Animals
The 4.2m long Sowerby's beaked whale is thought to have become stranded at Saltdean shortly before 8pm.
Newhaven Coastguard was called to the scene where they found the dead whale.
They said in a statement: "The team were tasked to investigate a stranded whale on the beach at Saltdean.
"When the team arrived the 4.2 metre long Sowerby' beaked whale was deceased.
"The whale was pulled approximately 120 metres to the promenade using salvage equipment supplied by Cutts Marine."
The male whale, which weighed 35 tonnes, was first spotted at sea on Wednesday before its body drifted to the Coq beach near Bruges, the first time such an event has occurred in 21 years, local media said.
Fin whales are a protected species and are the world's second biggest mammals after blue whales.
The huge carcass was to be cut up and moved to a site where specialists will try to determine the cause of death.
On its Twitter account, the institute asked spectators to keep their distance while the operation was ongoing.
The girl, identified as Hatice Aydoğdu, was waiting for her school shuttle when a pitbull accompanied by a stray dog ran up to her and bit her repeatedly.
Sinem Aydoğdu, the girl's mother, quickly tried to save her daughter but could not stop the dog for several minutes.
According to Wayne Dyason, City of Cape Town Law Enforcement spokesperson, the whale was dead on discovery. "The cause of death is unknown but an autopsy will be done to determine the cause of death," he said.
Law Enforcement officers in Melkbos Strand were also successful in foiling the plans of illegal fishers.
Two men were observed entering the waters of Melkbos in full diving equipment, and officers suspected that they were fishing illegally. This hunch proved to be right as they were found to be in possession of undersized West Coast Rock Lobsters, as well as abalone.

A man carries a branch as spider webs blanket shrubs at the banks of Lake Vistonida, Greece, October 19, 2018.
This peculiar phenomenon was apparently caused by unusually warm weather which led to an increase in the mosquito population and therefore triggered an overpopulation of spiders that feed on these insects.
The spiders are from the genus Tetragnatha, known as stretch spiders due to their elongated bodies.
They are known to build webs near watery habitats, with some species even said to be able to walk on water.
"Some of the footage we are getting back from the cameras is breathtaking, including species we have never seen in this part of the world," Australian Antarctic Division Program Leader Dirk Welsford said.
The monster, alternatively known as the 'Spanish Dancer', or Enypniastes eximia, is a deep-sea swimming sea cucumber typically found bottom-feeding in certain parts of the world. The creature has previously only been filmed much farther north in the Gulf of Mexico.
Prior research has shown that dogs were living in both the Near East and Europe prior to the Neolithic. They were, in fact, the only domesticated species already present in Europe when the Near Easterners arrived. Now, the researchers in this new effort have found evidence of dogs traveling with people as they moved from the Near East to Europe and subsequently mated with the dogs already living there.
To learn more about the history of dog domestication, the researchers studied 100 mitochondrial sequences obtained from ancient dog remains found in both the Near East and Europe. They used the genetic information they found to trace the lineage of dogs from the Upper Paleolithic to the Bronze Age.
Florida has become a haven for invasive species in the United States, but perhaps the most well-known of the state's alien residents is the Burmese python. These giant snakes, native to Southeast Asia, have become well-established over the past few decades and even flourish in their new environment.
"In Burmese pythons, we observed the rapid establishment and expansion of an invasive population in Florida, which is quite ecologically distinct from Southeast Asia and likely imposes significant ecological selection on the invasive Burmese python population," said Todd Castoe, biology professor at The University of Texas at Arlington and director of the Castoe Lab. "This situation had all of the hallmarks of a system where rapid adaptation could occur, so we were excited to test for this possibility using cutting-edge genomic approaches."
Comment: The neo-Darwinist view of evolution as a long and slow process of random mutation and selection over millions of years doesn't account for many scientific observations, including the above. It seems the evolution can happen in much more rapid spurts in response to environmental pressures in real time, and doesn't require natural selection to allow for genetic mutations to spread throughout a population over the course of many generations. This is truly fascinating, but no-doubt angers many of the materialists crowd as it throws a rather large wrench into the "it's all random chance" narrative.
See also:
- Study suggests evolution doesn't work the way we thought it did
- A new look at archaic DNA tells a different story of human evolution
- 'Dark DNA' could change thinking on evolution
- Monkey business forces a rethink on human evolution
- Unified Theory of Evolution: Darwin's theory that natural selection drives evolution is incomplete without input from evolution's anti-hero: Lamarck

A shark tooth is embedded in the surfboard belonging to a Whanageri man who was attack by the shark off Baylys Beach
The man was surfing at Baylys Beach about 100 kilometers (60 miles) northwest of Auckland when the attack happened, according to police.
The man, who is in his 20s, was in pain and bleeding after being bitten on his hand, elbow and mouth, according to the New Zealand Herald website, but was able to walk and talk.
The shark left bite marks and a tooth in the man's surfboard, said news website Stuff.

This giant Finback Whale washed up on the outside of Long Point Road in P-Town.
50-60 foot Finback whale washed up on the outside of Long Point Road in Provincetown. The Finback whale (Balaenoptera physalus) is the world's second biggest living animal. Finbacks can grow to nearly 70 feet in length and a weight of 70 tons. Despite that massive size, they are streamlined and muscular allowing them to travel at speeds of up to 35 miles per hour, earning it the nickname, "the greyhound of the sea". It can reportedly hold its breath for 50 minutes. The whale's territory stretches across all of the world's oceans. The Finback Whale is listed as an endangered by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.











Comment: Evidence found in the Americas demonstrate that dogs have been man's best friend for at least 14,000 years.
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