५ नोव्हेंबर, २००६

When dolphins walked the earth.

50 million years ago, dolphins and whales -- they say -- were four-legged creatures lumbering about like hippos. And now, they seem inclined to evolve those legs again. Scary!

(You don't think dolphins are scary? You need to listen to this, about the evil version of Flipper: Zipper. "Oh, Zipper's surly. He is uncaring.")

१६ टिप्पण्या:

Balfegor म्हणाले...

This calls for an Onion link.

Pat Patterson म्हणाले...

In HP Lovecraft stories the dolphins were always the, pardon the pun, foot-soldiers of Cthulhu. And even more significant Cthulhu's hidden city was in the Gulf of Arabia. If the dolphins can walk again then we'll all end up as food for the Old gods.

Bissage म्हणाले...

"Fa loves Pa."

Balfegor म्हणाले...

In HP Lovecraft stories the dolphins were always the, pardon the pun, foot-soldiers of Cthulhu. And even more significant Cthulhu's hidden city was in the Gulf of Arabia. If the dolphins can walk again then we'll all end up as food for the Old gods.

Ah yes,

In his House at R'lyeh, dead Cthulhu lies sleeping

But I thought R'lyeh was in the Pacific.

John Stodder म्हणाले...

Six or seven years ago, the NY Times had a long story in its Science section in which it demonstrated that the real dolphins were far from their image of being graceful messengers of beauty and peace -- that in fact, some of them were homicidal maniacs. I'll have to look this story up.

Even still, if I had to choose, I'd rather swim near a dolphin than a shark -- even a baby shark.

P.S. to Edward. I have my own position on this subject. I refuse to believe that evangelicals refuse to believe in evolution. They say they don't, but that's just for public consumption. When the TV cameras go away, they laugh their heads off and pull out their science books.

Pat Patterson म्हणाले...

Balfegor; Yep, R'lyeh sank into the South Pacific while the cult of Cthuhu was centered in Arabia. I'm still staying well clear of Flipper.

amba म्हणाले...

Dolphins rape. They even try to rape humans.

SteveWe म्हणाले...

While I can't find it right now, there was an article (Nature?) about dolphins that had the following premise. Dolphins have large brains because they, warm blooded mammals, live in a cold environment (the ocean *is* cold) and brain size reduces heat loss of core tissue. Also, most of dolphin brain tissue is engineered for maintaining heat. Very little of that tissue is actual "brain" matter, or synapses. Ipso, dolphins are not as smart as we might think if we only go by brain mass as a measure of intelligence. Sorry to pop anyone's bubble about this.

Anecdotally, I lived in San Diego, home of Sea World, and knew a few dolphin trainers/keepers. Without exception, they said that dolphins are pretty dumb, mean, and of a nature that one should never turn ones back upon.

amba म्हणाले...

And here's an Outside Magazine article that refers to that Times article about dolphin evil. This one's worth reading, if only for the headline "Slutfish Confess: We Do It for the Halibut."

Maxine Weiss म्हणाले...

I read somewhere that Dolphins are the most romantic of all mammals.

The article said that only humans, Dolphins and Orangutans...were the only species to have physical relations, for reasons other than procreation.

Can you imagine.....having physical relations, but not for procreation?

Wow, that's a first.

I, however, am coming back as a sea lion.

Peace, Maxine

Ron म्हणाले...

dolphins are pretty dumb, mean, and of a nature that one should never turn ones back upon.

Feet are one thing, but they come out of the water with suicide belts on, that's it, I'm invading the Pacific Ocean. "Why settle for just a third?," will be our rallying cry...

The birkenstock people will rejoice as the strolling dolphins will represent an untapped market for them. Or maybe they will wear Ann's French orange clogs and come to worship Mario Batalli.

Balfegor म्हणाले...

Re: Ron

Feet are one thing, but they come out of the water with suicide belts on, that's it, I'm invading the Pacific Ocean. "Why settle for just a third?," will be our rallying cry...

Shades of Capek's The War with the Newts. Haha.

Paddy O म्हणाले...

"Anecdotally, I lived in San Diego, home of Sea World, and knew a few dolphin trainers/keepers. Without exception, they said that dolphins are pretty dumb, mean, and of a nature that one should never turn ones back upon."

Oddly enough, this might support the idea dolphins are smart and social creatures. Living in Sea World would be like a person living in a prison and having to put on interpretive dances for the public at 10:30, 11:30, 1:30, and 3:30.

Likely make me kinda dumb and mean too.

Ann Althouse म्हणाले...

Ron: My red (not orange) shoes are not clogs! And they are French, not German or Scandinavian!

Ron म्हणाले...

Ron: My red (not orange) shoes are not clogs! And they are French, not German or Scandinavian!

Odd, they looked orange in that picture from awhile back. M'bad. From the top they do look "clogish", but I'll take your word for it! But I did call them French! As you often say...go back and read the comment to the post!

If I could draw a conclusion, even, I'd draw some footed dolphins with the clogs, er, shoes on...

SteveWe म्हणाले...

You are probably correct, Paddy O. But, let's remember that the dolphins are in Sea World to entertain the sentient apes who paid the admission fee to view the show and to support the whole "experience" of capture, training and exploitation. Why? Because they are so cute. Ditto for nasty koalas that also look so cute.

Frankly, I prefer to encounter animals in the "wild" -- just so long as they are like WNC black bears or Arizona cougars and not crazed Wisconsin squirrels in the attic or Georgia rabbits trying to get into my canoe.