terça-feira, 16 de agosto de 2011

This is the 15-minute version of China News, Tuesday July 12, 2011
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VjwOozKz1zM
Headlines:

• U.S. Congressmen Speak Out for Falun Gong
• Chinese Authorities Hold Ai Weiwei Tax Evasion Hearing
• Third Oil Spill in China Since Early June
....................................................................................................
This is the 15 minute version of China News, Monday July 18, 2011
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAhfaIpodC0&feature=relmfu
Headlines:

• China's Oil Plants Now under Scrutiny
• Chinese Regime Condemns Obama-Dalai Lama Meeting
• Major Bridge Collapses in Hangzhou City, China

China has passed the U.S. to become the world's biggest energy consumer, according to new data from the International Energy Agency, a milestone that reflects both China's decades-long burst of economic growth and its rapidly expanding clout as an industrial giant.

China's emergence as the world's most voracious energy consumer has wide implications for U.S. national security and foreign policy. Wall Street Journal reporter Neil King discusses.

China's ascent marks "a new age in the history of energy," IEA chief economist Fatih Birol said in an interview. The country's surging appetite has transformed global energy markets and propped up prices of oil and coal in recent years, and its continued growth stands to have long-term implications for U.S. energy security.

The Paris-based IEA, energy adviser to most of the world's biggest economies, said China consumed 2.252 billion tons of oil equivalent last year, about 4% more than the U.S., which burned through 2.170 billion tons of oil equivalent. The oil-equivalent metric represents all forms of energy consumed, including crude oil, nuclear power, coal, natural gas and renewable sources such as hydropower.

China, meanwhile, disputed the IEA figures, but didn't offer alternative data, according to Zhou Xian, spokesperson for China's top energy agency.

China disputed the latest statistics from the International Energy Agency showing it surpassed the U.S as the world's largest energy consumer last year. Correspondent Shai Oster gives WSJ's Jake Lee the larger context on the story.

The U.S. had been the globe's biggest overall energy user since the early 1900s, Mr. Birol said.

China overtook it at breakneck pace. China's total energy consumption was just half that of the U.S. 10 years ago, but in many of the years since, China saw annual double-digit growth rates. It had been expected to pass the U.S. about five years from now, but took the top position earlier because the global recession hit the U.S. more severely, slowing American industrial activity and energy use.

Reuters

Laborers in Hangzhou work on transmission towers in May, as China boosts its electricity-generation capacity.

China's economic rise has required enormous amounts of energy—especially since much of the past decade's growth was fueled not by consumer demand, as in the U.S., but from energy-intense heavy industry and infrastructure building.

China's growing energy demands will present new challenges to U.S. foreign policy, as well as to international efforts to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases linked to climate change. China National Petroleum Co., the country's biggest oil company, is pushing forward with oil and gas projects in Iran, despite U.S. efforts to enforce sanctions against the Tehran government.

Beijing has refused to agree to cap its overall growth in its consumption of fossil fuels, or reduce its emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. That frustrated President Barack Obama's efforts to forge an international climate agreement at a United Nations summit in Copenhagen last December.

China instead set a target to reduce emissions intensity—the amount of carbon dioxide emitted per unit of gross domestic product—by 40% to 45% from 2005 levels by 2020. That meant China was agreeing to make its economy more energy efficient—boosting its competitiveness—but not to consume less energy overall.

China's growth has transformed global energy markets and sustained higher prices for everything from oil to uranium and other natural resources that the country has been consuming. Once, China was a major exporter of both oil and coal. Its increasing reliance on imports has sustained higher energy prices worldwide and underpinned a natural-resource boom in Africa, the Middle East and Australia.

"There is little doubt that China's growing consumption changes what ability we have to control our own destiny within global energy markets," said David Pumphrey, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "China can now demand a large space inside any energy-policy tent."

China's rapidly expanding need for energy promises to have major geopolitical implications as it hunts for ways to satisfy its needs. Already, China's rising imports have changed global geopolitics. Chinese oil and coal companies have been looking overseas in their quest to secure energy supplies, pitching the Chinese flag in places like Sudan, which Western companies had largely abandoned under international pressure.

The most ambitious effort to secure overseas energy supplies was the failed 2005 attempt Cnooc Ltd. to take over California-based Unocal in an $18 billion bid, which was trumped by politics and rival Chevron. Despite a short pullback in the aftermath of that failed deal, Chinese companies have expanded overseas, buying assets in Central Asia, Africa, South America, Canada and even small stakes in the Gulf of Mexico. While their overall overseas footprint is still small compared with that of big international oil companies, these companies are expanding with access to cheap credit through China's state-owned banks.

