Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Deer Woman (Native American) – female human above the waist, deer below. Male version is Elk Man. Eikþyrnir (Norse mythology) – stag which stands upon Valhalla; Goldhorn – white golden-horned antelope; Jackalope (North American) – jackrabbit with antelope horns; Keresh (Jewish) – giant deer of the forest of Bei Ilai
The Frost Giants (based on the Marvel Comics race Giants (Marvel Comics)), introduced in Thor, are a race of 10 ft. tall humanoid beings that inhabit the frozen, barren realm Jotunheim. They are ruled by Laufey, king of the Frost Giants, who is also Loki's true biological father. Small and weak for a Frost Giant, Loki is abandoned by his father ...
Ymir is a large frost giant over 1,000 feet (300 m) tall with physical attributes far greater than most others. [12] He possesses superhuman strength and durability. [13] He is able to project intense and deadly cold. [14] [15] Ymir can regenerate from as little as an ice particle. [16] He is also considered to be immortal. [17]
15.5 35th Anniversary Giant Size X-Men Box-set. ... Savage Frost Giant ... The giant figures will all include lights and sounds. Wave 1 – October 2010 ...
Size comparison between a human and two species of Basilosaurus, B. cetiodes (dark blue) and B. isis The heaviest archeocete , and possibly the heaviest known mammal was Perucetus , with weight estimated at 85–340 t (84–335 long tons; 94–375 short tons), while length is estimated at 17.0–20.1 meters (55.8–65.9 ft), [ 108 ] possibly ...
A very large mature female of Onykia robsoni with a mantle length of 88.5 cm (2.90 ft) and total weight of 11.1 kg (24 lb) Lepidoteuthis grimaldii female measuring 61.7 cm (2.02 ft) in mantle length and weighing 4.07 kg (9.0 lb), from the Chatham Rise off New Zealand (note the prominent dermal cushions, likely used for buoyancy) The maximum ...
The female will then lay her eggs nearby. [11] All cuttlefish, including S. mestus, disperse their eggs by attachment to the sea floor, usually on or under hard surfaces such as rock and coral. [6] After spawning and brooding, male and female adults usually die shortly after. [11] Like most members of the class Cephalopoda, S. mestus are ...
As such, it is common in Spanish-speaking cultures to personify death as a female figure. A common term for the personification of death across Latin America is "la Parca" from one of the three Roman Parcae, a figure similar to the Anglophone Grim Reaper, though usually depicted as female and without a scythe.