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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
901.www.imf.au.dk21200
902.www.dfn.de20900
903.www.irb-cisr.gc.ca20900
904.www.gazettelabo.fr20900
905.www.newscientisttech.com20800
906.www.biosicherheit.de20600
907.www.sze.hu20600
908.www.onlineconversion.com20500
909.www.mncn.csic.es20400
910.www.spectrum.ieee.org20200
911.www.dkrz.de20200
912.www.fee.uva.nl20000
913.www.force.dk20000
914.www.miktex.org19900
915.www.archaeology.nsc.ru19900
916.www.bura.hu19900
917.www.watergeo.ru19800
918.www.urania.be19700
919.www.asm.org19500
920.www.logoi.com19500
921.www.sindioses.org19500
922.www.conaf.cl19400
923.www.humaniora.sdu.dk19400
924.www.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp19300
925.www.falw.vu.nl19300
926.www.inpi.fr19200
927.www.accademiadellacrusca.it19200
928.www.mi.uib.no19200
929.www.natur-lexikon.com19100
930.www.vito.be19000
931.www.retsinfo.dk19000
932.www.metoffice.com18900
933.www.dfu.min.dk18900
934.astrofili.org18800
935.www.techcentralstation.com18700
936.www.gsc.riken.go.jp18400
937.www.bwl.tu-darmstadt.de18200
938.www.inta.es18100
939.www.astronomynow.com18000
940.www.enst-bretagne.fr18000
941.www.wiwi.hu-berlin.de17800
942.www.arpa.piemonte.it17800
943.www.exponenta.ru17700
944.www.medioambiente.gov.ar17600
945.www.yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp17600
946.www.sondasespaciales.com17500
947.www.politstudies.ru17500
948.www.barrameda.com.ar17400
949.www.statistikbanken.dk17300
950.www.chemedia.com17100
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901. www.imf.au.dk

Rating: 21200 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.imf.au.dk' on the other websites

www.imf.au.dk

AU: IMF Forside

Description: IMF Forside / Institut for Matematiske Fag, Det Naturvidenskabelige Fakultet, Aarhus Universitet

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Today's Mystery Bird For You To Identify
This lovely mystery bird has such a large range that it can be seen throughout Europe (even in the UK) as well as Africa. Can you name this species and tell me if it's a male or female?Mystery Bird photographed at Mikumi National Park, Tanzania, Africa. [I will identify this bird for you in 48 hours]Image: Dan Logen, 8 January 2010 [with binoculars].Nikon D300s, 600 mm lens, ISO 1000, f/8, 1/320 sec.This lovely mystery bird has such a large range that it can be seen throughout Europe (even in the UK) as well as Africa. Can you name this species and tell me if it's a male or female?Daily Mystery Bird Rules: 1. Please name at least one field mark that supports your identification, keeping in mind that more than one field mark is often necessary to distinguish between species. IDs without any supporting information are not valid and may be deleted by the moderators. 2. Expert and intermediate level birders: do NOT try to be the first to blurt out the mystery bird's ID. Instead, please provide helpful hints, such as descriptions, literary references, puns, personal anecdotes, and other forms of discussion and assistance for beginning birders and for those following on their iPhones without naming the species. Expert and intermediate birders are free to name the bird species 24 or more hours after it was first published.3. Each mystery bird is usually accompanied by a question or two. These questions can be useful for identifying the pictured species, but may instead be used to illustrate an interesting aspect of avian biology, behaviour or evolution, or may be intended to generate conversation on other topics, such as conservation. 4. Each bird species will be demystified 48 hours after publication. If you have bird images, video or mp3 files that you'd like to share with a large and appreciate audience, feel free to email them to me for consideration.GrrlScientistguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Today's mystery bird for you to identify
I've never seen this species in the wild, but in my opinion, this African mystery bird is a "flying field mark" because nothing else in the world looks like it. Can you identify this lovely and distinctive bird?Mystery Bird photographed at Tarangire National Park, Tanzania, Africa. [I will identify this bird for you in 48 hours]Image: Dan Logen, 17 January 2010 [velociraptorize].Nikon D300, 600 mm lens with 1.4 extender, ISO 400, f/9, 1/400 secI've never seen this species in the wild, but in my opinion, this African mystery bird is a "flying field mark" because nothing else in the world looks like it. Can you identify this lovely and distinctive bird?Daily Mystery Bird Rules: 1. This is a game, not a testosterone-driven competition designed to crush one's fellow birders/twitchers into the muck of disappointment, despair and humiliation. It is meant to be a learning experience where together we can learn a few things about birds and about the process of identifying them (and maybe about ourselves, too).2. Please name at least one field mark that supports your identification, keeping in mind that more than one field mark is often necessary to distinguish between species. IDs without any supporting information are not valid and may be deleted by the moderators. 3. Expert and intermediate level birders: do NOT try to be the first to blurt out the mystery bird's ID. Instead, please provide helpful hints, such as descriptions, literary references, puns, personal anecdotes, and other forms of discussion and assistance for beginning birders and for those following on their iPhones without naming the species. Expert and intermediate birders are free to name the bird species 24 or more hours after it was first published.4. Each mystery bird is usually accompanied by a question or two. These questions can be useful for identifying the pictured species, but may instead be used to illustrate an interesting aspect of avian biology, behaviour or evolution, or may be intended to generate conversation on other topics, such as conservation or ethics. 5. Each bird species will be demystified approximately 48 hours after publication. (Yes, I do my best with this.)If you have bird images, video or mp3 files that you'd like to share with a large and (mostly) appreciative audience, feel free to email them to me for consideration.GrrlScientistguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk