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Tag Archive '330'

May 03 2008

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The Chyulu hills

Filed under General

his post has absolutely nothing to do wth lions. It is about the place that I live though. And there are lions near the hills.

In 1997 a group of scientists investigated the tomography of the chyulu hills, and wrote a comprehensive paper describing their findings (A tomography study of the Chyulu Hills, Kenya: J. R. R. Ritter and T. Kaspar). If I understand it correctly, there are pockets of magma about 70km underneath the Chyulus, and that these are somehow related to the continued tearing apart of the East african rift. Its not bedtime reading, and for a non-geologically inclined person such as myself there is some language that deserves a special mention in the dungbeetle hall of fame. Such as,

“The major difficulty with teleseismic rays is vertical smearing of structures along the steep ray paths. This can be seen in Fig. 8 where the off-diagonal elements of the resolution matrix are biggest for blocks above and below neighbouring layers.”

I’ve met some nice geologists, but my goodness their work can be obscure in the extreme. Regardless of the difficulty with teleseismic rays, the chyulu hills are pleasant to look at. Most of them are extinct, well eroded cinder cones and have quite a soft, rounded shape with a collapsed crater at the summit. Here is an image of the hills northwest of camp.

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Apr 30 2008

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more food for thought

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An even shorter (but not and sweet) post today. What do you as readers think of the idea of rescuing lions from Romania and flying them to Africa? I would be very interested to hear your views. Call it a snap survey….

By the way, refer to comments on the previous post, for my rambling response to Wim.

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Apr 25 2008

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A few observations of some young lions

Filed under Lion-watching

Here’s a photo I took recently of two members of Nempakai’s pride. This pride was mentioned in Antony’s post on on the Lion Guardian blog, on the 19th of April. I thought I might point out some interesting features. 

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The “handsome spots” are a feature of younger lions. They lose these spots as they grow older, and become more tawny.

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 The noses of cubs are almost completely pink for at least the  first year. They become progressively more black as the lion gets older. In Tanzania it was found that lions generally had completely black noses by the age of about 6 years.

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This was a short (and sweet?) post today. More tomorrow….Thanks

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