The Cutest Baby Animals of 2013!.
Cute Little animals … a good collection available in ba-ba mail site is being shared with you thro my site ..
natarajan
The Cutest Baby Animals of 2013!.
Cute Little animals … a good collection available in ba-ba mail site is being shared with you thro my site ..
natarajan

A giraffe at Rotterdam’s Diergaarde Blijdorp zoo says goodbye to Mario. Photo: Stitching Ambulance Wens Netherlands.Source: Supplied
A DYING cancer patient who worked at a Dutch zoo his whole life has said a final goodbye to the animal.
The 54-year-old man, identified only as Mario, was approaching by a loving giraffe as he lay in his hospital bed wheeled into Rotterdam’s Diergaarde Blijdorp zoo.
“You could see him totally light up,” Kees Veldboer, founder and director of Ambulance Wish Foundation, told a Dutch newspaper, Algemeen Dagblad.
“It’s very special to see that those animals recognise him, and sense that he isn’t doing well,” he said.
Mario has a mental disability and has worked as a maintenance man at the zoo for most of his life.
He later bid farewell to his colleagues, the paper reported
source:::: News.com.au
natarajan

Abandoned airports are fascinating. Source: ThinkStock
WELCOME to no-man’s land.
They are the airports to nowhere; commercial flights ceased long ago and they have been left to fall into ruin, yet we remain intrigued at just what went so “plane” wrong.
Here are the amazing stories behind 15 of the biggest, weirdest and most expensive abandoned airports in the world.
That includes “alien landing strips”, ruined runways and financial disasters.
1. Castellón — Costa Azahar Airport, Spain
What’s Spanish for “white elephant”? Officially declared open in March 2011, no commercial flight has actually departed or landed at Castellón-Costa Azahar Airport. Built at a cost of 150 million euros ($230 million), the enduring feature of this freshly-deceased airport near Valencia is a statue in honour of Carlos Fabra, the local politician who was the driving force behind its construction.

Castellon — Costa Azahar. picture: Sanbec, Wikicommons Source: Supplied
2. Don Quijote Airport, Spain
If you thought $230 million was a gigantic waste of money, how about $1.2 billion?Don Quijote Airport (or Ciudad Real Central, to give it its official name) was conceived in the 1990s as an alternative to Madrid-Barajas Airport. Fifty minutes from Madrid on a high-speed rail connection with Seville, it was Spain’s first private international airport, and Spain’s last — it went bust and closed in April 2012.

Don Quijote Airport. Picture: Africa Twin, Wikicommons Source: Supplied
3. Berlin Templehof, Germany
Built in 1923, Berlin-Tempelhof closed to passengers in October 2008. Until the construction of the Pentagon, it was the largest building in the world. It played a key role in the Berlin Airlift but over the years it became obsolete. Today ‘Tempelhof Field’ is the largest public park in the city and the airport buildings host events such as raves and fashion shows.

Berlin Templehof. Picture: Quapan Source: Flickr
4. Croydon Airport, England
Said to be one of the three iconic pre-WWII airports in Europe, along with Le Bourget in Paris and Templehof in Berlin (see above), Croydon was redolent of the romance of early aviation. Several famous figures, from Amy Johnson and Charles Lindbergh to Winston Churchill, graced its runway, which crossed a road on which traffic had to be stopped by a man waving a red flag. It’s also famous for being the first airport with air traffic control. Today, the old terminal Airport House still stands.

Croydon Airport. Picture: HHA124L Source: Flickr
5. Nicosia International Airport, Cyprus
Nicosia International Airport was the most important airport in Cyprus but commercial activity stopped after the Turkish invasion of 1974. Today it is a no-man’s land, a United Nations buffer zone from which both Greeks and Turks are barred.

Nicosia International Airport. Picture: Dicklebers, Wikicommons Source: Supplied
6. RAF Binbrook, England
The UK has a number of old disused airfields just waiting to be turned into the next ‘regional hub’ or Mayor of London-named mega project mooted as an alternative to Heathrow’s 11th runway. RAF Binbrook, near Brookenby in Lincolnshire was used by bombers during World War II and continued to be used by the Air Force until the 1980s. Its biggest claim to fame is as the set for 1990 flick Memphis Belle.

