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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

The Cute and the Sinister: Huggable Primates


"QUANTUM SHOT" #528
Link - Article by Justin Sampson and Avi Abrams



The Pygmy Marmoset is the "storybook-cute" kind



(images credit: su neko, Gregg Obst)

The Pygmy Marmoset, looking like a reincarnated Furby (did you already forget about those? - a must-have toy in 1998), is the world’s smallest monkey. They range in length from 5 to 6 inches not including the tail, which is an amazing 6 to 8 inches in itself. Their name comes from the French word marmouset, meaning “shrimp” or “dwarf”.





(images AP Photo/Froso Zoo, via 1, 2)

Even when they display an angry face, they're impossibly cute:


(image credit: Julie Holland)

A cute monkey is a wise monkey:


(image credit: Stefan Koeder)

A Butterfly Buffet

Staying true to their heritage, the Marmoset has the taste pallet of a French food critic, enjoying everything from fruits, leaves, small reptiles, and tree sap. They spend about two-thirds of their life rabidly clawing at bark using their specialized incisors in search of the sweet, sweet sap. They can make up to 1,300 holes in a single tree, and the tricky buggers will even leave some sap behind to attract butterflies which they promptly eat.


(image credit: Loris Conservation)

They spend their time literally hanging out in the rainforest canopies of Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. Their small size means they can reach heights other animals can’t, so they get the pick of the food (they only weigh about 4 or 5 ounces, and they use their curly tail to balance on branches in comfort while gorging on dinner). We also might mention that it's the father, not the mother, that carries little marmosets around piggyback style until they’re old enough to get their own food.


(photo by Kerstin Molhagen)

The Pygmy has the same life span as a dog: about 11 years. Good luck finding one in the wild - their fur has magical cloaking abilities and they’re currently being harvested by the US military for making invisibility suits. Ok, maybe I made that up (just checking your attention); you can find them on display in a zoo, for example, in San Diego. The Bronx Zoo even has twins for the bonus cuteness factor - watch video.


Photos by AP/Eckhart Shulz and China Daily

Even cuter is the Slender Loris:



(images by Soumyajit Nandy, via and AP Photo/Gautam Singh)

------------

Sinister Animal Terrorizing Madagascar

This ruffled-looking stranger is really not that dangerous, pretty harmless indeed - and one of the most endangered... Aye-Aye is a large nocturnal primate from the Strepsirrhini family (the ones that have "wet noses").


(photo by Guardian UK, via)



(images via 1, 2)

"Aye-ayes can be found only on the island of Madagascar. These rare animals may not look like primates at first glance, but they are related to chimpanzees, apes, and humans." They tap on trees with their long middle fingers and listen for the insects and bugs that might inhabit its depths.


(images by Bristol Zoo Gardens, via)

Many natives of Madagascar consider this animal an omen of ill luck. "To the Malagasy people, the Aye-aye is magical, and is believed to bring death to the village it appears in. The Sakalava believe that the aye-aye enters houses during the night through thatched roofs and murders the sleeping human occupants. It supposedly uses its elongated finger to cut the aortic vein of its victims".

All these beliefs lead to the fact that the poor primates are killed on sight... Looks like it's humans who bring deadly luck to this animal, not the other way around.


(image credit: Dani Jeske, National Geographic)

Thanks to Justin Sampson for contributing some of the material, check out his site

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COMMENTS::

3 Comments:

Blogger a tiny sundrop said...

Where it says it's Pygmy marmosets - it's actually an array of different species or marmosets you have posted pictures of...

___  
Anonymous Wes Ley said...

Sweet! I absolutely am blown away by the animal life on that island! Fantastic! That is just mind blowing, wow.

Man I want a few of those ha ha ha.

___  
Anonymous WannaSmile.com said...

Well are'nt they supah adorable!

___  

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  • It is NOT FROM CHERNOBYL, you damned idiots. This fact has been established many times over. What's with all you people who think because you have knowledge of an abandoned park somewhere that you can outright claim you know where the damned clown train is from, when you have never once seen a pic of it there. POST A PIC or a google maps direct link to back it up if you are going to continue to claim you know where it is.
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  • I am pretty sure that the last pic with the clown train is from Prypiat, Ukraine. I recently found it surfing the net, in search of abandoned parks...thanks for sharing this nice collection!
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  • Type the coordinats provided under one of the pictures above in to google earth for added eerieness.





    SPOILER:
    Fukushima
    Read more

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  • The clown photo is from Laura Salas. Her livejournal link is below:

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    Read more

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    Read more

  • The photo captioned "Need more square footage? Hire extreme and fearless contractors:" is from Bath, England (UK). The building faces the river on the opposite side to that photographed and was a goods warehouse, its in a row of many. The wooden cabin jutting out is on the opposite side to the river and housed a winch to lift/lower goods into/from any of the other floors (you can see the trap door through which the winch operated in the picture). This is a very common architectural feature and can be seen in large grain stores, warehouses etc..As the addition only housed a winch it was cheaper to make it from wood- it is however attached to the rest of the building with the correct layout of girders. How do I know this? I live in the converted one nextdoor!
    Read more

  • The 'Nobody can tell me what this is' looks like some sort of mobile oven.
    Read more

  • The photo captioned "Nobody can tell me what this is:
    (maybe an altar to the gods of construction? They need all the forgiveness they can get)" is try to illustrate old russian tale about Emelya (men) who drive the stove. The same: http://www.es911.ru/files/1(1).jpg
    Read more

  • re "Nobody can tell me what this is:" - it looks to me like a brickwork mockup. The builder makes one or more of these to illustrate different brickwork types, and the client agrees to one of them. The bricklayers refer back to that, so that the final brickwork is what the client wants. They should demolish mockups after the building is complete, but if the building is never completed...?
    Read more

  • I quite like the look of the something-old-something-new coagulation in Bucharest. It reminds me of the Citigroup Center in NYC, the skyscraper which had to be built balanced on four huge stilts to make room for a church on the same plot.

    I wonder how many other landmarks are designed to accomodate other buildings?
    Read more

  • from what I know, the tower in the lake is an actual church-tower in the village of Graun, south-Tyrol. The village was moved when a dam for a power-station was constructed, but they left the church-tower standing (it's now a tourist-stop to make photos, obviously).
    when you search for "Graun, Italy" on Google Maps and activate photos, you can find it.
    Read more

  • the italian "water tower" is not a water tower but a church tower. it was buried by water to create a dam for generating electric power. The town is Curn Venosta, in Val Venosta, near Passo Stelvio (not really Gavia).
    http://wikitravel.org/it/Curon_Venosta
    http://www.comune.curon.bz.it
    Read more

  • I believe the "Nobody can tell me what this is:
    (maybe an altar to the gods of construction? They need all the forgiveness they can get)" is actually a portable stove. Like a George Foreman, but awesome.
    Read more

  • I seriously had an apartment that had something like the "Throne Room". The toilet was on a platform raised 6 inches from the rest of the bathroom. I always thought "I'm high on pot" whenever I sat on it.
    Read more

  • The hybrid stairs are common in the SNCF building (SNCF (Société Nationale des Chemins de fer Français) (French National Railway Company) is a French public enterprise). I have exactly the same one in my town, in Toulouse. and, yes, it's kinda weird.
    Read more

  • Nobody can tell me what this is:
    (maybe an altar to the gods of construction

    This is a brick stove. I've seen them in people's back yards. Looks like someone took one and mounted it on wheels.
    Read more

  • Updated with all new info - thank you!
    Read more

  • The picture of curved bridge was made when the bridge was tested under pressure of heavy loaded trucks.
    In real life bridge is in good condition and stands straight as any other bridge.
    Read more

  • The picture from Bath was taken by me:
    http://flickr.com/photos/javic/101758496/
    Read more

  • Photo credit added - thank you for letting us know - picture came without attribution.
    Read more

  • Can't believe that some of them are real, I am laughing my ass of here... :-))
    Read more

  • That first one is the ugliest building I've seen in a while. It's not even creative or unique... it's just plain ugly. It looks like a building being attacked by hairy brown caterpillars or something.
    Read more

  • You know, I gotta admit the house in Bath, England is cute in an ugly way. Or is it the other way around...
    Read more

  • U, my dear friend, it is obvious that you are not verry much informed about certain things you posted on your site. The "something old, something new" - is an awarded piece of architecture and it is verry spectacular, but yet, thank you for the publicity, anyone might want to see that one in real life or maybe just closer.
    Read more

  • The building in Bucharest, Romania, is not a simple building, it's the UAR(Romanian Architects Union) builduing;)
    Read more

  • "Plumbing Gets Complicated" = radiant heating floor system
    Read more

  • For the "Stairway Into the Wild," it actually looks like it goes around the corner of the building on that level. It looks like the stairs end because the railing is glass and see through so it looks like it just drops off!
    Read more

  • Are these architects out of their minds or are the people who commissioned the works? There's a great book on this subject called "Architecture of the Absurd: How Genius Disfigured a Practical Art."
    Read more

  • Love that stairway into the column.
    Read more

  • "Something old, something new" - Hey, I've seen that! Wow! really amazing building. I used to visit it, when I was very little.
    Read more

  • Something old, something new - the one from Romania is actually a very good building, very controversial indeed, some hate it and some love it, but the fact is it had a lot of awards. Frankly I don't see why it's in the same list with all those horrors.
    Read more


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