My cock is so tiny and cute! I love my itty bitty cock!
*ahem*
Peppercorn was being bullied because he is too gentle and sweet to hold his own among the other miniature dinosaurs. He actually managed to escape the coop somehow and was pretty chewed up when @corpsegods found him, so we've decided he'll be a house chicken. He seems quite fine with this, and loves snuggling with us. He's a kikiriki so he'll probably not get much bigger than this, though he hasn't found his cluck or crow yet.
I honestly don't know why there are still people in my family that do not believe i'm autistic, like, I have been given a tiny silicone dinosaur filled with sand for Christmas and I've given it a name and now I sleep with it and take it everywhere with me in my Metallica tote bag, and I've even created a insta story highlight for him like- gurl be for real
This is Papayi
Papayi watching Sense8 and Papayi watching Sense8 on top of my sister's head
Papayi and my cat, and Papayi sitting on my mum's spot on the sofa
The name "Jakapil" comes from a word meaning "shield bearer" in the Puelchean or northern Tehuelchean Indigenous language of Argentina. "Kanikura" comes from the words meaning "crest" and "stone" in the Indigenous Mapudungun language.
Fossils of a small, prickly dinosaur recently discovered in South America may represent an entire lineage of armored dinosaurs previously unknown to science.
The newly discovered species, Jakapil kaniukura, looks like a primitive relative of armored dinosaurs like Ankylosaurus or Stegosaurus, but it came from the Cretaceous, the last era of the dinosaurs, and lived between 97 million and 94 million years ago.
That means a whole lineage of armored dinosaurs lived in the Southern Hemisphere but had gone completely undetected until now, paleontologists reported in a new study.
J. kaniukura weighed about as much as a house cat and had a row of protective spines running from its neck to its tail and probably grew to about 5 feet (1.5 meters) long. It was a plant eater, with leaf-shaped teeth similar to those of Stegosaurus.