“The Choco-Bony-Bunny...a traditional favorite but now with added calcium! Happy Easter!“

seen from Türkiye

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seen from Türkiye
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seen from T1
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seen from United States
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“The Choco-Bony-Bunny...a traditional favorite but now with added calcium! Happy Easter!“
Visible Interactive Parrot - macaw skull with labeled skull bones
Visible Interactive Parrot - macaw skull with brain endocast, inner ears, etc.
“Animation of the skull of an adult scarlet macaw (Ara macao, OUVC 10633)“
"This video presents an animation that seeks to replicate the anatomical impact of rhino-horn poaching, drawing on experience with the rhinos that were poached at the Kariega Game Reserve."
Animation of the skull of an adult bobcat (Lynx rufus: OUVC 9576)
WitmerLab Animation FAIL - Spinosaurus "One vid was simply supposed to depict a spinning skeleton. However the head somehow got detached. The head orbits the pelvis (thus proving it’s a male)."
"http://bit.ly/V47Kxy. Rhinos are being injured and killed at an alarming rate to satisfy the illegal trade in rhino horn. This video is intended to draw attention to new, freely-available anatomical resources that can help in the treatment and care of rhinoceroses, as well as in the education of the public. WitmerLab at Ohio University partnered with O'Bleness Hospital in Athens, OH, to generate the most complete CT scan dataset ever collected for an adult rhinoceros head (http://on.fb.me/H4kTks). We scanned the head completely from front to back with slices only 300 microns (= 0.3 mm = 0.0118 inches) thick. The subject was Kehtla, a male white rhinoceros well known to generations of Phoenix, AZ, residents. In 1963, he was brought as a two-year-old from Natal, South Africa, to the Phoenix Zoo. He passed away from cancer in 2003 at the age of 42. At that time, his head was air-freighted to WitmerLab for anatomical study. We removed the horns for a study published in 2006 (http://bit.ly/bnlspj) on how rhino horns grow and attach to the skull. To generate this movie, four different CT scan datasets were assembled by Ryan Ridgely using Avizo (http://on.fb.me/GZMmoi). The full CT dataset is available from WitmerLab, as are high resolution slice movies comparable to this movie. For news from WitmerLab, visit http://www.ohio.edu/witmerlab or our Facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/witmerlab). If you want to help the rhinos, go here: http://www.kariega.co.za/about-us/help-save-our-rhino-project."