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         Whales:     more books (79)
  1. The Snail and the Whale by Julia Donaldson, 2007-07
  2. Whale Done! : The Power of Positive Relationships by Kenneth Blanchard, Thad Lacinak, et all 2002-02-19
  3. Berried to the Hilt (The Gray Whale Inn Mysteries) by Karen MacInerney, 2010-11-08
  4. Whale Hunting: How to Land Big Sales and Transform Your Company by Tom Searcy, Barbara Weaver Smith, 2008-01-02
  5. Songs of the Humpback Whale: A Novel by Jodi Picoult, 2001-10-02
  6. Whale Talk by Chris Crutcher, 2009-07-01
  7. Whale Hunt in the Desert: Secrets of a Vegas Superhost by Deke Castleman, 2009-03-01
  8. The Whale: In Search of the Giants of the Sea by Philip Hoare, 2010-02-01
  9. The Whale Rider by Witi Ihimaera, 2010
  10. Face to Face with Whales (Face to Face with Animals) by Flip Nicklin, Linda Nicklin, 2010-08-24
  11. Is a Blue Whale the Biggest Thing There Is? by Robert E. Wells, 1993-01-01
  12. Dead and Berried (Gray Whale Inn Mysteries, No. 2) by Karen MacInerney, 2007-02-08
  13. Amazing Whales! (I Can Read Book 2) by Sarah L. Thomson, 2006-03-01
  14. Murder Most Maine (Gray Whale Inn Mysteries, No. 3) by Karen MacInerney, 2008-11-08

161. WHALES-N-SAILS MAIN PAGE
See the rare North Atlantic right whale. We use clean, quiet wind power to sail with the whales. Welcome to whalesn-sails Adventures. General Information.
http://www.whales-n-sails.com/
Whale watching Grand Manan Island, Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick Canada whale-watching sea birds whales seals boat tours Whales-n-Sails Adventures Welcome to... Whales-n-sails Adventures General Information Dates and Rates Things Y ... Click here to see our plans for 2004 or Click here for a report on our 2003 activities last updated May 07/04 Call us toll free or email: info@whales-n-sails.com Grand Manan Island
New Brunswick
Canada
The RIGHT place
to see WHALES Lots of whales! These awards are your guarantee of the highest quality experience.
Check them out! General Information Dates and Rates Things You Should Know About Plans for 2004 ... To Start Page

162. CNN.com - Extreme Tides Strand Beluga Whales In Alaska - Aug. 30, 2003
CNN
http://cnn.com/2003/US/West/08/30/strandedwhales.ap/index.html
The Web CNN.com Home Page World U.S. Weather ... Special Reports SERVICES Video E-Mail Services CNNtoGO SEARCH Web CNN.com
Extreme tides strand beluga whales in Alaska
Onlookers peer over one of the beluga whales that washed ashore in Turnagain Arm south of Anchorage, Alaska, on Friday. Story Tools RELATED New Moby Dick? Boat crasher a rare white whale YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS Whales National Marine Fisheries Service Alaska or Create your own Manage alerts What is this? ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) Two dead beluga whales washed ashore Friday after dozens of the animals were temporarily stranded on mud flats during extreme low tides. The dead whales apparently were among 46 beluga that were grounded for several hours Thursday along the shore of Turnagain Arm, about 40 miles southeast of Anchorage. The survivors swam out with the high tide Thursday night, said Barbara Mahoney, a biologist with the National Marine Fisheries Service. The two dead beluga washed ashore north of the stranding site. Alaska Native hunters salvaged blubber under an agreement with fisheries officials. Necropsies were planned on the whales' internal organs and other parts.

163. Seals & Whales
Grand Manan White Head. Seals whales CLICK to hear sounds.. The pups are born from April to June and are not weaned until two years of age. whales
http://www.grandmanannb.com/seals.htm
CLICK to hear sounds..
Seals
We have four species of seals which may be seen in the Bay of Fundy, one of which is common ( harbour seal ), one which is increasing in numbers ( grey seal ) and two which are sporadic visitors ( hooded and harp seals These seals belong to the phocids or earless seals. They can not bring their hind flippers under the body as another group of seals can (otariids or sea lions, fur seals, etc.), they swim with a side-to-side motion of their body using their hind flippers as a rudder and they lack ear lobes or pinnae. One species, which is the only member of the odobenids, has been extirpated (or removed) through hunting pressure ( walrus ). Seals occupy a controversial place in the Bay of Fundy because of conflicts with fisheries and aquaculture but they are generally regarded positively by visitors and there are growing numbers of "S eal Watching Adventures" in conjunction with other activities. Phocids or Earless Seals: Harbour Seals Phoca vitulina concolor - common
Grey Seals
Halichoerus grypus - occasional
Hooded Seals
Crystophora cristata - rare
Harp Seals
Phoca groenlandica - rare Odobenid: Walrus Odobenus rosmarus - extirpated
Species Descriptions:
Harbour Seals
The most common species of seal in the Bay of Fundy is the harbour seal Phoca vitulina concolor
Grey Seals
Grey seals Halichoerus grypus
Hooded Seals
Hooded seals Crystophora cristata
Harp Seals
Harp seals Phoca groenlandica ) are also rare visitors to the Bay of Fundy, usually living in the Arctic in the summer and pupping on ice floes in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in the winter. Both sexes attain 170cm (5'7") in length and 130kg (296lb) in weight. The coat colour is white with a dark "harp" or saddle on the back and dark face. Pups are born in late February to mid-March on pack ice and are weaned after 10 days. The pups are called "whitecoats" for the first three weeks until they moult into a grey coat with dark spots and are then called "beaters". Immatures of 14 months and older are known as "bedlamers". The diet is mostly fish and crustaceans. Long been hunted the population is increasing with decreases in hunting pressure. Because of the rarity of this seal in the Bay of Fundy it is not considered a pest to fisheries or aquaculture, nor is it hunted, but would be treated in the same manner as harbour and grey seals when it occurs.

164. Rescued Whale Dies After Escaping Holding Pen
CNN
http://cnn.com/2003/US/South/04/25/stranded.whales.ap/index.html

165. Bowhead Whales
Bowhead whales. Balaena mysticetus. Sounds produced by the environment or by the whales reverberate differently under different ice conditions.
http://www.nps.gov/bela/html/bowhead.htm
Bowhead Whales
Balaena mysticetus
Description
Habitat and Range
Life History
Relationships with People
Population Status
Ecological Concerns
Description
This robust and powerful baleen whale measures up to 18 meters in length and weighs about 3.3 tons per meter (60 feet long, one ton per foot). When it surfaces to breathe a V-shaped spout issues from twin blowholes at the peak of its massive head, a head that is powerful enough to break through a foot of sea ice. In the days of commercial whaling the bowhead was valued for its large quantities of baleen and oil.
Habitat and Range
Bowheads spend their lives near sea ice margins. Once found throughout northern polar waters, they are reduced to one substantial population inhabiting Beringia and remnants in the eastern Canadian Arctic and the Sea of Okhotsk. The Beringian bowheads winter in the Bering Sea. In spring they migrate north through open ice leads, usually rounding Point Barrow by early June on their way to summer feeding areas in the Canadian waters of the eastern Beaufort Sea. In August they begin moving west toward Wrangel Island, and in late fall return south through Bering Strait. Bowheads evidently sense their surroundings mainly by sound, which travels five times faster and much farther in water than in air. Sounds produced by the environment or by the whales reverberate differently under different ice conditions. Bowheads are excellent navigators of ice-choked waters, although they sometimes get trapped by ice and drown. Bowheads make a wide variety of sounds with a voice covering seven octaves. Like humpbacks, they may "sing" in deep undulating tones, often with two notes at once. During migration they evidently call not only to help navigate but also to maintain cohesion of small herds dispersed over perhaps a half dozen square miles.

166. Ocean Stock. The Premiere Marine Imagery Web Site.
Stock marine photo library features underwater images including whales, dolphins, and sharks. Digital and film images.
http://www.wattstock.com/

167. Welcome To Singing Rock Press: Whales, Dolphins, And Marine LIfe!
WELCOME TO whales IN THE CLASSROOM. For middleschool aged children whales, dolphins, fish and other sea life is a source of constant interest and enjoyment.
http://www.whalebooks.com/
SINGING ROCK P R E S S WELCOME TO WHALES IN THE CLASSROOM WHO WE ARE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES PRODUCTS SAMPLE ACTIVITIES For middle-school aged children whales, dolphins, fish and other sea life is a source of constant interest and enjoyment. We have two books that have provided science-based instruction, activities, reading, and real-world issues about weather, food chains, whale migration, and career models for young women and men. At Singing Rock Press we believe that a large part of the healthy future of our planet rests on the health of our oceans, and the health of our oceans clearly rests on the interests of young people and their willingness to "follow their hearts to the seas." Join us in viewing some sample activities from our two books: "Whales in the Classroom Presents: Oceanography" and "Whales in the Classroom Presents: Getting to Know the Whales"

