Why is Venus hotter than Mercury even though it is farther away from the sun?



The carbon dioxide traps most of the heat from the Sun. The cloud layers also act as a blanket. The result is a “runaway greenhouse effect” that has caused the planet’s temperature to soar to 465°C, hot enough to melt lead. This means that Venus is even hotter than Mercury.



The surface of Venus has been mapped by radar. The maps show thousands of volcanoes and impact craters. There are two main upland areas, with a mountain range taller than Mt. Everest.



Dozens of spacecraft have visited Venus, but many mysteries remain. ESA’s Venus Express has been in near-polar orbit around the planet since it arrived in April 2006. Most of its instruments have been studying the dense atmosphere and rapidly moving clouds, or investigating how the Sun affects the planet. However, its infrared sensor has also been able to map some of the surface and show that active volcanoes may exist on Earth’s neighbour.



 



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How far is the Moon from Earth?



The Moon is an average of 238,855 miles (384,400 km) away. How far away is that? That’s 30 Earths.



Why mention the average distance? Well, the Moon is not always the same distance away from Earth. The orbit is not a perfect circle.



When the Moon is the farthest away, it’s 252,088 miles away. That’s almost 32 Earths. When it's closest, the Moon is 225,623 miles away. That’s between 28 and 29 Earths.



Today, the moon is moving away from Earth at a rate of about 1.5 inches (4 cm) per year.



The moon is in synchronous rotation with Earth. In other words, the moon rotates on its axis in about the same amount of time it takes to revolve around Earth — 27 days 8 hours, which is called sidereal month. So we always see the same side of the moon; there is no "dark side of the moon." Instead, scientists refer to the side of the moon facing away from the planet as the "far side of the moon." The far side can be spotted by missions such as NASA's DSCOVR satellite, which captured a video of the moon "photobombing" Earth.



A lunar month, also called a synodic month, is the time it takes for the moon to complete a lunar cycle — full moon to full moon. A lunar month is about 29 days 13 hours.



 



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What did scientists find in the clouds of Venus? This chemical could be a sign of life on the planet.



Something deadly might be wafting through the clouds shrouding Venus—a smelly, flammable gas called phosphine that annihilates life-forms reliant on oxygen for survival. Ironically, though, the scientists who today announced sightings of this noxious gas in the Venusian atmosphere say it could be tantalizing—if controversial—evidence of life on the planet next door.



As far as we know, on rocky planets such as Venus and Earth, phosphine can only be made by life—whether human or microbe. Used as a chemical weapon during World War I, phosphine is still manufactured as an agricultural fumigant, is used in the semiconductor industry, and is a nasty byproduct of meth labs. But phosphine is also made naturally by some species of anaerobic bacteria—organisms that live in the oxygen-starved environments of landfills, marshlands, and even animal guts.



Put simply, phosphine shouldn’t be in the Venusian atmosphere. It’s extremely hard to make, and the chemistry in the clouds should destroy the molecule before it can accumulate to the observed amounts. But it’s too early to conclude that life exists beyond Earth’s shores. Scientists caution that the detection itself needs to be verified, as the phosphine fingerprint described in the study could be a false signal introduced by the telescopes or by data processing.



 



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Which is the densest moon in the solar system?



Io (Jupiter) is the densest moon in the Solar System.



Density is one of the simplest non-fundamental properties of matter you can imagine. Every object that exists, from the microscopic to the astronomical, has a certain amount of energy-at-rest intrinsic to it: what we commonly call mass. These objects also take up a given amount of space in three dimensions: what we know as volume. Density is just the ratio of these two properties: the mass of an object divided by its volume.



Our Solar System itself was formed some 4.5 billion years ago the way all solar systems are formed: from a cloud of gas in a star-forming region that contracted and collapsed under its own gravity. Recently, thanks to observatories such as ALMA (the Atacama Large Millimetre/submillimetre Array), we've been able to directly image and analyze the protoplanetary disks that form around these newborn stars for the first time.



 



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Which mineral was found by Chandrayaan-1?



Using data from a NASA instrument onboard India’s Chandrayaan-1 mission, scientists have, for the first time, found the oxidised iron mineral hematite at high latitudes on the Moon.



The findings come as a surprise to planetary scientists since the lunar surface is virtually devoid of any oxygen.



