Archive for 2010
Wednesday, December 29th, 2010
Mammals like Diadectes, with its thick body, short skull and sprawling limbs, was a member of this ancestral stock from which evolved such totally different creatures as Nyctosaurus, a pigeon-sized flying reptile with an eagle wingspread, and Moschops, a ponderous plant eater.
http://uglogical.com/
Wetaskiwin Edmonton Alberta
Coqutlam Auto Repair Shop
Tags: Auto Repair Shop, Creatures, Edmonton Alberta, Flying Reptile, Mammals, Moschops, Pigeon, Plant Eater, Skull, Stock, Thick Body, Wingspread
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Saturday, December 25th, 2010
The history of reptiles, from their first appearance during the Carboniferous to the present, is traced on this chart. (Each white area represents a major order plotted according to when it first began to flower and how long it lasted.) In addition to the major groups, many short-lived offshoots developed. For reasons of space only two of them, represented by the marine forms Geosaurus and Tylosaurus, have been included here. Solid bars on the chart indicate lines of descent which have been fairly well established by the fossil record. Broken bars are used where the fossil evidence is sketchy.
A striking aspect of reptile history is how, from the primitive cotylosaurs (here represented by Seymouria), these creatures radiated to occupy an enormous variety of niches on land, in the water, and in the air. One group of cotylosaurian descendants that played a profound role in the development of reptiles was the thecodonts, primitive archosaurs. Not only did they give rise to the Ornithischia and Saurischia (popularly called dinosaurs), but also the Pterosauria (flying reptiles) and the Crocodilia. Thecodonts were even related to the ancestral birds. The mammals evolved from another group, the therapsids, shown at lower left.
Another curious fact of reptilian evolution revealed by this chart is the relative suddenness with which order after order disappeared toward the end of the Cretaceous, described as “the time of the great.”
http://uglogical.com/
Spruce Grove Alberta
BC winning lottery numbers
Winnipeg Mainstay Suites Hotels
Related Websites
- Reflexology Foot Chart In order to fully understand how reflexology works, it is important to relate the “macrocosm to the microcosm.” In other words, be able to see how the human body is represented on the feet. The...
- G20 Reveals New World Order Not Conspiracy Theory Sunday Paper - April 5th, 2009 American Exceptionalism Barack Obama is not leading the United States. What he is doing, and painfully obviously so, is having America take a seat in the back of the...
- How to Get More from Collecting Chinese Paper Money Those who enjoy collecting currency are delighted to start collecting something like Chinese paper money. This is because of how rare some of the item can be as well as the history regarding the currency...
- Question: What is the Best Interval for Day Trading: One Minute? Five Minute? Answer: NO MINUTE! Hereâs another question from the âAsk Barryâ service. This is a service where anyone can ask me a question about the market, technical analysis, trading, money management, etc. You can use the form in the...
- Chords 101 In both music as well as musical theory, chords are described as being sets of three or more unique notes in a specific key that are sounded simultaneously. Chords that are constructed of three notes...
- Da Bulls! After a surge in energy to the downside, the S&P completed it's A, B, C pattern and has now made a Higher High. Technically it made a Lower Low as well, but looking at the...
Tags: Archosaurs, Broken Bars, Cretaceous, Curious Fact, Dinosaurs, Enormous Variety, First Appearance, Flying Reptiles, Fossil Evidence, History Of Reptiles, Mainstay Hotels, Mainstay Suites, Mammals, Niches, Offshoots, Ornithischia, Profound Role, Reptilian Evolution, Spruce Grove Alberta, Striking Aspect, Thecodonts, Therapsids, Tylosaurus, Winning Lottery Numbers
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010
All 2,700 kinds of snakes tend to look alike – long, squirmy and legless. But despite this superficial resemblance, they show just as much variability of form as their ancestors the lizards do. They range in size from the five inches of a burrowing snake no thicker than a goose quill to the 30 feet of an Asian python over 300 pounds in weight. And with these variations go others – environmental adaptations such as the prehensile tails of many of the arboreal snakes, or skin colors and patterns that match or blend with the surroundings. The amazing thing about snakes is that being legless has not proven a hindrance to locomotion, but an enhancement, making them extremely agile. Some snakes can even outdistance a man in brush or over rough ground. The eyelash viper, a poisonous snake of Central America, can wind its prehensile tail several times around a branch and grab at birds with its open mouth while dangling in the air.