168. Bicycle Tour Of Golden Ring Of Russia With Moscow Travel Agency Three Whales
Trips, services, photographs, cost, and contacts.
http://www.threewhales.ru/t10.htm
IDEA OF THE TRIP. We want to invite people interested in cycling Russia and learning more about this big country. Cycling is not the goal of the tour. It is more like a mean of transportation and a way of staying fit. We want you to spend your vacation in an active way and learn a lot of the Russian history. That is why we have our van or a car with us to take you to places in time, give you a lift if you are tired or in case of bad weather. Almost every day has time for cycling and sightseeing. We want you to see as much of the Russian heritage as possible riding the bike rather then using the bus all the time. The tour is escorted by English speaking stuff and all the excursions are conducted by professional local guides. We want to make the trip as pleasant and comfortable for your as possible so NO TENTS we use hotel, NO NEED TO BRING A BIKE you can rent it from us, NO COOKING AND SNACK FOOD we use restaurants, tired of riding a bike - TAKE A BREAK IN A VAN.
Almost every day has time for cycling and sightseeing. We want you to see as much of the Russian heritage as possible riding the bike rather then using the bus all the time. All the excursions are conducted by professional local guides. Moreover we have a guide who will accompany you through all the tour and a bike instructor who will be able to solve technical issues.
CAN I PARTICIPATE?

169. Save The Whales
Includes action alerts, Makah updates, research, adopt a whale, captivity, and marine mammal inventory.
http://www.savethewhales.org/

Our Purpose

Contact Us
Whale
- Books, Movies and LInks

Whale Activities
Whale Box

Right Whale Activity

Whales on Wheels

About Whales
... Crop Circle Studios

170. Status Of Killer Whales In Canada
STATUS OF KILLER whales IN CANADA. Killer whales can be found in all three of Canada s oceans, as well as occasionally in Hudson Bay and in the Gulf of St.
http://www.dal.ca/~whitelab/rwb/kwstatus.htm
STATUS OF KILLER WHALES IN CANADA
Robin W. Baird Contract report submitted to the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) . Reviewed and evaluated by COSEWIC in April 1999. Published in the Canadian Field-Naturalist in 2001. Download an Adobe PDF version of this report Summary Portions of the text of this report can be found at the following pages: Introduction, Population Discrimination etc Population Size and Trends Limiting Factors Special Significance and Evaluation ... Go to index of killer whale reports and publications

171. CETACEA: Whales, Dolphins, And Porpoises
Comprehensive description of the order and its various families from the online book Walker's Mammals of the World by Ronald Nowak.
http://www.press.jhu.edu/books/walker/cetacea/cetacea.html
Order Cetacea
Whales, Dolphins, and Porpoises
This order of wholly aquatic mammals occurs in all the oceans and adjoining seas of the world, as well as in certain lakes and river systems. Living cetaceans are traditionally divided into two suborders: the Odontoceti, individuals of which have teeth (generally all of one kind) and an asymmetrical skull and which comprise the families Iniidae, Lipotidae, Pontoporiidae, Platanistidae, Delphinidae, Phocoenidae, Monodontidae, Ziphiidae, and Physeteridae; and the Mysticeti, individuals of which have plates of baleen, instead of teeth, and a symmetrical skull and which comprise the families Eschrichtidae, Balaenopteridae, Balaenidae, and Neobalaenidae. Rice 1984) considered the Odontoceti and the Mysticeti to be distinct orders, because it is questionable whether the two groups had a common origin and because the differences between them are as great as those between some of the universally recognized orders of mammals. Certain authorities, such as Ellis 1980), have followed Rice's procedure. Gaskin 1976), however, summarized data supporting a monophyletic origin for cetaceans and treated the Odontoceti and Mysticeti as suborders. The latter procedure also is supported by new cytological data (

172. NUKEWHALES.com.br
Translate this page nukewhales.com.br/daily nukewhales.com.br/cafe nukewhales.com.br/awards.
http://www.nukewhales.com.br/

nukewhales.com.br/
daily nukewhales.com.br/ cafe
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daily
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173. Index
Provides information on gray whales, whale watching, pictures, and news.
http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/Jungle/1953/index.html
A GRAY WHALE WATCHING GUIDE GRAY WHALES 101 WHALE WATCH 2004 WINSTON `S WEB LINKS GRAY WHALE WATCHING
BOATS and TOURS FUN ZONE To Enter This Web site Click On The ICONS Below . Visit Winston's SAVE the WHALES Web site E-MAIL WINSTON @ w_pup@yahoo.com PHOTOS OF GRAY WHALES BALEEN WHALES
All photographs were taken by the author . If you wish to use anything on this site , please contact the author first. Please sign my guest book
Please view my guest book Check out Dick Russell's book on
Gray whales.
"Eye of the Whale"

