Hunan is home to a variety of rare animals such as the South China tiger, the white stork and the sheldrake, which are protected in the national reserve areas. |
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These saltworks are often feeding areas for birds, particularly the pink flamingoes, Phoenicopterus ruberroseus, and the Tadorna tadorna sheldrake. |
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Sheldrake knelt down and brushed away leaves to reveal a patch of soil the size of a dinner plate. |
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Sheldrake suggests that the two starers may have differed in their beliefs concerning the ability to detect unseen staring. |
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The paragraph in question had been in his article through galley proofs, which Sheldrake had seen and approved, but was somehow accidentally omitted in the layout process. |
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Sheldrake sees these processes as examples of morphic resonance. |
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He led an assault on AIDS denialists and their supporters at the Sunday Times, and ended up in disputes over homeopathy, cold fusion and with Rupert Sheldrake, a parapsychologist. |
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McDonald and a host of other Gills' players unsportingly protested to Darren Sheldrake who appeared to be content to take no further action. |
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The biologist and author, Rupert Sheldrake, has conducted experiments, and compiled evidence from other studies, on the existence of animal-human telepathy, including dogs, and an African Grey parrot, N'kisi. |
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Dr Sheldrake, 57, claims his research so far suggests that animals really do have telepathetic powers that are better developed than our own. |
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The archaeal digoxin induced electromagnetic and plasma traces are eternal and can exists extracorporeally and forms the memory of nature as postulated by Sheldrake. |
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Sheldrake proposed his theory of morphogenetic fields as the only viable alternative to mechanistic and vitalistic theories to explain biological morphogenesis. |
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