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         Whales:     more books (100)
  1. I Wonder if I'll See a Whale by Frances Ward Weller, 1998-07-20
  2. Whales of the World (Worldlife Discovery Guides) by Phil Clapham, 2001-04-02

141. Seven Rescued Pilot Whales Swimming On Their Own, Health Improving
CNN
http://cnn.com/2003/US/South/04/22/stranded.whales.ap/index.html

142. Whales Alive
A nonprofit organization dedicated to the protection and celebration of whales, includes how you can help, conservation issues, photographs,
http://www.whalesalive.org.au/

143. Cornwall Wildlife Trust
A joint marine project run by the Devon and Cornwall Wildlife Trusts. Information for people who are interested in the larger marine creatures such as dolphins, whales, seals, turtles and basking sharks, around the UK coastline.
http://www.wildlifetrust.org.uk/cornwall/sight/
Cornwall Wildlife Trust This site has moved and should update automatically. Alternatively, click here to go to the new web site

144. Lesson Exchange: Whales Reader's Theatre Based On Gail Gibbon's Book, Whales (El
Reader 3 The first ancestors of whales lived more than 50 million years ago. Reader 6 whales tails are called flukes. They don t look like fish tails
http://www.teachers.net/lessons/posts/1128.html
My Links: chat center
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    #1128. Whales Reader's Theatre based on Gail Gibbon's book, Whales
    4 Blocks, level: Elementary
    Posted Fri Jun 25 20:39:05 PDT 1999 by deb ( d-smith@cybersol.com
    coloma, south haven, MI USA
    Concepts Taught: readers theatre, reading, 4 blocks
    Whales By Gail Gibbons
    Isbn: 0-8234-1030-7
    Reader 1: Whales live in oceans. They are not fish. They are air-breathing, warm-blooded mammals.
    Reader 2: Some are small, and others are huge! The world's largest animals are whales.
    Reader 3: The first ancestors of whales lived more than 50 million years ago.
    Reader 4: Their fur was replaced by blubber to keep them warm. Blubber is a layer of fat between the skin and muscles. Reader 5: Inside their flippers are bones arranged like those of a hand. Reader 6: Whales' tails are called flukes. They don't look like fish tails. Whales push themselves through the water by moving their flukes up and down. They use their flippers for balance and turning. Reader 7: Whales can't stay under water like fish. Beneath the surface they must hold their breath. Reader 8: Before diving, whales breathe fresh air into their lungs through one or two nostrils on top of their heads. They are called blowholes.

145. WHALES-N-SAILS MAIN PAGE
Whale watching tours on the Bay of Fundy from Grand Manan Island, New Brunswick, Canada. See the rare North Atlantic right whale.
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 2005
(scroll down on the 2005 page for an update on the season) or Click here for a report on our 2004 activities last updated July 10/05 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 2005 ... To Start Page

146. Ocean Mammal Institute (OMI) Science Protecting Nature
OMI collects data on the impact of human marine activities on whales and dolphins. The research results are used to develop guidelines to protect these marine mammals.
http://www.oceanmammalinst.org
Who We Are About OMI Research on Whales Our Research Vessel Impact: Short Term Vessel Impact: Parasails Vessel Impact: 5 Yr Study ... Listen to Whale Songs Internships Learn Through Experience Registration Form Underwater Noise Pollution (UNP) About UNP
Underwater Noise Pollution Fact Sheets
Updated
Low Frequency Active Sonar: What Is It? FAQ Chronology Misinformation ... Links to More Info
Support Us OMI Merchandise Store Donations
Contact Us How to Reach Us
Site Updated: August 17, 2005
OMI is dedicated to awakening peoples' minds and hearts to nature's interconnected harmony.
Our programs help individuals understand and feel their connection to nature, and give them courage to act responsibly for the planet and its inhabitants. Science Protecting Nature OMI is unique as a research organization.
We collect data on the impact of human marine activities on whales and dolphins. The research results are then used to develop guidelines to protect these marine mammals. Our current research Underwater Noise Pollution on the entire marine environment that has driven Dr. Marsha Green, OMI President and Founder, to act to make a difference.

