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So, what's a polar bear doing on
my site?
Thanks for asking. I put it there:
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to explain
how I generated my business name, URSA MAJOR, from one of my
interests, and how you might do something similar.
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to
demonstrate how just a little piece of clipart, an animation,
a photo or two, possibly some music on your page can generate
interest. These are simple and easy to add.
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to
share that the bear is my totem, adopted from childhood when a
black bear came up to my car in Yellowstone and communed with
me through the window, only inches away, for what seemed like
10 minutes. She seemed to be sayng that we share the planet together,
that they have intelligence and concerns, and they have as much
right to live here as we do..
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To
spread a fascinating story about a rare black bear called "spirit
bear" or "ghost bear", of the species Ursus Americanus Kermodie,
which I found on the PBS web site. It's a true story, and demonstrates
the power of the Internet to convey information powerfully.
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Enjoy the story!
- Michele T. Fry, Webmaster by Design.
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Some people like music on web
sites.
How about you?

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Princess Royal Island, just off the coast
of British Columbia in Canada, is a throwback to an
earlier time: a temperate rainforest inhabited only
by animals. Here, bald eagles, gray wolves, and salmon
live undisturbed by civilization, and a rare subspecies
of bear, almost invisible anywhere else, has been allowed
to flourish. Princess Royal Island is the home of the
ghost bear.
A ghost bear is an otherwise ordinary
American black bear who, thanks to a recessive gene,
is born with white fur.
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Also known as the Kermode bear, after Frank Kermode,
former director of the Royal British Columbia Museum, this bear
is a genetic abnormality, but not an albino. Where an albino
would have a white nose and light-colored eyes, a Kermode bear
has a brown nose and eyes.
On Princess Royal Island, the bear population
has been isolated for so long that this recessive gene for white
fur shows up in large numbers: one out of every ten bears is
white. It is one of these bears, an adolescent just learning
to get along without his mother, who is the star of the NATURE
program GHOST BEAR.
Pictured right:
British Columbia's Great Bear Rainforest,
"ghost bear's" only remaining undisturbed habitat.
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A more fanciful explanation of the bear's
origin comes from the Tsimshiam people, who once lived
on the island. Long ago, the story goes, the world was
covered in ice and snow. One day, the raven, the creator
of the world, came down from heaven and turned the world
green, as it is today. But as a reminder of the time
when all was white, the raven went among the bears and
turned every tenth one the color of snow. The raven
decreed that the white bear, which the Tsimshiam call
Moksgm'ol, would live forever in peace.
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But this guarantee may not be valid much longer.
To protect Princess Royal Island, NATURE had chosen not to make
its name public, but in the three years since GHOST BEAR was
filmed, the island has become the center of a struggle between
conservationists and developers. The island has been targeted
by the logging industry, which has already begun clearing away
tracts of the 10,000-year-old forest.
With its habitat in danger, the Kermode bear is
a subject of great interest to wildlife filmmakers. Jeff and
Sue Turner, the makers of GHOST BEAR, first ventured to Princess
Royal Island in 1991 to spot this elusive creature and determine
whether they could make a film about it. They travelled north
in the late summer, when the island's waters were full of the
salmon that tempt hungry bears out of the deep forests.
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Once funding for the film shoot was in
place, the Turners returned to the island in 1992. They
built a base camp where they lived for an entire year
with their advisor, Charles Russell, and their newborn
baby. Over the course of a year, thanks to the resident
bears' unfamiliarity with people, the Turners got closer
to these animals than anyone has ever done.
Throughout most of the world, bears know
enough about humans to avoid us by instinct.
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Afraid of an attack, the filmmakers were
surprised instead to be welcomed by the young bear,
who was as curious about the humans as they were about
him.
Russell goes on to warn the reader against
trying to initiate contact with wild bears, who have
unpredictable natures, but the story -- and the fact
that Russell lived to write about it -- is a testament
to the spirit bear's trust for him and the Turners.
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More Info Get
A Quote |
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Many webpages of my creation have Kermode
bear
running through my logo at the bottom, like this.
Clients may also choose a
text-only logo, as follows:
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