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  2. Snake experts offer advice on snake encounters, hunting ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/snake-experts-offer-advice-snake...

    The snakes enjoy the Allegheny Plateau and other open areas. “It grades all the way over to the Pocono Plateau where it’s a high elevation already and you find snakes up on those knobs and ...

  3. Smooth green snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smooth_green_snake

    When handled by humans, it usually shows excited behavior and calms down after wrapping itself around a finger. When it hunts, it turns its head from side to side, finding prey with its tongue. The flicking of the tongue gathers air near the snake's head, and the Jacobson's organ (on the roof of its mouth) interprets the airborne pheromones and ...

  4. Why copperhead snakes like coming onto our front porches ...

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    Copperheads are NC’s most common venomous snake, and sometimes they come a little too close to our front doors.

  5. Brown tree snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_tree_snake

    The brown tree snake is a nocturnal and arboreal species that uses both visual and chemical cues when hunting, either in the rainforest canopy or on the ground. [3] It is a member of the subfamily Colubrinae, genus Boiga, which is a group of roughly twenty-five species that are referred to as "cat-eyed" snakes for their vertical pupils. [4]

  6. Ring-necked snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring-Necked_Snake

    The snakes do not have a true venom gland, but they do have an analogous structure called the Duvernoy's gland derived from the same tissue. [4] Most subspecies are rear-fanged with the last maxillary teeth on both sides of the upper jaw being longer and channeled; [4] the notable exception is D. p. edwardsii, which is fangless. [7]

  7. Taking bluebonnet photos? Watch out for rattlesnakes ... - AOL

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  8. George Went Hensley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Went_Hensley

    George Went Hensley (May 2, 1881 – July 25, 1955) was an American Pentecostal minister best known for popularizing the practice of snake handling.A native of rural Appalachia, Hensley experienced a religious conversion around 1910: on the basis of his interpretation of scripture, he came to believe that the New Testament commanded all Christians to handle venomous snakes.

  9. Rectilinear locomotion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rectilinear_locomotion

    Rectilinear locomotion relies upon two opposing muscles, the costocutaneous inferior and superior, which are present on every rib and connect the ribs to the skin. [5] [6] Although it was originally believed that the ribs moved in a "walking" pattern during rectilinear movement, studies have shown that the ribs themselves do not move, only the muscles and the skin move to produce forward ...