hound384
161 posts
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A polar bear (Ursus maritimus) feeds on a walrus carcass in Svalbard, Norway
by Tim Melling
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everybody give it up for this brand of green. round of applause for most under appreciated green
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“The remains of three Paleolithic dogs, including one with a mammoth bone in its mouth, have been unearthed at Predmosti in the Czech Republic, according to a new Journal of Archaeological Science paper.
The remains indicate what life was like for these prehistoric dogs in this region, and how humans viewed canines. The dogs appear to have often sunk their teeth into meaty mammoth bones. These weren’t just mammoth in terms of size, but came from actual mammoths.
In the case of the dog found with the bone in its mouth, the researchers believe a human inserted it there after death.”
Do you guys even know what this means… It means that someone cared enough about this dog, and knew it’s love for mammoth bones, that upon the dogs death, the human placed a bone in the canines mouth because they wanted it to take the bone with them in the afterlife. I love knowing that humans have always been like this because I’ve been burying stuffed animals with my passed pets since I was a kid
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⚠️ Important News! ⚠️
Baby Tiger Shark Practicing Her First Bites
Look at her go :)
Look at that little face <3
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everybody give it up for this brand of green. round of applause for most under appreciated green
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Alligator in Donnelley Wildlife Management Area, Green Pond, SC. Photo by Brandon Coffey.
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American crocodile By: Unknown photographer From: Wildlife Fact-File 1990s
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Alligator eyes shining in the sunset, Myakka River State Park, Florida
Photographed by Larry Lynch & David Moynahan
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A Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) covered in pondweeds in Chobe National Park, Botswana
by flowcomm
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