Tag: dolphins
NFL Week 16: How To Watch Packers vs. Dolphins and the Rest of Sunday’s Action Without Cable – CNET
How to Watch NFL Network: Bills vs. Dolphins Livestream – CNET
Vladimir Putin using killer dolphins to defend key waters as Crimea bridge blown up
Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey has meltdown as Bills lose 21-19 to Miami Dolphins
Brewin Dolphin’s 5 tech stocks to watch: I’d split £2k between 2 of them
I’m looking to inject a bit more excitement into my portfolio and take advantage of recent volatility to buy a few UK tech stocks like these.
The post Brewin Dolphin’s 5 tech stocks to watch: I’d split £2k between 2 of them appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
Four dolphins die at holiday hotspot which charges thousands for therapy sessions
FOUR dolphins have died at a holiday hotspot which charges thousands of pounds for therapy sessions.
It has led animal rights activists to demand a criminal investigation into the deaths at the site, which is popular with British visitors.
Splash, 21, became the latest dolphin to die at the Onmega Dolphin Therapy and Activity Center in Marmaris, Turkey, in July.
Flip, 37, pregnant Frosya, 32, and a 15-day-old infant have also died since June last year.
Bottlenoses have a lifespan of 40 to 60 years.
Tracey Özdemir, from UK group Media On Taiji Ocean Defenders, says its lawyer has reported it to prosecutors.
Read More on Animals
She said: “We need answers.
“We’ve had a whistleblower inform us about the problems at the park.”
There are believed to be three more dolphins at the centre.
It offers a range of packages, including a two-week therapy course for £3,329.
Most read in The Sun
Its suggestion that conditions such as autism can be treated by swimming with dolphins, has been criticised for a lack of science behind it.
The centre said: “We’ve been here for 15 years and now people are out to close us down.
Read More on The Sun
“The dolphins got sick.
“We are trying to find out what happened.”
This Footage From Cameras Strapped to U.S. Navy Dolphins Is Amazing
The U.S. Navy’s marine mammal program started in the 1960s and is still going strong. The department has specially trained dolphins that identify undersea mines, defend the waters, and even protect some of the U.S. nuclear reserves. Now, researchers are strapping cameras to those dolphins to gather insight.