Wednesday 13 November 2013

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images

Animal Pictures For Kids Biography

Source:- Google.com.pk
Find a big range of animal pictures to use as you please. They’re perfect for kids science projects or for just learning what certain types of animals look like. Enjoy photos of everything from cats and dogs to fish, birds, tigers, snakes, monkeys, cheetahs, lions and rabbits. There are images of wild animals, endangered species, farm animals and even some free pics of cute baby animals. These color photos are taken in a range of interesting environments including zoos, in the wild, under water and on farms. They often capture candid moments when animals are behaving in interesting and funny ways but also show them going about their everyday lives in a natural way.

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures For Kids Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Tuesday 12 November 2013

Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images

Animal Picture Biography 

Source:- Google.com.pk


 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 Animal Picture Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Tuesday 5 November 2013

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images

Animal Pictures Funny Biography

Source:- Google.com.pk
This is a discussion on The definition of cute - Puppy howling within the General Dog Discussion forums, part of the Keeping and Caring for Dogs category; Don't know if this has been posted already.For the 1920s there’s Juliette, the imagined companion of Coco Chanel resplendent in pearls and a tweed jacket; the 1940s envisages a pug called Sydney dressed in a tuxedo complete with bow tie as Charlie Chaplin’s ideal pooch, and 1990 sees Fernandez the dog wearing a polo neck jumper as the companion of the late Steve Jobs. However they are classified, it is accepted that the NGSD is the most primitive "domestic" dog, brought to the island by humans at least 6,000 years ago. Kept pure due to isolation from other types of dogs until the 1950s, they are like a living fossil. Almost all of the NGSD in North America have descended from the original Taronga Zoo pair. Offspring of this founder pair were widely distributed to zoos in America and Europe.In this sense, 2013 got off to a good start in Europe and the United States. On January 1, a European Union directive came into effect banning the use of individual sow stalls from the fourth week of pregnancy until one week before the sow gives birth. Millions of sows must now have the elementary freedom not only to turn around, but to walk. Nor can they be kept on bare concrete without straw or some other material that allows them to satisfy their natural instinct to root. By the end of January, 20 of the 27 EU member states were at least 90% compliant with the directive, and the European Commission was preparing to take action to ensure full compliance.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphMeanwhile, in America, active campaigning by the Humane Society of the US has led to about 50 major pork buyers announcing that they will phase out their purchase of pork from suppliers who use sow stalls. (Some, including Chipotle and Whole Foods, already have.)
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphStill, Europe is far ahead of the US on farm-animal welfare. The ban on sow stalls there continues the progress made to ameliorate the most extreme forms of animal confinement.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphIndividual stalls for veal calves were the first to go, in 2007. Last year, the standard battery cage for egg-laying hens was banned, ensuring somewhat better conditions for hundreds of millions of hens (though they can still be kept in cages that severely restrict their movement).
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe new standards are compromises that are premised on the assumption that Europeans will continue to eat animal products and do not wish to see a sharp rise in the cost of their food. Predictably, therefore, animal-welfare advocates are not – and should not be – satisfied, even if, as the European Commission’s scientific and veterinary advice indicates, the new standards will reduce animal suffering.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphAnother European directive came into effect on January 1, banning medical research on chimpanzees. It went unnoticed, because there has been no European medical research on chimpanzees since 2003. During the past 20 years, other countries have also stopped using chimpanzees for medical research; indeed, only the US and Gabon continue to do so, with the US by far the larger user.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphLast month, the National Institutes of Health, the US government agency responsible for biomedical research, approved a report recommending the cancelation of the majority of NIH-funded projects involving invasive biomedical research on chimpanzees. The report also recommends that most of the chimpanzees owned or supported by the NIH should be “retired” from research and moved to sanctuaries.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe NIH will retain only one colony, comprising roughly 50 chimps, and any research carried out on these apes will have to be approved by an independent committee that will include public representation. The report also recommends special requirements for keeping the remaining chimps: housing in groups of at least seven, with a minimum of 1,000 square feet per chimp, room to climb, and opportunities to forage for food. The NIH action still needs to be ratified by the director, Francis Collins.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphWith billions of animals still leading miserable lives on factory farms, more space for pregnant sows and the release from labs of a few hundred chimpanzees may not seem like much to cheer about. But the larger picture is worth celebrating. For centuries, humans in industrialized countries have treated animals as units of production, rather than as sentient beings with a moral status that requires us to take their interests into account. (In more traditional societies, relations between humans and animals have often been closer, but not always better for the animals.)
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe struggle to liberate animals from oppression is a moral campaign comparable to the struggle to end human slavery. Indeed, the enslavement of animals, for labor and for food, is more pervasive and more central to our way of life than the enslavement of other humans ever was. With some isolated and short-lived exceptions – for example, in India under the Emperor Ashoka and in Japan under the Tokugawa shogun Tsunayoshi – laws to protect animals from cruelty are less than 200 years old.

CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphIt is therefore bound to be a long struggle. But, if the gains made so far seem to be dwarfed by the wrongs that humans continue to do to animals, we can find hope in the fact that, as January’s developments show, the pace of change is accelerating perceptibly

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Animal Pictures Funny Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Sunday 3 November 2013

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Biography

Source:- Google.com.pk
Animation is a series of still drawings that, when viewed in rapid succession, gives the impression of a moving picture. The word animation derives from the Latin words anima meaning life, and animare meaning to breathe life into. Throughout history, people have employed various techniques to give the impression of moving pictures. Cave drawings depicted animals with their legs overlapping so that they appeared to be running. The properties of animation can be seen in Asian puppet shows, Greek bas-relief, Egyptian funeral paintings, medieval stained glass, and modern comic strips.

In 1640, a Jesuit monk named Althanasius Kircher invented a "magic lantern" that projected enlarged drawings on a wall. A fellow Jesuit, Gaspar Schott, developed this idea further by creating a straight strip of pictures, a sort of early filmstrip, that could be pulled across the lantern's lens. Schott further modified the lantern until it became a revolving disk. A century later, in 1736, a Dutch scientist named Pieter Van Musschenbroek created a series of drawings of windmill vanes that, when projected in rapid succession, gave the illusion of the windmill circling around and around.

The magic lantern became a popular form of entertainment. Traveling entertainers, visiting the villages and towns of Europe, included it in their shows. In London, the Swiss-born physician and scholar Peter Mark Roget, most famous for compiling the Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases, was fascinated by the scientific phenomenon at play and wrote an essay entitled "Persistence of Vision with Regard to Moving Objects" that was widely read and used as a basis for subsequent inventions. One of the first was the thaumatrope, developed in the 1820s by John Paris, also an English doctor. The thaumatrope was simply a small disk with a different image drawn on either side. Strings were knotted onto two edges so that the disk could be spun. As the disk twirled around, the two images appeared to blend. For example, a monkey on one side appeared to sit inside the cage on the opposite side.

The next major innovation was the phenakistoscope, created by Joseph Plateau, a Belgian physicist and doctor. Plateau's contribution was a flat disk perforated with evenly spaced slots. Figures were drawn around the edges, depicting successive movements. A stick attached to the back allowed the disk to be held at eye level in front of a mirror. The viewer then spun the disk and watched the reflection of the figures pass through the slits, once again giving the illusion of movement.

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

 

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Moving Animated Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Biography

Source:- Google.com.pk
Unless you've been living under a rock, you all know Knut (pronounced 'ka-noot'): the sweet journal of his cute, cuddly baby frosty-bear face - his four short years of life as a resident and visitor magnet at the Berlin Zoo - is resplendent on the 'net. Google 'Knut' - just his name, no further keyword necessary - and you'll be rewarded with hours of smile-generating, awwww-inducing photos of the precocious Polar Bear.
The controversy began with the rejection by his mother at birth, followed by his being snapped up as the tiny helpless, almost-furless infant-cub he was (in the wild, it is common for the mother bear to eat her cub(s) if she has, for reasons only a new mother Polar bear understands, determined her offspring either too weak to survive or if she is simply a first-time, utterly-confused and annoyed mother) and given over to zoo keeper Thomas Dörflein to hand raise.
There's much more to learn, and I'm being overly-simplistic here because my point doesn't need the particular details (visit WikiPedia for the best, in-a-nutshell synopsis of little Knut's life, his caretakers, and the controversy that swirled around him around his 1st birthday).

Of course there are always those who choose to stand for one extreme or the other.
I experienced a childhood not unlike that: you do the one thing, and are chided for doing it wrong. So you do it the other way, and are scolded for doing it wrong. You're damned if you do, damned if you don't.
An animal rights activist started the spark, publicly denouncing 1 year old Knut as a 'psychopath' of a bear, a casualty of bad judgement, basically decrying Knut's 'spoiled' and 'un-bear-like' life in the zoo as tragic, that he would have been better off had the zoo allowed nature to take its course (allowing the cub(s) to starve and fail, and/or be eaten by their mother after rejection) instead of his current 'spoofhood', the emptiness of his 'bear life', as it was certain Knut would never have a mate, cubs of his own, etc., as he had absolutely no knowledge or experience of 'being a Polar bear' to live by.
This accompanied by shots of a wet and dirty 1 year old Knut rolling in joyful abandon on the rocky poolside of his habitat.
Sure, Knut had become the new staple of pop culture, the cutie of the moment, and merchandising had become a huge enterprise (stuffed toys, snacks, coloring books, not to mention souvenirs, all selling like hotcakes not only in the zoo gift shop but worldwide), verging on exploitation (Vanity Fair magazine shoot with celeb Leo DeCaprio, the subject of songs, weekly TV shows, DVD's, and yes, a motion picture, etc, etc.).
For me, the surprisingly-profound cherry atop the media blitz was this: a book (published in Germany by Ravensburger on July 26, 2007; US publishing company Scholastic released the English version in the United States in November of the same year; rights to the book were also sold to publishers in Japan, England, Mexico, China, and Italy over the next few years) entitled Knut: How one little polar bear captivated the world.

