Hi hello! I'm AnaI plan on posting some stuff here but I'll likely not be consistentI like bugs hjmauamha this is my carrd if you want to know more! -» https://ana-40.carrd.co/
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The Fact He Even Did The Peter Griffin Pose
The fact he even did the peter griffin pose 💀💀💀💀
guys im crying why does frank always get beaten up
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More Posts from Ana40ratenjoyer
Spent some time hanging out with the African lions (Panthera leo) yesterday. We filmed an interview with visiting researcher Larisa DeSantis, who is interested in studying microwear patterns on feliforms - species of wild cats, and hyenas. Tiny breaks in the teeth can be an indication of what an animal was eating shortly before it died, whether they were shearing soft tissues or breaking into hardened bone, which could indicate scavenging behavior.
This sort of research becomes particularly interesting when you’re looking at specimens living during extinction events. Museum collections allow these scientists to compare recent specimens to older examples of that species. If, historically, a species wasn’t known to be scavenging, but you see significant microwear in the more recent specimens, then it could imply that prey animals were scarce and a non-scavenger would have been more desperate for prey.
But what really blows my mind is the application of this research when studying man-eating behaviors. We still aren’t certain as to why the Lions of Tsavo began preying on railway workers in 1898. A few theories include evaluating dental and pain disease, and how that could have precluded the lions from hunting their typical large game (although research published in 2011 indicates they were still consuming herbivores). Other hypotheses suggest there was food scarcity and they were simply desperate – or perhaps the lions gained a taste for human flesh after eating workers who died of other causes. By taking dental impressions of the Tsavo Lions’ teeth, we may be able to answer this question – with science! In other words, heavy microwear on the Tsavo lions’ teeth could indicate they were super desperate and eating whatever was around - including people.
Stay tuned for the upcoming videos on the Tsavo Lions and Other Man-Eaters – and check out more of Larisa’s fascinating dental-work-meets-paleontology research here.
OMG YES YESS YES THANK YOU THANK YOU I WAS LOOKING FOR THIS
UPDATE UPDATE I FOUND THE FUCKING VIDEO
A lot of my friends have backslid--understandably--into despairposting and doomreblogging about this, so I want to give you something a bit different: the UK does not like these rioting racist twats and is prepared to say so loudly and with force.
please don't reblog posts that are "EVERYTHING IS TERRIBLE" unless they contain some way for the people reading them to take action--whether it's gofundmes, or letter templates for MPs, petition links, etc. "LOOK AT THE BAD THING" is for the newspapers. we are not the newspapers, we are the people trying to fix the fucking mess they've made.
Borgar.......
Right arm is too short but life goes on
THE BADASS BUG BRACKET
ROUND 2, BRACKET 7
Devil's Flower Mantis (Idolomantis diabolica) vs Synagris Proserpina
Devil's Flower Mantis propaganda: Looks cool as hell overall but especially SICK with it's threat display! Also its about 10-13 cm long (3.9-5.1 inches), so its a pretty damn big bug!!! Look up more pics of them they always look sick as hell
Synagris Proserpina propaganda: Is this wasp a total nobody? no common name, not even a wikipedia page, just a few images on inaturalist and the sort? yes! but tell me it doesnt look AWESOME. it looks like a LITTLE DEVIL. it literally looks like a cartoon demon to me its the devil from the bible. i dont know anything about it as a species, but i am enamored and delighted by its shapes. plus, those huge horns are unique to its genus, so its special little dude. when have you seen a wasp with horns before? NEVER I BET.