The Loneliest Whale in the World

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For years he has roamed singing unrequited songs of yearning, searching for a soul to share his solitary world. His plaintive love songs have been heard by many yet he has never been seen. He is the loneliest whale in the world.

But although he swims in waters that are populated by thousands of other whales no female ever responds because his voice is unusually high for a whale – about 52 Hertz – which is what researchers have named him.

“We don’t know whether he sounds that way because he’s a hybrid of a blue whale and a fin whale or if he’s a blue whale with a physical deformity that causes him to sing at 52 Hertz,” says [marine biologist Mary Ann Daher].

There are a lot of theories as to what 52 Hertz is: Possibly he is a blue whale from the Atlantic who somehow found himself in the Pacific. Possibly he simply has a morphological physical mutation or injury that has resulted in his call being so distinct. We’re not even sure what his species is, whether fin, blue whale, fin-blue whale hybrid (as happens ), or some rare, undiscovered species of whale.

Regardless of which it is, he swims up to 42 miles a day and in one year covered more than 6,873 miles. Since the U.S. Navy only releases data days after an appearance, scientists haven’t been able to actually spot him in person to determine his species.

Top photo of a blue whale such as 52 Hertz is thought to be, though he has never actually been seen – only heard.

Via Express. Also, check out 52 Hertz’s call, sped up x10 on the PMEL Acoustics Program website.

Wasps Nesting in a Bed. Aw, how cute…

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Birkett said he got a call from the homeowner’s son on Sunday about a nest that had taken over a bed in a spare bedroom in the home in Worchester, Hampshire. The colony was devouring the bedding.

The nest had grown so large because the family rarely uses the room on the second floor of their five-bedroom home, he said.

The wasps snuck in through an open window and used the bed as their home for nearly three months, chewing through eight inches of the mattress and two pillows.

The exterminator was a little remorseful about having to remove the nest: “That would be quite nice to keep. They’ve worked really hard at this. But [the homeowner] didn’t think that was a great idea.”

Humans. You guys are such damned spoilsports sometimes.

Via ABC News.

Strapping Cameras on Sharks

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How do sharks move when pursuing prey? Do they avoid other shark species?

[A] team of biologists from the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology and the University of Tokyo’s Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute decided to strap on a camera and see what happens.

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[T]he researchers built a device that captures video and movement information (with a triaxial accelerometer-magnetometer like a flight-data recorder) but is small enough that it won’t interfere with a shark on the move.

They secure the camera to the shark’s fin, where it rides for up to two weeks. Then the device auto-releases and floats to the surface, pinging the research team for pickup.

Fortunately our species is good about producing adrenaline junkies, because there is no !@#? way in hell I would volunteer to strap a camera to the back of a shark.

Via WIRED.

The Soviet War of Aggression on the Micronation of the Principality of Outer Baldonia

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The Principality of Outer Baldonia is a now defunct micronation whose territorial pretensions comprised the roughly 4 acres (16,000 m2) of Outer Bald Tusket Island, the southernmost of the Tusket Islands, 8 nautical miles (15 km) off the southern tip of the Canadian province of Nova Scotia.

Founded in 1948 by [Pepsi-Cola sales executive] Russell Arundel, [it was] endowed with a charter, flag, and organized military. Coinage and passports were also issued.

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Stumbling across the island while fishing (recreationally, not commercially) for tuna, Arundel soon after arranged to purchase the island for $750 and built a stone fishing lodge about 30 by 20 feet in size.

While drinking (naturally) he and some friends conceived of and elaborated on the details of what would become Outer Baldonia.

There are some great details here, too – for example, the currency was referred to as “the Tunar” in honor of the tuna fishing that had led Arundel to the island.

All citizens of the Principality who caught a Bluefin Tuna and paid a $50 fee were accorded the rank of Prince. The ranks of the peerage were limited to 100.

While never legally recognized by any government other than that of Nova Scotia, Outer Baldonia managed to acquire a certain amount of prestige on the international stage.

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Simply by listing his law office’s phone number as that of the Consulate of Outer Baldonia in the telephone registry of Washington, D.C., Prince Russell received many invitations to gatherings which he attended in his diplomatic garb, which some say was decorated largely with sardine cans and bottle caps.

Outer Baldonia was even invited to apply for membership to the then nascent United Nations.

The Declaration of Independence of the Charter of Outer Baldonia is another gem:

“That fishermen are a race alone. That fishermen are endowed with the following inalienable rights: The right to lie and be believed. The right of freedom from question, nagging, shaving, interruption, women, taxes, politics, war, monologues, care and inhibitions. The right to applause, vanity, flattery, praise and self-inflation. The right to swear, lie, drink, gamble and silence.”

The rest of the charter covered tax policy, citizenship codes of conduct, military structure, trade and industrial policies.

Women were banned from the island (though, strangely, not citizenship), and the stated primary business of the island was (of course) fishing, but also the export of empty rum and beer bottles.

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Then came war with the Soviet Union. Seriously. Kind of.

A communist writer in the Soviet Union published an attack upon the content of the Charter, which she claimed dehumanised and decivilized the citizenry in the USSR state publication Literaturnaya Gazeta

When the Soviet Government declined an invitation to visit and observe the wholesomeness of the micronation’s way of life with an eye to retracting its insults, a declaration of war was issued on March 9, 1953.

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Yes, Outer Baldonia actually had a navy in the form of somewhere between twenty and a hundred fishing and sport vessels.

The reaction of the Soviet Union was swift and in the form of a series of press condemnations, as the communist state clearly had no desire to challenge the Baldonian Navy.

In the end, the inside joke of Outer Baldonia’s diplomatic representatives fell before the onslaught of investigative reporting as to the exact nature of Outer Baldonia. In 1973, the island was finally sold to Russel Arundel for the price of $1 (Canadian) to the Nova Scotia Bird Society, whereupon the island was designated a bird sanctuary. Outside of tern rookery breeding season, it is open to the public.

Top photo via Teddeon.
Other images via Wizzley. Map from Google Maps.
Quoted text via Wikipedia.

Macaque Selfie Copyright Dispute

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Photographer David Slater said he owns the copyright to the images of crested black macaque monkeys, which were taken in the Indonesian jungle in 2011.

Slater told the BBC that although the monkeys pressed the button, he had set the self-portraits up by framing them and setting the camera on a tripod.

But Wikimedia Foundation said no one owned the copyright to the images, because under U.S. law, “copyright cannot vest in non-human authors” — the monkeys in this case.

Seems to me we should update the law to allow for proper distribution of royalties to primates. I mean, think of how many bananas, mangosteens, and marquisa telur kodoks that guy could have coming to him?

Photo via Wikimedia Commons.
Quoted text via Mercury News.

The Giant Solar Power Duck of Copenhagen

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The common eider duck resides in great numbers in Copenhagen; however, its breeding habitat is at risk from the effects of climate change. Energy Duck takes the form of the eider to act both as a solar collector and a buoyant energy storage device.

Solar radiation is converted to electricity using low cost, off-the-shelf PV panels. Some of the solar electricity is stored by virtue of the difference in water levels inside and outside the duck.

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When stored energy needs to be delivered, the duck is flooded through one or more hydro turbines to generate electricity, which is transmitted to the national grid by the same route as the PV panel-generated electricity.

Solar energy is later used to pump the water back out of the duck, and buoyancy brings it to the surface. The floating height of the duck indicates the relative cost of electricity as a function of city-wide use: as demand peaks the duck sinks.

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I would have voted for a mermaid, personally, but I suppose a duck works well enough.

Via Land Art Generator Initiative.