http://uglogical.com/
Mazda 3 Edmonton
Edmonton Auto Dealer
Coquitlam Auto Service
Related Websites - Mr Pretzel The Snake - VIDEO. Hi, Animals are a very common sight in Bangkok. It is not a surprise to see a dozen stray dogs on a sub street fighting over leftovers from a street food stand. Also, a lot...
- Customizing a Budget It is a good idea for you to put together your own unique budget work sheet when it comes to getting started in setting up a budget for your household. Make sure that the categories...
- How to Handle an Uncooperative Toilet Toilets are one of the western world's most important inventions. They are an easy and convenient way to dispose of waste into our elaborate and safe sewage systems well below the ground. Other cultures are...
Tags: Ancestors, Arboreal Snakes, Auto Dealer, Auto Service, Edmonton Edmonton, Environmental Adaptations, Eyelash Viper, Goose Quill, Hindrance, Kinds Of Snakes, Legless, Lizards, Locomotion, Match, Mazda 3, Open Mouth, Poisonous Snake, Prehensile Tail, Prehensile Tails, Rough Ground, Several Times, Skin Colors, Superficial Resemblance, Variability
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Sunday, December 19th, 2010
Snakes are clearly derived from some ancient kind of lizard, and the two are put together in the order Squamata. One of the features distinguishing the lizards and snakes from other reptiles is a drastic reduction of bones in the temporal region of the skull, which reaches its extreme among the snakes. Another is that the anal opening in lizards and snakes is transverse, instead of longitudinal as in crocodilians and turtles. Finally, both snakes and lizards have paired copulatory organs, and both have distinctive sets of sensory cells in their mouths, called Jacobson’s organs.
As to differences between snakes and lizards themselves, most lizards can close their eyes, but a snake’s eyes remain permanently open behind a clear covering called the spectacle. The unblinking stare of snakes may account for some of the superstitious fears people have about them. Snakes also generally have a single row of widened scales under the belly, while the scales of lizards tend to be more nearly the same size above and below. Lizards typically have some sort or external ear; snakes have none. In most lizards the tail can be readily shed, evidently as an escape mechanism. In some, the broken-off section snaps and jumps about in an irresponsible way. It is easy to imagine that this allows the rest of the lizard to slip quietly away from the scene while its attacker is preoccupied with the twitching tail. Later, a new tail generally grows again, sometimes lighter in color, with a different scale pattern and shorter than the one that was left behind.
The most obvious difference between typical lizards and snakes, however, is the leglessness of the latter. Although there are lizards that have no legs and that superficially resemble snakes, it is still generally easy to draw the line between the two groups. At the same time, it also is helpful to keep in mind that snakes are really a specialized and quite successful sort of lizard.
Of the two groups of the Squamata, the lizards are of course the older. They have the conventional body plan of a typical land vertebrate: four legs, five toes to a foot, and the sprawling gait of the earliest reptiles. Most of the adaptations that have allowed them to spread and prosper are relatively unspectacular changes in the old four-legged look – exceptions being the various groups in which the legs have been lost completely. As vertebrates, lizards are a fairly representative group and it has been suggested that the lizard would be more suitable as a type with which to introduce freshman biology students to vertebrate anatomy than the universally used frog. Perhaps it sounds cynical to say so, but I think the answer there is that the frog, being tailless, fits dissection pans more gracefully.
In spite of their fundamentally conventional body plan, modern lizards are a diverse lot. They range in length from two inches to 10 feet. They may look like dragons and they may look like worms, and they show a complex adaptive range through terrestrial, arboreal, subterraneous and aquatic environments.
