Giant Ibis

The giant ibis (Thaumatibis gigantea), the only species in the monotypic genus Thaumatibis, is a wading bird of the ibis family, Threskiornithidae.
It is confined to northern Cambodia, with a few birds surviving in extreme southern Laos and a recent sighting in Yok Đôn National Park, Vietnam.

The giant ibis is a lowland bird that occurs in marshes, swamps, lakes, wide rivers, flooded plains and semi-open forests as well as pools, ponds and seasonal water-meadows in denser deciduous forest. One bird was collected in a Malay paddyfield. Formerly the giant ibis was believed to breed in southeastern Thailand, central and northern Cambodia, southern Laos and southern Vietnam. It was still fairly common in the Mekong Delta until the 1920s but is now almost depleted, with a small remnant population breeding in Cambodia, southern Laos and possibly in Vietnam. This is, by far, the largest of the world's ibises. Adults are reportedly 102–106 cm (40–42 in) long, with an upright standing height of up to 100 cm (39 in) and are estimated to weigh about 4.2 kg (9.3 lb). Among standard measurements, the wing chord is 52.3–57 cm (20.6–22.4 in), the tail is 30 cm (12 in), the tarsus is 11 cm (4.3 in) and the culmen is 20.8–23.4 cm (8.2–9.2 in). The adults have overall dark grayish-brown plumage with a naked, greyish head and upper neck. There are dark bands across the back of the head and shoulder area and the pale silvery-grey wing tips also have black crossbars. The beak is yellowish-brown, the legs are orange, and the eyes are dark red. Juveniles have short black feathers on the back of the head down to the neck, shorter bills and brown eyes. It has a loud, ringing call, frequently repeated around dawn or dusk, a-leurk a-leurk.



Very little is known of the giant ibis's life history. It eats aquatic invertebrates, eels, crustaceans and small amphibians and reptiles. Insects such as locusts and cicadas are eaten regularly when abundant and seeds occasionally supplement the diet. Outside of the breeding season, frogs and mole-crickets appear to be perhaps the most significant prey types for giant ibises. They mainly forage in muddy substrate in shallow waters, though can feed at all depths in seasonal forest pools. Feeding flocks may consist of a breeding pair or small family group and have been observed mixing with black ibises. Next to nothing is known of its breeding behaviour, but it nests in trees, with a possible preference for Dipterocarpus trees. Usually, nests are located at least 4 km (2.5 mi) from human habitations, although the species is not especially shy around or fearful of humans unless persistently harassed or hunted. Females lay two eggs at the start of the rainy season, around June to September. Earthworms taken from their mounds in wet grasslands appears to be an important food source for nesting ibises of this species. In general, the species is residential but can wander widely for food or in response to disturbances. The giant ibis is generally territorial and may remain with a family group throughout the year. However, in the dry season, when they are not nesting, groups of up to seven individuals, sometimes likely unrelated, have been observed feeding together.

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FUJI MOUNTAIN.

Mount Fuji, situated on Honshu Island, is the most astounding mountain in Japan at 3,776.24 m. A dynamic stratovolcano that last emitted in 1707–08, Mount Fuji lies around 100 kilometers south-west of Tokyo, and can be seen from that point on a sunny morning.
Mount Fuji 富士山 Fujisan,  situated on Honshu Island, is the most elevated mountain in Japan at 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft). A dynamic stratovolcano that last emitted in 1707–08, Mount Fuji lies around 100 kilometers (60 mi) south-west of Tokyo, and can be seen from that point on a crisp morning. Mount Fuji's particularly symmetrical cone, which is snow-topped a while a year, is an extraordinary image of Japan and it is oftentimes delineated in craftsmanship and photos, and also went to by tourists and climbers. Mount Fuji is one of Japan's "Three Holy Mountains" (三霊山 Sanreizan?) alongside Mount Tate and Mount Haku. It is additionally a Special Place of Scenic Beauty and one of Japan's Historic Sites. It was added to the World Heritage List as a Cultural Site on June 22, 2013. According to UNESCO, Mount Fuji has "roused craftsmen and artists and been the object of journey for a considerable length of time". UNESCO perceives 25 locales of social enthusiasm inside the Mt. Fuji territory. These 25 areas incorporate the mountain itself, Fujisan Hongū Sengen Shrine and six other Sengen sanctums, two cabin houses, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Kawaguchi, the eight Oshino Hakkai hot springs, two magma tree shape, the remaining parts of the Fuji-kō religion in the Hitoana cavern, Shiraito Falls, and Miho no Matsubara pine tree grove.



The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, signify "riches" or "copious" and "a man with a certain status" separately. Nonetheless, the name originates before kanji, and these characters are ateji, implying that they were chosen on the grounds that their articulations coordinate the syllables of the name yet don't convey a significance identified with the mountain. The root of the name Fuji is misty. A content of the 10th century Tale of the Bamboo Cutter says that the name originated from "interminable" (不死 fushi, fuji?) furthermore from the picture of copious (富 fu?) warriors (士 shi, ji?) rising the inclines of the mountain.[11] An early society derivation guarantees that Fuji originated from 不二 (not + two), significance without equivalent or quintessence. Another cases that it originated from 不尽 (not + to fumes), importance ceaseless. A Japanese traditional researcher in the Edo period, Hirata Atsutane, hypothesized that the name is from a word signifying "a mountain remaining up shapely as an ear (穂 ho?) of a rice plant". A British preacher Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) contended that the name is from the Ainu word for "flame" (fuchi) of the flame god (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese language specialist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic advancement (sound change). It is likewise pointed that huchi implies an "old lady" and gorilla is the word for "flame", chimp huchi kamuy being the flame divinity. Research on the dissemination of spot names that incorporate fuji as a part likewise propose the inception of the word fuji is in the Yamato dialect as opposed to Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami contended that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji?) and rainbow (虹 niji, however with an option word fuji?), and originated from its.

In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. A few sources allude to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, repetitively, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers allude to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific addition utilized with individuals' names, for example, Watanabe-san, yet the on-perusing of the character yama (山?, lit. "mountain") utilized as a part of Sino-Japanese mixes. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi. Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have gotten to be outdated or graceful, incorporate Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山?, lit. "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺?, lit.

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EVEREST MOUNTAIN.

Mount Everest, additionally referred to in Nepal as Sagarmāthā and in Tibet as Chomolungma, is Earth's most elevated mountain. It is situated in the Mahalangur segment of the Himalayas.

Mount Everest (Qomolangma) is the biggest and most noteworthy mountain on the planet. Mount Everest is in the Himalayas. It is around 8,848 meters (29,029 ft) high. Its crest is on the fringe of Nepal and China. It is over the Death Zone where the air is too thin for a person, so generally additional oxygen is utilized when climbing. The Death Zone alludes to the parts of Mount Everest that are over 7,600m (25,000ft) above ocean level. Two different mountains likewise can be named as "most noteworthy" mountains - the fountain of liquid magma Mauna Kea on Hawaii island is the most noteworthy mountain measured from the base submerged to the summit (more than 11 kilometers), and the summit of Chimborazo is the altered point on Earth which is the best separation from the middle - in view of the changed ball state of the planet Earth which is "thicker" around the Equator than measured around the posts.


English individuals started investigating the territory around Mount Everest in 1921. The main campaign to attempt to move to the highest point of Everest was in 1922. On June 8th, 1924, George Leigh Mallory and climbing accomplice Andrew Irvine attempted to move to the summit of Mount Everest. They vanished into the haze and were not seen again until Mallory's dead body was found by Conrad Anker in 1999. Right up 'til the present time, nobody is certain whether Mallory and Irvine made it to the summit before biting the dust, 29 years prior to the following climbers would achieve the summit. The highest point of Mount Everest was initially come to in May 1953 by the Sherpa Tenzing Norgay and the New Zealander Sir Edmund Hillary. This was following 31 years of British trials to get a man on top.


Other than garbage, the debasement on Himalayan crests and different issues concerned long-lasting Everest aide and climber Apa Sherpa. He said when he initially began climbing Everest, the trail to the summit was secured with ice and snow. However it is currently dabbed with exposed rocks. The dissolving ice has likewise uncovered profound chasms, making campaigns more dangerous.[58] Apa sorted out an endeavor to evacuate 4,000 kg (8,800 lb) of trash from the lower piece of the mountain and another 1,000 kg (2,200 lb) from higher regions. In 2008, another climate station at around 8000 m height (26,246 feet) went online.The station's first information in May 2008 were air temperature −17 °C, relative stickiness 41.3%, environmental weight 382.1 hPa (38.21 kPa), wind heading 262.8°, wind speed 12.8 m/s (28.6 mph), worldwide sun oriented radiation 711.9 watts/m2, sunlight based UVA radiation 30.4 W/m2.The task was arranged by Stations at High Altitude for Research on the Environment (SHARE), who likewise set the Mount Everest webcam in 2011.




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HONG KONG CITY.

Hong Kong, officially known as Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China, is a city on the southern coast of China at the Pearl River Estuary and the South China Sea.

