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Animal Echolocation - Science Experiments - Porpoises Echolocation - Science Channel
Animal Echolocation - Science Experiments - Porpoises Echolocation - Science Channel
http://youtu.be/6EkP760dgpw
Original: https://vimeo.com/118710998
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/2797468?hl=en
Author: American Scientist - https://vimeo.com/amscimag
Animal Echolocation - Science
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Animalist & DNews: The Amazing Connection Between Bats And Dolphins
Seeing with your eyes is sooo old school.. echolocation is where it's at! This super useful form of sight allows animals like dolphins and bats to navigate all kinds of places. So how did these animals grow to develop sonar and how does a biologically-based sonar system work? Anthony is joined by Animalist host Alex Farnham to explain.
Read More:
Bats, Dolphins and the Genetic Evolution of Echol
-
Blind Boy Sees With Sound - Echolocation - Extraordinary Animals - Series 2 - Earth
Milo the Dolphin uses Sonar to locate the world around him. Incredible school boy Sam is learning how to tap into this skill and become an echolocator.
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=BBCEarth
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.
-
Bats hunting their prey - Top Bat - BBC
Bats hunt by echolocation but, as this mesmerising footage shows, diiferent methods for capturing prey are used by these beautiful nocturnal creatures. Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos and watch more high quality videos on the new BBC Earth YouTube channel here: http://www.youtube.com/bbcearth
-
JumpStart Animal Adventures Karaoke (2002) - Echolocation [Song]
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave blast
I realease to find food fast
Whoop whoop
Bionic ears, ultra sonic frequencies,
I can hear
Whoop whoop
I sleep all day, upside down, in my cave
Whoop whoop
I fly by night, don't need light,
eat meals in-flight.
[Chorus]
Whoop whoop
A
-
Blind man uses echolocation like a dolphin - Extraordinary Animals - Series 2 - Earth
Marine Mammalogist, Dr Magnus Wahlber meets Daniel who has been a human echolocator for 42 years. Daniel has the extraordinary ability to use a sonar like technique to experience the world around him.
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=BBCEarth
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (
-
Super Smart Dolphin Answers Questions - Extraordinary Animals - Earth
The Echo Location Visualization and Interface System (ELVIS) allows Dolphins to make choices and answer questions. Luna the young Dolphin grasped the concept quickest and is eager to choose her own meals and please her trainers.
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=BBCEarth
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http:/
-
JumpStart Animal Adventures Karaoke (2002) - Echolocation [Karaoke]
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave blast
I realease to find food fast
Whoop whoop
Bionic ears, ultra sonic frequencies,
I can hear
Whoop whoop
I sleep all day, upside down, in my cave
Whoop whoop
I fly by night, don't need light,
eat meals in-flight.
[Chorus]
Whoop whoop
A
-
Animal Echolocation - Bat in the Cave
There are various species of bats. Bats have a very interesting character of echolocation ability beside Dolphin. This species of bats was found inside the cave arround Ayamaru Plateau - Central of Birds Head Peninsula West Papua
-
All About Bats for Kids: Animal Videos for Children - FreeSchool
Bats may fly in the night, but there's no reason to fear these amazing mammals! Bats are one of the most common types of mammals on the planet and live on almost every continent. Most bats eat insects, some eat fruit, some eat nectar, and a few even eat blood. They are amazing creatures: not only are they the only flying mammal, but they also use echolocation to find their food and navigate in tot
-
Animal Echolocation - Bat in the Island
Daytime roosting area for a large colony of Fruit Bats on Um Island in Makbon - Birds Head Peninsula region West Papua. Engine noise on Boat stirred them.
-
Champ Search : Fish Finder & Echolocation of an unknown animal comparison.
Here is a comparison of a Fish Finder recording on a spectrogram and the recording we captured on July 31, 2014 in Lake Champlain of an unknown animal. There is a major difference between a Fish Finder and the recording we captured which is clearly a biological sound.
The July 31st recording is 298 Hz+/-6.0 Hz
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JumpStart Animal Adventures Karaoke (2002) - Echolocation - Sing with the Animals [Karaoke]
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave blast
I realease to find food fast
Whoop whoop
Bionic ears, ultra sonic frequencies,
I can hear
Whoop whoop
I sleep all day, upside down, in my cave
Whoop whoop
I fly by night, don't need light,
eat meals in-flight.
[Chorus]
Whoop whoop
A
-
0051 Sensory Substitution - Animal Echolocation
0051 Sensory Substitution
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BAT SENSE - by Nature Video
This stunning slow motion footage shows how bats use echolocation to find water. We know how bats echolocate to hunt insects, but this is the first study to show how they recognise large, flat objects like ponds. Moreover, by testing young bats that had never encountered a pond or river before, the researchers showed that bats seem to have a built-in ability to recognize these important features
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ECHOLOCATION: BATS AND WHALES
Video assignment for ANM103 by Isabelle Sharkie and Jessica Bolin.
Whale, whale, whale, what do we have here? Looks like an over-whale-ming video on echolocation. I hope it doesn't drive you batty! Or you might need some cetacean to calm you down.
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Studying the a Porpoise's Hearing With Echolocation
Studying the hearing of a harbor porpoise at Fjord&B;ælt while performing a psychophysical echolocation task. The animal is asked to swim down to the green hoop. Right in front of the animal are two screens: The first one is opaque and the second one is an acoustic shield. In some trials an 18-centimeter long cylinder is lowered down on the other side of the two screens. Once the porpoise is statio
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Doppler Effect and Echolocation
Physics project on the application of the Doppler Effect in animals' echolocation.
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Bats Using Echolocation Around Humans?
Please SUBSCRIBE NOW! http://bit.ly/BWchannel
Watch More - http://bit.ly/BTbats
On this week's Behind the Adventure, Coyote answers a question about the use of echolocation in Bats and talks about his first hand experience with them in season 1 of Breaking Trail.
Keep the questions coming, next week we might answer yours!
The Brave Wilderness Channel is your one stop connection to a wi
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Rouge the Bat- Jumpstart Echolocation
Rouge sings the Echolocation bat song from Jumpstart Animal Adventures for the PC
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Modern Human Migration and Echolocating Eels
Scientists have found 80,000-year-old modern human teeth in a Chinese cave, challenging the most widely accepted timelines of human migration. And electric eels use electricity to both attack and track their prey!
Hosted by: Hank Green
----------
Dooblydoo thanks go to the following Patreon supporters -- we couldn't make SciShow without them! Shout out to Justin Ove, Justin Lentz, David Campos,
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Animal senses
Animal senses like infrared, electroreception, magnetoreception and echolocation / sonar allow them to perceive the environment in different ways to humans but there are more than five senses that humans can use but sight and hearing dominate our perception.
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How do moth ears deal with bat's echolocation?
Author: Yohami Fernandez
She is a PhD student at the Bioacustic and Neuroethology Research group (Dr. Mora). Universidad de la Habana, La Habana, Cuba.
They use the moth as an animal model.
This video was the 1st place winner of the video contest of the second version of SBBI course (2012)
Animal Echolocation - Science Experiments - Porpoises Echolocation - Science Channel
Animal Echolocation - Science Experiments - Porpoises Echolocation - Science Channel
http://youtu.be/6EkP760dgpw
Original: https://vimeo.com/118710998
Creative ...
Animal Echolocation - Science Experiments - Porpoises Echolocation - Science Channel
http://youtu.be/6EkP760dgpw
Original: https://vimeo.com/118710998
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/2797468?hl=en
Author: American Scientist - https://vimeo.com/amscimag
Animal Echolocation - Science Experiments - Porpoises Echolocation - Science Channel
wn.com/Animal Echolocation Science Experiments Porpoises Echolocation Science Channel
Animal Echolocation - Science Experiments - Porpoises Echolocation - Science Channel
http://youtu.be/6EkP760dgpw
Original: https://vimeo.com/118710998
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/2797468?hl=en
Author: American Scientist - https://vimeo.com/amscimag
Animal Echolocation - Science Experiments - Porpoises Echolocation - Science Channel
- published: 26 Feb 2015
- views: 487
Animalist & DNews: The Amazing Connection Between Bats And Dolphins
Seeing with your eyes is sooo old school.. echolocation is where it's at! This super useful form of sight allows animals like dolphins and bats to navigate all ...
Seeing with your eyes is sooo old school.. echolocation is where it's at! This super useful form of sight allows animals like dolphins and bats to navigate all kinds of places. So how did these animals grow to develop sonar and how does a biologically-based sonar system work? Anthony is joined by Animalist host Alex Farnham to explain.
Read More:
Bats, Dolphins and the Genetic Evolution of Echolocation
http://guardianlv.com/2013/09/bats-dolphins-and-the-genetic-evolution-of-echolocation/
"What is the similarity between a bat and a dolphin? Most people's immediate answer would be "not a lot." However, a group of researchers have recently sought to investigate the genetic profiles of these two unrelated species, based upon a single similarity in their behavior."
Genome-wide signatures of convergent evolution in echolocating mammals
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature12511.html
"Echolocation is a complex phenotypic trait that has evolved independently in bats and whales, and which involves the production, reception and auditory processing of ultrasonic pulses for obstacle avoidance, orientation and hunting."
Queen Mary scientists uncover genetic similarities between bats and dolphins
http://www.qmul.ac.uk/media/news/items/se/113396.html
"The evolution of similar traits in different species, a process known as convergent evolution, is widespread not only at the physical level, but also at the genetic level, according to new research led by scientists at Queen Mary University of London and published in Nature this week."
Watch More:
Dolphins Have Names:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ycRaQvhwrvs
5 Insect Superpowers:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-t_4f8Q8l0
____________________
DNews is dedicated to satisfying your curiosity and to bringing you mind-bending stories & perspectives you won't find anywhere else! New videos twice daily.
Watch More DNews on TestTube http://testtube.com/dnews
Subscribe now! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=dnewschannel
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Discovery News http://discoverynews.com
wn.com/Animalist Dnews The Amazing Connection Between Bats And Dolphins
Seeing with your eyes is sooo old school.. echolocation is where it's at! This super useful form of sight allows animals like dolphins and bats to navigate all kinds of places. So how did these animals grow to develop sonar and how does a biologically-based sonar system work? Anthony is joined by Animalist host Alex Farnham to explain.
Read More:
Bats, Dolphins and the Genetic Evolution of Echolocation
http://guardianlv.com/2013/09/bats-dolphins-and-the-genetic-evolution-of-echolocation/
"What is the similarity between a bat and a dolphin? Most people's immediate answer would be "not a lot." However, a group of researchers have recently sought to investigate the genetic profiles of these two unrelated species, based upon a single similarity in their behavior."
Genome-wide signatures of convergent evolution in echolocating mammals
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature12511.html
"Echolocation is a complex phenotypic trait that has evolved independently in bats and whales, and which involves the production, reception and auditory processing of ultrasonic pulses for obstacle avoidance, orientation and hunting."
Queen Mary scientists uncover genetic similarities between bats and dolphins
http://www.qmul.ac.uk/media/news/items/se/113396.html
"The evolution of similar traits in different species, a process known as convergent evolution, is widespread not only at the physical level, but also at the genetic level, according to new research led by scientists at Queen Mary University of London and published in Nature this week."
Watch More:
Dolphins Have Names:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ycRaQvhwrvs
5 Insect Superpowers:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-t_4f8Q8l0
____________________
DNews is dedicated to satisfying your curiosity and to bringing you mind-bending stories & perspectives you won't find anywhere else! New videos twice daily.
Watch More DNews on TestTube http://testtube.com/dnews
Subscribe now! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=dnewschannel
DNews on Twitter http://twitter.com/dnews
Anthony Carboni on Twitter http://twitter.com/acarboni
Laci Green on Twitter http://twitter.com/gogreen18
Trace Dominguez on Twitter http://twitter.com/trace501
DNews on Facebook http://facebook.com/dnews
DNews on Google+ http://gplus.to/dnews
Discovery News http://discoverynews.com
- published: 10 Sep 2013
- views: 29754
Blind Boy Sees With Sound - Echolocation - Extraordinary Animals - Series 2 - Earth
Milo the Dolphin uses Sonar to locate the world around him. Incredible school boy Sam is learning how to tap into this skill and become an echolocator.
