia boleh membesar sehingga 8 atau 12kaki panjang dan berat mencecah sehingga 100 paun bila mencapai tahap dewasa. Catatan rekod dunia, 279paun aligator gar ditangkap di sungai Rio Grande pada tahun 1951.
Tuesday, September 04, 2007
GOBLIN SHARK
The goblin shark, Mitsukurina owstoni, is a deep-sea shark, the sole living species in the family Mitsukurinidae.[1] The most distinctive characteristic of the goblin shark is the unorthodox shape of its head. It has a long, trowel-shaped, beak-like rostrum or snout, much longer than other sharks' snouts. Some other distinguishing characteristics of the shark are the color of its body, which is mostly pink, and its long, protrusible jaws.[1] When the jaws are retracted, the shark resembles a pink grey nurse shark (Carcharias taurus) with an unusually long nose.
Mitsukurina owstoni is found in the deep ocean, far below where the sun's light can reach at depths greater than 200 meters. They can be found throughout the world, from Australia in the Pacific Ocean[2] to the Gulf of Mexico in the Atlantic Ocean.[3] They are best known from the waters around Japan, where the species was first discovered by modern science.[4]
Goblin sharks feed on a variety of organisms that live in the deep waters they call their home. Among some of their known meals are deep-sea squid, crabs and deep-sea fishes. Very little is known about the species' life history and reproductive habits, as encounters with them have been relatively rare. As seemingly rare as they are however, there seems to be no real threat to their populations and so they are not classified as endangered species by the IUCN.[5]