Voracious energy demand also helps explain why China—which gets most of its electricity from coal, the most polluting of fossil fuels—passed the U.S. in 2007 as the world's largest emitter of carbon-dioxide emissions and other greenhouse gases.

In the past, being the world's biggest consumer of fossil fuels went hand in hand with being its dominant economy. The question now is whether this will hold true in the future, as nations compete to develop new ways to produce more wealth with less energy. While China is No. 1 in consumption, the U.S. remains the world's biggest economy.

The U.S. is also by far the biggest per-capita energy consumer, with the average American burning five times as much energy annually as the average Chinese citizen, said Mr. Birol.

The U.S. also remains the biggest oil consumer by a wide margin, going through roughly 19 million barrels a day on average. China, at about 9.2 million barrels a day, runs a distant second. But many oil analysts believe U.S. crude demand has peaked or is unlikely to grow very much in coming years, because of improved energy efficiency and more stringent vehicle fuel-efficiency regulations.

China's rise is also helping shift the focus for oil producers in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Key OPEC states like Saudi Arabia long looked to U.S. oil consumption for guidance in adding new pumping capacity. But in recent years, OPEC states including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have built or started building refineries and storage facilities in Asia. Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest crude exporter, now ships more to China than to the U.S.

Prior to the global economic crisis, China had been expected to become the biggest energy consumer in about five years. Economic malaise and energy-efficiency programs in the U.S. brought forward the date, Mr. Birol said.

The decreased "energy intensity" of the U.S. economy is a key reason energy investors, such as General Electric, have increasingly looked to China as a driver of growth. Mr. Birol said China requires total energy investments of some $4 trillion over the next 20 years to keep feeding its economy and avoid power blackouts and fuel shortages.

Mr. Birol, formerly an economist at OPEC, said China is expected to build some 1,000 gigawatts of new power-generation capacity over the next 15 years. That is about equal to the current total electricity-generation capacity in the U.S.—a level achieved over several decades of construction.

China's energy intensity actually fell during the first phase of its economic growth in the 1980s and 1990s, which was driven by light manufacturing. But in the early 1990s, China became a net oil importer for the first time as its demand finally outpaced domestic supplies. China's energy demand surged again after China joined the World Trade Organization in 2001.

Before China joined the WTO, most international prognosticators, including the IEA, predicted energy demand would increase at an annual rate of 3% to 4% from 2000 to 2010. Demand wound up growing four times faster than they predicted.

[CENERGYfrnt]

There is a chance the growth in China's energy appetite could slow, as the pace of industrial expansion slows and energy-efficiency policies backed by the government—such as tougher fuel-efficiency standards for cars—take hold.

In a few years, there won't be much infrastructure left to build. Urbanization will continue, but at a slower pace. And the heavy factory jobs that consume huge amounts of energy may start to shift away to other countries partly as China's workers demand better conditions and higher salaries.

But the same force that could be moving factory jobs away—rising incomes—could also underpin even greater energy needs as richer Chinese start consuming more. The question is whether China will adopt a low-energy pathway pioneered by places like Japan and Europe or follow a high-energy life-style of big houses and big cars pioneered by the U.S.

quinta-feira, 7 de julho de 2011

OIL NEWS: Oil Spill Hits Yellowstone River ( and others)


LINK:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0YS0LqSOe4

HARI SREENIVASAN: A major cleanup effort was under way today in Montana, after an oil spill spewed up to 42,000 gallons into the Yellowstone River. The ExxonMobil pipeline ruptured late Friday near the town of Laurel. Since then, the oil has traveled about 100 miles east, near Hysham.

The oily residue has washed up on the riverbanks, but is still downstream from Yellowstone National Park. Crews are laying sheets of absorbent padding and booms to prevent further damage.

The president of ExxonMobil said an investigation is under way.

GARY PRUESSING, ExxonMobil: We do not know the root cause. This is a very unusual event. Obviously, we had a large amount of oil enter the water very quickly. So, whatever it is, it's something that is very unusual for us, something that we do not have our hands around yet. But the investigating team certainly will work hard to determine that.