RAF Binbrook. Picture: MilbourneOne, Wikicommons Source: Supplied
7. Gaza International Airport, Gaza strip
Also known as Yasser Arafat International Airport, this airport served the Gaza strip. Opened in 1998, 700,000 passengers passed though it a year, but not for long. In December 2001 Israeli forces shelled its radar station and control tower, putting it out of action. A few weeks later, they bulldozed the runway.

Gaza International Airport. Picture: GishaOrg Source: Flickr
8. Stapleton International Airport, US
Stapleton International Airport served Denver, Colorado between 1929 and 1995, when it was replaced by Denver International. In July 1997, a storm caused severe damage to its structure, so it had to get knocked down completely. All that remains today is one old control tower.

Stapleton International Airport. picture: Bradleygee Source: Flickr
9. Marine Corps Air Station El Toro, US
“Welcome to Earth!” This was Will Smith’s greeting to an alien in Independence Day. Scenes from the classic 1996 sci-fi blockbuster were filmed at the Air Station Marine Corps El Toro airfield in the California desert, which looks exactly like the kind of place that an extraterrestrial attack force would use as a rendezvous point on our planet. It closed in 1999 (not because of an alien attack).

Marine Corps Air Station El Toro. Picture: Dsearls Source: Flickr
10. Galeville, Shawangunk, US
The small military airfield in upstate New York was built during World War Two for use as a military academy. It had two paved runways and for some years operated as a civilian airport. It’s now part of the Shawangunk Grasslands National Wildlife Refuge.

Galeville, Shawangunk. Picture: Danielcase, Wikicommons Source: Supplied
11. Johnston Atoll Airport, US
Imagine trying to land a plane here! Johnston Atoll Airport is, as the name suggests, a small atoll in the Pacific Ocean, several hundred miles south of Hawaii. It was a US military base for much of the 20th century but closed in 2005. Built on a small island, it housed 400 men and had an underground hospital. Attacked by Japanese submarines in During World War II, it’s now abandoned and lies in ruins.

Johnston Atoll Airport. Picture: USFWSPacific Source: Flickr
12. Montreal-Mirabel International Airport, Canada
Opened in 1975, Montreal International Airport in Quebec is now just used by cargo planes. But his beginnings were more ambitious. It was conceived as the largest airport in the world at the time, 10 times as big as Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris. Expected to receive 50 million passengers a year, this never happened. Despite government intervention, passenger flights ceased in 2004. The Tom Hanks movieTerminal was filmed here, while the track serves as a racing circuit.

Montreal-Mirabel International Airport. Picture: Yvan — Leduc, Wikicommons Source: Supplied
13. Floyd Bennett Field, New York, US
Formerly one of New York’s major airports, Floyd Bennett Field is synonymous with the exploits of Amelia Earhart and Howard Hughes. Its glory days over, it was replaced by Newark Airport in New Jersey. Although these days is a public park, it retains some of the historic buildings that were part of the airport.

Floyd Bennett Field. picture: Uberzombie Source: Flickr
14. Robert Mueller Municipal Airport, US
Robert Mueller Municipal Airport served the city of Austin in Texas from 1928 to 1999 when it was officially closed and replaced by the Austin Bergstrom International Airport. Now built over, the only thing that reminds us that one day there was an airport here is the old control tower.

Robert Mueller Municipal Airport. Picture: Seanmasn Source: Flickr
15. Kai Tak International Airport, Hong Kong
Kai Tak International was Hong Kong’s main airport from 1925 to 1998, when it closed and all traffic moved to the new Hong Kong International Airport, 48 kilometresto the west. Surrounded by mountains and buildings, it was one of the world’s most notorious for takeoffs and landings, especially on the famous track 13, since the aircraft had to make a turn of 90 or even 180 degrees.
Read more travel news from leading travel search website Skyscanner.

Kai Tak International Airport. Picture: Alandot Source: Flickr
source:::::news.com.au
natarajan

source::::glasbergen.com
natarajan
These Are More Than Mere Photos, They`re Art..
Some Stunning Images thro lens… a nice collection from ba-bamail site. Pl watch
natarajan
When Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 disappeared without a trace over Southeast Asia sometime Saturday, a persistent question quickly emerged: How could an airliner just vanish? But as the days continue to pass without any sign of the plane, we have been reminded that flight is a complex process that we now frequently take for granted. That’s right, maybe this whole flying through the air in a metal tube with wings thing isn’t as easy or simple as we make it look, and sometimes, albeitextremely rarely, it does go wrong.
From the beginnings of the remarkable achievement of human flight and the mysterious disappearance of American aviator Amelia Earhart, a number of seemingly unbelievable incidents have helped shape how we fly. Some of the following air incidents ultimately made airplane travel safer, but usually only after emphasizing the fact that the skies — and what we do in them — can sometimes be shockingly unpredictable. Perhaps it’s amazing that things almost always go right.
1. A commercial airliner went down over the Atlantic and wasn’t found for five days.
![]()
Crew members of a Brazilian frigate recover debris from Air France flight 447.
A little after 10 p.m. on May 31, 2009, Air France Flight 447 took off from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil to make its way across the Atlantic to Paris’ Charles de Gaulle International Airportf. The Airbus A330-203 was carrying 216 passengers, as well as 12 crew members. The aircraft was last contacted at 2:10 a.m. on June 1. Five days later, wreckage of the plane finally began showing up in the Atlantic. All aboard were presumed dead and the cause of the crash remained largely undetermined until the plane’s flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder were recovered nearly two years later, about two miles under the ocean.
Analysis of the black boxes determined that Air France Flight 447’s autopilot failed and the pilots mistakenly raised the nose of the plane causing it to stall. The pilots were reportedly unaware of the stall and continued pulling up, which resulted in the plane eventually plummeting intact from 38,000 feet, falling at roughly 10,000 feet per minute. Experts concluded that the plane broke apart not in the air but upon impact with the Atlantic Ocean.
2. An American Airlines plane was stolen off a runway in Luanda, Angola and has never been seen again.
![]()
The stolen American Airlines plane, 14 years prior.
It was 2003, and Ben Charles Padilla — airline mechanic, flight engineer and private pilot — was in charge of maintenance of a used Boeing 727 American Airlines plane(owned by a Miami airline leasing company), that had been sitting on the runway in Luanda, Angola at Quatro de Fevereiro Airport for a little over a year. On May 25, 2003, the plane inexplicably made its way down the runway, without authorization and with its transponder turned off. The FBI and CIA believe Padilla was at the controls, but reports vary as to how many people were with him upon takeoff. U.S officials suspect the plane was used for illegal activity, such as running drugs, guns or perhaps even crashed for insurance money, but no one is certain. As of today, the plane and Padilla remain missing.
3. An Australian pilot reported a UFO hovering above him mid flight. He and his plane are still missing.
![]()
Single engine Cessna craft similar to that flown by Valentich.
In October 1978, Frederick Valentich was flying over Melbourne’s Bass Strait when he reported that an aircraft that he could not identify was hovering a thousand feet above him. The flight tower told Valentich they detected no other aircraft in the area. At about 7:12 p.m., Valentich told the tower the object was “hovering and it’s not an aircraft.” This was followed by 17 seconds of unidentified “metal scraping sounds” and then silence. Valentich and his Cessna 182L were never seen again.
Without the wreckage, we’ll never really know what happened, but subsequent reports suggest it is likely that Valentich became disoriented, possibly misjudged his altitude and crashed. Given that the disappearance took place over 30 years ago, and no wreckage has ever been found on land, it leads many to believe that Valentich must have gone down over water, which could conceivably hide a crashed plane indefinitely.
4. The roof of a commercial airliner blew off mid-flight, leaving passengers and crew exposed to the elements. The plane still managed to land safely.
![]()
Passengers recover as the exposed cabin of Flight 243 looms in the background.
On April 28, 1988, Aloha Airlines Flight 243 was carrying passengers from Hilo to Honolulu, Hawaii on a Boeing 737-297 when an explosive decompression caused the roof just outside the cockpit to rupture, leaving a gaping hole through which debris from the aircraft and unsecured items from the cabin were rapidly sucked out. One flight attendant, Clarabelle Lansing, was also ejected from the plane, and her body was never found. She was the lone fatality in the catastrophic incident, which according to the NTSB, was caused by a structural failure in the fuselage due to age and stress on the 19-year-old aircraft. Others had different hypotheses, but following the NTSB’s report, safety inspection and construction standards were changed for this line of commercial airliner.
5. A pilot successfully crash-landed a 737 in the middle of the jungle after flying in the wrong direction upon takeoff.
![]()
A Varig 737 similar to the one piloted into the Amazon.
Varig Flight 254 was supposed to be taking a plane full of passengers on the final leg of a flight from São Paulo to Belém, in Brazil, on Sept. 3, 1989. After completing a number of successful stopovers, the crew prepared for the home stretch, a short journey from Marabá to Belém. When the pilot went to input the heading for the final flight, he misread the coordinates, leading him to direct the plane to fly in the opposite direction, into an uninhabited section of the Amazon. The true extent of the mistake went unnoticed until it was too late, as the pilots attempted to find nearby airfields to land in when they couldn’t find the Belém runway. The plane eventually ran out of fuel and the crew was forced to take the aircraft down over an isolated stretch of rainforest.