For me, that title says it all.
Knut. The little Polar Bear that, indeed, captivated the world.

Because for all the fuss and holler over whether it was cruel (or not) to have rescued Knut from certain death to let him grow up in a way no Polar Bear ever would, in the wild, I believe Knut had a purpose that embraced his unorthodox cub-hood, a destiny that superceded all the ideas of natural vs. unnatural, morally right vs. ethically wrong.
Regardless of how 'unnatural' it was that he fawn and climb all over his non-bear 'mama', Thomas Dörflein, the man who raised him as a cub to a little after his 1st birthday (and who, sadly, died after suffering a heart attack in 2008), that he pose and tumble for the thousands of human visitors to his habitat, that Knut was so comfortable with the constant click and flash of cameras he seemed to be addicted to humans and their attention - regardless. Knut served the world a far greater purpose than he would have, had he gown up as a mother-approved, albeit captive, but more 'beary' bear, or had he been ultimately blessed to have been a Polar Bear born in and living in the wild country and glaciers and ice of the arctic, along with the approximately 20,000 other 'natural' Polar Bears alive in the world today - all of them no-less important, but nameless and faceless to the world.

See, there is a tragedy happening as I write. Polar bears are slowly - more rapidly now, however - losing their battle to survive, as climate changes, ice melt, are destroying their natural habitat.and resulting in their suffering starvation and death, in massive numbers yearly compared to the cycles of centuries past. The numbers of Polar Bears living in the wild are in the neighborhood of 20,000 to 30,000 today, but are expected to face a 30% drop in just the next decade! Will it be THEN, when there are perhaps 10,000 Polar Bears in existence, or less, that the humans of the world realize something needs to be done? It might be too late.

So one asks the blunt question: would it have been better for Knut to have been born into the iffy-ness of a 'natural' life in the arctic? Maybe. Was it better that he lived a spoiled, pampered and media-circus life at the zoo? Maybe, maybe not. For a few year, however, he was safe.
And from all of those snapshots, those Kodak moments that relayed his every day's experiences to the world, he appeared to be healthy and happy, if happy could be something an animal can be described as (I think so, but scientists are still out on that one).

But most of all, I would answer the question, instead, with another question...
The world knows who Knut is (was).
The world knows more about the plight of this threatened animal, and the world knows something needs to be done.

And, the world, people of the world, have been giving, in the name of Knut, to wildlife organizations, donating money and time to efforts to impact a change that will protect the Polar bear from extinction, all things that would not have come to be had those people not seen a particularly-precious webshot of that fluffy white, black-eyed teddy-bear-cute Polar Bear cub face.

How many Monday mornings were brightened, for millions of people, with a quick shared peek at the latest Knut pic? Did positive actions not take place, as a result?

I think yes. In Knut's case, his 'unbearlike' existence was a small price to pay for the caretaking, human attention and over-marketing that took place over the course of his short 4 years because Knut was serving a far greater purpose, in a fashion, than that of his wild and natural counterparts.

Knut was an ambassador.
He had been born into the position of mascot, of a 'face to a name', even a product, but representative of something great, no less.

Now think of what a LOSS this world would have suffered, having NOT had this wonderful little cub in their media-laden lives.
If one little hand-raised, 'psychopath', human-addicted Polar bear cub can accomplish so much in such a short time, then I think that validates the reasons by which he was rescued as a cub.

On March 19, 2011, Knut was, as often, romping on the banks and splashing in the water of his enclosure. WItnesses say he seemed fine one minute, then jumped in the water, than there was short spasm and he died.
It may be weeks before anything definitive is reported, as to why this young Polar Bear simply 'shut off', like the flicker and zap of a lightbulb going out, his reason for dying...

But Knut most certainly did have a wonderful reason for LIVING, exactly way he did live ...
Because of Knut and his unnatural existence, he introduced the world to the plight of his natural-living counterparts.
And I fail to see the 'wrong' in that.

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images 

Funny Cute Animal Pictures Pictures with Captions Quotes Words Sayings For Kids guns Photos Images