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Comment le chant des baleines aiderait à percer les secrets du fond des océans

Comment le chant des baleines aiderait à percer les secrets du fond des océans
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Scene Briefs, May 12

Library hours expand With Teton County’s COVID-19 risk level down to yellow, for “low,” Teton County Library is welcoming more people for longer period of time, and making meeting rooms available by reservation. Changes at the main Jackson library include extended hours, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays, with weekend hours remaining at 1-5 p.m. and Sunday reserved for pickup only; a doubling of the visitor capacity to 50 for the main wing and 20 in the Youth Wing; two meetings rooms available by reservation at TCLib.org/meetingrooms; double the number of public computers and extended time to use them; and a Curative COVID-19 testing kiosk near the entrance of the lot available Monday through Friday.

Iceland to Resume Whale Hunting | IceNews

The Icelandic whale hunting company Hvalur hf. is going to resume whale hunting after a two-year break. This is reported by visir.is The company will hunt finback whales. The whales will be used in research and manufacturing on iron-rich food supplements as well as gelatine from the bones and blubber. Additionally, there are hopes that Japanese whale markets will open again soon. Iron deficiency is one of the world’s most widespread and dire health problem. By Aqqa Rosing-Asvid – Visit Greenland (Flickr: Finhval) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia CommonsHvalur hf. has been permitted to hunt 161 finback whales plus they will be allowed to use a portion of last year’s quota which was unused. It is not certain if they will hunt so many whales though.

Supporting sustainable travel: From Greenland, with love

Share Here is a letter from Hjörtur Smárason, the new managing director at Visit Greenland about how the country aims to become one of the world’s leading destinations in sustainable tourism. I have had a strong connection to Greenland for a long time. I first came here when I was only 14 years old. This was with a group of young people from the small village of Bildudalur in Iceland, who were on a 10-day visit to its ‘twin town’ of Kulusuk. Since then, I have been to Greenland countless times – both privately and in connection with the development of tourism and marketing. Over the last 15 years I have worked with tourism development, place branding and crisis management – not only in Iceland, but in all of the Nordic countries, in Northern Europe, the Balkans, Russia, Nepal, the Middle East and in several countries in Africa. And now again in Greenland.

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