Subscri...
Milo the Dolphin uses Sonar to locate the world around him. Incredible school boy Sam is learning how to tap into this skill and become an echolocator.
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=BBCEarth
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.
wn.com/Blind Boy Sees With Sound Echolocation Extraordinary Animals Series 2 Earth
Milo the Dolphin uses Sonar to locate the world around him. Incredible school boy Sam is learning how to tap into this skill and become an echolocator.
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=BBCEarth
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.
- published: 19 Mar 2014
- views: 63944
Bats hunting their prey - Top Bat - BBC
Bats hunt by echolocation but, as this mesmerising footage shows, diiferent methods for capturing prey are used by these beautiful nocturnal creatures. Visit ht...
Bats hunt by echolocation but, as this mesmerising footage shows, diiferent methods for capturing prey are used by these beautiful nocturnal creatures. Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos and watch more high quality videos on the new BBC Earth YouTube channel here: http://www.youtube.com/bbcearth
wn.com/Bats Hunting Their Prey Top Bat BBC
Bats hunt by echolocation but, as this mesmerising footage shows, diiferent methods for capturing prey are used by these beautiful nocturnal creatures. Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos and watch more high quality videos on the new BBC Earth YouTube channel here: http://www.youtube.com/bbcearth
- published: 20 Nov 2009
- views: 144415
JumpStart Animal Adventures Karaoke (2002) - Echolocation [Song]
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave b...
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave blast
I realease to find food fast
Whoop whoop
Bionic ears, ultra sonic frequencies,
I can hear
Whoop whoop
I sleep all day, upside down, in my cave
Whoop whoop
I fly by night, don't need light,
eat meals in-flight.
[Chorus]
Whoop whoop
A squeal, like that hits an insect
bounces back
Whoop whoop
Sound reflections will determine my direction
[Chorus] x2
wn.com/Jumpstart Animal Adventures Karaoke (2002) Echolocation Song
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave blast
I realease to find food fast
Whoop whoop
Bionic ears, ultra sonic frequencies,
I can hear
Whoop whoop
I sleep all day, upside down, in my cave
Whoop whoop
I fly by night, don't need light,
eat meals in-flight.
[Chorus]
Whoop whoop
A squeal, like that hits an insect
bounces back
Whoop whoop
Sound reflections will determine my direction
[Chorus] x2
- published: 16 May 2015
- views: 3224
Blind man uses echolocation like a dolphin - Extraordinary Animals - Series 2 - Earth
Marine Mammalogist, Dr Magnus Wahlber meets Daniel who has been a human echolocator for 42 years. Daniel has the extraordinary ability to use a sonar like techn...
Marine Mammalogist, Dr Magnus Wahlber meets Daniel who has been a human echolocator for 42 years. Daniel has the extraordinary ability to use a sonar like technique to experience the world around him.
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=BBCEarth
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.
wn.com/Blind Man Uses Echolocation Like A Dolphin Extraordinary Animals Series 2 Earth
Marine Mammalogist, Dr Magnus Wahlber meets Daniel who has been a human echolocator for 42 years. Daniel has the extraordinary ability to use a sonar like technique to experience the world around him.
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=BBCEarth
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.
- published: 26 Mar 2014
- views: 35830
Super Smart Dolphin Answers Questions - Extraordinary Animals - Earth
The Echo Location Visualization and Interface System (ELVIS) allows Dolphins to make choices and answer questions. Luna the young Dolphin grasped the concept qu...
The Echo Location Visualization and Interface System (ELVIS) allows Dolphins to make choices and answer questions. Luna the young Dolphin grasped the concept quickest and is eager to choose her own meals and please her trainers.
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=BBCEarth
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.
wn.com/Super Smart Dolphin Answers Questions Extraordinary Animals Earth
The Echo Location Visualization and Interface System (ELVIS) allows Dolphins to make choices and answer questions. Luna the young Dolphin grasped the concept quickest and is eager to choose her own meals and please her trainers.
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=BBCEarth
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.
- published: 11 Dec 2013
- views: 1129127
JumpStart Animal Adventures Karaoke (2002) - Echolocation [Karaoke]
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave b...
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave blast
I realease to find food fast
Whoop whoop
Bionic ears, ultra sonic frequencies,
I can hear
Whoop whoop
I sleep all day, upside down, in my cave
Whoop whoop
I fly by night, don't need light,
eat meals in-flight.
[Chorus]
Whoop whoop
A squeal, like that hits an insect
bounces back
Whoop whoop
Sound reflections will determine my direction
[Chorus] x2
wn.com/Jumpstart Animal Adventures Karaoke (2002) Echolocation Karaoke
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave blast
I realease to find food fast
Whoop whoop
Bionic ears, ultra sonic frequencies,
I can hear
Whoop whoop
I sleep all day, upside down, in my cave
Whoop whoop
I fly by night, don't need light,
eat meals in-flight.
[Chorus]
Whoop whoop
A squeal, like that hits an insect
bounces back
Whoop whoop
Sound reflections will determine my direction
[Chorus] x2
- published: 05 Aug 2015
- views: 889
Animal Echolocation - Bat in the Cave
There are various species of bats. Bats have a very interesting character of echolocation ability beside Dolphin. This species of bats was found inside the cave...
There are various species of bats. Bats have a very interesting character of echolocation ability beside Dolphin. This species of bats was found inside the cave arround Ayamaru Plateau - Central of Birds Head Peninsula West Papua
wn.com/Animal Echolocation Bat In The Cave
There are various species of bats. Bats have a very interesting character of echolocation ability beside Dolphin. This species of bats was found inside the cave arround Ayamaru Plateau - Central of Birds Head Peninsula West Papua
- published: 12 Apr 2015
- views: 246
All About Bats for Kids: Animal Videos for Children - FreeSchool
Bats may fly in the night, but there's no reason to fear these amazing mammals! Bats are one of the most common types of mammals on the planet and live on almos...
Bats may fly in the night, but there's no reason to fear these amazing mammals! Bats are one of the most common types of mammals on the planet and live on almost every continent. Most bats eat insects, some eat fruit, some eat nectar, and a few even eat blood. They are amazing creatures: not only are they the only flying mammal, but they also use echolocation to find their food and navigate in total darkness. Bats are cool!
Like this video if you want to see more videos about ANIMALS!
Subscribe to FreeSchool: https://www.youtube.com/user/watchfreeschool?sub_confirmation=1
Visit us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/watchFreeSchool
Check our our companion channel, FreeSchool Mom! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTcEtHRQhqiCZIIb77LyDmA
And our NEW channel for little ones, FreeSchool Early Birds!
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3OV62x86XHwaqsxLsuy8dA
Music: Jaunty Gumption, Professor and the Plant - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Video and Image Credits:
Some video courtesy of the US Fish and Wildlife Service.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/deegephotos/4553895076/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/criminalintent/9535912006/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/incandopolis/7224428768/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/frogbelly/6603769155/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/karen_roe/8728504852/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/milbot79/6445243763/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEQuFlSzv84
https://www.flickr.com/photos/batlove/8752313970/
wn.com/All About Bats For Kids Animal Videos For Children Freeschool
Bats may fly in the night, but there's no reason to fear these amazing mammals! Bats are one of the most common types of mammals on the planet and live on almost every continent. Most bats eat insects, some eat fruit, some eat nectar, and a few even eat blood. They are amazing creatures: not only are they the only flying mammal, but they also use echolocation to find their food and navigate in total darkness. Bats are cool!
Like this video if you want to see more videos about ANIMALS!
Subscribe to FreeSchool: https://www.youtube.com/user/watchfreeschool?sub_confirmation=1
Visit us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/watchFreeSchool
Check our our companion channel, FreeSchool Mom! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTcEtHRQhqiCZIIb77LyDmA
And our NEW channel for little ones, FreeSchool Early Birds!
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3OV62x86XHwaqsxLsuy8dA
Music: Jaunty Gumption, Professor and the Plant - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Video and Image Credits:
Some video courtesy of the US Fish and Wildlife Service.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/deegephotos/4553895076/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/criminalintent/9535912006/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/incandopolis/7224428768/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/frogbelly/6603769155/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/karen_roe/8728504852/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/milbot79/6445243763/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEQuFlSzv84
https://www.flickr.com/photos/batlove/8752313970/
- published: 29 Oct 2015
- views: 12780
Animal Echolocation - Bat in the Island
Daytime roosting area for a large colony of Fruit Bats on Um Island in Makbon - Birds Head Peninsula region West Papua. Engine noise on Boat stirred them....
Daytime roosting area for a large colony of Fruit Bats on Um Island in Makbon - Birds Head Peninsula region West Papua. Engine noise on Boat stirred them.
wn.com/Animal Echolocation Bat In The Island
Daytime roosting area for a large colony of Fruit Bats on Um Island in Makbon - Birds Head Peninsula region West Papua. Engine noise on Boat stirred them.
- published: 10 Apr 2015
- views: 110
Champ Search : Fish Finder & Echolocation of an unknown animal comparison.
Here is a comparison of a Fish Finder recording on a spectrogram and the recording we captured on July 31, 2014 in Lake Champlain of an unknown animal. There is...
Here is a comparison of a Fish Finder recording on a spectrogram and the recording we captured on July 31, 2014 in Lake Champlain of an unknown animal. There is a major difference between a Fish Finder and the recording we captured which is clearly a biological sound.
The July 31st recording is 298 Hz+/-6.0 Hz
wn.com/Champ Search Fish Finder Echolocation Of An Unknown Animal Comparison.
Here is a comparison of a Fish Finder recording on a spectrogram and the recording we captured on July 31, 2014 in Lake Champlain of an unknown animal. There is a major difference between a Fish Finder and the recording we captured which is clearly a biological sound.
The July 31st recording is 298 Hz+/-6.0 Hz
- published: 14 Nov 2014
- views: 450
JumpStart Animal Adventures Karaoke (2002) - Echolocation - Sing with the Animals [Karaoke]
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave b...
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave blast
I realease to find food fast
Whoop whoop
Bionic ears, ultra sonic frequencies,
I can hear
Whoop whoop
I sleep all day, upside down, in my cave
Whoop whoop
I fly by night, don't need light,
eat meals in-flight.
[Chorus]
Whoop whoop
A squeal, like that hits an insect
bounces back
Whoop whoop
Sound reflections will determine my direction
[Chorus] x2
wn.com/Jumpstart Animal Adventures Karaoke (2002) Echolocation Sing With The Animals Karaoke
[Chorus]
Echo, Echo, Echo, Echolocation
I find my prey, I find my way
Echolocation
I'm little brown bat
Hungry for a midnight snack
Whoop whoop
The soun wave blast
I realease to find food fast
Whoop whoop
Bionic ears, ultra sonic frequencies,
I can hear
Whoop whoop
I sleep all day, upside down, in my cave
Whoop whoop
I fly by night, don't need light,
eat meals in-flight.
[Chorus]
Whoop whoop
A squeal, like that hits an insect
bounces back
Whoop whoop
Sound reflections will determine my direction
[Chorus] x2
- published: 01 Sep 2015
- views: 229
BAT SENSE - by Nature Video
This stunning slow motion footage shows how bats use echolocation to find water. We know how bats echolocate to hunt insects, but this is the first study to sh...
This stunning slow motion footage shows how bats use echolocation to find water. We know how bats echolocate to hunt insects, but this is the first study to show how they recognise large, flat objects like ponds. Moreover, by testing young bats that had never encountered a pond or river before, the researchers showed that bats seem to have a built-in ability to recognize these important features of their environment. Read the original research paper here: http://www.nature.com/ncomms/journal/v1/n8/full/ncomms1110.html
wn.com/Bat Sense By Nature Video
This stunning slow motion footage shows how bats use echolocation to find water. We know how bats echolocate to hunt insects, but this is the first study to show how they recognise large, flat objects like ponds. Moreover, by testing young bats that had never encountered a pond or river before, the researchers showed that bats seem to have a built-in ability to recognize these important features of their environment. Read the original research paper here: http://www.nature.com/ncomms/journal/v1/n8/full/ncomms1110.html
- published: 29 Oct 2010
- views: 626625
ECHOLOCATION: BATS AND WHALES
Video assignment for ANM103 by Isabelle Sharkie and Jessica Bolin.
