Currently working for PMA-265 as the Airborne Electronic Attack Growler Systems Integration Integrated Product Team Sustainment Contractor Support Services bubba.
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Finally, Congress' Work Schedule Explained! (Pause 'Anchors Aweigh' First)
1. This giant rat is one of two likely new species discovered in Indonesia's Foja Mountains in June, Conservation International announced Monday. The creature is about five times the size of a typical city rat. 2. The group also found this pygmy possum, calling it one of the world's smallest marsupials. The international team has made previous finds in the pristine area, which it calls "the lost world." 3. The "golden frog of Supata," found in a remote region of Colombia, belongs to a group of poison dart frogs, which have toxins embedded in their skin. Scientist announced the discovery of the creature in August. 4. Conservationists found the clouded leopard in March in the rainforests of Borneo. The animal was ultimately classified as a new species. 5. In February, researchers working in the remote forests of Cambodia said they discovered the only known Asian colony of slender-billed vultures, one of the world's most threatened bird species. 6. The bright yellow- and red-crowned Yariguies brush-finch, named for an indigenous tribe, was discovered last October in a previously unexplored Andean cloud forest in Colombia. 7. In June 2006, researchers scouring the swamps of Borneo Island discovered the Enhydris Gyii, known locally in West Kalimantan as the Kapuas mud snake, a new species of snake that can change its skin color. 8. In March 2006, the Atelopus frog was found in the Nassau Mountains in eastern Suriname. It was one of 24 new species of wildlife discovered by scientists in the remote plateaus north of Brazil. 9. Scientists announced the discovery of dozens of new marine species in the waters off Indonesia's Papua province in February 2006, including the epaulette shark, which walks on its fins. 10. A new species of smoky honeyeater was among scores of new plant and animal species found during Conservation International's Foja Mountain expedition in late 2005. 11. During that trip, scientists took the first known photographs of Berlepsch's six-wired bird of paradise, which was described by hunters in New Guinea in the 19th century. 12. The team also found this golden-mantled tree kangaroo, which had not developed a fear of humans. It is the second site on Earth where it is known to exist. 13. This Kiwa hirsuta resembles a furry lobster. The eyeless shellfish, about 5.9 inches long, was discovered in March 2005, near the hydrothermal vents of the Pacific Antarctic Ridge, south of Easter Island.