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$h@dy wrote:
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:looks like demon spawn and sorcery to me
but apparently it's a real thing
https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turu
Turu
The turu ( Teredo sp. ), Also known as maggot , pagurian [ 1 ] or termite-fish , [ 2 ] is a mollusc bivalve family of teredinídeos . It presents wormlike appearance similar to an earthworm, and one of the ends with valves provided grooves of teeth, which are used to open galleries in submerged woods, then forming their colonies.
The shipworms live mainly in mangroves , feeding on their trunks or rotten and fallen trees in the water. They can devour the wood through their denticles on the head. They are like wet wood termites, they are found in the hulls of ships, causing them damage. Its meat is edible and can be consumed in raw form, cooked or in soups. This delicacy is part of Pará and Amazon cuisines, especially in the island of Marajó and surroundings, and also appreciated in Maranhão and Amapá . [ 3 ] It is a food rich in calcium and iron, whose flavor is described as similar to clams as oysters. In the Epic of Gilgamesh (2700 BC) there was talk of the need to protect vessels against attack teredos. One of the species is the Teredo navalis . [ 4 ]
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:looks like demon spawn and sorcery to me
but apparently it's a real thing
https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turu
Turu
The turu ( Teredo sp. ), Also known as maggot , pagurian [ 1 ] or termite-fish , [ 2 ] is a mollusc bivalve family of teredinídeos . It presents wormlike appearance similar to an earthworm, and one of the ends with valves provided grooves of teeth, which are used to open galleries in submerged woods, then forming their colonies.
The shipworms live mainly in mangroves , feeding on their trunks or rotten and fallen trees in the water. They can devour the wood through their denticles on the head. They are like wet wood termites, they are found in the hulls of ships, causing them damage. Its meat is edible and can be consumed in raw form, cooked or in soups. This delicacy is part of Pará and Amazon cuisines, especially in the island of Marajó and surroundings, and also appreciated in Maranhão and Amapá . [ 3 ] It is a food rich in calcium and iron, whose flavor is described as similar to clams as oysters. In the Epic of Gilgamesh (2700 BC) there was talk of the need to protect vessels against attack teredos. One of the species is the Teredo navalis . [ 4 ]
COROLLA KID wrote:Ronaldo95163 wrote:
Looks like a bunch of men in make up and nice hair......
maj. tom wrote:
Ronaldo95163 wrote:Name the 2nr
2WNBoost wrote:Lightning Kills 300 Reindeer in Rare Mass Death
A severe storm in Norway killed an entire reindeer herd in a national park in an unprecedented event, officials say.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/08/norway-reindeer-lightning-weather/
More than 300 wild reindeer were recently killed by lightning at a Norwegian national park, officials say.
The Norwegian Environment Agency has released haunting images of reindeer—including 70 calves—that seemingly fell over where they stood in the grasses of Hardangervidda, the largest high mountain plateau in northern Europe.
The national park, the largest in Norway with wild reindeer populations, spans some 8,000 square kilometers (3,088 square miles) and is home to 10,000 to 11,000 wild reindeer.
While specifics on the lightning strike are still unknown at this time, it’s likely that the dead reindeer were a herd that huddled together to weather a severe thunderstorm that rolled through the area on Friday.
The park where the animals died spans some 8,000 square kilometers (3,088 square miles) and is home to 10,000 to 11,000 wild reindeer.
It’s not the first time that lightning has caused animal herds to die en masse. In 1990, a thunderstorm killed 30 cattle on a farm in Orange County, Virginia, leaving their bodies scattered in a field. In 2005, a lightning strike killed 68 cows at a dairy farm outside Dorrigo in New South Wales, Australia. And in 2008, lightning outside of Montevideo, Uruguay, struck a paddock’s wire fence, killing 52 of the cattle grazing inside.
“I’ve heard of groups of cow [getting killed] when it strikes the ground,” says Steve Goodman, a scientist with the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration’s Satellite Service. “The lightning can spread for hundreds and hundreds of meters, for sure.”
$h@dy wrote:
TheOwnerPO wrote:Real or not ?
Coppershot wrote:
Ronaldo95163 wrote:Name the 2nr
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