Whale, whale, whale, what do we have here? Looks like an over-whale-ming video on echolocati...
Video assignment for ANM103 by Isabelle Sharkie and Jessica Bolin.
Whale, whale, whale, what do we have here? Looks like an over-whale-ming video on echolocation. I hope it doesn't drive you batty! Or you might need some cetacean to calm you down.
wn.com/Echolocation Bats And Whales
Video assignment for ANM103 by Isabelle Sharkie and Jessica Bolin.
Whale, whale, whale, what do we have here? Looks like an over-whale-ming video on echolocation. I hope it doesn't drive you batty! Or you might need some cetacean to calm you down.
- published: 09 Oct 2015
- views: 178
Studying the a Porpoise's Hearing With Echolocation
Studying the hearing of a harbor porpoise at Fjord&B;ælt while performing a psychophysical echolocation task. The animal is asked to swim down to the green hoop....
Studying the hearing of a harbor porpoise at Fjord&B;ælt while performing a psychophysical echolocation task. The animal is asked to swim down to the green hoop. Right in front of the animal are two screens: The first one is opaque and the second one is an acoustic shield. In some trials an 18-centimeter long cylinder is lowered down on the other side of the two screens. Once the porpoise is stationed in the hoop, the acoustic shield is lifted so the animal can detect the cylinder with echolocation but not with vision.
In the first trial of the video the cylinder is not present and the porpoise remains in the hoop until the trainer blows the whistle. In the second trial the cylinder is present, and, if the porpoise detects the cylinder, it swims up to the surface and puts its nose on the red indicator. A correct response is rewarded with a fish.
Read more about this ability and research: http://www.americanscientist.org/issues/feature/2015/1/the-acoustic-world-of-harbor-porpoises
The sequence was recorded at Fjord&B;ælt.
wn.com/Studying The A Porpoise's Hearing With Echolocation
Studying the hearing of a harbor porpoise at Fjord&B;ælt while performing a psychophysical echolocation task. The animal is asked to swim down to the green hoop. Right in front of the animal are two screens: The first one is opaque and the second one is an acoustic shield. In some trials an 18-centimeter long cylinder is lowered down on the other side of the two screens. Once the porpoise is stationed in the hoop, the acoustic shield is lifted so the animal can detect the cylinder with echolocation but not with vision.
In the first trial of the video the cylinder is not present and the porpoise remains in the hoop until the trainer blows the whistle. In the second trial the cylinder is present, and, if the porpoise detects the cylinder, it swims up to the surface and puts its nose on the red indicator. A correct response is rewarded with a fish.
Read more about this ability and research: http://www.americanscientist.org/issues/feature/2015/1/the-acoustic-world-of-harbor-porpoises
The sequence was recorded at Fjord&B;ælt.
- published: 16 Dec 2014
- views: 347
Doppler Effect and Echolocation
Physics project on the application of the Doppler Effect in animals' echolocation.
Music channel - http://youtube.com/kuchuljungmusic
Facebook - http://facebo...
Physics project on the application of the Doppler Effect in animals' echolocation.
Music channel - http://youtube.com/kuchuljungmusic
Facebook - http://facebook.com/kcjrecords
Twitter - http://twitter.com/kuchuljung
SoundCloud - http://soundcloud.com/kuchuljung
Website - http://kuchuljungmusic.webs.com
Instagram - http://instagram.com/kuchuljung
Tumblr - http://kuchuljung.tumblr.com
wn.com/Doppler Effect And Echolocation
Physics project on the application of the Doppler Effect in animals' echolocation.
Music channel - http://youtube.com/kuchuljungmusic
Facebook - http://facebook.com/kcjrecords
Twitter - http://twitter.com/kuchuljung
SoundCloud - http://soundcloud.com/kuchuljung
Website - http://kuchuljungmusic.webs.com
Instagram - http://instagram.com/kuchuljung
Tumblr - http://kuchuljung.tumblr.com
- published: 05 May 2014
- views: 629
Bats Using Echolocation Around Humans?
Please SUBSCRIBE NOW! http://bit.ly/BWchannel
Watch More - http://bit.ly/BTbats
On this week's Behind the Adventure, Coyote answers a question about the use...
Please SUBSCRIBE NOW! http://bit.ly/BWchannel
Watch More - http://bit.ly/BTbats
On this week's Behind the Adventure, Coyote answers a question about the use of echolocation in Bats and talks about his first hand experience with them in season 1 of Breaking Trail.
Keep the questions coming, next week we might answer yours!
The Brave Wilderness Channel is your one stop connection to a wild world of adventure and amazing up close animal encounters!
Follow along with adventurer and animal expert Coyote Peterson and his crew as they lead you on three exciting expedition series - Breaking Trail, Dragon Tails and Coyote's Backyard - featuring everything from Grizzly Bears and Crocodiles to Rattlesnakes and Tarantulas...each episode offers an opportunity to learn something new!
So SUBSCRIBE NOW and join the adventure that brings you closer to the most beloved, bizarre and misunderstood creatures known to man!
GET READY...things are about to get WILD!
New Episodes Every Tuesday at 9AM EST!
Subscribe Now! https://www.youtube.com/BraveWilderness
Find more info at: https://www.CoyotePeterson.com
Coyote Peterson on Twitter: https://twitter.com/COYOTEPETERSON
Coyote Peterson on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CoyotePeterson
Coyote Peterson G+: https://plus.google.com/100310803754690323805/about
Photo Credits: Wikipedia and Photofeed
wn.com/Bats Using Echolocation Around Humans
Please SUBSCRIBE NOW! http://bit.ly/BWchannel
Watch More - http://bit.ly/BTbats
On this week's Behind the Adventure, Coyote answers a question about the use of echolocation in Bats and talks about his first hand experience with them in season 1 of Breaking Trail.
Keep the questions coming, next week we might answer yours!
The Brave Wilderness Channel is your one stop connection to a wild world of adventure and amazing up close animal encounters!
Follow along with adventurer and animal expert Coyote Peterson and his crew as they lead you on three exciting expedition series - Breaking Trail, Dragon Tails and Coyote's Backyard - featuring everything from Grizzly Bears and Crocodiles to Rattlesnakes and Tarantulas...each episode offers an opportunity to learn something new!
So SUBSCRIBE NOW and join the adventure that brings you closer to the most beloved, bizarre and misunderstood creatures known to man!
GET READY...things are about to get WILD!
New Episodes Every Tuesday at 9AM EST!
Subscribe Now! https://www.youtube.com/BraveWilderness
Find more info at: https://www.CoyotePeterson.com
Coyote Peterson on Twitter: https://twitter.com/COYOTEPETERSON
Coyote Peterson on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CoyotePeterson
Coyote Peterson G+: https://plus.google.com/100310803754690323805/about
Photo Credits: Wikipedia and Photofeed
- published: 14 Aug 2015
- views: 32803
Rouge the Bat- Jumpstart Echolocation
Rouge sings the Echolocation bat song from Jumpstart Animal Adventures for the PC...
Rouge sings the Echolocation bat song from Jumpstart Animal Adventures for the PC
wn.com/Rouge The Bat Jumpstart Echolocation
Rouge sings the Echolocation bat song from Jumpstart Animal Adventures for the PC
- published: 05 Sep 2011
- views: 10460
Modern Human Migration and Echolocating Eels
Scientists have found 80,000-year-old modern human teeth in a Chinese cave, challenging the most widely accepted timelines of human migration. And electric eels...
Scientists have found 80,000-year-old modern human teeth in a Chinese cave, challenging the most widely accepted timelines of human migration. And electric eels use electricity to both attack and track their prey!
Hosted by: Hank Green
----------
Dooblydoo thanks go to the following Patreon supporters -- we couldn't make SciShow without them! Shout out to Justin Ove, Justin Lentz, David Campos, Philippe von Bergen, Chris Peters, Lilly Grainger, Happy Birthday!!, and Fatima Iqbal.
----------
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Sources:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature15640.html
http://www.nature.com/articles/doi:10.1038/ncomms9638
http://anthro.palomar.edu/homo2/mod_homo_4.htm
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/15/us-science-teeth-idUSKCN0S82CB20151015
http://www.nps.gov/grba/learn/nature/flowstone.htm
http://askanaturalist.com/how-do-electric-eels-generate-electricity/
http://www.ucs.louisiana.edu/~jxa4003/Albert%20PDF's/Albert-Crampton-Electroreception-proofs.pdf
http://animals.mom.me/electric-eels-live-3669.h tml
wn.com/Modern Human Migration And Echolocating Eels
Scientists have found 80,000-year-old modern human teeth in a Chinese cave, challenging the most widely accepted timelines of human migration. And electric eels use electricity to both attack and track their prey!
Hosted by: Hank Green
----------
Dooblydoo thanks go to the following Patreon supporters -- we couldn't make SciShow without them! Shout out to Justin Ove, Justin Lentz, David Campos, Philippe von Bergen, Chris Peters, Lilly Grainger, Happy Birthday!!, and Fatima Iqbal.
----------
Like SciShow? Want to help support us, and also get things to put on your walls, cover your torso and hold your liquids? Check out our awesome products over at DFTBA Records: http://dftba.com/scishow
Or help support us by becoming our patron on Patreon:
https://www.patreon.com/scishow
----------
Looking for SciShow elsewhere on the internet?
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/scishow
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/scishow
Tumblr: http://scishow.tumblr.com
Instagram: http://instagram.com/thescishow
Sources:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature15640.html
http://www.nature.com/articles/doi:10.1038/ncomms9638
http://anthro.palomar.edu/homo2/mod_homo_4.htm
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/15/us-science-teeth-idUSKCN0S82CB20151015
http://www.nps.gov/grba/learn/nature/flowstone.htm
http://askanaturalist.com/how-do-electric-eels-generate-electricity/
http://www.ucs.louisiana.edu/~jxa4003/Albert%20PDF's/Albert-Crampton-Electroreception-proofs.pdf
http://animals.mom.me/electric-eels-live-3669.h tml
- published: 23 Oct 2015
- views: 180985
Animal senses
Animal senses like infrared, electroreception, magnetoreception and echolocation / sonar allow them to perceive the environment in different ways to humans but ...
Animal senses like infrared, electroreception, magnetoreception and echolocation / sonar allow them to perceive the environment in different ways to humans but there are more than five senses that humans can use but sight and hearing dominate our perception.
wn.com/Animal Senses
Animal senses like infrared, electroreception, magnetoreception and echolocation / sonar allow them to perceive the environment in different ways to humans but there are more than five senses that humans can use but sight and hearing dominate our perception.
- published: 12 Oct 2014
- views: 1527
How do moth ears deal with bat's echolocation?
Author: Yohami Fernandez
She is a PhD student at the Bioacustic and Neuroethology Research group (Dr. Mora). Universidad de la Habana, La Habana, Cuba.
They use...
Author: Yohami Fernandez
She is a PhD student at the Bioacustic and Neuroethology Research group (Dr. Mora). Universidad de la Habana, La Habana, Cuba.
They use the moth as an animal model.
This video was the 1st place winner of the video contest of the second version of SBBI course (2012)
wn.com/How Do Moth Ears Deal With Bat's Echolocation
Author: Yohami Fernandez
She is a PhD student at the Bioacustic and Neuroethology Research group (Dr. Mora). Universidad de la Habana, La Habana, Cuba.
They use the moth as an animal model.
This video was the 1st place winner of the video contest of the second version of SBBI course (2012)
- published: 21 Mar 2013
- views: 131
-
US NAVY Dolphins & Sea Lions - Fascinating Animal Documentary
US NAVY DOLPHINS and SEA LIONS - Used for national defense and protection of marine fleets and submarines in port by the United States Defense Department. A fascinating documentary video.
TAGS:
"Dolphin (Animal)" sea lion US NAVY Department of Defense Ocean Boat Submarine Training Captivity "Sea Lion (Animal)" dolphins sonar echolocation mine defuse mitigation diver SEALS naval frigate battles
-
Commonalities (Animal Atlas)
Be our guest! Let's take a visit with some animals who are closely related and share similar physical adaptations but don't necessarily look or behave alike one another including the flight birds and bats, the water-walking basilisk lizard and the jacana, as well as the echolocation of dolphins, bats and whales.