Iron is highly reactive with oxygen and forms rust, which is commonly seen on Earth. However, on the Moon, the hydrogen in solar wind blasts the surface, which acts in opposition to oxidation. This makes the presence of highly oxidised iron-bearing minerals, such as hematite, on the Moon an unexpected discovery.



According to researchers from University of Hawai’i, the lunar hematite may have formed with the help of oxygen from the Earth’s upper atmosphere that has been continuously blown to the lunar surface by solar winds during the past several billion years. 



 



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Name the probe that was launched to study the outer corona of the Sun in 2018.



The Parker Solar Probe is a NASA Space Probe launched in 2018 with the mission of making observations of the outer corona of the Sun.



The Parker Solar Probe rocket lifted off from Cape Canaveral, Florida.



The probe is set to become the fastest-moving manmade object in history. Its data promises to crack longstanding mysteries about the Sun's behaviour.



It is the first space craft to be named after a living person - astrophysicist Eugene Parker, 91, who first described solar wind in 1958



Over the course of seven years, Parker will make 24 loops around our star to study the physics of the corona, the place where much of the important activity that affects the Earth seems to originate.



The probe will dip inside this tenuous atmosphere, sampling conditions, and getting to just 6.16 million km (3.83 million miles) from the Sun's broiling "surface".



 



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What is Crab Nebula?



The Crab Nebula, the result of a supernova noted by Earth-bound chroniclers in 1054 A.D., is filled with mysterious filaments that are not only tremendously complex, but appear to have less mass than expelled in the original supernova and a higher speed than expected from a free explosion. The Crab Nebula spans about 10 light-years. In the nebula's very center lies a pulsar: a neutron star as massive as the Sun but with only the size of a small town. The Crab Pulsar rotates about 30 times each second.



This beautiful nebula is relatively easy to locate due to its location near a bevy of bright stars and recognizable constellations. Although it can be seen at some time of night all year except from roughly May through July when the sun appears too close, the best observing comes from late fall through early spring.



To find the Crab Nebula, first draw an imaginary line from bright Betelgeuse in Orion to Capella in Auriga. About halfway along that line you will find the star Beta Tauri (or Elnath) on the Taurus-Auriga border.



Having identified Beta Tauri, backtrack a little more than a third of the way back to Betelgeuse and you should find the fainter star Zeta Tauri easily. Scanning the area around Zeta Tauri should reveal a tiny, faint smudge. It is located about a degree from the star (that’s about twice the width of a full moon) more or less in the direction of Beta Tauri.



Binoculars and small telescopes are useful for finding the object and showing its roughly oblong shape, but are not powerful enough to show the filimentary structure or any of its internal detail.



 



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Ganymede is a moon of which planet?



Jupiter's moon Ganymede is the largest satellite in the solar system. Larger than Mercury and Pluto, and only slightly smaller than Mars, it would easily be classified as a planet if were orbiting the sun rather than Jupiter.



Ganymede is the seventh moon and third Galilean satellite outward from Jupiter, orbiting at about 665,000 miles (1.070 million kilometers). It takes Ganymede about seven Earth-days to orbit Jupiter.



Daytime temperatures on the surface average minus 171 degrees Fahrenheit to minus 297 degree F, and night temperatures drop to -193 degree C. In 1996, astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope found evidence of a thin oxygen atmosphere. However, it is too thin to support life as we know it; it is unlikely that any living organisms inhabit Ganymede.



Ganymede is the only satellite in the solar system to have a magnetosphere. Typically found in planets, including Earth and Jupiter, a magnetosphere is a comet-shaped region in which charged particles are trapped or deflected. Ganymede's magnetosphere is entirely embedded within the magnetosphere of Jupiter.



 



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Swiatek wins French Open, first Pole to win Grand Slam singles title



On Saturday, October 10, 2020, Polish teenager Iga Swiatek defeated American Sofia Kenin in the women's singles final of the French Open to lift the title.



She did it in style, creating a number of records.



Teenage triumph



At 19 years and 132 days, Swiatek is the youngest woman to win the French Open since 1992. Monica Seles was 18 years and 187 days old when she won the women's single title at the 1992 French Open.



Among male and female players, Swiatek is the youngest to win at Roland Garros since 2005. Rafael Nadal picked up the first of his 13 French Open men's singles titles as a 19-year old in 2005.



A first for poland



By winning the 2020 French Open women's singles title, Swiatek became the first Polish player, female or male, to win a singles major title in tennis history, if we take doubles into consideration as well, she has some company from her compatriots. Following Wojtek Fibak (men's doubles at 1978 Australian Open) and Lukasz Kubot (men's doubles at 2014 Australian Open and 2017 Wimbledon), she is the third Polish player to win a Grand Slam event in the Open Era (1968 onwards), singles or doubles.



Unseeded starter, title winner



Swiatek is only the second unseeded woman to win the French Open in the Open Era, Jelena Ostapenko was the first - a feat she achieved at the 2017 French Open.



Winning without dropping a set



Following in the footsteps of Evonne Goolagong (1971), Chris Evert (1974) and Steffi Graf (1988). Swiatek became just the fourth teenager in the Open Era to win the French Open women's singles title without dropping a single set! If we are to look at records irrespective of age. Swiatek is the first such winner at Roland Garros since Justine Henin won the title in 2007 without dropping a set.



In the last 30 years, only two other players have managed to win women's singles Grand Slam titles as a teenager without dropping a set Monica Seles won the 1992 US Open that way, while Martina Hingis claimed the Australian Open and US Open in 1997 that way.



 



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Do aliens exist?



Are we alone in this Universe? Could there be other intelligent life forms, besides us, out there? These questions haunt our imagination.



Given the fact that our Universe contains two trillion galaxies, each with millions of stars and thousands of planets, it seems unlikely Earth is unique. Still, we have not found anything to suggest that extraterrestrial life exists. In 1974, scientists used a 1,000-foot-wide telescope to send a carefully crafted radio broadcast into outer space, a message of zeros and ones meant to alert aliens to our existence. It was humanity's first interstellar message intended to be picked up by aliens. But we haven't heard back from them yet.



Perhaps, there are no aliens. Perhaps, there are aliens but they choose to remain isolated or they could lack the technology to send or receive messages. Or perhaps, we are not listening properly.



 



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What was George Lucas vision for Star Wars?



Tales from a galaxy far, far away....



On May 25, 1977, a low-budget science fiction film opened in just 32 movie theatres across the United States. The film. Packed with strange characters such as lightsaber-wielding Jedis and Wookiees, surprisingly caught the public imagination and broke all box office records across the country. That film was none other than the cult classic "Star Wars".



Forty-three years later, the space saga is still going strong with Disney's film and television adaptations. But what exactly did filmmaker George Lucas have in mind when he conceived this timeless series and what did he intend for its characters in the future? That's exactly what a just "Star Wars" companion book "Star Wars Fascinating Facts" written by Pablo Hidalgo reveals.



Disney's film adaptations of "Star Wars" have received mixed reviews from fans over the years. One of the most debated topics was Luke Skywalkers death in director Rian Johnson's 2017 film 'The Last Jedi". It showed the Jedi fading away after expending all his energy. Much to the surprise of the fans, Hidalgo's book states that Lucas loo wanted to kill the character in his original plan for "Star Wars 8" (also known as Episode VIII), which was set Around the same time as that of the film.



Who was George Lucas?



George Lucas Walton Jr. was born in a small town of Modesto in California on May 14, 1944. From a young age. Lucas wanted to become a professional race car driver. But a near fatal car racing accident altered his aspirations and forced him to pursue other interests. He began filming car races, which gradually got him interested in filmmaking. He created classics such as Star Wars" and "Indiana Jones”.



In 1971, he founded Lucasfilm, the parent company of the Pixar Animation Studios. Many of Pars creative geniuses used to work at Lucasfilm.



How it began



Contrary to the science fiction films of the time. Lucas wanted to make something light for young adults. So. he began working on the space drama Star Wars". But its production proved to be tumultuous. From budget constraints and health issues to natural disasters, Lucas had to overcome several odds along the way. On the first day of filming "A New Hope", a huge Tunisian storm destroyed the set and delayed shooting and some of the electronic equipment malfunctioned. To make matters worse, actor Mark Hamil was injured in an accident towards the end of production. That's not all, Lucas had an equally tough time finding producers for the film. It was turned down by major studios such as United Artists and Universal But an undeterred Lucas finally managed to convince 20th Century Fox to invest in the film.



OH REALLY?



"Star Wars" and "Indiana Jones" became two of the world's most successful film franchises, paving the way for the others such as "Harry Potter and "Marvel". Today, Lucas is worth an estimated $6.1 billion. But in 2010, the billionaire signed the Giving Pledge, which is a promise to give away half his wealth. During his lifetime. He was particularly interested in donating it to the cause of education.



 



Picture Credit : Google


Which are the best games on Google search?



Rubik's Cube



Don't have a Rubik's Cube at home, but have always wanted to try your hand at solving it? Then look no further than the Internet. Type out Rubik's Cube Google Doodle in the search bar and hit enter. You will find a link to the game right at the beginning of the search results page. The doodle was a tribute to Hungarian inventor and Professor of Architecture Emo Rubik.



The game is as simple as it gets. You have a 3x3 Rubik's Cube whose rows and columns you have to move around to ensure that each of the six colours on the cube forms a 3x3 grid on each side of the cube. Simply put all the nine green coloured squares need to be on one side of the cube and this is the same with the rest of the colours on the cube. If you manage to achieve this, then you're a Rubik's Cube master.



Crossword



If you are a crossword enthusiast, there's a Google Doodle to satisfy your love for the puzzle. To mark the 100th anniversary of the crossword puzzle on December 21, 2013, Google collaborated with a crossword constructor to come up with an interactive crosswords doodle.



Just head to the Google search bar and type out Crossword Google Doodle' and you will find the link. Once you begin the game, you will realise it is just like any other crossword puzzle. Clues are given on the right side. When you click a clue, the relevant portion on the grid will get highlighted and you can key in the solution.



If you think the clues are a little difficult, take your parents help. Or else, you can always Google and find the answers



Magic Cat Academy



This is a fun and exciting Google Doodle game created by Google to mark Halloween on October 31, 2016. Just key in Magic Cat Academy Google Doodle and a link to the doodle will appear



The premise and the rules of the game are explained at the start. In this game, you are a wizard cat and the ghosts have taken over the Magic Cat Academy where you study. You need to fight and kill them to get your academy back. There are a total of five levels in the gameplay. To kill the ghosts at each level, you will have to draw the symbol appearing above each ghost's head. Sometimes, you will have to draw a combination of symbols. At the end of each level, you will face a powerful ghost to kill whom a long combination of symbols needs to be drawn multiple times. Once you do so, you will move on to the next level. You have five chances to stay in the game and win. To improve your chances, sometimes a special power with a heart symbol on top will appear. If you draw the symbol, you will get an extra chance.



 



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What are the rules for singular and plural verbs?



One of the first things that you should pay attention to when you write is this: See that your verb agrees with the subject you have chosen to write about.



What you want to write about your choice. You can choose Sachin Tendulkar as your topic.



You can choose to write about your neighbours pesky dog that barks all night.



Once you have made your choice about the subject the not thing is to place a verb that matches the subject in the sentences you make.



You know that verbs change.



[1] The verb changes when the action described happened in the past. He wrote the novel several years ago.



[2] The verb you pick depends on whether the subject is singular (he she, it) or plural (they, you). Of course the pronoun is special and takes the verb an in the present tense.



If your action state of being is in the present tense, you need to write He writes, she writes, it writes. I write you write, we write. They write. He is, she is, it is. I am. You are, we are, they are.



What about "has and "have"? Has" is used for subjects in the singular, when the action/state of being is in the present tense. He has, she has, it has



"Have" is used for subjects in the plural when the action/state of being is in the present tense.



I have, you have, we have, they have



For action verbs, the past tense does not make a difference. It changes to the past tense and remains the same for all subjects.



She/he/It//We//You/They wrote many letters to the government



Read these examples for seeing the rules clearly.



He has done his work. She has done her work. It has done its work.



I have done my work. We have done our work, You have done your work. They have done their work.



"Has" and "have" are also used to show possession. Shenji (He) has a large house. I have a library at home.



As the examples above show, the rules for using "has", "have" for showing possession are the same as the rules for using them as helping verbs.



Here are some tips to remember



Singular subjects take on singular verbs. (he/ she/it = is/was/has) Plural subjects take on plural verbs (you/ we/they = are/were/ have)



* For all the subjects, all the past tense verbs are the same



So, when you write your sentences, watch out! See that the verb agrees with the subject



Pick your verb, place the questions what or "who" before it. The answer is the subject.



Example 1: She has done her work very well. Which is the verb? "has done."



Who has done? "She". So "she is the subject. The sentence is "She has done".



So the verb "has done agrees with the subject "she." Example 2: Her anms across her chest she lays.



Which is the verb? "lays. Who lays? "She". So "she" is the subject. So the verb "lays" agrees with the subject "She".



 



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What is the career in the field of perfume-making?



With many luxury brands and celebrities launching their own line of exclusive fragrances, perfumes have become a status symbol. The popularity of fragrant essential oils in aroma therapy too has increased the demand for those skilled in the art of perfume-making



Who is a perfumer?



A perfumer is a term used for an expert in creating and bottling fragrances. Due to their fine sense of smell and skill in producing these scents, perfumers are also called as a 'Nose. They are employed by perfume-making companies as well as companies manufacturing personal products such as shampoo, soap and anti-perspirant.



What to study?



Till a few years ago, there were limited options to study perfumery in India. With the market for perfumes growing many colleges now offer specialisations in this field.




  • Kelkar Education Trust's VG Vaze College. Mumbai Postgraduate Diploma in Perfiunery and Cosmetics Management in partnership with the French Group institute Superior International of Perfumes, Cosmetics and Aromatic Alimentaire (ISIPCA) backed - by the University of Versailles.

  • Mumbai University and Institute of Chemical Technology. Mumbai Masters in Perfumery and Flavours Technology

  • Fragrance and Flavour Development Centre (FFDC) Kannauj. Uttar Pradesh: Diploma course in Technology Development Programme in Aroma and its Management Postgraduation in Aroma Technology in partnership with the Forest Research Institute. Dehradun.



Abroad:




  • ISIPCA University of Versailles: European Fragrance and Cosmetic Master Master of Science (MSC) in Cosmetic Expertise Formulation and Applications M.SCIR Fragrance Expertise Formulation and Applications

  • The Grasse institute of Perfumery, France international Technical Degree in Fragrance Creation and Sensor



Evaluation




  • Cinquieme Sens, Paris and the U.S: The Technique and Language of Perfumery Programme: The Fragrance Sales Programme and The Fragrance Development Programme.



Capturing the essence



Ascent or a fragrance cannot be seen, but it has a powerful presence. Everything in nature has its own unique scent especially fruits and flowers. A scent is made of different tones and notes. Perfumers have a sharp nose and a unique ability to discern the different tones in a scent and extract it from an object. This requires a lot of skill patience and passion. Through trial and error, perfumers do their best to capture the smell and enhance it further. It can often take 500 trials to find the perfect note for a fragrance.



 



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What is the life story of Romulus Whitaker?



Have you seen my pet?' a teenage Romulus Whitaker went knocking door to door in his apartment complex in Bombay (today's Mumbai).



What sort of a pet? One neighbour asked kindly, probably thinking of a cat, dog or some such.



A python,' Rom answered, with a straight face.



The neighbours eyes widened, and words caught in his throat.



It's non-venomous.' explained Rom, patiently.



Rom retells the story, while sitting in his house in Tamil Nadu, with a twinkle in his eyes. 'Ah, non-venomous. As though that makes a big difference! A snake is a snake.



City slickers are not very kind towards species that they ve only read about and don't really know personally."



Fortunately for his neighbours, Rom found his missing pet snoozing under an old trunk in the storeroom in his own house, and so, 1 had to literally go back to every house and tell them.' Little did his neighbours know that the teenager would go on to become one of India's foremost herpetologists earning him the title, Paambu kaara ('snake man in Tamil).



Romulus Earl Whitaker III has been working in reptile conservation for over half a century, but his heart still races when he sees a King Cobra. In fact, decades of hard work hasn't dulled his passion or enthusiasm for the subject and the species.



Rom has worked with scientists, educationists, students and conservationists in India and all across the world on several projects: crocodile recovery programmes, radio telemetry studies on the Gharial and King Cobra, snake venom collection and rodent control by indigenous people. Breeding biology of pythons and King Cobras, field surveys to determine conservation status of reptiles, and popularising conservation biology through writings, talks and films.



Rom moved to India when he was seven with his mother Doris Norden and stepfather Rama Chattopadhyay, son of social reformer and freedom fighter Kamaladevi and poet Harindranath. After high school, Rom went to college briefly in the U.S. and served in the U.S. army for two years during the Vietnam War, working in the army hospital and assisting the medical team in Japan. Rom trained at the Miami Serpentarium from 1963 to 1965, and returned to India because he knew he wanted to work with reptiles.



His career is dotted with many firsts:



1969: Rom set up the Madras Snake Park, India's first reptile park.



1972: Rom started the first sea turtle walks in India. Volunteers would walk the coast and transplant eggs to hatcheries to safeguard them.



Early 1970s: Rom carried out the first Gharial survey in the Chambal Valley. This work helped convince the government of India to create six new river sanctuaries for this endangered species, and a national conservation programme, Project Crocodile, was established. 1975: Rom conducted India's first survey of crocodiles Finding out that crocodile populations were dwindling spurred him and his former wife, children's author Zai Whitaker, to start the Madras Crocodile Bank Trust (MCBT) in 1976, with three field research and conservation stations on the Chambal river, the Agumbe rainforest and the Andaman Islands,



Rom was instrumental in bringing about the creation of five iconic Protected Areas (where human occupation and exploitation of natural resources are limited or banned), These are Silent Valley National Park in Kerala, Guindy National Park and Palani Hills National Park in Tamil Nadu. Gulf of Mannar Biosphere Reserve in the Indian Ocean and the Great Nicobar Island Biosphere Reserve in the Nicobar Islands.



The Madras Crocodile Bank Trust



The MCBT was set up by Rom and zai. They met through their joint desire to protect Silent Valley.



The Indian wing of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) was set up in 1969 by Zai's father, Zafar Futehally. While working there as a volunteer, Zai read an article by Rom about Silent Valley. Silent Valley is a perfect example of (a] true rainforest with all the wealth of animals and plants that make it up... As humble observers of this great expanse of rainforest we also know that it is just a tiny valley when compared to what has already been deforested in the name of "economic and technological progress... HOW many dam projects could be best done in biotopes less vitally important to keep intact? (published in the WWF newsletter November 1973).



Deeply moved, Zai and her sister petitioned Salim Ali, their unde and India's foremost omithologist, who headed the Bombay Natural History Society at the time. They urged him to write to the then prime minister Indira Gandhi to stop the dam construction. He shooed us away! Laughed Zai. But we drafted and redrafted a letter and he signed and sent it. And Indira Gandhi put a stop to it.



Three years later, they set up the Madras Crocodile Bank Trust (MCBT) together, of which their elder son Nikhil is the curator. Zai, who is the joint director of MCBT, said people thought they were crazy to set up a centre in the middle of nowhere, 'Back then it was just a bare sandy stretch with few casuarina trees ... we walked out one day and an Olive Ridley Turtle was laying eggs by the gate; there were sea snakes on the shore, and jackals and foxes at night.



Parselmouth



Rom, Zai and their team also partnered with the Irulas, an indigenous community from Tamil Nadu known for their skill in finding and handling snakes, to set up the Inula Snake Catchers Cooperative Society in 1978, and they worked with the community for three decades. The Irulas extract venom from snakes, which is needed to make antivenom to treat snakebites, thus saving many human and snake lives. This is crucial, as according to one estimate, some 46,000 snakebite deaths occur annually in India. (Ironically, Rom is allergic to antivenom.) Many years later, Zai would write "Kali and the Rat Snake" (Tulika Books), a story about an Irula boy whose classmates find him strange. She also wrote the script for the multilingual award winning film, "The Boy and the Crocodile," which was directed by Rom.



Rom attributes a lot of his knowledge of snakes to the Irulas, and continues to be amazed. At how good they are at tracking snakes, especially how they can tell whether the snakes are venomous or not simply by looking at their tracks on the ground. Rom has had a special interest in snakes from the time his mother got him "The Boys Book of Snakes when he was four. It was basically about American snakes but it helped a lot.' said Rom. First of all, it told her that there are no venomous snakes where we lived in northern New York state, which is helpful. No matter what I picked up, I might get a bite but I'm not gonna get a venomous bite. So she was pretty cool with that.'



When Rom was studying in Kodaikanal, Tamil Nadu, he ferried his pet python to school by train in a vegetable basket, and stored him under his bed in the dormitory in a box. He warned the cleaners not to bother with the box. He would take him out to bask in the sunlight while his friends read and played. He picked up snakes whenever he spotted one, read about them and wrote to herpetologists asking for tips on taking care of the reptiles.



It was in school that he came across a green coloured pit viper. He sensibly spoke to his biology teacher rather than hiding the snake under his bed. Luckily, this guy was okay, recalled Rom. He said, I know it's venomous. We also know that it's not a fatally venomous creature and we are not going to let anyone handle it' He put it in a terrarium and kept it for a while, until I decided to let it go. So it was a series of people who encouraged me along the way. Or didn't discourage me, let's put it that way.



