You will return to my blog and blubber all over me in weepy gratitude once you've heard them. |
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He was not a lumberjack, or a fur trader, and he didn't live in an igloo or eat blubber, or own a dog sled. |
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Waterproof hair and insulating fat, called blubber, help crabeater seals stay warm in the frigid waters. |
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I could almost hear the coopers banging, smell the blubber cauldrons boiling. |
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They try to keep still, to conserve their resources of blubber and mother's milk. |
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A gull will land on the back of a surfaced whale and rip at its flesh and blubber. |
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As we ease in for the pick-up, I can see a tiny nub of blubber protruding from the end of the tip. |
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Yet the movement of his blubber lips, closely pressed together, showed clearly that he could not understand a word. |
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When I looked at his face I saw his blubber lips twitching with the efforts of attempted smile, but he couldn't quite carry it off. |
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Maybe then I'll lose some of my blubber, 'cause really you didn't have much to lose, sweet cheeks. |
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In my case, in addition to my belly, my chest was still misshaped from carrying too much blubber. |
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A word every prep fears, due to the fact they hate seeing a little bit of blubber on anyone, especially themselves. |
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At this point I am taking a coffee break as I retch once again at the thought of whale blubber sitting unhappily in my oesophagus. |
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In the 19th century it became an important port of call for ships, whose crews also picked up whale blubber and seal skins there. |
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He was trying to tell me all you get to eat in Japan is raw fish and whale blubber for every meal. |
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The tongue of the whale was regarded as a delicacy, while salted whale blubber could be bought in any French town. |
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The smell of the sea was in the air as picnickers feasted on sun-dried halibut, muktuk, whale blubber, and Greenland raisin cake. |
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Young and old chewed thin slices of raw whale blubber as quickly as it was being cut off the carcass. |
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Charcoal, Propane, Mesquite, whale blubber, whatever gives you the taste that you desire. |
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The amount of contaminants in the meat of sea mammals is also low, but the level of contamination in the blubber of seals and whales is high. |
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I've been keeping the conversation moving so Buffy here doesn't blubber, so don't you start or we'll be having to blow dry my dress. |
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The meat and blubber were consumed by members of the Makah Tribe and during tribal ceremonies. |
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The whales visible in the distance can live here only because they are protected by thick layers of blubber. |
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Whale meat and blubber is shared out locally, and a small amount is sold to pay for the upkeep of boats. |
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But that business is encountering its own problems, specifically a bottleneck in processing seal blubber for nutritional supplements. |
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He was to investigate the pathology, the pesticide levels in the blubber, try to do bacteriology and virology. |
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Like most other seals, leopard seals are insulated from frigid waters by a thick layer of fat known as blubber. |
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Other cases are shots of birds wheeling overhead, or dog teams riding, or kayak trips, or cleaning blubber that are all too long. |
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Fish oil supplements are derived from a variety of sources, including mackerel, herring, tuna, salmon, cod liver, halibut, whale blubber and seal blubber. |
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Scott does not come off as a conventionally conceived gigglebox made of blubber. |
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Meanwhile, Democratic leaders blubber about racism while cynically scheming for a permanent demographic majority. |
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Marketing drives much of the blabber about blubber, and the best way to hook a mass audience is to make a diet plan as simplistic and one-dimensional as possible. |
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Prior to kerosene lamps, most lamps consisted of whale blubber. |
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Because the seal's layer of blubber does not extend to its flippers, veins in the flippers lie close to the surface of the skin, poorly insulated from the ice and cold water. |
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Fourteen years later, Norway is preparing to resume the international trade in whale meat with a 10 ton shipment of meat and blubber from minke whales destined for Iceland. |
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I decided to do it just because I have lived with a little too much blubber around my middle for my entire life although the rest of me is quite lean and fat-less. |
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Yes I am losing my blubber, but I have tonnes of it left to lose. |
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He sat down with dignity, answered diplomatically certain mysterious questions about the dames, and applied his blubber lips to a handsome mouthpiece of lemon-coloured amber. |
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They're Yorkshiremen, you see, and their impressionable parts have been cured over the centuries, like Baffin Island blubber, by spindrift and coal smoke. |
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If only my flensing actually did get rid of all the blubber. |
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A thick coat of blubber insulates its body and provides energy when food is scarce or during fasting. |
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We removed the blubber, then the flesh, and finally we disarticulated the skeleton, bone by bone, as we moved from tail to head. |
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Pinnipeds conserve heat with their large and compact body size, insulating blubber and fur, and high metabolism. |
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Polar bears are able to produce water through the metabolism of fats found in seal blubber. |
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They both reside in the frigid arctic and both have large amounts of blubber. |
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In species that live near the poles, the blubber can be as thick as 11 inches. |
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They will then stay there for a matter of months until the calf has developed enough blubber to survive the bitter temperatures of the poles. |
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They have large reserves of blubber, more so for toothed whales as they are higher up the food chain than baleen whales. |
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The seal blubber is used to make seal oil, which is marketed as a fish oil supplement. |
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The two flue harpoon was the primary weapon used in whaling around the world, but it cut through the blubber when under stress. |
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The spearhead is shaped in a manner which allows it to penetrate the thick layers of whale blubber and stick in the flesh. |
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A slab of seal blubber could be left to melt over the lamp feeding it with more fat. |
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Calves, generally, are born with a thin layer of blubber, which develops at different paces depending on the habitat. |
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Walruses maintain such a high body weight because of the blubber stored underneath their skin. |
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The meat, blubber and oil of cetaceans have traditionally been used by indigenous peoples of the Arctic. |
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They have a layer of fat, or blubber, under the skin to maintain body heat in cold water. |
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High levels of organic chemicals accumulate in these animals since they are near the top of food chains and have large reserves of blubber. |
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Increased body weight in males increases the length of time they can fast due to the ample energy reserves stored in the blubber. |
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They also discuss a qulliq, a lamp that uses mammal blubber as fuel and arctic cotton as a wick. |
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Seals have a layer of subcutaneous fat known as blubber that is particularly thick in phocids and walruses. |
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The meat, blubber and fur coats of pinnipeds have traditionally been used by indigenous peoples of the Arctic. |
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They have a layer of fat, or blubber, under the skin to keep warm in the cold water, and, other than the walrus, all species are covered in fur. |
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During the 19th century and the early 20th century, walruses were widely hunted and killed for their blubber, walrus ivory, and meat. |
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The Blubber Point Member, characterized by impure limestone and calcareous sandstone with minor shale, represents shallow, inner carbonate shelf deposition. |
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They have a layer of fat, or blubber, under the skin to keep warm in the cold water. |
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The poached blubber was definitely cetacean in origin, but the particular species could not be identified. |
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When food is scarce, killer whales metabolize blubber for energy, which increases pollutant concentrations in their blood. |
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All he knew about flensing knives was that they were used to strip blubber from whale carcasses. |
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The meat, blubber and baleen of whales have traditionally been used by indigenous peoples of the Arctic. |
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Forty percent of a right whale's body weight is blubber, which is of relatively low density. |
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They have a layer of fat, or blubber, under the skin to keep them warm in cold water. |
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Harbour porpoises were traditionally hunted for food, as well as for their blubber, which was used for lighting fuel. |
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Calves are born with only a thin layer of blubber, but some species compensate for this with a covering of fine, downy hair known as lanugo. |
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In a word, after being tried out, the crisp, shrivelled blubber, now called scraps or fritters, still contains considerable of its unctuous properties. |
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This blubber keeps them warm and the fat provides energy to the walrus. |
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Fat is located in a layer of blubber between the meat and the skin. |
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The neighbours included a whale blubber boilery and two glue factories. |
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Pups are weaned after one month and build up a thick layer of blubber. |
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The body is wrapped in a thick layer of fat, known as blubber, used for thermal insulation and gives cetaceans their smooth, streamlined body shape. |
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They kill their prey with their long tusks and eat their blubber and skin. |
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All dolphins have a thick layer of blubber, thickness varying on climate. |
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It is believed that chronically entangled animals may in fact sink upon death, due to loss of buoyancy from depleted blubber reserves, and therefore escape detection. |
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Blubber serves both to keep the animals warm and to provide energy and nourishment when they are fasting. |
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The distribution of pilot whale meat and blubber in the Faroe Islands follows specific rules laid out in the early nineteenth century and little changed since. |
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However, one of the two main types of pottery used was the blubber lamp, a small, oval deep dish in which you ignited a chunk of blubber or even oil with a wick. |
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The remains of four blubber ovens or furnaces have been found on Gravneset, as well as a graveyard containing about 130 graves dating from the 17th to the late 18th century. |
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Blubber under the seal's skin helps to maintain body temperature. |
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Blubber also streamlines its body for more efficient swimming. |
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