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Listening in the Deep -- Using Sound to Study Animals We Cannot See
(Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) Marine animals like the elusive beaked whale are notoriously difficult to study, as they are rarely seen. Fortunately, scientists can hear them! These animals use echolocation to forage and those sounds can be recorded in even the most remote and inaccessible areas of the ocean. Join Simone Baumann-Pickering as she details how patterns of echolocation are allowing s
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Zoo Crafting: Side Quest! Echolocation Practice!
We do a little more adventuring in the peaceful (most of the time) realm of Twilight Forest, collecting bits of cotton and roots for our exhibits and then... are those bats we hear?! And could that be... the moan of a zombie villager?!
Welcome to the zoo! From humble beginnings we're going to build a zoo for the ages, complete with beautiful habitats for our animals, fountains and statues to deco
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C'est pas sorcier -DAUPHINS
La chaine officielle de l'émission de France 3.
C'est pas sorcier, le magazine de la découverte et de la science.
Cette semaine, Fred, Jamy et Sabine ont effectué une petite plongée en compagnie d'acrobates hors pair : les dauphins du Marineland d'Antibes. Excellents plongeurs, Sabine et Fred sont partis observer de près ces mammifères marins à l'éternel sourire. Avec aux, Sabine a réalisé quelq
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ECHO: Meet the Scientist: Lake Champlain -- Home To A Mystery Animal?
I attended this talk on July 16, 2009, given by Elizabeth von Muggenthaler of animalvoice.com. The whole talk was fascinating, covering the severely endangered Sumatran rhinoceros that sings like a whale, tiger paralysis of prey, and the incredible healing qualities of cat purrs (who knew?).
Watch it all if you can, but listen carefully at the 18:00 mark. It is clear from her evidence that there
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The Nature Of Things Mysteries Of The Animal Mind
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Night & Day: Nocturnal & Diurnal (Animal Atlas)
Join us on an EXPLORATION into the world of animals that are not only nocturnal and diurnal, but crepuscular. We look at why animals are awake at one time instead of another, and what special sensory adaptations they have for nocturnal living.
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The boy who sees without eyes - Extraordinary People
The boy who sees without eyes - Extraordinary People
A documentary about Ben Underwood, a boy who has taught himself to use echo location to navigate around the world. Ben Underwood is blind, but has managed to do some truly extraordinary feats.
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Nature's Engineer | The Extent of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films
Nature's Engineer | The Extent of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films
Animal cognition describes the mental capacities of animals and its study. It has developed out of comparative psychology, including the study of animal conditioning and learning, but has also been strongly influenced by research in ethology, behavioral ecology, and evolutionary psychology. The alternative
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Animal Navigation || Radcliffe Institute
WELCOMING REMARKS
Lizabeth Cohen 00:16
Dean, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies
Department of History
Harvard University
John Huth 7:32
Donner Professor of Science
Codirector of the Science Program
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Harvard University
ANIMAL NAVIGATION 16:50
Susanne Åkesson 19:53
Professor and Principal Investigator
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Bats, echolocation, and a Newtonian view of Einstein's Special Relativity
This is a seminar recorded on June 24 2014 in the School of Mathematics and Statistics, UNSW. A/Prof N J Wildberger shows how to derive the main kinematic formulas of Special Relativity by taking a novel Newtonian point of view, emphasizing the role of inertial observers rather than inertial frames, and by framing the discussion in terms of sound (not light!) and how two bats might set up coordina
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White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
The beluga whale or white whale (Delphinapterus leucas) is an Arctic and sub-Arctic cetacean. It is one of two members of the family Monodontidae, along with the narwhal, and the only member of the genus Delphinapterus. This marine mammal is
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Ocean (Be a predator) Documentary HD
Imagine you are flying above the African savannah, swimming under Antarctic ice, climbing up Amazon trees and diving the Marianna abyss.
Imagine you can suddenly see in the night, hear ultra-sounds, decode radar waves and detect electric fields.
1,2,3... you are a lion or else a dolphin, a bear or a vulture!
Using the latest technologies of image treatment and stock footage from Saint Thomas Pr
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Lori Marino: Dolphin Brains: An Alternative to Complex Intelligence in Primates
In the past three decades, new research has revealed that dolphin brains are not only large but are extremely complex in their organization, forming the neurobiological basis for the considerable intelligence and socio-cultural characteristics of dolphins and their relatives, the whales. Dolphin brains are larger than expected for their body size and contain numerous features associated with sophi
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Echolocation & Hearing Protection In Cetaceans
Join us for a presentation with Dr. Paul Nachtigall on the echolocation and hearing sensitivity control in cetaceans.
More info: http://www.vanaqua.org/cetacean-echolocation
-
Moby-Dick The Massive White Sperm Whale
Find out about THE OUTLANDER CHANNEL at: http://www.theoutlanderchannel.com
Discover more by following us on:
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Moby-Dick The Massive White Sperm Whale
Sperm whales are easily recognized by their massive heads and prominent rounded foreheads. They have the lar
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23. Auditory cortex 2: Language; bats and echolocation
MIT 9.04 Sensory Systems, Fall 2013
View the complete course: http://ocw.mit.edu/9-04F13
Instructor: Chris Brown
This video discusses echolocation by bats and the cortical processing of language.
License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
More information at http://ocw.mit.edu/terms
More courses at http://ocw.mit.edu
-
Orca Simulator By Gluten Free Games -Part 4 - Compatible with iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch, Android
Played By 11 year - old Joseph David.
Dive into the arctic ocean and live life as an Orca! Survive in a vast underwater world filled with massive whales and dangerous predators! Raise your family, hunt with your pod, and battle for your life against aquatic predators like the White Shark, Narwhal, and the Kraken!
Download the Orca Simulator today while it's 50% OFF for a very limited time!
Game
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How Animals Hear
-
Dolphin Simulator By Gluten Free Games -Compatible with iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.
Played By 10 years old Joseph David.
Dive into the ocean and swim to your hearts content as a wild Dolphin! Explore a vast underwater world filled with dangerous predators and hidden treasures. Start your own family, hunt for food, and battle for your life against fierce aquatic animals like orcas, sharks, and mermaids!
Download the Dolphin Simulator today while it's 50% OFF for a very limited t
-
Nature Shock: When Killer Whales Attack
Nature Shock: When Killer Whales Attack
I don't own the footage or audio used in this video.
-
Gameplay Commentary: Magic School Bus Explores the World of Animals
Ever wanted to take a field trip on the Magic School Bus? Come join me as I do just that, and along the way we'll put together a skeleton, play with some stickers, and play in a gameshow!
All content shown in the game is owned by Scholastic and Microsoft Corporation. This video is intended to educate and entertain. I own nothing except my commentary.
US NAVY Dolphins & Sea Lions - Fascinating Animal Documentary
US NAVY DOLPHINS and SEA LIONS - Used for national defense and protection of marine fleets and submarines in port by the United States Defense Department. A fas...
US NAVY DOLPHINS and SEA LIONS - Used for national defense and protection of marine fleets and submarines in port by the United States Defense Department. A fascinating documentary video.
TAGS:
"Dolphin (Animal)" sea lion US NAVY Department of Defense Ocean Boat Submarine Training Captivity "Sea Lion (Animal)" dolphins sonar echolocation mine defuse mitigation diver SEALS naval frigate battleship sailor seaman attack aircraft carrier marine wildlife sea world Flipper intelligence language nuclear sub
TUFFY, THE SEA TEACHER (1972)
http://archive.org/details/gov.dod.dimoc.25781
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
This video was created by the United States Federal Government and is in the public domain for any use including commercial use.
Department of Defense
PIN 25781
TUFFY, THE SEA TEACHER
A STUDY OF DOLPHINS AND OTHER SEA ANIMALS, SUCH AS THE WHALE AND SEA LION, IN MANS CONTINUING SEARCH FOR KNOWLEDGE OF THE SEA AND HOW TO SURVIVE IN IT. SHOWN ARE THE METHODS OF CATCHING, TRAINING AND TESTING DOLPHINS AND THE RESULTS OF SOME OF THESE TESTS IN WHICH -TUFFY- WAS USED AS THE SUBJECT.
Producer: Department of Defense
Creative Commons license: CC0 1.0 Universal
wn.com/US Navy Dolphins Sea Lions Fascinating Animal Documentary
US NAVY DOLPHINS and SEA LIONS - Used for national defense and protection of marine fleets and submarines in port by the United States Defense Department. A fascinating documentary video.
TAGS:
"Dolphin (Animal)" sea lion US NAVY Department of Defense Ocean Boat Submarine Training Captivity "Sea Lion (Animal)" dolphins sonar echolocation mine defuse mitigation diver SEALS naval frigate battleship sailor seaman attack aircraft carrier marine wildlife sea world Flipper intelligence language nuclear sub
TUFFY, THE SEA TEACHER (1972)
http://archive.org/details/gov.dod.dimoc.25781
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
This video was created by the United States Federal Government and is in the public domain for any use including commercial use.
Department of Defense
PIN 25781
TUFFY, THE SEA TEACHER
A STUDY OF DOLPHINS AND OTHER SEA ANIMALS, SUCH AS THE WHALE AND SEA LION, IN MANS CONTINUING SEARCH FOR KNOWLEDGE OF THE SEA AND HOW TO SURVIVE IN IT. SHOWN ARE THE METHODS OF CATCHING, TRAINING AND TESTING DOLPHINS AND THE RESULTS OF SOME OF THESE TESTS IN WHICH -TUFFY- WAS USED AS THE SUBJECT.
Producer: Department of Defense
Creative Commons license: CC0 1.0 Universal
- published: 04 Jul 2012
- views: 9686
Commonalities (Animal Atlas)
Be our guest! Let's take a visit with some animals who are closely related and share similar physical adaptations but don't necessarily look or behave alike one...
Be our guest! Let's take a visit with some animals who are closely related and share similar physical adaptations but don't necessarily look or behave alike one another including the flight birds and bats, the water-walking basilisk lizard and the jacana, as well as the echolocation of dolphins, bats and whales.
wn.com/Commonalities (Animal Atlas)
Be our guest! Let's take a visit with some animals who are closely related and share similar physical adaptations but don't necessarily look or behave alike one another including the flight birds and bats, the water-walking basilisk lizard and the jacana, as well as the echolocation of dolphins, bats and whales.
- published: 12 Aug 2014
- views: 6133
Listening in the Deep -- Using Sound to Study Animals We Cannot See
(Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) Marine animals like the elusive beaked whale are notoriously difficult to study, as they are rarely seen. Fortunately, scientists ...
(Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) Marine animals like the elusive beaked whale are notoriously difficult to study, as they are rarely seen. Fortunately, scientists can hear them! These animals use echolocation to forage and those sounds can be recorded in even the most remote and inaccessible areas of the ocean. Join Simone Baumann-Pickering as she details how patterns of echolocation are allowing scientists to document the natural acoustic behavior of a species, and determine if those natural patterns are being disturbed by man-made noise. Series: "Perspectives on Ocean Science" [3/2014] [Science] [Show ID: 26000]
wn.com/Listening In The Deep Using Sound To Study Animals We Cannot See
(Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) Marine animals like the elusive beaked whale are notoriously difficult to study, as they are rarely seen. Fortunately, scientists can hear them! These animals use echolocation to forage and those sounds can be recorded in even the most remote and inaccessible areas of the ocean. Join Simone Baumann-Pickering as she details how patterns of echolocation are allowing scientists to document the natural acoustic behavior of a species, and determine if those natural patterns are being disturbed by man-made noise. Series: "Perspectives on Ocean Science" [3/2014] [Science] [Show ID: 26000]
- published: 03 Mar 2014
- views: 3918
Zoo Crafting: Side Quest! Echolocation Practice!
We do a little more adventuring in the peaceful (most of the time) realm of Twilight Forest, collecting bits of cotton and roots for our exhibits and then... ar...
