
#extradirty

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Jules of Nature
KIROKAZE

Product Placement

oozey mess
cherry valley forever

@theartofmadeline
tumblr dot com
Xuebing Du
sheepfilms
Peter Solarz

pixel skylines
Today's Document
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Game of Thrones Daily

JVL
styofa doing anything

ellievsbear

if i look back, i am lost

seen from Ireland
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seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Georgia

seen from Türkiye
seen from Ireland

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Georgia
seen from Romania
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seen from Italy
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seen from Vietnam
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@4d4pt4t10n
Bobby Stormer
Scientists have revived the dire wolf—a massive species extinct for over 10,000 years.
Meet Romulus and Remus, born October 1, 2024—the world’s first de-extinct animals.
Using ancient DNA and CRISPR, Colossal reconstructed the dire wolf genome from fossils over 11,000 years old. A historic leap for science, conservation, and the future of our planet.
Mountain Hare/skogshare. Värmland, Sweden (July 18, 2021).
Bumblebees/humlor. Värmland, Sweden (July 18, 2019).
Bellying up for a shot of salt, goats come from miles around to ingest a solution of various mineral salts seeping from a cliff known as Walton Goat Lick in Glacier National Park, National Geographic, April 1995
MINHOCÃO
During the late 19th century, a number of sightings were recorded in numerous parts of South America of a creature resembling a giant earthworm. One account, dating from the 1840s near the Rio dos Papaganaios in the Parana State, described a woman who went to draw water from a well one morning. She saw, a short distance off, an animal that she described as being as large as a house moving along the ground. In the same district, a young man later saw a huge pine suddenly overturn, the surrounding earth begin to move, and an enormous, black worm-like animal appear, about 80 ft long with two horns on its head. A report in the American Journal of Science from the period mentions instances where livestock had been captured by one of these creatures and dragged under the water, suggesting that it was actually a type of water serpent. The name Minhocao comes from the Portuguese word minhocar (earthworm). There is also a similar creature from the folklore of Nicaragua called Sterpe, which was described as being similar to a huge snake. Various suggestions have been put forward by cryptozoologists, including the suggestion that the Minhocao was a surviving Glyptodont (a prehistoric South American animal which resembled an armadillo); while others have suggested a giant Caecilian, a worm-like amphibian native to Mexico and South America. No sightings have been reported since 1870.
Text from The Element Encyclopedia of Magical Creatures by John and Caitlin Matthews (HarperElement, 2005)
Alien vs. Predator (2004)
by insectmyheart
Bats getting glamour shots
Kakadu national Park, Australia. - Author: SwanDrizzle