The impact and ensuing disintegration of the plane led to eight fatalities. Survivors of the crash then hiked out of the jungle to retrieve help for their companions. A total of 13 were killed as a result of the incident.
6. A commercial jetliner went down in the ocean just short of its island destination. Out of 153 people on board, only one survived.
![]()
French and Yemeni divers search the Indian Ocean for the wreckage of Yemenia Flight 626.
Yemenia Flight 626, an Airbus A310-324, crashed into the Indian Ocean off the coast of the small island of Comoros on June 30, 2009. Thirteen hours after the crash, rescuers spotted 14-year-old Bahia Bakari clinging to debris in the ocean. Without a life vest and apparently unable to swim, Bakari was the only survivor of the flight, which also claimed the life of her mother. An investigation of the crash ultimately determined that the plane had gone down due to crew error.
7. The U.S. Navy shot down a commercial jet thinking it was an F-14.
![]()
The U.S.S. Vincennes.
With the Iran-Iraq war still going strong in 1988, there was still a great deal of uneasiness in the Persian Gulf. Iran Air Flight 655 left from Tehran on its way to Dubai on July 3. Patrolling the Gulf that day was the USS Vincennes, a U.S. Navy guided missile cruiser. The U.S. claims that it attempted to make contact with the aircraft, which did not identify itself, and thus was forced to shoot down the plane using two surface to air missiles, killing all 290 on board.
The U.S. military has stated that it believed the Airbus A300 was actually an F-14 fighter jet, a much smaller and much faster aircraft. The lack of concrete reasoning for firing upon the aircraft, along with its historical opposition to Iran, did not paint the U.S. in a forgiving light. And though it has never admitted fault, the U.S. government paid the families of the deceased $61.8 million in restitution.
8. A plane veered off the runway shortly after takeoff, severing its wing and exploding onto a nearby highway.
![]()
A flatbed truck hauls the remains of Northwest Airlines flight 255’s two engines.
Northwest Airlines Flight 255 took off just outside of Detroit on August 16, 1987. The McDonnell Douglas MD-82 departed the runway shakily and veered off in one direction, severing the fuel-filled wing of the plane on a light pole. That ignited the plane as it crashed and broke apart on nearby Interstate 94. A total of 148 passengers and six crew members were killed in the accident. Two people on the ground were also killed. The lone survivor of the flight was a 4-year-old girl named Cecelia Cichan. She lost her mother, father and 6-year-old brother in the incident. It remains thedeadliest sole-survivor crash in the history of aviation.
9. A corporate jet had part of its wing and tail clipped by a commercial airliner — at 37,000 feet.
The Legacy 600 jet with part of its wing and tail clipped.
New York Times travel writer Joe Sharkey was flying above the Amazon rainforest on September 29, 2006 in what he called an “uneventful and comfortable flight.”Suddenly, the $25 million Embraer Legacy 600 corporate jet he was flying in was hit. By what, no one knew. The passengers could only see that part of a wing was gone. And all this at nearly 40,000 feet in the air, above the Amazon. The pilots, unsuccessful in contacting anybody on the ground, desperately looked for a place to land. Finally, they located a hidden military base and miraculously brought the aircraft down safely.
Sharkey and the other passengers all celebrated and joked about their brush with death, wondering what might have hit them. Then news came. A Brazilian flight went missing right in the area where they had reported the collision. It was carrying 155 passengers. The two aircraft had somehow been traveling at the same altitude in opposite directions, in the same space, each at about 500 miles per hour.
The other craft turned out to be Gol Transportes Aéreos Flight 1907, a Boeing 737 traveling from Manaus, Brazil to Rio De Janeiro. According to crash reports, the Legacy 600’s left winglet (part of the wing that juts vertically off the wing’s tip) had collided with and sliced off nearly half of the Boeing 737’s left wing. This caused Flight 1907 to nose dive from 37,000 feet into an uncontrollable spin, which broke the aircraft apart in midair, sending all passengers and crew members to their death in the jungle below.
___________________________________________________________
All of these incidents were as tragic are they were unusual, which is perhaps why they are so fascinating. Flying in an airplane is seemingly inevitable. The airline industry has made it possible for us to jet coast to coast, continent to continent and everywhere in between, pretty much at the drop of a hat. And while the two million-plus passengers who board more than 30,000 flights every day in the U.S. (and no doubt others around the world) love to complain when things go wrong and flights are delayed or interrupted by crying babies, being involved in something like one of the incidents above seems almost unthinkable.
And that’s not by accident: The airline industry has continued to improve safety standards for both planes and broader flight protocols, ensuring that we almost always get from point A to point B without any real trouble, much less danger. You have a one-in-11 million chance of being killed in an airplane crash, meaning you’re much more likely to be eaten by a shark, or as some airline executives claim, more likely to die in the airport — and certainly while driving there — than on the plane itself.
Air FranceAirplane CrashesAloha Airlines Flight 243Northwest Airlines Flight 255Jack Gilbert GrahamJoe Sharkey Legacy 600Frederick ValentichVarig Flight 254Yemenia Flight 626Iran Air Flight 655USS VincennesAirplane IncidentsWorldPost News
source:::: The World Post
natarajan