We do a little more adventuring in the peaceful (most of the time) realm of Twilight Forest, collecting bits of cotton and roots for our exhibits and then... are those bats we hear?! And could that be... the moan of a zombie villager?!
Welcome to the zoo! From humble beginnings we're going to build a zoo for the ages, complete with beautiful habitats for our animals, fountains and statues to decorate the zoo, museums, research centers, and even ice cream stands! Not to mention there is a whole world full of mysterious ruins and surprises to explore!
Server generously provided by: http://nitrous-networks.com/
Zoocast Zookeepers ::
- Caff & Lewbot [ http://www.youtube.com/caffcast ]
- Kafers [ http://www.youtube.com/kafers8bit ]
- Seri [ http://www.youtube.com/seriiiously ]
_______________________________________________
• Seri is a biologist-in-training with an intense passion for plants and filling her house to the brim with finches, potted plants, and biology "specimens" that look oddly like snail shells, mossy, and twigs covering every available surface.
She is also big into spreading her love of the natural world through the entertaining medium of story-telling through video games! Jump on in and see what our amazing, animal-loving, plant-studying community is all about! And remember, stay curious! •
_______________________________________________
• Seri! Let's Play! Official Website: http://www.mossleaf.net
• By the Leaf! Etsy Shop: https://www.etsy.com/shop/ByTheLeaf
• Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Seri-Lets-Play/1467689196778000
• Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/Seriiiously
• Twitter: https://twitter.com/Seriiiously
Music: "Unlimited" by Lee Rosevere used with permission.
_______________________________________________
Mods in Use Include:
- DrZharks Mocreatures
- Biomes o' Plenty
- Pam's HarvestCraft
- Rei Minimap
- Doggy Talents
- Ran's Penguins
- Backpack Mod
- Wild Caves
- Chococraft
- Chisel Mod
- Mega Plant Pack
- Modular Plant Pot Mod
- Biome Wand Mod
- Tropicraft
- Minefactory Reloaded
- Carpenters Blocks
- Tinkers Construct
- Fossil & Archaeology Mod
- Statues Mod
- Rail Craft
- Tree Capitator
- Bibliocraft
- Build Craft
- Custom NPCs
- Extra Biomes XL
- Microblocks
- Iron Chests
- Not Enough Items
- Optifine
wn.com/Zoo Crafting Side Quest Echolocation Practice
We do a little more adventuring in the peaceful (most of the time) realm of Twilight Forest, collecting bits of cotton and roots for our exhibits and then... are those bats we hear?! And could that be... the moan of a zombie villager?!
Welcome to the zoo! From humble beginnings we're going to build a zoo for the ages, complete with beautiful habitats for our animals, fountains and statues to decorate the zoo, museums, research centers, and even ice cream stands! Not to mention there is a whole world full of mysterious ruins and surprises to explore!
Server generously provided by: http://nitrous-networks.com/
Zoocast Zookeepers ::
- Caff & Lewbot [ http://www.youtube.com/caffcast ]
- Kafers [ http://www.youtube.com/kafers8bit ]
- Seri [ http://www.youtube.com/seriiiously ]
_______________________________________________
• Seri is a biologist-in-training with an intense passion for plants and filling her house to the brim with finches, potted plants, and biology "specimens" that look oddly like snail shells, mossy, and twigs covering every available surface.
She is also big into spreading her love of the natural world through the entertaining medium of story-telling through video games! Jump on in and see what our amazing, animal-loving, plant-studying community is all about! And remember, stay curious! •
_______________________________________________
• Seri! Let's Play! Official Website: http://www.mossleaf.net
• By the Leaf! Etsy Shop: https://www.etsy.com/shop/ByTheLeaf
• Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Seri-Lets-Play/1467689196778000
• Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/Seriiiously
• Twitter: https://twitter.com/Seriiiously
Music: "Unlimited" by Lee Rosevere used with permission.
_______________________________________________
Mods in Use Include:
- DrZharks Mocreatures
- Biomes o' Plenty
- Pam's HarvestCraft
- Rei Minimap
- Doggy Talents
- Ran's Penguins
- Backpack Mod
- Wild Caves
- Chococraft
- Chisel Mod
- Mega Plant Pack
- Modular Plant Pot Mod
- Biome Wand Mod
- Tropicraft
- Minefactory Reloaded
- Carpenters Blocks
- Tinkers Construct
- Fossil & Archaeology Mod
- Statues Mod
- Rail Craft
- Tree Capitator
- Bibliocraft
- Build Craft
- Custom NPCs
- Extra Biomes XL
- Microblocks
- Iron Chests
- Not Enough Items
- Optifine
- published: 07 Jan 2015
- views: 2292
C'est pas sorcier -DAUPHINS
La chaine officielle de l'émission de France 3.
C'est pas sorcier, le magazine de la découverte et de la science.
Cette semaine, Fred, Jamy et Sabine ont effe...
La chaine officielle de l'émission de France 3.
C'est pas sorcier, le magazine de la découverte et de la science.
Cette semaine, Fred, Jamy et Sabine ont effectué une petite plongée en compagnie d'acrobates hors pair : les dauphins du Marineland d'Antibes. Excellents plongeurs, Sabine et Fred sont partis observer de près ces mammifères marins à l'éternel sourire. Avec aux, Sabine a réalisé quelques prouesses sous-marines dont on se souviendra longtemps.
Créature terrestre à quatre pattes à leur origine, comment les dauphins sont-ils devenus des animaux marins ? Pourquoi classe-t-on les dauphins, les baleines et les orques dans la même famille ? Comment les dauphins, alors qu'ils respirent exactement comme nous, parviennent-ils à se maintenir plus d'un quart d'heure sous l'eau ? Comment utilisent-ils leurs sonars pour chasser et communiquer entre eux ? Comment leurs pattes sont-elles devenues des nageoires ?
wn.com/C'Est Pas Sorcier Dauphins
La chaine officielle de l'émission de France 3.
C'est pas sorcier, le magazine de la découverte et de la science.
Cette semaine, Fred, Jamy et Sabine ont effectué une petite plongée en compagnie d'acrobates hors pair : les dauphins du Marineland d'Antibes. Excellents plongeurs, Sabine et Fred sont partis observer de près ces mammifères marins à l'éternel sourire. Avec aux, Sabine a réalisé quelques prouesses sous-marines dont on se souviendra longtemps.
Créature terrestre à quatre pattes à leur origine, comment les dauphins sont-ils devenus des animaux marins ? Pourquoi classe-t-on les dauphins, les baleines et les orques dans la même famille ? Comment les dauphins, alors qu'ils respirent exactement comme nous, parviennent-ils à se maintenir plus d'un quart d'heure sous l'eau ? Comment utilisent-ils leurs sonars pour chasser et communiquer entre eux ? Comment leurs pattes sont-elles devenues des nageoires ?
- published: 27 May 2013
- views: 510644
ECHO: Meet the Scientist: Lake Champlain -- Home To A Mystery Animal?
I attended this talk on July 16, 2009, given by Elizabeth von Muggenthaler of animalvoice.com. The whole talk was fascinating, covering the severely endangered ...
I attended this talk on July 16, 2009, given by Elizabeth von Muggenthaler of animalvoice.com. The whole talk was fascinating, covering the severely endangered Sumatran rhinoceros that sings like a whale, tiger paralysis of prey, and the incredible healing qualities of cat purrs (who knew?).
Watch it all if you can, but listen carefully at the 18:00 mark. It is clear from her evidence that there is a mammal living in Lake Champlain that uses echolocation. In fact, there are, at minimum, three of these creatures. To me, irrefutable evidence of...you know what.
wn.com/Echo Meet The Scientist Lake Champlain Home To A Mystery Animal
I attended this talk on July 16, 2009, given by Elizabeth von Muggenthaler of animalvoice.com. The whole talk was fascinating, covering the severely endangered Sumatran rhinoceros that sings like a whale, tiger paralysis of prey, and the incredible healing qualities of cat purrs (who knew?).
Watch it all if you can, but listen carefully at the 18:00 mark. It is clear from her evidence that there is a mammal living in Lake Champlain that uses echolocation. In fact, there are, at minimum, three of these creatures. To me, irrefutable evidence of...you know what.
- published: 21 Mar 2014
- views: 110
Night & Day: Nocturnal & Diurnal (Animal Atlas)
Join us on an EXPLORATION into the world of animals that are not only nocturnal and diurnal, but crepuscular. We look at why animals are awake at one time inste...
Join us on an EXPLORATION into the world of animals that are not only nocturnal and diurnal, but crepuscular. We look at why animals are awake at one time instead of another, and what special sensory adaptations they have for nocturnal living.
wn.com/Night Day Nocturnal Diurnal (Animal Atlas)
Join us on an EXPLORATION into the world of animals that are not only nocturnal and diurnal, but crepuscular. We look at why animals are awake at one time instead of another, and what special sensory adaptations they have for nocturnal living.
- published: 04 Mar 2014
- views: 63861
The boy who sees without eyes - Extraordinary People
The boy who sees without eyes - Extraordinary People
A documentary about Ben Underwood, a boy who has taught himself to use echo location to navigate around t...
The boy who sees without eyes - Extraordinary People
A documentary about Ben Underwood, a boy who has taught himself to use echo location to navigate around the world. Ben Underwood is blind, but has managed to do some truly extraordinary feats.
wn.com/The Boy Who Sees Without Eyes Extraordinary People
The boy who sees without eyes - Extraordinary People
A documentary about Ben Underwood, a boy who has taught himself to use echo location to navigate around the world. Ben Underwood is blind, but has managed to do some truly extraordinary feats.
- published: 11 Feb 2012
- views: 895388
Nature's Engineer | The Extent of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films
Nature's Engineer | The Extent of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films
Animal cognition describes the mental capacities of animals and its ...
Nature's Engineer | The Extent of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films
Animal cognition describes the mental capacities of animals and its study. It has developed out of comparative psychology, including the study of animal conditioning and learning, but has also been strongly influenced by research in ethology, behavioral ecology, and evolutionary psychology. The alternative name cognitive ethology is therefore sometimes used; much of what used to be considered under the title of animal intelligence is now thought of under this heading.[1]
Research has examined animal cognition in mammals (especially primates, cetaceans, elephants, dogs, cats, horses,[2][3] raccoons and rodents), birds (including parrots, corvids and pigeons), reptiles (lizards and snakes), fish and invertebrates (including cephalopods, spiders and insects).[1]
Read More About “Nature's Engineer | The Extent of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_cognition
Visit Our Website for More World Documentary Films: http://historydocumentaryfilms.com/
You May Also Subscribe to: WORLD DOCUMENTARY FILMS channel For More Updated Videos: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu0AHiRkmFccCXoJjcWlBWA
Thank you for watching “Nature's Engineer | The Extent of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films”
wn.com/Nature's Engineer | The Extent Of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films
Nature's Engineer | The Extent of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films
Animal cognition describes the mental capacities of animals and its study. It has developed out of comparative psychology, including the study of animal conditioning and learning, but has also been strongly influenced by research in ethology, behavioral ecology, and evolutionary psychology. The alternative name cognitive ethology is therefore sometimes used; much of what used to be considered under the title of animal intelligence is now thought of under this heading.[1]
Research has examined animal cognition in mammals (especially primates, cetaceans, elephants, dogs, cats, horses,[2][3] raccoons and rodents), birds (including parrots, corvids and pigeons), reptiles (lizards and snakes), fish and invertebrates (including cephalopods, spiders and insects).[1]
Read More About “Nature's Engineer | The Extent of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_cognition
Visit Our Website for More World Documentary Films: http://historydocumentaryfilms.com/
You May Also Subscribe to: WORLD DOCUMENTARY FILMS channel For More Updated Videos: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu0AHiRkmFccCXoJjcWlBWA
Thank you for watching “Nature's Engineer | The Extent of Animal's Superior Intelligence | World Documentary Films”
- published: 10 Jul 2015
- views: 3046
Animal Navigation || Radcliffe Institute
WELCOMING REMARKS
Lizabeth Cohen 00:16
Dean, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies
Department of History
H...
WELCOMING REMARKS
Lizabeth Cohen 00:16
Dean, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies
Department of History
Harvard University
John Huth 7:32
Donner Professor of Science
Codirector of the Science Program
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Harvard University
ANIMAL NAVIGATION 16:50
Susanne Åkesson 19:53
Professor and Principal Investigator
Centre for Animal Movement Research, Lund University (Sweden)
Introduced by
Scott Edwards 17:51
Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology
Curator of Ornithology
Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology in the Museum of Comparative Zoology
Harvard University
Q&A; 50:44
wn.com/Animal Navigation || Radcliffe Institute
WELCOMING REMARKS
Lizabeth Cohen 00:16
Dean, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies
Department of History
Harvard University
John Huth 7:32
Donner Professor of Science
Codirector of the Science Program
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Harvard University
ANIMAL NAVIGATION 16:50
Susanne Åkesson 19:53
Professor and Principal Investigator
Centre for Animal Movement Research, Lund University (Sweden)
Introduced by
Scott Edwards 17:51
Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology
Curator of Ornithology
Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology in the Museum of Comparative Zoology
Harvard University
Q&A; 50:44
- published: 01 Dec 2014
- views: 785
Bats, echolocation, and a Newtonian view of Einstein's Special Relativity
This is a seminar recorded on June 24 2014 in the School of Mathematics and Statistics, UNSW. A/Prof N J Wildberger shows how to derive the main kinematic formu...
This is a seminar recorded on June 24 2014 in the School of Mathematics and Statistics, UNSW. A/Prof N J Wildberger shows how to derive the main kinematic formulas of Special Relativity by taking a novel Newtonian point of view, emphasizing the role of inertial observers rather than inertial frames, and by framing the discussion in terms of sound (not light!) and how two bats might set up coordinates to measure their spacetimes.
This way the relativity of simultaneity, time dilation, length contraction and the curious Einstein addition of velocities become simple consequences of high school algebra applied to a scenario not far removed from every day life.
At about 25:00, the board is a bit hard to read (sorry about that) but here are the two main equations there:
t_1=(x-t)/(r-s) and t_2=(x+t)/(r+s).
wn.com/Bats, Echolocation, And A Newtonian View Of Einstein's Special Relativity
This is a seminar recorded on June 24 2014 in the School of Mathematics and Statistics, UNSW. A/Prof N J Wildberger shows how to derive the main kinematic formulas of Special Relativity by taking a novel Newtonian point of view, emphasizing the role of inertial observers rather than inertial frames, and by framing the discussion in terms of sound (not light!) and how two bats might set up coordinates to measure their spacetimes.
This way the relativity of simultaneity, time dilation, length contraction and the curious Einstein addition of velocities become simple consequences of high school algebra applied to a scenario not far removed from every day life.
At about 25:00, the board is a bit hard to read (sorry about that) but here are the two main equations there:
t_1=(x-t)/(r-s) and t_2=(x+t)/(r+s).
- published: 26 Jun 2014
- views: 5203
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
T...
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
The beluga whale or white whale (Delphinapterus leucas) is an Arctic and sub-Arctic cetacean. It is one of two members of the family Monodontidae, along with the narwhal, and the only member of the genus Delphinapterus. This marine mammal is commonly referred to simply as the melonhead, beluga or sea canary due to its high-pitched twitter.
It is adapted to life in the Arctic, so has anatomical and physiological characteristics that differentiate it from other cetaceans. Amongst these are its unmistakable all-white colour and the absence of a dorsal fin. It possesses a distinctive protuberance at the front of its head which houses an echolocation organ called the melon, which in this species is large and plastic (deformable). The beluga's body size is between that of a dolphin's and a true whale’s, with males growing up to 5.5 m (18 ft) long and weighing up to 1,600 kg (3,500 lb). This whale has a stocky body; it has the greatest percentage of blubber. Its sense of hearing is highly developed and it possesses echolocation, which allows it to move about and find blowholes under sheet ice.
documentary national geographic national geographic national geographic 2014 national geographic documentary documentary documentary 2014,documentaries documentaries 2014 bbc documentary discovery channel history channel history channel documentary national geographic channel,documentary films,documentary films 2014 national geographic animals documentary history channel documentaries national geographic documentary national geographic
source:https://youtu.be/h1eVTgvMX0U
wn.com/White Whales Documentary Sea Life Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
White Whales-Documentary Sea Life-Nature Documentary
The beluga whale or white whale (Delphinapterus leucas) is an Arctic and sub-Arctic cetacean. It is one of two members of the family Monodontidae, along with the narwhal, and the only member of the genus Delphinapterus. This marine mammal is commonly referred to simply as the melonhead, beluga or sea canary due to its high-pitched twitter.
It is adapted to life in the Arctic, so has anatomical and physiological characteristics that differentiate it from other cetaceans. Amongst these are its unmistakable all-white colour and the absence of a dorsal fin. It possesses a distinctive protuberance at the front of its head which houses an echolocation organ called the melon, which in this species is large and plastic (deformable). The beluga's body size is between that of a dolphin's and a true whale’s, with males growing up to 5.5 m (18 ft) long and weighing up to 1,600 kg (3,500 lb). This whale has a stocky body; it has the greatest percentage of blubber. Its sense of hearing is highly developed and it possesses echolocation, which allows it to move about and find blowholes under sheet ice.
documentary national geographic national geographic national geographic 2014 national geographic documentary documentary documentary 2014,documentaries documentaries 2014 bbc documentary discovery channel history channel history channel documentary national geographic channel,documentary films,documentary films 2014 national geographic animals documentary history channel documentaries national geographic documentary national geographic
source:https://youtu.be/h1eVTgvMX0U
- published: 22 Jun 2015
- views: 10616
Ocean (Be a predator) Documentary HD
Imagine you are flying above the African savannah, swimming under Antarctic ice, climbing up Amazon trees and diving the Marianna abyss.
Imagine you can sudden...
Imagine you are flying above the African savannah, swimming under Antarctic ice, climbing up Amazon trees and diving the Marianna abyss.
Imagine you can suddenly see in the night, hear ultra-sounds, decode radar waves and detect electric fields.
1,2,3... you are a lion or else a dolphin, a bear or a vulture!
Using the latest technologies of image treatment and stock footage from Saint Thomas Productions’ extensive film library, this wildlife series presents an insider’s view of the predators’ life and senses. Both spectacular and entertaining, the series gives a modern outlook on nature and its most spectacular ambassadors : predators.
Each episode depicts a predator and its hunting techniques in its natural habitat. Following the principles of a food chain, the programmes jump from one animal to the next, from hunter to prey.
Oceans
Sharks or Dolphins, two predators, two morphological responses to the same environmental constraints. Which one is the better adapted to survive ?
An underwater camera passes swiftly over a coralline sandbank then stops on a black and image of a razor fish lurking in wait. Several bottlenose dolphins forage in this location. The mothers use echolocation to spot razor fish and teach their young how to master this sophisticated sense that we don’t know. Other bottlenose dolphins have developed yet another spectacular application of this sense: they hunt grey mullets in the muddy mangrove waters and strand them on the banks. Other dolphin species use this natural sonar in different ways : some descend in group in the abyss to locate anchovy shoals. They force them up to a lesser depth where they will get stuck by the natural frontier of the water surface. But how is it possible to hunt in the darkness of the abyss without this super-sense? Seals have found an answer to this question, thanks to their vibrissae. These whiskers can detect the movements of prey in total darkness. But what can really be seen with these whiskers and how do they use them? That is what a young sea lioness in Patagonia and a grey seal in Scotland learn… before they suddenly end up in the jaws of a super-predator, a killer whale. How can they resist? To rule over the oceans, this animal an array of senses, a hunting culture transmitted from one generation to the next and an adaptability to changing environmental conditions.
Author(s) : Frédéric Bernadicou et Julien Naar
Director(s) : Frédéric Bernadicou et Julien Naar
Year : 2006
Producer(s): Saint Thomas Productions
Distributor(s) : Saint Thomas Productions
See the episode 2here : Be a predaror Poles https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3GkryGubic
More English documentary :
Shark : Scavengers of the Seas - documentary BBC
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3D1_sRg22ms
Animal Homosexuality - documentary BBC
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYdcvRe7ox8
A man among Orcas - documentary BBC
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOicyQf_Lhc
A Day in The Life of a Dictator (portrait of craziness in power) - Documentary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TposvnTgmJw
wn.com/Ocean (Be A Predator) Documentary Hd
Imagine you are flying above the African savannah, swimming under Antarctic ice, climbing up Amazon trees and diving the Marianna abyss.
Imagine you can suddenly see in the night, hear ultra-sounds, decode radar waves and detect electric fields.
1,2,3... you are a lion or else a dolphin, a bear or a vulture!
Using the latest technologies of image treatment and stock footage from Saint Thomas Productions’ extensive film library, this wildlife series presents an insider’s view of the predators’ life and senses. Both spectacular and entertaining, the series gives a modern outlook on nature and its most spectacular ambassadors : predators.
Each episode depicts a predator and its hunting techniques in its natural habitat. Following the principles of a food chain, the programmes jump from one animal to the next, from hunter to prey.
Oceans
Sharks or Dolphins, two predators, two morphological responses to the same environmental constraints. Which one is the better adapted to survive ?
An underwater camera passes swiftly over a coralline sandbank then stops on a black and image of a razor fish lurking in wait. Several bottlenose dolphins forage in this location. The mothers use echolocation to spot razor fish and teach their young how to master this sophisticated sense that we don’t know. Other bottlenose dolphins have developed yet another spectacular application of this sense: they hunt grey mullets in the muddy mangrove waters and strand them on the banks. Other dolphin species use this natural sonar in different ways : some descend in group in the abyss to locate anchovy shoals. They force them up to a lesser depth where they will get stuck by the natural frontier of the water surface. But how is it possible to hunt in the darkness of the abyss without this super-sense? Seals have found an answer to this question, thanks to their vibrissae. These whiskers can detect the movements of prey in total darkness. But what can really be seen with these whiskers and how do they use them? That is what a young sea lioness in Patagonia and a grey seal in Scotland learn… before they suddenly end up in the jaws of a super-predator, a killer whale. How can they resist? To rule over the oceans, this animal an array of senses, a hunting culture transmitted from one generation to the next and an adaptability to changing environmental conditions.
Author(s) : Frédéric Bernadicou et Julien Naar
Director(s) : Frédéric Bernadicou et Julien Naar
Year : 2006
Producer(s): Saint Thomas Productions
Distributor(s) : Saint Thomas Productions
See the episode 2here : Be a predaror Poles https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3GkryGubic
More English documentary :
Shark : Scavengers of the Seas - documentary BBC
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3D1_sRg22ms
Animal Homosexuality - documentary BBC
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYdcvRe7ox8
A man among Orcas - documentary BBC
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOicyQf_Lhc
A Day in The Life of a Dictator (portrait of craziness in power) - Documentary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TposvnTgmJw
- published: 08 Jan 2016
- views: 534
Lori Marino: Dolphin Brains: An Alternative to Complex Intelligence in Primates
In the past three decades, new research has revealed that dolphin brains are not only large but are extremely complex in their organization, forming the neurobi...
In the past three decades, new research has revealed that dolphin brains are not only large but are extremely complex in their organization, forming the neurobiological basis for the considerable intelligence and socio-cultural characteristics of dolphins and their relatives, the whales. Dolphin brains are larger than expected for their body size and contain numerous features associated with sophisticated perceptual and cognitive abilities, e.g., echolocation, communication, cooperation and dynamic social networks, cultural transmission of learned behaviors, and self-awareness, to name a few. Because of their very different evolutionary history from our own primate lineage, dolphin and whale brains evolved along very different lines than primate brains. The story of their evolution, dating back 55 million years, is a fascinating example of an alternative route to sophisticated intelligence in different species.
Dr. Lori Marino is a neuroscientist, focused on animal behavior and intelligence, and was on the faculty at Emory University for 19 years. She is the founder and Executive Director of The Kimmela Center for Animal Advocacy, a non-profit organization dedicated to academic and scholarship-based advocacy for other animals. Dr. Marino has gained international prominence for her noninvasive research into dolphin and whale brains and intelligence and comparisons with primates. She has authored over 100 peer-reviewed papers, book chapters, and magazine articles on marine mammal biology and cognition, comparative neuroanatomy, self-awareness in other animals, human-nonhuman animal relationships, and animal welfare and protection. Dr. Marino co-authored a 2001 ground-breaking study showing that dolphins can recognize themselves in mirrors and she is currently the co- author of a new paper on auditory pathways in dolphin brains.