HARI SREENIVASAN: The U.S. Department of Transportation, which oversees pipelines, recently notified ExxonMobil of seven potential safety violations along the ruptured pipe. Two of the warnings faulted the company for its emergency response and pipeline corrosion training.

Some 12,000 residents of Los Alamos, N.M., are returning home after the largest wildfire in that state's history. An evacuation order was lifted yesterday now that the blaze is about 20 percent contained and no longer threatens the community. Meanwhile, the Los Alamos National Laboratory is set to reopen Wednesday. But fire crews are still racing to protect sacred Native American grounds that remain vulnerable.

A violent crackdown on opposition intensified in central Syria today. Syrian forces opened fire on residents in Hama and sealed off the city three days after a massive anti-government protest there. This amateur video shows gunfire breaking out in the streets. Approximately 20 people were wounded. Activists also reported Syrian troops fired on people fleeing to neighboring Turkey. They say a mother and her young son were wounded.

The winner of elections in Thailand moved today to put together a ruling coalition with four smaller parties. Yingluck Shinawatra will become Thailand's first female prime minister. She said her priority is to bring unity and reconciliation to Thailand, after five years of turmoil following a military coup. Today, the defense minister accepted her win, and vowed the military wouldn't stage another coup.

In Morocco, thousands of protesters called for more electoral reforms this weekend, just two days after voters approved a new constitution. The demonstrators were showing their support for the Feb. 20 movement that aims for a parliamentary monarch and to fight corruption. Last Friday, a referendum passed that would give executive power to the government, but keep the king in charge of the cabinet, army and judiciary.

he former Bosnian Serb Military Chief Ratko Mladic was thrown out of his own court hearing today. U.N. judges ejected him from an arraignment at The Hague after he shouted at the court in Serbian, interrupted the judge, and refused to enter any plea. He faces 11 charges of masterminding the worst atrocities of the Bosnian war.

RATKO MLADIC, former Bosnian Serb general (through translator): I don't want to listen at all. Without my lawyer I don't want to listen anymore.

PRESIDING JUDGE ALPHONS ORIE, International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (through translator): Mr. Mladic, the court orders that you be removed from the courtroom. Could security please escort Mr. Mladic out of the courtroom?

RATKO MLADIC (through translator): You are not allowing me to defend myself.

HARI SREENIVASAN: After Mladic left, the presiding judge entered not- guilty pleas on his behalf. That's the rule of the war crime tribunal for suspects who refuse to enter a plea.

Mexican authorities announced the arrest of one of the co-founders of Mexico's Zetas drug cartel. Jesus Enrique Rejon Aguilar is also suspected in the killing of a U.S. customs agent in February. Aguilar was one of the - one of Mexico's most wanted men and the U.S. State Department had offered a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest. He was caught outside Mexico City on Sunday.

The Secret Service will investigate the hacking of FOX News' political Twitter account. It was hacked early Monday with six false postings reporting that President Obama had been assassinated in Iowa, and the shooter was unknown. FOX News responded with a statement on its website calling the tweets malicious and false.

quarta-feira, 1 de junho de 2011

Daqing Petrochemical Industry


Charles Chaw, producer of 6 episodes "Inside China Next Powerhouse", presents the opportunities of Northeastern China. In this Part 2 of the last episode: Besides oil, Daqing also has plenty of natural gas resource. With the depleting oil resource, Daqing Oil Field has paid more attention to gas exploration. They calculate that by increasing gas production, their combined oil and gas output can be maintained at 40 million tones till 2020. Nevertheless, like all aging oil fields in the world, it will get more and more difficult to extract oil as time goes by. Something more needs to be done. For a major oil city, naturally, the first thought is to strengthen the related petrochemical industry.

Crude oil found in Daqing, typically has a low sulfuric content. This makes Daqing's crude more suitable for process into a wide variety of petrochemical products. Daqing aims to be China's largest petrochemical industry center. Its refineries are able to distill more than ten major product categories, with over 160 varieties. Examples of such products include, chemical fertilizers, acrylic fibers, lubricants and even aviation kerosene for both China's air force and overseas exports.

Daqing's economy is heavily built around the oil industry and the government cannot just rely on the petrochemical industry alone. The clock is ticking, and Daqing knows that it has to reinvent itself. In 1992 the Daqing government set up the Daqing High Technology Development Zone, to spearhead the city's move away from oil. Companies that base their operations in the development zone can expect a wide range of policy support, like tax incentives and financial support. This high -- tech development zone looks set a win the hearts of the investors.

quinta-feira, 31 de março de 2011

About:Accounting Oil and Hip implant

The following article is an excerpt from the free online course "Using Finance & Accounting in Your Small Business".