Out at my farm lizards are all over the place on warm days. The large family of the Iguanidae is there, represented by the slender anole that stalks insects on the screens, and by the scaly-backed fence lizards that bask on almost every log or stump. This is, as the name suggests, the group to which the big tropical arboreal and marine iguanas belong, and it includes a host of smaller forms. Its counterpart in the Old World is the family Agamidae, which has a curiously similar structural and ecological spread.
http://uglogical.com/
Wetaskiwin Edmonton Alberta
Coqutlam Auto Repair Shop
Winnipeg Mainstay
Related Websites - Italy - Airc Project: Cancer stem cells modified to combat the disease Image via Wikipedia Taming the bad cancer stem cells, genetically modifying them to arm them against disease and cancer-from defusing the bomb. Bet on cell girls 'GM', transformed into cancer killer bullets, one of five...
- Looking For Life Insurance? Better Learn The Language People that are looking for life insurance to protect their family in the event of the unthinkable often find that they cannot understand the common terms used in the life insurance industry. Without being able...
- Choosing the Right Plants for Your Garden When you first saw how much space you had in your back yard you were probably really excited by the prospect of all of the plants that you could install there. But you need to...
- Hunting Decals Hunting decals are one of the little perks of hunting that don't really serve a purpose but can be a great deal of fun. We've all seen trucks going down the road that have more...
- Report: Self-management, strength training can benefit sufferers of osteoarthritis Self-management programs and strength training regimens can help patients suffering from the early stages of osteoarthritis, says a new report titled Multidimensional Intervention for Early Osteoarthritis of the Knee. The study, conducted at the University of...
- Finder's Keeper's Remember being young and coming across something that didn't belong to you, yet piqued your interest, and showed some promise of being beneficial. The phrase we used to claim the 'found' item was, "Finders Keepers,...
Tags: Attacker, Crocodilians, Drastic Reduction, External Ear, Fraternity, Jacobson, Left Behind, lizard, Lizards, Mouths, Order Squamata, Organs, reptiles, Scales, Sensory Cells, Skull, Snakes And Lizards, Spectacle, Temporal Region, Turtles
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 15th, 2010
There are about 3,000 species and subspecies of lizards, and though they differ in many ways, they have one habit in common – all shed their skins. Adults molt once every month or so, during the months in which they are active, and unlike snakes, most do not shuffle off their epidermis in one piece, but in patches or even a scale at a time. The banded gecko below rips off its old skin with its mouth and swallows the strips. And to peel its feet, it yanks at each digit as though removing a tight glove.
The Komodo Monitors of Indonesia, the largest, heaviest lizards. grow to 10 feet and weigh up to 300 pounds. They occasionally catch small deer or pigs and can swallow them whole.
http://uglogical.com/
Mazda 3 Edmonton
Edmonton Auto Dealer
Long Stay Hotel Winnipeg
Related Websites - Fishing Report: October 23, 2009 Lake Fishing - At Amador, a 3,000 lb trout plant just went in, some of which were as large as 10 lbs, this past Tuesday. Both boaters and float tubers that are using bait and...
- Top 20 List of the Biggest Canadian Gold Stocks With gold prices breaking through $1000/ounce (Sept. 2009), US dollar weakness and continued upside pressure on gold with the recent announcement by Barrick of the removal of its gold hedging books (a very bullish and...
- Sonoma County Hike of the Jack London Historic Park Summary: This is a Sonoma County ridge trail hike that is a 10.3 mile hike out and back that goes through the woods surrounding the peak above Jack London's home ranch. Location: Sonoma County Hike...
- Obama: U.S. One of the Largest Muslim Countries - WRONG! Sunday Paper - June 7th, 2009 As the Barack Obama world-wide appeasement and apology tour plodded ahead this past week, we heard an interesting comment made on Monday. Obama told a French reporter, "if you...
- What The Effects Are of A Rising Interest Rate In Terms Of Its Currency: Look At Australia Australia just became the first major central bank to raise its interest rate (today, October 6, 2009) since the beginning of the financial crisis of 2008-2009. From 3.00%, it raised rates 25 basis points to...
- Vanguard Lowers Fees On Its Emerging Market ETF(VWO) To 0.22% Last month Vanguard's Emerging Market ETF, VWO overtook BlackRock iShares' ETF, EEM in total assets to become the largest Emerging Market ETF in the US. Both the funds have been swelling in size due to...
Tags: Adults, Auto Dealer, Banded Gecko, Deer, Edmonton Edmonton, Gecko, Habit, Indonesia, Komodo Monitors, Lizards, Mazda, Mazda 3, Old Skin, Patches, Pigs, Skins, Snakes, Subspecies, Swallows, Tight, Winnipeg, Yanks
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Sunday, December 12th, 2010
Emerging from streams and ponds some 365 million years ago, the reptile ancestors established a beachhead during the Upper Devonian and eventually gave rise to myriad bizarre creatures, from gopher-sized cotylosaurs to the schooner-sized Brontosaurus. While many returned to the water, a few took to the air. But most remained on land to dominate the earth for some 200 million years.
http://uglogical.com/
Mazda Edmonton
Edmonton Alberta Auto Dealer
Winnipeg Long Stay Hotel
Related Websites - Earth Day, What's The Big Deal? Photo Courtesy of Waffle Whiffer Today, April 22nd, is Earth Day. So I guess I should be saying happy earth day, right? Earth Day is supposed to inspire awareness and appreciation of Earth. Wow, an...
- Why Have Over 14 Million People Watched This Video? Is December 21st, 2012 The End? So why are over fourteen million people watching a video about the end of the world; prophesied to occur on December 21st, 2012? Update Feb 2011 - The original video I posted, which had received over...
- Messianic Prophecy: Characteristics of the coming Messiah: Messianic Prophecy: Characteristics of the coming Messiah: Prophecy: “Of old You founded the earth, And the heavens are the work of Your hands. “Even they will perish, but You endure; And all of them will...
- Egypt -- Investing in the Land of the Pharaohs Egypt evokes images of the Great Pyramid at Giza , the Nile River and the vast expanse of the Sinai Peninsula. Egypt's population of 83 million also makes it the Arab world’s most populous country....
- Would You Turn Down 12 Million Dollars? It's pretty easy to turn down money when it means you have to work for it. It's called being lazy and we all do it. We have the ability to work hard and get paid,...
- Chegg.com Rent Textbooks: Fast Delivery, Free Return Shipping! Chegg.com is the hottest online textbook rental service sweeping the nation that's helping students save $500 or more a year on textbooks. Chegg has 1 million customers and...
Tags: Auto Dealer, Beachhead, Bizarre Creatures, Brontosaurus, Earth, Edmonton Alberta, Edmonton Edmonton, Grandeur, Long Stay, Mazda, Million Years, Ponds, Reptile Ancestors, Schooner, Streams, Upper Devonian, Winnipeg
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 8th, 2010
Swift desert species where bipedality is common, the hind limbs may be quite strong and longer than the forelimbs. In species that can leap well, as in the American collared lizards (Crotaphytus), this situation is readily apparent. Those lizards not so swift of foot, such as horned lizards and Gila monsters, are equipped with strong nearly equal-sized limbs, usually with strong claws.
In regard to limbs, the geckos and certain Anolis have developed a special toe pad composed of millions of microscopic hooks which give the lizard the ability to scale most objects and to even walk along ceilings. While this feature is not universal among geckos, it is a trait by which most geckos are known.
The tail of many lizards is known as an excellent defense from predators because it can often be disconnected from the rest of the body. Being broken at a special point on the tail vertebra, the muscles and blood vessels allows almost no bleeding. In those lizards that rely heavily on this defense, the tail will eventually regenerate. This process of tail or limb loss is known as autotomy. The regrown tail will not as perfect as the original, nor will it contain any true vertebrae.
The tail has other purposes in other species. We already described the prehensile tail. In those forms that run bipedally, the tail is necessary organ of balance. Species that need this organ for balance, such as Crotaphytus and Chlamydosaurus, do not readily lose the tail.
Certain lizards have relatively short tails, with a special purpose. The Old World agamids Uromastix and Agama batil lifera have tails shorter than the head and body length, but these tails are equipped with sharp spines, a defense against potential predators. If they must secure themselves in a crevice, they keep the tail facing the entrance to discourage pursuit.
The Gila monster and beaded lizard both have bulky tails. This organ serves as a fat reserve from which the lizards can derive nourishment during times of bad hunting.
http://uglogical.com/
Long Stay Hotel Winnipeg
Edmonton Premium Used Cars
Mazda 3 Edmonton
Related Websites - Swimming Pools in your Garden Landscape When you add a swimming pool to your landscape, it should not appear as a fish out of water, but instead incorporating a pool into your landscape should be smooth and easy. Your swimming pool...
- Is a Hunting DVD Worth Watching? People who don't hunt or fish or participate in any outdoor sports often like to make fun of things like fishing programs or a hunting DVD. They can't understand why anyone would want to watch...
- 10 Extinct Species That We Should Miss Dinosaurs were surely fantastic creatures, but you’d be hard pressed to find someone who wishes Tyrannosaurus rex were alive and roaming the streets. If dinosaurs weren’t extinct, humankind probably would be. All in all, the...
Tags: Agama, Anolis, Chlamydosaurus, Collared Lizards, Crevice, Desert Species, Forelimbs, Geckos, Gila Monster, Gila Monsters, Hind Limbs, Horned Lizards, Limb Loss, Lizards, Nourishment, Prehensile Tail, Spines, Toe Pad, Uromastix, Vertebrae
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Sunday, December 5th, 2010
The bite of this species and other large lizards is painful, although not venomous, and could cause serious wounds. In captivity all the lizards I’ve mentioned can become docile and freely allow handling. If exposed to sunlight, however, a strange transformation takes place. The animal slowly regains its more aggressive instincts and may become vicious if an attempt is made to handle it. It has been reported by Ditmars that large monitors may charge and attack their regular keeper. The lizards inflate their lungs, give off ominous hissing noises, and lash at their victim with the long tail. The tail of a monitor can break the legs of a dog; a large one could probably knock over a man.
http://uglogical.com/
Mazda 3 Edmonton
Edmonton Auto Dealer
Winnipeg Long Stay Hotel
Related Websites - Do You Think Large Scale About Your Online Business ? Now-a-days many people are running their own online business and the entrepreneur's percentage grows every day. One good example is the blog statistics released by Technorati every year which tells how many blogs are created...
- Guide to Repairing a Gate There are a number of different reasons why you might find yourself needing to repair a gate. Troubleshooting what is actually going on with the gate is typically going to let you know what needs...
- How to Become Prosperous the Easy Way For many, the concept of prosperity is foreign and unreachable. If you are stuck in a dead end job or your bills haunt your sleep, it’s easy to feel as though you will never be...
- Making Ecourses With Helpful Articles In today’s society, the internet is not just used for shopping or entertainment; it's also made use of for learning. Over the past few years, online eCourses have quickly increased in popularity. What does this...
- Avoid Becoming A Victim Of Debit Card Fraud The use of debit cards has increased dramatically over the last decade, resulting in a dramatic increase in the number of cases of debit card fraud reported each year. As companies try to combat the...
- KeywordNinja.com REVIEW - How To Choose Long Tail Keywords How Using Long Tail Keywords Can Rank You In The Top 3 Spots of Google! Good market and keyword research is key in landing you on the first page of a Search. Often times people...