Dr. Marino was recently featured as a National Geographic Innovator and appears in several films and television programs including the powerful documentary Blackfish, about killer whale captivity, The Ghosts in Our Machine, about the lives of individual animals who we employ as part of our modern society, and Inside Animal Minds, a 2014 BBC special on the evolution of dolphin and whale brains. Dr. Marino is also currently senior scientist for the Someone, Not Something Project, a collaboration between Farm Sanctuary and The Kimmela Center focused on cognition and intelligence in farm animals.
wn.com/Lori Marino Dolphin Brains An Alternative To Complex Intelligence In Primates
In the past three decades, new research has revealed that dolphin brains are not only large but are extremely complex in their organization, forming the neurobiological basis for the considerable intelligence and socio-cultural characteristics of dolphins and their relatives, the whales. Dolphin brains are larger than expected for their body size and contain numerous features associated with sophisticated perceptual and cognitive abilities, e.g., echolocation, communication, cooperation and dynamic social networks, cultural transmission of learned behaviors, and self-awareness, to name a few. Because of their very different evolutionary history from our own primate lineage, dolphin and whale brains evolved along very different lines than primate brains. The story of their evolution, dating back 55 million years, is a fascinating example of an alternative route to sophisticated intelligence in different species.
Dr. Lori Marino is a neuroscientist, focused on animal behavior and intelligence, and was on the faculty at Emory University for 19 years. She is the founder and Executive Director of The Kimmela Center for Animal Advocacy, a non-profit organization dedicated to academic and scholarship-based advocacy for other animals. Dr. Marino has gained international prominence for her noninvasive research into dolphin and whale brains and intelligence and comparisons with primates. She has authored over 100 peer-reviewed papers, book chapters, and magazine articles on marine mammal biology and cognition, comparative neuroanatomy, self-awareness in other animals, human-nonhuman animal relationships, and animal welfare and protection. Dr. Marino co-authored a 2001 ground-breaking study showing that dolphins can recognize themselves in mirrors and she is currently the co- author of a new paper on auditory pathways in dolphin brains.
Dr. Marino was recently featured as a National Geographic Innovator and appears in several films and television programs including the powerful documentary Blackfish, about killer whale captivity, The Ghosts in Our Machine, about the lives of individual animals who we employ as part of our modern society, and Inside Animal Minds, a 2014 BBC special on the evolution of dolphin and whale brains. Dr. Marino is also currently senior scientist for the Someone, Not Something Project, a collaboration between Farm Sanctuary and The Kimmela Center focused on cognition and intelligence in farm animals.
- published: 23 Mar 2015
- views: 2089
Echolocation & Hearing Protection In Cetaceans
Join us for a presentation with Dr. Paul Nachtigall on the echolocation and hearing sensitivity control in cetaceans.
More info: http://www.vanaqua.org/cetac...
Join us for a presentation with Dr. Paul Nachtigall on the echolocation and hearing sensitivity control in cetaceans.
More info: http://www.vanaqua.org/cetacean-echolocation
wn.com/Echolocation Hearing Protection In Cetaceans
Join us for a presentation with Dr. Paul Nachtigall on the echolocation and hearing sensitivity control in cetaceans.
More info: http://www.vanaqua.org/cetacean-echolocation
- published: 05 Feb 2015
- views: 1188
Moby-Dick The Massive White Sperm Whale
Find out about THE OUTLANDER CHANNEL at: http://www.theoutlanderchannel.com
Discover more by following us on:
Google+: https://google.com/+Theoutlanderchannel...
Find out about THE OUTLANDER CHANNEL at: http://www.theoutlanderchannel.com
Discover more by following us on:
Google+: https://google.com/+Theoutlanderchannel
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ZOutlanderCh
Flipboard: https://flipboard.com/@zoutlanderch
Moby-Dick The Massive White Sperm Whale
Sperm whales are easily recognized by their massive heads and prominent rounded foreheads. They have the largest brain of any creature known to have lived on Earth. Their heads also hold large quantities of a substance called spermaceti. Whalers once believed that the oily fluid was sperm, but scientists still do not understand the function of spermaceti. One common theory is that the fluid—which hardens to wax when cold—helps the whale alter its buoyancy so it can dive deep and rise again. Sperm whales are known to dive as deep as 3,280 feet (1,000 meters) in search of squid to eat. These giant mammals must hold their breath for up to 90 minutes on such dives.
These toothed whales eat thousands of pounds of fish and squid—about one ton (907 kg) per day.
Sperm whales are often spotted in groups (called pods) of some 15 to 20 animals. Pods include females and their young, while males may roam solo or move from group to group. Females and calves remain in tropical or subtropical waters all year long, and apparently practice communal child care. Males migrate to higher latitudes, alone or in groups, and head back towards the equator to breed. Driven by their tale fluke, approximately 16 feet (5 meters) from tip to tip, they can cruise the oceans at around 23 miles (37 kilometers) per hour.
These popular leviathans are vocal and emit a series of "clangs" that may be used for communication or for echolocation. Animals that use echolocation emit sounds that travel underwater until they encounter objects, then bounce back to their senders—revealing the location, size, and shape of their target.
Sperm whales were mainstays of whaling's 18th and 19th century heyday. A mythical albino sperm whale was immortalized in Herman Melville's Moby Dick, though Ahab's nemesis was apparently based on a real animal whalers called Mocha Dick. The animals were targeted for oil and ambergris, a substance that forms around squid beaks in a whale's stomach. Ambergris was (and remains) a very valuable substance once used in perfumes.
Despite large population drops due to whaling, sperm whales are still fairly numerous.
wn.com/Moby Dick The Massive White Sperm Whale
Find out about THE OUTLANDER CHANNEL at: http://www.theoutlanderchannel.com
Discover more by following us on:
Google+: https://google.com/+Theoutlanderchannel
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ZOutlanderCh
Flipboard: https://flipboard.com/@zoutlanderch
Moby-Dick The Massive White Sperm Whale
Sperm whales are easily recognized by their massive heads and prominent rounded foreheads. They have the largest brain of any creature known to have lived on Earth. Their heads also hold large quantities of a substance called spermaceti. Whalers once believed that the oily fluid was sperm, but scientists still do not understand the function of spermaceti. One common theory is that the fluid—which hardens to wax when cold—helps the whale alter its buoyancy so it can dive deep and rise again. Sperm whales are known to dive as deep as 3,280 feet (1,000 meters) in search of squid to eat. These giant mammals must hold their breath for up to 90 minutes on such dives.
These toothed whales eat thousands of pounds of fish and squid—about one ton (907 kg) per day.
Sperm whales are often spotted in groups (called pods) of some 15 to 20 animals. Pods include females and their young, while males may roam solo or move from group to group. Females and calves remain in tropical or subtropical waters all year long, and apparently practice communal child care. Males migrate to higher latitudes, alone or in groups, and head back towards the equator to breed. Driven by their tale fluke, approximately 16 feet (5 meters) from tip to tip, they can cruise the oceans at around 23 miles (37 kilometers) per hour.
These popular leviathans are vocal and emit a series of "clangs" that may be used for communication or for echolocation. Animals that use echolocation emit sounds that travel underwater until they encounter objects, then bounce back to their senders—revealing the location, size, and shape of their target.
Sperm whales were mainstays of whaling's 18th and 19th century heyday. A mythical albino sperm whale was immortalized in Herman Melville's Moby Dick, though Ahab's nemesis was apparently based on a real animal whalers called Mocha Dick. The animals were targeted for oil and ambergris, a substance that forms around squid beaks in a whale's stomach. Ambergris was (and remains) a very valuable substance once used in perfumes.
Despite large population drops due to whaling, sperm whales are still fairly numerous.
- published: 19 Jan 2015
- views: 10441
23. Auditory cortex 2: Language; bats and echolocation
MIT 9.04 Sensory Systems, Fall 2013
View the complete course: http://ocw.mit.edu/9-04F13
Instructor: Chris Brown
This video discusses echolocation by bats and ...
MIT 9.04 Sensory Systems, Fall 2013
View the complete course: http://ocw.mit.edu/9-04F13
Instructor: Chris Brown
This video discusses echolocation by bats and the cortical processing of language.
License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
More information at http://ocw.mit.edu/terms
More courses at http://ocw.mit.edu
wn.com/23. Auditory Cortex 2 Language Bats And Echolocation
MIT 9.04 Sensory Systems, Fall 2013
View the complete course: http://ocw.mit.edu/9-04F13
Instructor: Chris Brown
This video discusses echolocation by bats and the cortical processing of language.
License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
More information at http://ocw.mit.edu/terms
More courses at http://ocw.mit.edu
- published: 28 Oct 2014
- views: 555
Orca Simulator By Gluten Free Games -Part 4 - Compatible with iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch, Android
Played By 11 year - old Joseph David.
Dive into the arctic ocean and live life as an Orca! Survive in a vast underwater world filled with massive whales and da...
Played By 11 year - old Joseph David.
Dive into the arctic ocean and live life as an Orca! Survive in a vast underwater world filled with massive whales and dangerous predators! Raise your family, hunt with your pod, and battle for your life against aquatic predators like the White Shark, Narwhal, and the Kraken!
Download the Orca Simulator today while it's 50% OFF for a very limited time!
Game Features
REALISTIC SIMULATOR
You'll need to maintain your health, hunger, oxygen, and energy if you're going to survive in the icy waters of the Arctic Ocean!
EPIC BATTLES
Use your swift speed and powerful bite to hunt down and fight deadly sharks, whales, and dolphins! Deliver the killing blow by combining your Dash and Bite attacks!
ECHOLOCATION BASED RADAR
Use your echolocation to reveal the location of nearby animals. Follow the realtime locator to easily hunt down the nearest prey!
START YOUR FAMILY
Find another Orca to bond with and raise your very own pod of Killer Whales! Breed orca calves and watch them grow in size and strength while they help you survive in the ocean!
LEVEL UP YOUR ORCAS
Gain experience by fighting dangerous predators, eating fish, completing missions, and defeating bosses! Level up your orcas to increase their health and attack damage, unlock new orca colors, and gain new powers like Death Grab!
MISSIONS AND ACHIEVEMENTS
Introducing unlimited missions and over two dozen achievements to give you a boost of experience! With the level cap increased to 200, you’ll need all the help you can get!
THREE BOSS BATTLES
Ready to put your Killer Whale to the test? Enter into combat with 3 deadly bosses that will push you to your limits! Take on a harpoon slinging whaling ship, the legendary Moby Dick, and the deadly Kraken!
DYNAMIC WEATHER AND DAY/NIGHT CYCLE
Introducing a brand new procedural weather system with unique storms, clouds, and celestial movement. Realistic storms will bring a downpour of rain, flashes of lightning, booms of thunder, blankets of snow and more! Steer clear of dangerous whirlpools that can devastate your health!
HUGE 3D ENVIRONMENT
Your orca is free to roam a massive open-world environment that is more than triple the size of the previous simulators! Discover underwater volcanos, coral reefs, and seaweed forests!
NEW TOUCH-BASED CONTROLS
Brand new intuitive controls let you navigate your animal like never before! Try out the BRAND NEW first person camera mode to see the world through the eyes of your orca!
OVER 20 UNIQUE SPECIES
Discover a massive all-new collection of arctic wildlife! Hunt down animals like narwhal, squid, fish, dolphin, penguin, seal, puffin, shark, blowfish, sea turtle, mermaid, whale, eel and many more!
ARCTIC SURVIVAL GUIDE
Look to your handy survival guide for information on wildlife, a map of the world, orca customizations, achievement progress, and much more!
HD GRAPHICS
Stunning High Definition graphics will transport you deep into a sparkling ocean filled with hidden wonders! New Graphics Quality options allow you to customize the game to look amazing and perform great on any device!
OPTIONAL BLOOD EFFECTS
Looking for more realistic action? If you are of age or have your parents permission, turn on the blood effects for some added combat ferocity!
