The Internet Archive discovers and captures web pages through many different web crawls.
At any given time several distinct crawls are running, some for months, and some every day or longer.
View the web archive through the Wayback Machine.
COMMENTS ON COLLECTING BIRDS: A Reply
-
[image: jay collection]
After my post about collecting two weeks ago I received a bit of feedback,
some positive, some negative, and I’ve...
Some more signs of winter
-
Groups of Whooper Swans have started to arrive......it's getting very close
to the start of winter..............
We were up in Yakumo in the early morni...
Osprey and other birds at Brunswick Landing
-
[image: 1. bwha 6-12-15-kab] *Broad-winged Hawk on power lines 6-12-15*
*Over the course *of the summer I birded Brunswick Landing several times.
It is a...
The Erisocrinoidea: Shallow Crinoids
-
*Articulated calyx of *Erisocrinus typus*, copyright Richard Paselk.*
The close of the Permian period saw the largest mass extinction ever
recorded. It ha...
Mountain Blackeye
-
24th October 2015
On the recent 7th Borneo Bird Festival held at Mt. Kinabalu, this bird
became one of the favorite among bird race teams because of it u...
Birding The Sunday Showers
-
The clocks went back on Sunday morning. Winter is here. An extra hour in
bed for many folks but not for yours truly, just an extra hour’s birding.
Trouble ...
Breakfast frenzy with Alate Termite
-
Feeding frenzy on Alate Termite at my backyard.
All sorts of birds:-
Yellow-vented Bulbul , Asian Glossy Starling, Common Myna, Brown
Shrike,Pied Fantail, B...
Temple elephants
-
A pet peeve of mine.
"India must perhaps be the only country that has drafted so many acts and
laws for animals yet enforces so few of them."
Gods in ...
Loose Feathers #517
-
*Wild Turkey / Photo by Alex Galt/USFWS*Birds and birding news
- A Bell's Vireo has spent the past two weeks at the National Arboretum
in Washington,...
Osprey
-
[image: Osprey]
The osprey is a bird that is in a class all its own. Literally, the osprey
is the only member of the genus Pandion, which is the only genus...
Migration Season--Fall Banding at Seven Islands
-
This is the second in a two-part series on the October 11th banding session
at Seven Islands State Birding Park, Tennessee, with Mark Armstrong and Billie
...
Don't Look A Gift Bird In The Bill/Beak
-
I wish that I could tell you that I'm filled with joy and excitement every
time I'm out bird-watching but that would be a lie. The truth is that there
are...
Things that go bump in the night…
-
Are owls, bats, spiders and creepy crawlies really as spooky as we make
them out to be? Bloomsbury investigates our biggest wildlife phobias… Many
creature...
Balcony Safari – The idle joy of birding
-
Why go on an expensive safari to watch birds when your backyard is just as
well endowed as any forest? The Green Ogre - Nature's layers unraveled
To read m...
West Penwith Wildlife
-
Some more photos of the wildlife of West Penwith all taken in and around
the Sennen, Lands End and St Levan areas of the far west.
Beautiful Demoiselle *Ca...
Travel: More floral artistry in Zurich
-
So did you get an eyeful of the glorious flowers that Zurich's florists
dish out in my last post?
I do have one more florist whose work demands to be fea...
-
Some birds are just simply very hard to photograph. It takes a lot of time,
patience and a whole lot of luck. Having experienced all the elements, I
learn...
Cape Peninsula
-
I have been woefully inadequate in my postings about my trip to South
Africa last November. Unfortunate, because I left off my story on the day
before ...
Killdeer Chick in Yellowstone National Park
-
These were taken at West Thumb Geyser Basis, along the beach. It was really
cool to get to watch these little chicks up close and personal. I had never
see...
Why I otter.....
-
I'm guessing I'm the last person seriously interested in british mammals to
get around to visiting the norfolk town with otters gambolling through the
rive...
This Last Year
-
On Father's Day, 2011, Geoff and I came to the conclusion that we didn't
want to be married anymore.
We cried, we talked. We asked ourselves, "What happe...
Photo of the Week (10/03/2012): Safety Stop
-
For the beginner diver this is one of the most discomfiting times of a
dive, the safety stop, 3 minutes at 5 meters with the aim of eliminating
microbubbl...
So long, blogger... hello, wordpress
-
I'm moving on to Wordpress, folks, so please update your bookmarks / RSS
readers / email subscriptions to point to:Reconciliation Ecology: a leaf
warbler's...
Painted Redstart in Ocean Springs, Mississippi!
-
On Jan. 5, Nancy Madden found a *Painted Redstart* just east of Ocean
Springs, Mississippi, on the Jackson County Christmas Bird Count. The bird
has been...
Twitching a rarity
-
Week 40 - 08 October 2011, Pivot Fields
There is nothing worse than getting news of a first and national rarity
whilst you are away on a business trip, so...
Sleepy Morning (Waltheria indica)
-
An introduced shrubby herb native to tropical *America*. It occurs along
roadsides, weedy fields, waste places, rocky outcrops and cultivation from
8 to ...
Stuff you always wanted to ask a pregnant woman...
-
1. What's morning sickness like?
I have no idea. Never had it. I think MS depends on person to person and I
was one of the lucky ones to never have it. ...
Happy Birthday Kottu!
-
Rumour has it that Kottu is 10 years old. I say "rumour" because no one is
exactly sure on this, but it's about 10 years old. Sometime around now.
Never ...
Dark Bar-sided Skink - Sydney, Australia
-
[image: A photograph of a Dark bar-sided Skink taken in Sydney, Australia]
*Dark bar-sided Skink - Sydney, Australia*
Firstly, sorry for the prolonged abse...
4 comments:
It's funny how some of these tiny insects look so boring to the naked eye, but is absolutely breathtaking if you can look close enough!
GORGEOUS!!!!!!
Thanks a lot, GG!
Yes, life in the miniature is quite spectacular. Except cockroaches. :)
Planning a religio-birding-burn-my-fat pilgrimage to Adam's Peak. :)
Fantastic !
most of the bugs look like creatures from another planet !
what is this macro lens you have used ?
Thanks, Patali.
I use Canon 65mm and 100mm macro lenses.
Post a Comment