Life structures existed over 6,000 years prior at numerous destinations along the slowing down of Hong Kong. It was accepted that amid the soonest ancient periods, from the end of the fourth thousand years BC, Hong Kong encountered a change in the earth, in which the ocean levels ascended from as much as 100 meters beneath the present level. Antiquated curios recommend a solid reliance on the ocean. As per late unearthings, archeologists have found two fundamental Neolithic societies lying in stratified grouping. Bits of coarse, string stamped stoneware has been discovered together with fine, delicate, delicate earthenware finished with direct carvings, apertures and compositions. The fourth thousand years BC is connected with this stage. In the following stage, likely in the mid-third thousand years BC, another clay structure adorned with an extensive variety of amazing geometric examples was found. Better workmanship and a melange of distinctive shapes demonstrate a movement in systems. Decorations, for example, rings produced using quartz and different stones, show choice craftsmanship. Bronze rose amidst the second thousand years BC, with weapons, blades, sharpened stones, and apparatuses exhumed from Hong Kong destinations. Other proof from the islands of Chek Lap Kok, Lantau, and Lamma demonstrated that metal was worked by regional standards. Amid the Bronze Age, stoneware was made at high temperatures and beautified with geometric outlines. Other than artworks and apparatuses, old Chinese works have likewise been found around Hong Kong Island and on a portion of the littler, basically uninhabited islands. These compositions delineate the lives of oceanic individuals that looked like those in China's southeastern waterfront regions, suggesting that they may be of shared birthplaces.

At the time of the Qin (221 - 206BC) and Han (206BC - AD220) administrations, gatherings of individuals from the terrain came and settled in Hong Kong. They brought with them their legacy, which had an effect on the indigenous populaces. Coins of the Han period have been found in Hong Kong, and a block tomb was revealed at Kowloon's Lei Cheng Uk in 1955 with a progression of Han tomb furniture. Numerous different revelations and unearthings uncover relations between different Chinese administrations of the past with Hong Kong that have as of now been generally recorded. Western impact in China came to fruition toward the start of the fifteenth and sixteenth hundreds of years because of the expanded exchange Chinese items, for example, silk and tea through the Silk Road that extended from northwestern China to eastern Europe. The Europeans were keen on Hong Kong's safe harbor placed on the exchange courses of the Far East, therefore building an exchange endeavor between Western businesspeople and China. The Portuguese were the first to achieve China in 1555, however the British ruled outside exchange the southern district of Guangzhou (Canton) amid the early phases of Western association in China.



Ships from the British East India Company were positioned on the Indian Coast after Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty opened exchange on a restricted premise in Guangzhou. After fifteen years, the organization was permitted to construct a stockpiling distribution center outside Guangzhou. The westerners were given constrained inclination and needed to stick to numerous Chinese tenets and strategies. Until the exchanging season finished, they could just live in specific territories in Guangzhou, and were illegal from bringing arms, warships, or ladies. Chinese rulers likewise banned outsiders from taking in the Chinese dialect in trepidation of their potential awful impacts. Chinese wares, specifically porcelains and arranged decorations, were prominent among the European privileged people. The British East India Company attempted to adjust its enormous buys from China by multiplying its offer of opium to the Chinese. The offer of opium saw a colossal accomplishment by the start of the nineteenth Century. Dreadful of the surge of silver, the Chinese ruler banned the medication exchange 1799 yet without any result. Sneaking came to fruition as neither outside brokers nor Guangdong shippers were slanted to forego the beneficial business. All through the following couple of years, the British appreciated a fulfillment of accomplishment from opium. When they lost imposing business model of the exchange, other outside dealers ventured into the illicit opium business for an offer of riches.




In 1839, Lin Zexu was delegated by the sovereign as an uncommon official to Guangzhou to stop the medication exchange. He and his troops utilized power to affect the remote plants to surrender their supplies of opium. This demonstration was the venturing stone to the First Opium War when the Chinese and the British couldn't conform to each other's requests. As a consequence of the war and the Chinese' trepidation of British military dangers, Hong Kong was remunerated to the British under the Convention of Chuen Pi in January 1841. On January 26, 1841, the British banner was raised at Possession Point on Hong Kong Island, and British occupation started. A couple of months after the fact, authorities were offering plots of area and the colonization of Hong Kong took flight. Hong Kong initiated Sir Henry Pottinger as its first representative in August 1841. Regardless of British pessimism, Pottinger devoted his time to building up Hong Kong's future as he understood its potential. He enlivened long haul building ventures and honored area gifts. Keeping in mind the end goal to make peace with the Chinese, he sent his troops to the Chang Jiang (Yangtzi River) and debilitated to assault Nanjing (Nanking). In August 1842, the Chinese yielded and the two legislatures marked the Treaty of Nanjing, which formally gave Hong Kong to the British. The Chuen Pi Convention was never marked and subsequently never lawful. With that, Hong Kong carried on to advance as a port and under British impacts, it turned into one of the best port urban communities the world has ever seen. With the inclusion of the British, Hong Kong succeeded. Numerous organizations exchanged from Guangzhou to Hong Kong, empowering the British settlement to start a prime Asian entrepot. Dangers between the British and the Chinese of China kept on heightenning, prompting the Second Opium War. Hence, other remote nationals - Russia, France, Germany, and Japan - understood the significance of having simple access to exchange with China and started to secure ports up and down the Chinese coastline. A few settlements were marked between the diverse nationals. Later, British took ownership of the New Territories, which was announced a piece of the general region of Hong Kong.




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