On the High Seas

Bolivia, a landlocked South American country, has a navy with 173 vessels and about 5,000 personnel, despite being a landlocked country. It currently uses its navy to patrol the rivers that flow into the Amazon, as well as Lake Titicaca, which is located on Bolivia’s border with Peru. (Lake Titicaca, in addition to being the largest lake in South America, is the highest navigable lake in the world, at 12,507 feet above sea level. That’s the basis for my attempted pun in the title, since I can’t think of any puns based on the name of the lake itself.)

The country used to have a coastline, but lost it to Chile in the War of the Pacific (1879-83). Bolivia, to this day, makes no secret of the fact that it wants that land back.

Map of the War of the Pacific.en2

The country will get its day in court sometime soon, now that the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague has agreed to hear its claim for “sovereign access to the sea” (h/t Paul). The legal case involves complicated questions of international law that you can read about on your own. Continue reading

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Monday Morning Cute: The Lesser-Known Rodents

Inspired by the naked mole rat (which is really not cute at all), I started looking into other members of the rodent order that might be unfamiliar to people in the U.S. Rodents sort of tend to be either/or in the cuteness department, as we view them either as pests (mice, rats, squirrels that actually try to touch you) or as adorable little shnookums (mice and rats in controlled environments, squirrels that keep a polite distance, beavers actively engaged in chewing on things, etc.) There’s a big wide world of rodents out there, so join me. Today we look at the rodents of South America.

Giant rat-squirrels

You don’t need me to tell you that capybaras, the world’s largest rodent species, are adorable.

By Karelj (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons Continue reading

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