147. Stock Footage Library; Digital Stock Footage, Whale Footage, Fishing Footage, Ca
Digital stock footage of whales, fishing, sailing, and Caribbean scenery, wildlife and culture.
http://www.wahooproductions.com/stockfootage.htm
We have an extensive library of stock video
footage of whales, fishing, sailing and
Caribbean island culture and scenery

Footage Rates
Marine wildlife Caribbean scenery Sailing "Whales in the Wild" Choose your Internet connection speed. Whales Our founder and producer, Jill Mara, spent 6 years video documenting whales and other marine life off the coast of Cape Cod, MA. While operating her video production company, In The Wild Productions, she amassed the most extensive library of digital humpback whale footage in the North East. Also available is dv stock footage of fin whales, minke whales, pilot whales, dolphins, basking sharks, mola mola (sunfish) and seals. Select shots are now available for your documentary, commercial or other production. View a demo of the whale watching highlights video "Whales In The Wild" that Jill produced, for examples of the quality and variety of humpback whale behaviors captured such as breaching

148. Whale Watcher
Acquire® Demonstrations Whale Watcher. An Acquire® expert system application for identifying whales. Image of whale dorsal fins Image of whale dorsal fins
http://www.aiinc.ca/demos/whale.html
Your browser does not support script
Acquire Demonstrations: Whale Watcher
An Acquire® expert system application for identifying whales.
Whale watching is so popular that many people find this application to be entertaining, educational, interesting and useful. We certainly hope you enjoy it. The Whale Watcher will ask you some questions as it tries to identify the whale that you have observed. If you like it, you can download your own copy. When using this application, bear in mind that this expert system is meant for demonstration purposes only; it is not definitive. If you want a more informed identification of your observed whale(s), you should consult your government's Ministry of Fisheries and Oceans, marine biologists at your local university, a published reference work, or visit one of the Web sites listed below. The Java Whale Watcher works best with Microsoft Internet Explorer 4 (or higher)
The Whale Watcher is an example of our Acquire and Acquire SDK expert system technology, and its operation over the Web. If you want to learn more about Web-based expert systems, you can read About the CGI Whale Watcher or About the Java Whale Watcher , which describe what goes on behind the scenes with these expert systems. If you wish to build an application that is delivered over the Web, please send mail to

149. Whale Rider
A negative review of Niki Caro's Whale Rider starring Keisha CastleHughes.
http://worldfilm.about.com/cs/australianfilms/fr/whalerider.htm
var zLb=5; zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Entertainment World / Independent Film Actresses ... Keisha Castle-Hughes Whale Rider Entertainment Independent Film Essentials New DVD Releases ... Help w(' ');zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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Search World / Independent Film Keisha Castle-Hughes as Paikea and Rawiri Paratene as Koro in "Whale Rider"
(Newmarket Films) Stay up to date! Keisha Castle-Hughes as Paikea and Rawiri Paratene as Koro in "Whale Rider"
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Suggested Reading Australian/NZ Film Australian/NZ Actors and Actresses Australian/NZ Directors Keisha Castle-Hughes Related Guide Picks Friday Night The Adventures of Anotine Doinel Throne of Blood The Sea ... L'Auberge Espagnole Most Popular Sibel Kekilli Best Movies of 2005...So Far Margo Stilley Shu Qi ... Cillian Murphy What's Hot Jurgen's Best Films of 2001 Tropical Malady Separate Lies Review: "Heights" ... Aishwarya Rai Related Topics Classic Movies Comedy Movies Action-Adventure Movies Home Video / DVD
Whale Rider
from Jurgen Fauth
Digital Whales and Female Empowerment
Guide Rating - Visit Their Web Site Ever so often, a foreign movie will offer a hackneyed story, easily identifiable yet "other" characters, and a formulaic story of empowerment, and without fail, that movie will do more business and gain wider attention than any other world film.

150. ACS Humpback Whale Cetacean Fact Sheet - American Cetacean Society
FEEDING Humpback whales feed on krill, small shrimplike crustaceans, MATING AND BREEDING Humpback whales reach sexual maturity at 6-10 years of age or
http://www.acsonline.org/factpack/humpback.htm
HOME EDUCATION ISSUES WHALE WATCH TRIPS ... SITE MAP
Quick Links Curriculum Bibliography Glossary Links Picture Menus Taxonomy Whale Parts FACT PACKS Select a Fact Sheet Baird's beaked whale beluga whale blue whale boto bottlenose dolphin bowhead whale Bryde's whale common dolphin Cuvier's beaked whale Dall's porpoise fin whale franciscana gray whale harbor porpoise humpback whale killer whale (orca) minke whale narwhal orca (killer whale) pilot whale pygmy right whale pygmy sperm whale right whale Risso's dolphin sei whale sperm whale spinner dolphin spotted dolphin white-sided dolphin dolphin picture menu sm whales pic menu lg whales pic menu PDF format PHOTOS LISTEN A MERICAN C ETACEAN S OCIETY FACT SHEET HUMPBACK WHALE
Megaptera novaeangliae

CLASS: Mammalia ORDER: Cetacea SUBORDER: Mysticeti FAMILY: Balaenopteridae GENUS: Megaptera SPECIES: novaeangliae
The humpback whale is one of the rorquals , a family that also includes the blue whale fin whale Bryde's whale, sei whale , and minke whale . Rorquals have two characteristics in common: dorsal fins on their backs, and ventral pleats running from the tip of the lower jaw back to the belly area. The shape and color pattern on the humpback whale's dorsal fin and flukes (tail) are as individual in each animal as are fingerprints in humans. The discovery of this interesting fact changed the course of cetacean research forever, and the new form of research known as "photo-identification," in which individuals are identified, catalogued, and monitored, has led to valuable information about such things as humpback whale population sizes, migration, sexual maturity, and behavior patterns.

151. YAQU PACHA - Project: Humpback Whales
Provides information on the conservation of South American Aquatic Mammals, organization news and project information on work to protect whales from pollution, fisherman, and disease. Available in German, Spanish, and English.
http://www.yaqupacha.de/enbuckel.htm
Project Humpback Whales in Ecuador
The Humpback Whale is one of the most popular whale species. Like other baleen whales, this whale has feeding grounds in cold areas (arctic and antarctic) and breeding grounds in tropic or subtropical waters near the coasts.
Every year, the whales have to travel long distances between these areas.
Humpback Whales are regularly found off the coasts of Ecuador.
Since 1996, biologists of yaqu pacha observe this population. They provided evidence that the waters around the island La Plata are used as breeding grounds.
Especially during the months June, July, and August mothers can be found with new-born calves in this area.
Many individuals have been identified with the help of the Photo-ID-method.
The aim of this project is to determine the population size and to investigate their seasonal travels.
In order to protect these whales, it is of utmost necessity to monitor the impact of the prosperous and rapidly growing whale watching business in this area.
The results of this study will be used for establishing a management plan, and to prevent any negative effects of these activities on the Humpback Whale population.

152. Company Of Whales
Company of whales present cetacean adventures of whale, dolphin, seabird and shark watching minicruises from Portsmouth to northern Spain through the Bay
http://www.companyofwhales.co.uk/

153. Watching For Gray Whales Off The Northern Oregon Coast.
Information about gray whales and gray whale watching in northern Oregon.
http://www.wildbirdshop.com/Nature/graywhales.html
Pacific Gray Whales
Eschrichtius robustus Whale Watch Week schedule. Winter 2004: 12-26-04 through 1-2-05
Spring 2005: 3-19-05 through 3-26-05
Summer 2004: 8-29-05 through 9-5-05 Whales may be viewed from many, easily accessible headlands on the Oregon coast.
Read on down this page for whale watching hints. Check the whale watching website for more information on Whale Watch Week. Migration In December and January, gray whales migrate from their Bering Sea feeding grounds to calving lagoons in Baja, Mexico where pregnant females give birth and mating takes place. The southward migration takes them about three weeks, traveling at around five mile per hour. Some non-breeding whales may not make the entire trip. The males leave the lagoons for their return migration pretty shortly after mating and appear off our coast in March and early April. The females with calves wait until their calves gain some strength before leaving for the long trip north. They are most often seen off our coast from late April through June.
Gray whales do not feed much, if at all, during their migration - especially on the southward migration during which they keep a steady pace. Instead, they burn the fat which they spent the summer building up by munching all of those amphipods.

154. Meet The Nuclear Whales Saxophone Orchestra!
Put together a blend of zany comedy, footloose choreography, and sophisticated musicianshipwhat you have is the oneand-only Nuclear whales Saxophone
http://www.nuclearwhales.com/
Calling All Saxophonists...
1000 Saxophones On The Great Wall Of China!
Click to learn more

Stream Nuclear Whales Concert Video sample with RealPlayer
Best with Broadband connections click here
Concert Video available for sale NOW

A musical treat for the whole family, the NUCLEAR WHALES SAXOPHONE ORCHESTRA blends sophisticated musicianship with footloose choreography, ingenious special effects, and madcap comedy to delight everyone from saxophone afficionadoes to the most dedicated saxophobes. Stream a cut in RealAudio format while you look aroundmore on music page It Don't Mean a Thing The entire "Family of Saxophones" is featured - the tiny sopranino, the soprano, alto, tenor, baritone, and bass and the rare and monstrous 6'8" contrabass (described by The Los Angeles Times as "...an instrument with the stature of a power forward in the NBA and a pitch that makes a foghorn sound effeminate.") Together they create incredibly innovative music with a rich ensemble sound covering an amazing range of over six octaves. The NUCLEAR WHALES repertoire includes classical, jazz, swing, and a plethora of original works as well as a tribute to the ocean's whales which inspired the Orchestra's name. From Bach, Mozart, and Strauss to Ellington, Gershwin and Sousa, the WHALES leave no musical genre unexplored.