Bird spotter
A picture that requires a double take: this parrot is in fact a female model who posed for ‘world bodypainting champion’ Johannes Stötter. The Italian artist – whose frog imagewas an Internet hit – spent weeks planning the transformation, taking four hours to paint his subject with ink. The model’s arm forms the parrot’s head and beak, and her legs form the wing and tail feathers.
source::::bbc.com
natarajan

What is this strange structure sitting in the middle of the desert? Could it be an alien colony or perhaps the weirdest cinema we’ve ever seen. Picture: Picture Media Source: Supplied
SITTING in the middle of a vast desert, an abandoned cinema is still waiting for its first movie to be screened.
It has been over a decade since the outdoor cinema was built in the southern tip of the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt, at the bottom of a desert mountain range.
Now the 150 wooden seats are weathered and worn by the apocalyptic surroundings, and remain empty.
The screen’s foundations stand broken and the building housing the generator and projector has been left crumbling.

The End of the World cinema has ample seating but nobody has ever seen a film here. Picture: Picture Media Source:Supplied
This abandoned cinema was photographed by Kaupo Kikkas, 31, after he visited the region and heard about the unique destination while travelling through Egypt.
The Estonian photographer says, “It’s known as the ‘End of the World’ cinema.
“While I was there I had an extraordinarily strong feeling of loneliness, in many ways.”
Built in 2000, the cinema is said to have been created by an anonymous Frenchman, who purchased materials and equipment from Cairo.

Materials were reportedly bought from an old cinema. Picture: Picture Media Source: Supplied
The site of the cinema is 12 miles from the nearest town, Sharm el-Sheikh.
Kaupo says, “I heard he bought original old seats and projection equipment from an old cinema, before returning to Sinai to create his desert cinema.”
“But, on the day of the premiere, everything went wrong. Apparently, the local authorities were unhappy about the cinema’s construction and the Frenchman’s enthusiasm and spirit.”
“Before a film was screened the electricity generator was sabotaged and as a result the cinema was shut down.”
“No films were ever screened at the ‘End of the World’ cinema.”
source::::news.com au
natarajan

Anthony Wesley captured this glorious telescope image of the planet Mars on March 6. He wrote on his Facebook page:
Some good seeing this morning for the first time in many weeks…. I nearly missed it as the forecast was for cloud and rain, but at 3 a.m. it was clear although I could see lightning off in the distance…
North polar cap at top left, Syrtis Major to the lower left, cloud over the Elysium volcanoes at upper right, still bright blue cloud in Hellas at bottom. A faint band of equatorial cloud is also visible.
A few days earlier, he got this awesome shot of Mars’ two moons, Phobos and Deimos.

Of the image above, he wrote:
Third time lucky… got both Phobos and Deimos this time. Operating the GS3 camera in 12 bit mode gives me a little more headroom. Once again the diffraction from my 3 vane spider is prominent. 3 minutes @ 10fps, no filter (L channel). 16″ f/4 newtonian @ 6000mm focal length
source::::earth sky news
natarajan