New Mexico Bill To Protect Anti-Science Education
Showing posts with label mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mexico. Show all posts
Sunday, February 6, 2011
New Mexico Bill To Protect Anti-Science Education
An anonymous reader writes "From the Wired article: 'If educators in New Mexico want to teach evolution or climate change as a "controversial scientific topic," a new bill seeks to protect them from punishment. House Bill 302, as it's called, states that public school teachers who want to teach "scientific weaknesses" about "controversial scientific topics" including evolution, climate change, human cloning and — ambiguously — "other scientific topics" may do so without fear of reprimand. The legislation was introduced to the New Mexico House of Representatives on Feb. 1 by Republican Rep. Thomas A. Anderson. Supporters of science education say this and other bills are designed to spook teachers who want to teach legitimate science and protect other teachers who may already be customizing their curricula with anti-science lesson plans.'"
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Where is a beautiful location in Mexico to get married?
Got engaged 5 months ago and I would like to start planning for my wedding - hopefully in the Spring of 2012. I would really love to get married in Mexico.Where is the most beautiful location in Mexico to get married? I am interested in resorts/hotel
Tags: travel
love
hotels
Mexico
beautiful
married
location
5 months
wedding in mexico
Post originale: http://www.blogcatalog.com/search/frame?term=location&id;=d8c694a3acec0a57f348d1f841b93508
Tags: travel









Post originale: http://www.blogcatalog.com/search/frame?term=location&id;=d8c694a3acec0a57f348d1f841b93508
Friday, October 22, 2010
Mexico: Yucatán's Natural Wonders
Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula is crowded with natural wonders, and on Tobias Nowlan's recent visit, he was able to experience several of them with the help of local guides. Below, he offers a quick selection of some of the region's more unusual adventures.
The Hanging Serpents
Bats rush around us as we near a cave partly concealed by dense rain forest. A stream of the silent mammals pours from the black cave mouth and diffuses into the forest.
It is dusk in the rain forest near the town of Kantemo on the Yucatán Peninsula. My guide, Solomon, has led me by bicycle along narrow puddle-strewn tracks to a path winding through a cluster of chico zapote trees (a species tapped for its resin and valued for its fruit). The path leads to the now legendary "Cave of the Hanging Serpents." In this cave, like nowhere else on earth, boa constrictors have adapted to hang from the ceiling and snatch bats (six species have been recorded in this single cave) as they take flight at dusk. Torchlight on an azure pool deep inside the cave exposes white, blind eels, fish and shrimp; animals adapted to a lightless underground life.
Post originale: http://blogs.nationalgeographic.com/blogs/intelligenttravel/2010/10/hanging-serpents.html

Bats rush around us as we near a cave partly concealed by dense rain forest. A stream of the silent mammals pours from the black cave mouth and diffuses into the forest.
It is dusk in the rain forest near the town of Kantemo on the Yucatán Peninsula. My guide, Solomon, has led me by bicycle along narrow puddle-strewn tracks to a path winding through a cluster of chico zapote trees (a species tapped for its resin and valued for its fruit). The path leads to the now legendary "Cave of the Hanging Serpents." In this cave, like nowhere else on earth, boa constrictors have adapted to hang from the ceiling and snatch bats (six species have been recorded in this single cave) as they take flight at dusk. Torchlight on an azure pool deep inside the cave exposes white, blind eels, fish and shrimp; animals adapted to a lightless underground life.
Getting there: Las
Cuevas de Kantemo de los Serpientes Colgantes (the caves of Kantemo
of the hanging serpents) can be reached via bus to the nearest large
town (Puerto Maria Morelos) from where a taxi can be taken to Kantemo.
Here visitors need to wait for a local guide (who may or may not speak
English) to arrive at the small eco-center. Eco Travel Mexico is a tour company that
takes people there: http://www.ecotravelmexico.com/kantemo.php
Post originale: http://blogs.nationalgeographic.com/blogs/intelligenttravel/2010/10/hanging-serpents.html
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