155. Wonders Of The Seas: Sperm Whales
Includes pictures and information on the sperm whale.
http://www.oceanicresearch.org/spermwhales.htm
Educational Films Wonders of the Seas Contact ORG
Sperm Whales: The Deep Divers of the Ocean A Sperm whale calf investigating the camera! In Herman Melville's classic novel, a Sperm whale called Moby Dick is protrayed as an evil monster which sinks ships and kills sailors. This is the reputation these whales have gotten throughout the years, perhaps because of their large size and huge teeth. We now know that Sperm whales are not dangerous to people. They do not break ships apart and swallow sailors whole. In fact, we know a lot about what Sperm whales don't dobut not very much else. Sperm whales are the largest toothed whales on the planet, and perhaps the most abundant of the great whales, but we rarely get to study them because they spend so much time underwater. Sperm whales are deep divers, holding their breath and diving thousands of feet down to feed on deep sea squid and fish. They spend 90% of their lives down deep where they can't be seen. Only rarely do these energetic animals take a break and rest at the surface. The Sperm Whale's blow hole is at an angle on the left side of its head. This causes its blow to shoot to the left. You can see in this photo how the blowhole looks like a pair of lips, and it works like one too. The whale closes the blowhole when it dives to keep the water out.

156. Seals & Whales
The whales or cetaceans which regularly occur in the Bay of Fundy can be The right or true whale to hunt, right whales were the first whale to be
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.

157. Kayaking British Columbia Kayak Tours Vancouver Island Sea Whale Watching BC
Recommended by the National Geographic Travel Guide, they offer educational adventures, including kayaking with the whales.
http://www.kayakingcanada.com/
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  • Kayaking Day Tours ... Info Auf Deutsch Seasonal Kayak Special 10% special on all Discovery Islands and Desolation Sound 5 day Kayaking Expeditions in June Contact Our Kayak BC Dept
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    Kayak British Columbia - Sea Kayaking bc kayaking vancouver island
    Welcome to Coastal Spirits Expeditions; your premier bc kayaking vancouver island company. Kayak British Columbia offers you the best in sea whale watching tours, orca trips and beautiful kayaking tours on Vancouver Island BC. Located on Vancouver Island, we offer some of the finest bc kayaking Vancouver Island, Kayak British Columbia. Please choose from our tour program below or click on the links on the Navigation bar to your left.
  • 158. The Whalesong Project - Live And Archived Sounds Of The Humpback Whales From Mau
    whalesong Live and Archived Sounds of the Humpback whales.
    http://www.whalesong.net/
    Bringing you LIVE Whale Songs from Kihei, Maui photo courtesy of Michael Nolan
    www.wildlifeimages.net
    Click to hear whale vocalizations from Maui, Hawai'i using Realplayer. Get Realplayer-Free. To listen with a different player such as Windows WinAmp, Apple iTunes, or another player capable of streaming mp3: Choose the command for opening a new stream and enter: http://www.live365.com/play/whalesongmaui If you are still having problems listening, please Click here!
    German version
    "Whalesong"©2004 by S. Grace Mantle Whalesong Log September 1, 2005 - We are happy to announce two new categories on Whalesong.net: please find out everything you always wanted to know about humpback whales at our Humpback FAQ . You want to get a better picture of The Whalesong Project? See photos from the beginning until now at Photos . Enjoy! May 14, 2005 - Gamekids of Kihei, Maui visited the Whalesong Project a couple of times this season, and their second show on our project is running on the children's channel OC16 this week. You can catch them at 8 am on Sunday and 3 pm on Monday. The first Whalesong show ran earlier this season. Thanks to the Gamekids, their parents and adult support team for the nice coverage! May 9, 2005 -

    159. 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://www.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/programs/whales/index.html
    Located at:
    675 Belleville Street,
    Victoria, British Columbia,
    CANADA

    160. Bowhead Whales
    Other than people, the bowheads only natural enemies are killer whales (Orcas). Wildlife in Peril The bowhead whales continued survival is in
    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.

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