Did you go to university? http://pornhub.in.net/ pornub Satellite telemetry has tracked one wandering albatross that covered 15,500 miles in about nine weeks, almost the entire Atlantic and Indian oceans from west to east. Another in Australian waters moved 5,000 miles to the south Pacific in 17 days. Recent work suggests a mean speed of 34 mph but for almost a tenth of their journeys they travel at over 53 mph. One of the most striking aspects of the English-speaking world’s engagement with albatrosses is the absolute dominance of a single artistic representation. Indeed it is hard to think of another animal where one cultural image has so engaged and almost trapped our imaginations. Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, published in 1798, profoundly affects how the bird is perceived in popular culture but – strangely – it has also muddled our understanding of how albatrosses were viewed in the past. Even today it is a poem shrouded in confusion, perhaps partly because Coleridge steeped the bird in a powerful and highly refracted symbolism.