Life with crocodiles Rom first met a crocodile when he was fifteen: used to go fishing, with one of the guys who "I worked at my stepfather's motion picture lab, an old German guy, Schroder. Shammi Kapoor (actor) and people like that now old timers, loved fishing too. We'd fish from these so-called machans, which were floating on Powai Lake. We'd fish all night. We'd go in the evenings, spend the whole night nodding off fishing for katla and rohu. One evening. I saw a croc on the surface. And it just disappeared under the water, and I was like, wow! It was like the first dinosaur I'd ever seen."



Rom started researching crocodiles by talking to people.



Many people hated crocodiles, as they did leopards and tigers, because they were predators. Luckily, Rom knew otherwise.



Gharials, he discovered, had evolved with the dinosaurs, which means they have spent some 150 million years on this planet. Also, that birds are highly modified reptiles, which is why birds get a little bit of space in Rom's life.



Life with many animals Rom has a pet Emu called Neelakantan, named after his brother, and because the bird develops a blue mane during the breeding breeding season (neela: blue; kanta: throat). Neelakantan can be friendly or can make enemies in an instant.



'I wasn't into conservation,' said Rom. People give me that label and I still cringe a little bit. It just seems like a natural part of what you do, is to have that attitude towards life. It's not a special little branch of a tree which you sit out on, and say I am a conservationist. You just live your life that way. And if everyone did, it would help the world a lot.



But Rom credits his single-minded approach for his success. I still get excited at seeing a snake, he said, pointing around his garden in Tamil Nadu, if a snake pops up over there, which is very possible. There's a cobra, there's a Rat Snake, there are lots of vine snakes living here. And when I see one, I still get a real good feeling."



"Humans are not comfortable with creatures they know little about and if there is one thing those of us who like reptiles (and all wild creatures) can do to help them it's to get people to know and appreciate them.' said Rom. He has spent years understanding the King Cobra's biology and his efforts, by way of his writings, research and films, have helped building people's tolerance towards the snake. The first instinct to kill on sight has given way to observe and understand the snake instead.



WHAT CAN YOU DO?



Learn everything there is to about reptiles. Start with "Snakes of India: The Field Guide by Romulus Whitaker and Ashok Captain.




  • Once you know how fascinating they are, it's easy to protect them. If there are venomous snakes in your area, don't disturb them. Instead, tell an adult and call the local wildlife department or people who work with animals to rescue them.

  • Become a snake myth-buster. Cartoonist Rohan Chakravarty has written a comic book, "Making Friends with Snakes (But From a Distance)", based on Rom's film. It's got everything for you to become a know-it-all.



MORE CHAMPIONS WORKING WITH REPTILES



1. Ashok Captain, a Pune-based herpetologist, is so cool that he has two snakes named after him: Ashok's Bronzeback Tree Snake and Captain's Wood Snake! In 2019, he described a new snake species, the Arunachal Pit Viper. He's co-authored Snakes of India: The Field Guide with Rom. Usually he's found on a bicycle (he used to cycle competitively), and when off it he's counting snake scales.



2. Vijaya was perhaps India's first female herpetologist. She trained with Rom and in the early 1980s she documented mass hunting and slaughter of sea turtles. Her photographs caught the attention of the then prime minister Indira Gandhi, who created rules to conserve the species and instructed the coast guard to stop sea turtle captures. Vijaya lived alone for many months in a cave in Kerala while studying the Forest Cane Turtle, when she passed away under unknown circumstances. After 19 years, the turtle species she was studying was named Vijaycheles silvatica. She died in 1987.



3. P Gowri Shankar learnt how to handle snakes at the age of 13, and has gone on to rescue more than 100 King Cobras over the years. He works in Agumbe in the Western Ghats of Kamataka. He is a familiar face if you have watched any documentaries that feature Rom. He studies and documents King Cobra behaviour and trains hundreds of young people on snake ecology.



4. Gururaja KV is a batrachologist (bátrakhos is frog in Ancient Greek) and has described many new species of frogs. Special mentions go to one who is an ace potter (Kumbara Night Frog), and another who calls like a kingfisher (Karnavali Skittering Frog)! Gururaja helped publish a field guide to identify frogs, called "Frog Find" (there's an app too) and is part of a team that put together "Mandookavani". An audio compilation that has field recordings of over 75 frog calls.



 



Picture Credit : Google