When you learn something new like accounting concepts and terms, it helps to create links between what you know and what you are trying to learn. In some ways, it is like learning a second language and decoding the new word is part of the learning process. For example, trying to translate the Spanish word necesario you might brainstorm with necessary - and you would be right. How about blanco? Blanco is like blank which is like white. So, blanco is Spanish for the color white.

Try to make some logical connections about the accounting vocabulary. Take the word - accounting - and think about it. Really, the accounting system is a basic counting of what goes on in your business.

Sugested links:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jlMlcT4bfUw





Abu Dhabi, March 27 (IANS/WAM) Representatives of the global maritime industry will participate in a two-day World Ports and Trade Summit being organised here March 28-30, it was announced Sunday.

The summit will be attended by the representatives from some of the world’s most important international commercial shipping hubs.

“Given the truly global nature of the industry, which increasingly relies upon unhindered international trade and standardized regulations, this conference caters to the full spectrum of maritime industry stakeholders, from economists to terminal operators and shipping companies to cargo owners and investors,” said Chris Hayman, chairman of Seatrade, which is jointly organising the event with Turret Media.

UAE Foreign Trade Minister Sheikha Lubna Al Qasimi will be among those who will deliver the keynote address during the opening ceremony.

The event is split into six different sessions, covering topics such as the world economy, trade and ports, future challenges and opportunities for the Middle East.


sugested links




On August 26, 2010, DePuy Orthopedics, Inc., a division of Johnson & Johnson, announced a worldwide recall of two hip implant systems -- the ASR XL Acetabular System and the ASR Hip Resurfacing System. DePuy has estimated that 93,000 total devices have been implanted worldwide. Kershaw, Cutter & Ratinoff is a team of civil justice attorneys with years of experience successfully litigating against Johnson & Johnson and its subsidiaries. If you or a loved one has the recalled implant, contact us to find out about your legal rights and potential compensation. For more information, visit http://www.kcrlegal.com/hip-implant-recall.aspx


sugested links






segunda-feira, 14 de março de 2011

About: Earthquake and oil in Japan


The government has confirmed 18 deaths, with the number expected to rise. It follows the 8.9-magnitude earthquake which sent a 4-metre wall of water inland across the Miyagi prefecture . There's considerable destruction - 200 people have been washed away. Buildings, cars and ships were also swept by the raging waters. Several are missing on Japan's Sendai island. The first wave has also reached Russia's Kuril islands to the north, reportedly around a metre high. There are several fires along Japan's eastern coastline, and 4 million homes are without power. The Prime Minister's ordered an emergency response team to tackle the disaster - with aircraft scrambled to the worst-affected area. Communication is crippled and Tokyo's Norita International Airport has been closed. The entire Pacific region is on tsunami alert - with Hawaii braced to be hit within the next few hours.
Related link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZYT6BjfBro

Thomas Lee, chief U.S. equity strategist at JPMorgan Chase & Co., talks about the impact of a record-setting earthquake in Japan on the U.S. economy and stock market. Lee, speaking with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television's "In the Loop," also discusses his expectation for oil prices. (Source: Bloomberg)

quinta-feira, 10 de março de 2011

About: Oil split discussion



From Anonymous in Youtube:

I WANTED TO LET YOU SEE MY PREDICTIONS ON THE HYDROGEN SULFIDE GAS SINCE THERE IS NO AIR MONITORING THAT IS CURRENTLY BEING REPORTED. THE LAST REPORTS WERE IN THE MONTH OF MAY. THE MAY REPORT STATED THE HYDROGEN SULFIDE GAS WAS ABOVE 1100PPB. WELL, 500PPM IS CONSIDERED LETHAL TO HUMANS.
HYDROGEN SULFIDE IS A LOW LYING GAS THAT FOLLOWS THE LAY OF THE LAND. HYDROGEN SULFIDE (SMELLS LIKE ROTTEN EGGS AT FIRST, THEN IT DULLS THE SENSES) IT IS THE WORST GAS COMING FROM THE OIL VOLCANO IN THE GULF. THIS GAS WILL LAY IN LOW LYING AREAS FOR EXTENDED PERIODS OF TIME- LIKE SEWERS, OPEN WELLS, SWAMPS, BASEMENTS ETC...

