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  1. Faces of Melanesia

Port Mary, Santa Ana Island

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Musicians, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands<br />
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The 3rd source of music in the Solomon Islands is slit drums (not shown);  listen here: <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/eol/7/buencons/buencon3.mp3">http://www.umbc.edu/eol/7/buencons/buencon3.mp3</a>
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Musicians, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands

The 3rd source of music in the Solomon Islands is slit drums (not shown); listen here: http://www.umbc.edu/eol/7/buencons/buencon3.mp3

  • Bamboo music musician, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Making bamboo music, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Pan pipe player-2, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Musicians, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands<br />
<br />
The 3rd source of music in the Solomon Islands is slit drums (not shown);  listen here: <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/eol/7/buencons/buencon3.mp3">http://www.umbc.edu/eol/7/buencons/buencon3.mp3</a>
  • Woman dancer, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Woman dancer-2, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Woman dancer-3, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Woman dancer-4, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Woman blowing conch shell, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Men's dance, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Mud men dance, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands<br />
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Photos of a women's dance where they are dressed up in Klu Klux Klan hats, and a photo of a giant megapod egg (birds that incubate their eggs in composted materials) can be see heres;  <a href="http://goo.gl/LQHNWJ">http://goo.gl/LQHNWJ</a><br />
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14/11/13 www.allenfotowild
  • Woman's dance with white hoods, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands<br />
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Not the Klu Klux Clan
  • Group of children, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Portrait of a pan pipe player, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Megapode egg, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands<br />
<br />
Megapodes are known as mound builders and incubator birds. These birds have large feet (hence their name) which they use to make big heaps of vegetation or shallow burrows in which they incubate their eggs. Megapodes rely entirely on environmental heat sources – solar radiation, geothermal heat, and microbial decomposition – to incubate their eggs. They harness these heat sources via two main nesting strategies: mound-building or burrow-nesting. Unusually, their chicks are quite well-developed and have their feathers by the time they hatch so they don't need parental care (precocial)
  • Man building dugout canoe, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
  • Tethered piglet, Santa Ana Island, Solomon Islands
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