Tags: Auto Dealer, Break, Captivity, Ditmars, Edmonton Edmonton, Instincts, Large Lizards, Legs, Lizards, Long Stay, Lungs, Mazda, Mazda 3, Monitors, Strange Transformation, Sunlight, Tupinambis Teguixin, Winnipeg, Wounds
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 1st, 2010
Against the rough bark of the tree on the opposite page a gecko is almost invisible – a striking illustration of how the skin colors of many lizards match their backgrounds. Others can go even further, enhancing the effectiveness of their scaly and irregular shapes by means of dark-brown pigment cells which turn the skin lighter or darker as needed. Chameleons can even change color from gray to brown and green, and sometimes even yellow, in response to various stimuli. The East African chameleon seen above demonstrates its reaction to the changes in heat and light produced by a shadow; others show various hues from night to day, or when angered or alarmed. Lizards are the acknowledged masters of such color-changing. Some snakes have the ability, but use it only rarely and in a minor way.
http://uglogical.com/
Long Stay Hotel Winnipeg
Edmonton Alberta Auto Dealer
Mazda Edmonton
Related Websites - Viviane Woodard Skin Care I'm beginning a series on brands of skin care that I like and whatever magic products they have. It's only apt that I start with Viviane Woodard. I have certainly used it the longest! Viviane...
- Beyonce' Is No Tina Turner So there I am cruising the net and I come across this video of Beyonce performing Proud Mary by Ike and Tina Turner. I love Ike and Tina's music and as for Beyonce well, she's...
- Remove Total Security 2009 | TotalSecurity 2009 Removal Total Security 2009 is also known as TotalSecurity 2009 or TotalSecurity2009. It is a newer version of the Total Security Antivirus which we highlighted just a week or so ago. It is a more troublesome...
- Aromaleigh Minerals As I wrote in my previous post, Aromaleigh has a wide variety of colors to choose from. If I were starting to look into minerals, I think I would look only here. I don't think...
- Buying a Diamond Ring After reading about 2 Million's engagement, I was taken back to my own engagement a year ago. From a money point of view that typically means finding the right ring. For the average man this...
- Creating Romantic Bedroom Décor It should be fun to decorate your home—especially the master bedroom. The master bedroom is one of the most important rooms in the home for any couple, and it should definitely inspire romance. However, in...
Tags: Auto Dealer, Camouflage, Chameleon, Chameleons, Dark Brown Pigment, Edmonton Alberta, Gecko, Heat And Light, Hues, Irregular Shapes, Lizards, Masters, Match, Mazda, Pigment Cells, Rough Bark, Skin Colors, Snakes, Stimuli, Striking Illustration, Winnipeg
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Sunday, November 28th, 2010
Although not venomous, there are certain other lizards that can be a lot to reckon with if disturbed. The monitor lizards, genus Varanus, include the largest living lizards. The true giants, such as the Komodo dragon, Perentie, or water monitor, could easily dispatch a man. The teeth, claws, and weight of these lizards would make them a formidable bunch of adversaries. Indeed some, like the Komodo dragon, rule supreme in their native haunts.
While not overtly aggressive, even the moderately large monitors will turn on a potential threat. The smaller species of Varanus, as well as Tupinambis and Dracaena, could cause severe wounds and are reportedly capable of removing a finger. While not poisonous as such, a bite from one of these creatures could be quite serious. The large size and bad temper of the Komodo dragon make it unsuitable for handling, even if it were still legal to own them.
http://uglogical.com/
Mazda Edmonton
Edmonton Auto Dealer
Winnipeg Long Stay Hotel
Tags: Adversaries, Auto Dealer, Bad Temper, Creatures, Dispatch, Disturbed, Dragon, Edmonton Edmonton, Genus Varanus, Komodo Dragon, Lizards, Long Stay, Mazda, Monitor Lizards, Monitors, Native Haunts, Perentie, Teeth, True Giants, Tupinambis, Water Monitor, Winnipeg, Wounds
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »