A study has revealed that black-browed albatrosses can dive up to an impressive 62 feet (19 meters) into the sea to hunt prey, which is more than twice the depth previously thought. The study, [.]
they spend trillions to artificially prop up their economy. they printed it and created it. 50 cities are ghost cities. nobody lives there. they paid people money to built them, this high speed rail is not in the president s plan. it s an expansion of amtrak. the high speed rail loses billions of dollars a year and it sits in 1.1 trillion in debt. sounds sexy and they have it we don t. let s go get it. these are modern day pretend villages. look great on the outside but they re albatrosses. i understand it s a good selling point for people that don t delve into the numbers. the costs, i don t think we can afford it. neil: you sound like my dad. we re not going to pay for that. all right. fine. i know where you re coming from.
Increase in albatross numbers seen around Senkaku Islands Sorry, but your browser needs Javascript to use this site. If you re not sure how to activate it, please refer to this site: https://www.enable-javascript.com/
The Senkaku Islands have seen albatross numbers rise from 50 pairs to 110 to 140 pairs since 2002. | KYODO
Jiji Apr 6, 2021
Satellite imagery has suggested that the number of endangered albatrosses may be increasing on one of the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea, the Environment Ministry said recently.
The imagery from November showed some 110 to 140 pairs of albatrosses on Minamikojima, up from some 50 pairs found during an on-site inspection in 2002, the ministry said.