THIS MAP IS VERY BASIC YET TOOK SOME TIME. THIS MAP SHOWS MOST THE PLACES THAT MAY BE AFFECTED IF THE GAS ROSE TO THE 500FOOT ELEVATION LEVEL.

THIS IS NOT TO CREATE FEAR, BUT HOPEFULLY AN AWARENESS SO YOU CAN MAKE YOUR OWN DECISIONS ON WHAT IS THE BEST RESPONSE FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY.

THIS IS FROM MY OWN EXPERIENCES AND RESEARCH IN THIS FIELD. WE ALL HAVE A RESPONSIBILITY TO TAKE CARE OF OURSELVES AND NOT RELY ON OTHERS TO DO IT FOR US.

THIS MAP GIVES, WHAT I WILL CALL A HYPOTHETICAL SCENARIO.

BASICALLY IF YOU LOOK AT HYDROGEN SULFIDE GAS AS TO HOW DRY ICE ACTS YOU MAY HAVE AN IDEA OF WHAT I AM TALKING ABOUT. ANOTHER WAY TO TRACK THE GAS IS TO MAP THE AREAS WHERE PEOPLE ARE GETTING SICK OR SHOWING SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OF EXPOSURE. IF THIS IS EVEN BEING REPORTED. ON THE OTHER HAND, YOU MAY BE ABLE TO GET THIS INFORMATION FROM FRIENDS OR FAMILY NEAR THE GULF.

PLEASE DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH ON GASES, GET A TOPO MAP AND COME TO YOUR OWN CONCLUSIONS AS TO HOW SAFE YOU REALLY ARE.

ONE KEY HINT: WHEN YOU START SEEING YOUR POLITICAL LEADERS LEAVING ON VACATION IN MASS. IT MAY BE TIME TO FOLLOW SUIT. REMEMBER-EVEN RATS WILL NOT STAY ON SINKING OR BURNING SHIP.

Sugested links:





terça-feira, 8 de fevereiro de 2011

About: HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!... in CHINA



According to the Chinese Zodiac, the Year of 2011 is the Year of the Golden Rabbit, which begins on February 3, 2011 and ends on January 22, 2012. The Rabbit is the fourth sign of the Chinese Zodiac, which consists of 12 animals signs. The Rabbit is a lucky sign. Rabbits are private individuals and a bit introverted. People born in the Year of the Rabbit are reasonably friendly individuals who enjoy the company of a group of good friends. They are good teachers, counselors and communicators, but also need their own space.

According to Chinese tradition, the Rabbit brings a year in which you can catch your breath and calm your nerves. It is a time for negotiation. Don't try to force issues, because if you do you will ultimately fail. To gain the greatest benefits from this time, focus on home, family, security, diplomacy, and your relationships with women and children. Make it a goal to create a safe, peaceful lifestyle, so you will be able to calmly deal with any problem that may arise.

Not many people know that the Rabbit is the symbol of the Moon, while the Peacock is the symbol of the Sun, and that together, these two animal signs signify the start of day and night, represent the Yin and Yang of life. It is said that anyone making supplications for wishes to be fulfilled are certain to get what they want... and in the Year of the Rabbit, the wish-granting aspect of the Sun and the Moon combined is multiplied. The Moon is YIN and this is the Yin of Heaven, signifying magic. Thus on each of the Full Moon nights of this year, go out into your garden to gaze into the Full Moon and visualize plenty of Moon dust and Moon glow flowing into you, filling your whole body with bright white light and granting you fearlessness, love and courage. This will not only strengthen your inner "Chi" energy, it will also bring wisdom into your life

THE RABBIT FROZEN IN OIL AND GAS

Russia's largest oil producer, and China National Petroleum Corp. agreed to build a $5 billion refinery in China, while the two countries may not complete talks on natural-gas supplies until next year. A feasibility study for the refinery in Tianjin will be ready in six months and construction will take two years, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin said yesterday, according to a statement posted on the government's website. Zion Oil & Gas Inc. hopes to raise as much as $19 million through an offer it's extending to current shareholders of the chance to buy additional shares. The company, which explores for oil and gas in Israel, said the offer will include investors as of Sept. 28, who will get the right to buy a piece of 3.8 million "units" of securities that Zion is offering. Russia's Arctic territories are estimated to contain up to 100 billion tons of oil and gas and the nation needs to defend its claim to those riches, a Cabinet minister said Tuesday. Natural Resources Minister Yuri Trutnev's statement comes as Russia is strengthening efforts to defend its claims to parts of the Arctic, which is believed to contain as much as a quarter of the Earth's undiscovered oil and gas.

