Auteur Sujet: fuew For tens of thousands in Mich., Maine: No power, new snow  (Lu 54 fois)

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fuew For tens of thousands in Mich., Maine: No power, new snow
« le: Novembre 24, 2024, 04:02:03 am »
Pjrd 16-year-old dies while operating equipment at Mississippi poultry plant
 A 99-million-year-old amber fossil preserving a deadly encounter between two insects has proven what scientists long suspected about some of the Earth s first ants. The insect s ancestors had a deadly weapon in place of modern pincers mdash; vertical jaws that looked like the Grim Reaper s scythe that were used to pin prey against a horn on their heads so that it was easier to keep ahold of their meal.The discovery wa stanley cup s published Thursday in the scientific journal  Current Biology. The fossil was recovered in Myanmar and dates back to the final era when dinosaurs roamed the Earth, the Cretace stanley cup ous Period. The piece of amber shows the exact moment a hell ant  haidomyrmecine  embraces its victim, a now-extinct relative of the cockroach  Caputoraptor elegans .                A 99-million-year-old amber fossil shows a hell ant getting ready to devour a now-extinct insect related to the modern day cockroach.  DOI:https://do stanley cup i.org/10.1016/j.cub.2020.06.106 .                                                      Phillip Barden, Vincent Perrichot, Bo Wang                                        Phillip Barden, lead author of the study and an assistant professor at New Jersey Institute of Technology s Department of Biological Sciences, said in apress statement that fossilized behavior such as that of the hell ant s is  exceedingly rare.                                          As paleontologists, we speculate about the function of ancient adaptations using available evidence, but to see an Lhmh Two medical marijuana myths debunked in new research
 MIAMI -- Zoo Miamirsquo  matriarch gorilla, Josephine, who was grandmother to the internet-famous Harambe, has died. The zoo announced on social media that the 49-year-old ape was euthanized Wednesday morning, saying she had been suffering from several health issues that slowly incapacitated her.With very heavy hearts we announce the loss of our matriarch gorilla, Josephine, the zoo tweeted.    With very heavy hearts we announce the loss of our matriarch gorilla, Josephine, as well as chimpanzee, Binti. https://t.co/jj4JKCErve pic.twitter/FSm1D0iacJmdash; Zoo Miami  @zoomiami  January 18, 2017  Josephine was born in the wild in March 1967 and arrived at Zoo Miami in March 1983.                                         The Miami Herald reported that Josephine gave birth to her first offspr mizuno ing, a male named Moja, in 1984. He was the first gorilla born at Zoo Miami.                                                                                                                          Harambe                      23 photos                                                                                          Moja moved to Gladys Porter Zoo in Texas, where he fathered several gorillas, including Harambe, who gained worldwide attention last year when zookeeper jordan s at the Cincinnati Zoo shot him to protect a child that fell in the enclosure.         Zoo Miamirsquo  only remaining gorilla, Fredrika, will be transferred to another zoo.     af1