Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

N’dama Skull

Posted by Alex Turnbull, Wednesday, 31st January 2007

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In the desert of Mali, West Africa, we find the skull of an ex-cow, which was captured as part of the National Geographic Africa Megaflyover project. By the look of those horns, I’d say the skull probably once belonged to an N’dama, a species of cattle which is indigenous to this part of world.

buffaloskull.jpg

Useless semi-related Wikipedia facts for the day:

The term ‘cattle’ isn’t a plural, but a mass noun, so you can refer to “some cattle”, but not “three cattle”. Rarely for the modern English language, there is no singular equivalent to “cattle” other than the various gender and age-specific terms – i.e. “a cow” actually only refers to an adult female who has had more than two calves.

Which explains why “the skull of an ex-cattle” didn’t sound right…

Thanks to Felippo and googleearthhacks.

14 Responses to 'N’dama Skull'

  1. Jeff says:

    Actually, the plural for cows is Kine. Check it out.

    Jeff

  2. Dave H. says:

    I’d always thought kine was singular for cattle. Google “define:kine” gives “seven thin and ill-favored kine” as an example.

  3. I don’t understand how this could be so clear, isn’t that area extremely remote? I can’t even look at my grandma’s house in PA because she lives in a semi-rural area, but I can look at some cow head in the middle of the African desert?

  4. Alex says:

    “kine” on dictionary.com is actually defined as the plural of cow. Anyway, it’s archaic and therefore doesn’t count!

    Rarely for the modern English language

  5. Michi il Disperso says:

    Oh My… a Resolution of Few Centimeters???
    The scale is 2 Meters!!!!

    Like 1984 (Orwell)

    I Can See You!!
    Watch Out!!

  6. Alex says:

    Ryan, this image is part of the National Geographic Africa MegaFlyover, which involves loads of images taken by a guy in a plane over Africa – which Google added to maps and earth back in 2005.

  7. Timhogs says:

    Humph. Can somebody tell me why a dead bovine skull warrants a resolution five times bettter than that of the sunbathers?

  8. Tim says:

    Are you absolutely sure you would say “ex-cow”? I mean, when someone dies you don’t call them an ex-human… Oh hey! That brings to mind the Dead Parrot Sketch!

  9. Alex says:

    Thank you Tim – somebody finally got my reference :D

  10. Flümo says:

    OK, so the next thing we look out for is a hovercraft full of eels… ;-)

  11. phillip says:

    It has ceased to be!

  12. Chris says:

    Why is it that when I zoom out and try to zoom back in, it doesn’t zoom in as closely?

    Also, when zoomed out, I enjoy looking at the little regularly spaced squares of zoomage scattered throughout the field of blurriness.

  13. Alex says:

    Chris,

    Why is it that when I zoom out and try to zoom back in, it doesn’t zoom in as closely?

    Google maps doesn’t officially support zooming higher than zoom level 19. If you click “show link” on the map page, and then edit the link it shows in the address bar, you can push the zoom higher in areas with very high resolution shots. For example if you want to zoom in on one of those squares of zoomage:

    http://googlesightseeing.com/maps?p=&c=&t=k&hl=en&ll=15.526698,-1.792617&z=19

    becomes

    http://googlesightseeing.com/maps?p=&c=&t=k&hl=en&ll=15.526698,-1.792617&z=23

    (Not that I can find anything worth looking at in any of those other high res areas of course!)

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