174. Evolution Of Whales @ Nationalgeographic.com
On Assignment On Assignment Evolution of whales Step into the world of writers and photographers as they tell you about the best, worst, and quirkiest places
http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/data/2001/11/01/html/ft_20011101.4.html
NGM Site Index NGM Home Current Features EarthPulse Final Edit Flashback Forums Global Getaways Hip Zips Match Wits Postcards Tell Us: The Game Wallpaper Subscribe Archives Registration Contact Us Advertising Masthead Nationalgeographic.com Shop Online NGS Publications Index Photography Maps Collectors Corner Committee for Research Expeditions Council Membership Services
Evolution of Whales
Step into the world of writers and photographers as they tell you about the best, worst, and quirkiest places and adventures they encountered in the field
By Douglas H. Chadwick Photographs by Robert Clark
Get a taste of what awaits you in print from this compelling excerpt.
The coast of southern Alaska grows glaciers and brooding rain forests. Hot weather is rare, but since sunup the day had brought nothing else. By afternoon everyone was sweltering. The first person to do more than just talk about leaping off the boat into iceberg-chilled Frederick Sound performed a cannonball. Others jackknifed and belly flopped in. This contest to raise the biggest splash was spirited but short. No sooner had the last person shivered back aboard than three humpback whales surfaced exactly where the jumpers had been landing. The whales lingered a while, misting the crew with spray from their blowholes, then eased down out of sight.
We were still exclaiming about the visit minutes later when the sea to starboard erupted. A 45-foot (14-meter) whale went skyborne up to its tail. Then a pair leaped in near synchrony.

175. NATURE: Sperm Whales: The Real Moby Dick - Introduction
Includes information on the sperm whale such as social structure and facts.
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/spermwhales/html/intro.html

176. School Programs-Whales
An activity guide about whales of the West Coast of Canada. Includes a list of species, teacher and student guides, glossary, and links.
http://rbcm1.rbcm.gov.bc.ca/programs/whales/index.html
Located at:
675 Belleville Street,
Victoria, British Columbia,
CANADA

177. BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Extinction Nears For Whales And Dolphins
Alex Kirby reports that some species are now so endangered they may not survive another 10 years. Features photos and related links.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3024785.stm
News
Sport

Weather

World Service
... Programmes
Last Updated: Wednesday, 14 May, 2003, 08:13 GMT 09:13 UK Email this to a friend Printable version Extinction nears for whales and dolphins

By Alex Kirby
BBC News Online environment correspondent
Some whales, dolphins and porpoises are now so endangered they could vanish within a decade, scientists say. Cetacean diversity, like all biodiversity worldwide, is crumbling
William Perrin, IUCN The warning comes from an international group of cetacean experts at IUCN-The World Conservation Union. They say species like the baiji (the Yangtze River dolphin) are unlikely to last for another 10 years. Other small cetaceans and several of the great whale species are almost as endangered, they believe. The experts issue their warning in Dolphins, Whales and Porpoises: 2002-2010 Conservation Action Plan for the World's Cetaceans. The plan is the third of three written by IUCN's Cetacean Specialist Group (CSG) in the last 15 years. Help for the overlooked It lists the 86 recognised cetacean species, from the whales of the high seas to the small and increasingly seldom-seen freshwater species in southern Asia and Latin America.

178. Go To WhaleNet
Click here to go to WhaleNet.
http://whale.wheelock.edu/
Click here to go to WhaleNet Click here to go to WhaleNet

179. Cetacea
Cetacea Cetacea provides information on every species of whale, dolphin, and porpoise. Each species description covers classification, local names, recognition at sea, habitat, food and feeding,
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.cetacea.org/index.htm&y=02179767

180. Welcome To WhaleNet - Boston, Massachusetts
Welcome to WhaleNet Boston, Massachusetts WhaleNet is an interactive educational project sponsored (whale, seal, dolphin, porpoise and turtle data) by Wheelock College in Boston, Massachusetts
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://whale.wheelock.edu/&y=027D8520FFD47A

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