GLUTEN-FREE PROMISE
With all of our games you will always get the full game with no ads or additional purchases!
Download the Orca Simulator to experience the thrilling life of the most deadly ocean predator on the planet, the Killer Whale!
If you liked living as an Orca then you'll love our other animal simulators! Download our Stray Dog Simulator and live a wild life on the streets as your favorite breed, check out the Snow Leopard Simulator and pounce on your prey from high mountaintops, or slither around a tropical rainforest with the Snake Simulator!
Follow us on Facebook for more awesome animal games and simulators!
facebook.com/glutenfreegames
twitter.com/glutenfreegames
wn.com/Orca Simulator By Gluten Free Games Part 4 Compatible With Iphone, Ipad, And Ipod Touch, Android
Played By 11 year - old Joseph David.
Dive into the arctic ocean and live life as an Orca! Survive in a vast underwater world filled with massive whales and dangerous predators! Raise your family, hunt with your pod, and battle for your life against aquatic predators like the White Shark, Narwhal, and the Kraken!
Download the Orca Simulator today while it's 50% OFF for a very limited time!
Game Features
REALISTIC SIMULATOR
You'll need to maintain your health, hunger, oxygen, and energy if you're going to survive in the icy waters of the Arctic Ocean!
EPIC BATTLES
Use your swift speed and powerful bite to hunt down and fight deadly sharks, whales, and dolphins! Deliver the killing blow by combining your Dash and Bite attacks!
ECHOLOCATION BASED RADAR
Use your echolocation to reveal the location of nearby animals. Follow the realtime locator to easily hunt down the nearest prey!
START YOUR FAMILY
Find another Orca to bond with and raise your very own pod of Killer Whales! Breed orca calves and watch them grow in size and strength while they help you survive in the ocean!
LEVEL UP YOUR ORCAS
Gain experience by fighting dangerous predators, eating fish, completing missions, and defeating bosses! Level up your orcas to increase their health and attack damage, unlock new orca colors, and gain new powers like Death Grab!
MISSIONS AND ACHIEVEMENTS
Introducing unlimited missions and over two dozen achievements to give you a boost of experience! With the level cap increased to 200, you’ll need all the help you can get!
THREE BOSS BATTLES
Ready to put your Killer Whale to the test? Enter into combat with 3 deadly bosses that will push you to your limits! Take on a harpoon slinging whaling ship, the legendary Moby Dick, and the deadly Kraken!
DYNAMIC WEATHER AND DAY/NIGHT CYCLE
Introducing a brand new procedural weather system with unique storms, clouds, and celestial movement. Realistic storms will bring a downpour of rain, flashes of lightning, booms of thunder, blankets of snow and more! Steer clear of dangerous whirlpools that can devastate your health!
HUGE 3D ENVIRONMENT
Your orca is free to roam a massive open-world environment that is more than triple the size of the previous simulators! Discover underwater volcanos, coral reefs, and seaweed forests!
NEW TOUCH-BASED CONTROLS
Brand new intuitive controls let you navigate your animal like never before! Try out the BRAND NEW first person camera mode to see the world through the eyes of your orca!
OVER 20 UNIQUE SPECIES
Discover a massive all-new collection of arctic wildlife! Hunt down animals like narwhal, squid, fish, dolphin, penguin, seal, puffin, shark, blowfish, sea turtle, mermaid, whale, eel and many more!
ARCTIC SURVIVAL GUIDE
Look to your handy survival guide for information on wildlife, a map of the world, orca customizations, achievement progress, and much more!
HD GRAPHICS
Stunning High Definition graphics will transport you deep into a sparkling ocean filled with hidden wonders! New Graphics Quality options allow you to customize the game to look amazing and perform great on any device!
OPTIONAL BLOOD EFFECTS
Looking for more realistic action? If you are of age or have your parents permission, turn on the blood effects for some added combat ferocity!
GLUTEN-FREE PROMISE
With all of our games you will always get the full game with no ads or additional purchases!
Download the Orca Simulator to experience the thrilling life of the most deadly ocean predator on the planet, the Killer Whale!
If you liked living as an Orca then you'll love our other animal simulators! Download our Stray Dog Simulator and live a wild life on the streets as your favorite breed, check out the Snow Leopard Simulator and pounce on your prey from high mountaintops, or slither around a tropical rainforest with the Snake Simulator!
Follow us on Facebook for more awesome animal games and simulators!
facebook.com/glutenfreegames
twitter.com/glutenfreegames
- published: 08 Jun 2015
- views: 79706
Dolphin Simulator By Gluten Free Games -Compatible with iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.
Played By 10 years old Joseph David.
Dive into the ocean and swim to your hearts content as a wild Dolphin! Explore a vast underwater world filled with dangero...
Played By 10 years old Joseph David.
Dive into the ocean and swim to your hearts content as a wild Dolphin! Explore a vast underwater world filled with dangerous predators and hidden treasures. Start your own family, hunt for food, and battle for your life against fierce aquatic animals like orcas, sharks, and mermaids!
Download the Dolphin Simulator today while it's 50% OFF for a very limited time!
Game Features
+ REALISTIC SIMULATOR - You'll need to maintain your health, hunger, oxygen and energy if you're going to survive in the hostile underwater world that surrounds Pirate’s Cove!
+ RAISE YOUR FAMILY - Find up to 3 other wild dolphins to bond with and start your very own pod! Breed pups and watch them grow in size and strength while they help you survive in the wild!
+ EPIC BATTLES - Use your razor sharp teeth and powerful tail to defend your pod and fight off dangerous animals! Rescue friendly dolphins by defeating deadly bosses like the Megalodon shark and the King Crab!
+ BECOME A DOLPHIN - Act like a dolphin by jumping out of the water and swipe the screen to perform tricks like the Backflip and Reverse 360! Use your echolocation to hunt down fish and underwater predators!
+ LEVEL UP YOUR DOLPHIN - Gain experience by doing tricks, eating fish, and defeating enemy animals. Level up your dolphins to increase their health and attack damage, and unlock new colors and powerful attacks like Bubble Cannon!
+ DYNAMIC WEATHER AND DAY/NIGHT CYCLE - Introducing a brand new procedural weather system with unique storms, clouds, and celestial movement. Watch the sun set or swim and play under the stars in beautiful pale moonlight!
OCEAN SURVIVAL GUIDE - Look to your handy survival guide for information on enemy wildlife, a map of the world, dolphin customizations, and much more!
+ HUGE 3D ENVIRONMENT - Your dolphins are free to roam a massive open-world environment that is more the double the size of the previous simulators! Explore shipwrecks, sunken submarines, and even hidden caves filled with mermaids!
+ NEW TOUCH-BASED CONTROLS - Brand new intuitive controls let you navigate your animal like never before! Pinch to zoom and play from your dolphin's perspective or get a bird's eye view of the action!
+ 24 UNIQUE AQUATIC SPECIES - Behold a massive collection of ocean wildlife! Discover tropical fish, sea turtles, sharks, killer whales, octopuses, anglerfish, crabs, jellyfish, stingrays, pufferfish, mermaids, megalodon and many more!
+ HD GRAPHICS - Stunning High Definition graphics will transport you to a remote aquatic ecosystem and surround you with the ocean's beauty! New Graphics Quality options allow you to customize the game to look amazing and perform great on any device!
+ GLUTEN-FREE PROMISE - With all of our games you will always get the full game with no ads or additional purchases!
Download the Dolphin Simulator to experience the exciting life of the world’s most intelligent and playful animal, the wild Dolphin!
If you liked living as a Dolphin then you'll love our other animal simulators! Download our Eagle Simulator and soar through the skies, check out the Cheetah Simulator and pounce on your prey at lightning speeds, or slither around a tropical rainforest with the Snake Simulator!
wn.com/Dolphin Simulator By Gluten Free Games Compatible With Iphone, Ipad, And Ipod Touch.
Played By 10 years old Joseph David.
Dive into the ocean and swim to your hearts content as a wild Dolphin! Explore a vast underwater world filled with dangerous predators and hidden treasures. Start your own family, hunt for food, and battle for your life against fierce aquatic animals like orcas, sharks, and mermaids!
Download the Dolphin Simulator today while it's 50% OFF for a very limited time!
Game Features
+ REALISTIC SIMULATOR - You'll need to maintain your health, hunger, oxygen and energy if you're going to survive in the hostile underwater world that surrounds Pirate’s Cove!
+ RAISE YOUR FAMILY - Find up to 3 other wild dolphins to bond with and start your very own pod! Breed pups and watch them grow in size and strength while they help you survive in the wild!
+ EPIC BATTLES - Use your razor sharp teeth and powerful tail to defend your pod and fight off dangerous animals! Rescue friendly dolphins by defeating deadly bosses like the Megalodon shark and the King Crab!
+ BECOME A DOLPHIN - Act like a dolphin by jumping out of the water and swipe the screen to perform tricks like the Backflip and Reverse 360! Use your echolocation to hunt down fish and underwater predators!
+ LEVEL UP YOUR DOLPHIN - Gain experience by doing tricks, eating fish, and defeating enemy animals. Level up your dolphins to increase their health and attack damage, and unlock new colors and powerful attacks like Bubble Cannon!
+ DYNAMIC WEATHER AND DAY/NIGHT CYCLE - Introducing a brand new procedural weather system with unique storms, clouds, and celestial movement. Watch the sun set or swim and play under the stars in beautiful pale moonlight!
OCEAN SURVIVAL GUIDE - Look to your handy survival guide for information on enemy wildlife, a map of the world, dolphin customizations, and much more!
+ HUGE 3D ENVIRONMENT - Your dolphins are free to roam a massive open-world environment that is more the double the size of the previous simulators! Explore shipwrecks, sunken submarines, and even hidden caves filled with mermaids!
+ NEW TOUCH-BASED CONTROLS - Brand new intuitive controls let you navigate your animal like never before! Pinch to zoom and play from your dolphin's perspective or get a bird's eye view of the action!
+ 24 UNIQUE AQUATIC SPECIES - Behold a massive collection of ocean wildlife! Discover tropical fish, sea turtles, sharks, killer whales, octopuses, anglerfish, crabs, jellyfish, stingrays, pufferfish, mermaids, megalodon and many more!
+ HD GRAPHICS - Stunning High Definition graphics will transport you to a remote aquatic ecosystem and surround you with the ocean's beauty! New Graphics Quality options allow you to customize the game to look amazing and perform great on any device!
+ GLUTEN-FREE PROMISE - With all of our games you will always get the full game with no ads or additional purchases!
Download the Dolphin Simulator to experience the exciting life of the world’s most intelligent and playful animal, the wild Dolphin!
If you liked living as a Dolphin then you'll love our other animal simulators! Download our Eagle Simulator and soar through the skies, check out the Cheetah Simulator and pounce on your prey at lightning speeds, or slither around a tropical rainforest with the Snake Simulator!
- published: 09 Dec 2014
- views: 599430
Nature Shock: When Killer Whales Attack
Nature Shock: When Killer Whales Attack
I don't own the footage or audio used in this video....
Nature Shock: When Killer Whales Attack
I don't own the footage or audio used in this video.
wn.com/Nature Shock When Killer Whales Attack
Nature Shock: When Killer Whales Attack
I don't own the footage or audio used in this video.
- published: 07 Mar 2012
- views: 3397532
Gameplay Commentary: Magic School Bus Explores the World of Animals
Ever wanted to take a field trip on the Magic School Bus? Come join me as I do just that, and along the way we'll put together a skeleton, play with some sticke...
Ever wanted to take a field trip on the Magic School Bus? Come join me as I do just that, and along the way we'll put together a skeleton, play with some stickers, and play in a gameshow!
All content shown in the game is owned by Scholastic and Microsoft Corporation. This video is intended to educate and entertain. I own nothing except my commentary.
wn.com/Gameplay Commentary Magic School Bus Explores The World Of Animals
Ever wanted to take a field trip on the Magic School Bus? Come join me as I do just that, and along the way we'll put together a skeleton, play with some stickers, and play in a gameshow!
All content shown in the game is owned by Scholastic and Microsoft Corporation. This video is intended to educate and entertain. I own nothing except my commentary.
- published: 01 Jan 2012
- views: 438181