Antlers, skulls and bones She said if people are walking through the woods and finds a naturally shed antler, they can keep it. The same is true for skulls and bones. “As far as deer, elk, moose and caribou antlers go, you can pick them up and take them home,” she said.
Average Decibel Level of Human Speech A whisper is between 20-30 dB. On the other hand, a human scream can reach decibel levels between 80 and 125 dB.
Read More »triad The most common type of keyboard or piano chord is a triad, or three-note chord. A triad contains a root note and two other notes, most often...
Read More »The following is an excerpt from the Alaska Chapter of The Wildlife Society’s February 2018 newsletter. You may read the full article, located on pages 10-13 of the newsletter, here. A dead gray whale washed up on a beach near Juneau a few years ago. Over the course of several months, those willing to brave the stench salvaged the bones. When I checked it out, I asked one person who was taking some vertebrae if it was legal. He said he assumed it was okay, “because gray whales aren’t endangered.” Alaskans are fond of animal parts. Hunters keep skulls, hikers find and keep shed antlers, beachcombers keep bones, and it seems like everyone keeps a few bird feathers. What is legal to keep, and what’s not? The path to the answer might be complicated, but generally the answer is simple: Yes, you can keep this or no, you can’t. Animals in Alaska, and Alaska waters, are managed by different state and federal agencies, and each agency has rules about picking up and keeping parts of the animals they manage. In this context, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) manages terrestrial wildlife, including upland game birds such as grouse and ptarmigan. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) manages, or co-manages with ADF&G, most other birds and three marine mammals: Pacific walrus, polar bear, and sea otter. The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) manages other marine mammals, including seals, sea lions, porpoise, toothed whales and baleen whales. Land ownership, or status, is an issue as well, and there are places where animal parts must remain where they lie.
Anyone can learn to play the violin, at any age. Mastering a new skill, regardless of what it is, always involves desire, discipline and...
Read More »Jazz theory refers to a particular area of music theory that relates to the chord progression, scales, melodies, and rhythms primarily used in jazz...
Read More »So what about keeping those gray whale vertebrae? Legal. There’s a caveat: the parts must be registered with NMFS. Bob Marvelle is the supervisory enforcement officer with NMFS in Juneau. He outlined a scenario in Southeast Alaska: “You’re a non-Alaska Native and you’re walking the beach, or within a quarter-mile of the beach, and you find a dead sea lion. You can collect hard parts,” he said. “Hard parts only – nature has to take its course, if there is soft tissue on it you have to leave it – you can’t cut anything off.”
C# is a general-purpose, modern and object-oriented programming language pronounced as “C sharp”. ... C++ vs C# Feature C++ C# Language Type C++ is...
Read More »Arial Stick with sans-serif fonts - As mentioned earlier, fonts without serifs, such as Arial, are much easier on the eyes.
Read More »Upright piano – 300 to 500 pounds. Baby grand piano – 500 to 650 pounds. Grand piano – 700 to 1,200 pounds. Mar 3, 2021
Read More »