SUGESTED VIDEOS

links for oil and gas

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mi0fM8q860E or http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/01/03/china.russia.pipeline/index.html

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vCL00w4RSc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Y02AJPebaI or http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ga6zyVlMHDM


links for chinese new year

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MefB0wweAKI

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-51ccb8_QUQ&feature=fvst

domingo, 30 de janeiro de 2011

About Mermaids


MERMAIDS

The word is a compound of mere, the Old English word for "sea", and maid, a woman. The male equivalent is a merman.

There are many Mermaids all over the world, the myth ( for some, the belief) can be found everywhere

Among the Neo-Taíno nations of the Caribbean the mermaid is called Aycayia. Her attributes relate to the goddess Jagua, and the hibiscus flower of the majagua tree Hibiscus tiliaceus. In the modern Caribbean the mermaid is found as Haitian Vodou Lwa La Sirene (literally, 'the mermaid') who is lwa of wealth and beauty and the orisha Yemaya. Examples from other cultures are the Mami Wata of West and Central Africa, the Jengu of Cameroon, the Merrow of Ireland and Scotland, the Rusalkas of Russia and Ukraine, the Iara from Brazil and the Greek Oceanids, Nereids, and Naiads. One freshwater mermaid-like creature from European folklore is Melusine, who is sometimes depicted with two fish tails, and other times with the lower body of a serpent. It is said in Japan that eating the flesh of a ningyo can grant unaging immortality. In some European legends mermaids are said to be unlucky.

Atargatis, The first Mermaid

The first known mermaid stories appeared in Assyria, ca. 1000 BC. The goddess Atargatis, mother of Assyrian queen Semiramis, loved a mortal shepherd and unintentionally killed him. Ashamed, she jumped into a lake to take the form of a fish, but the waters would not conceal her divine beauty. Thereafter, she took the form of a mermaid—human above the waist, fish below—though the earliest representations of Atargatis showed her as a fish with a human head and legs, similar to the Babylonian Ea. The Greeks recognized Atargatis under the name Derketo. Prior to 546 BC, the Milesian philosopher Anaximander proposed that mankind had sprung from an aquatic species of animal. He thought that humans, with their extended infancy, could not have survived otherwise. This idea reappeared as the aquatic ape hypothesis in the twentieth century.

Djullanar, The Arabic Mermaid

The One Thousand and One Nights includes several tales featuring "Sea People", such as Djullanar the Sea-girl. Unlike the depiction in other mythologies, these are anatomically identical to land-bound humans, differing only in their ability to breathe and live underwater. They can (and do) interbreed with land humans, the children of such unions sharing in the ability to live underwater.

Chinese Mermaids and the peal tears

In some ancient fairytales of China, mermaid is a special species whose tears can turn into priceless pearls. What's more, mermaids can also knit an extremely valuable material which is not only slight but also beautiful and translucent. Because of this, fishermen longed to catch them, but it's difficult for them to survive for mermaids' splendid singing can simply drag them to coma. Actually, mermaid is a symbol of wonderful creatures in Ancient China. They are deft,beautiful and versatile. And the fishermen who want to catch mermaids are a symbol of negative character.

Sirens

The sirens of Greek mythology are sometimes portrayed in later folklore as mermaid-like; in fact, some languages use the same word for both bird and fish creatures, such as the Maltese word 'sirena'. Other related types of mythical or legendary creatures are water fairies (e.g., various water nymphs) and selkies, animals that can transform themselves from seals to humans.[citation needed]

YEMANJA ( or Yemaja ), the MERMAID

In Brazilian mythology Yemaja is known as Yemanja, she is a beautiful mermaid goddess, who appears from the water surrounded by sweet melodies and carrying a comb and mirror made from oyster and snail shells. She will rise from the water seated on a sea shell wearing a crown of pearls and starfish. Her kingdom is the all the waters of the world.

In African mythology the supreme being created the earth, and created a pantheon of gods and goddesses known as Orishas, Yemaja was the Orisha who was responisble for all the waters of the world. She regulated night and day, the tides and rain. Yemaja was also said to have brought beauty to the world.