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  2. Turtle Spirit Animal Symbolism & Meaning

    www.aol.com/turtle-spirit-animal-symbolism...

    Turtle dreams mean you’re entering a time when you’ll need to practice strength, endurance, and perseverance. They are also associated with the element of water, which can represent emotions ...

  3. Sea Turtle Spirit Animal Symbolism & Meaning

    www.aol.com/sea-turtle-spirit-animal-symbolism...

    The sea turtle symbolizes protection. Seeing a sea turtle means that you have a guardian spirit watching over you. If you don’t believe in guardian spirits, the meaning might have a different twist.

  4. Cultural depictions of turtles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of_turtles

    Sea turtles are used to promote tourism, as sea turtles can have a symbolic role in the imaginations of potential tourists. Tourists interact with turtles in countries such as France, Australia, [65] Brazil, Costa Rica, Greece, and the United States. Turtle-based ecotourism activities take place on nesting beaches around the world. [3]

  5. Turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turtle

    Small pond turtles regulate their temperature by crawling out of the water and basking in the sun, while small terrestrial turtles move between sunny and shady places to adjust their temperature. Large species, both terrestrial and marine, have sufficient mass to give them substantial thermal inertia , meaning that they heat up or cool down ...

  6. Chelone (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelone_(mythology)

    The noun χελώνη is the ancient Greek word for both the land tortoise and the sea turtle. [1] Traditionally the word is considered to derive from an Indo-European root *gʰel(H)-ewH-denoting turtles and tortoises, however it has also been suggested that it must be a loanword from a non-Indo-European language, a theory that Beekes supports.

  7. Urashima Tarō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urashima_Tarō

    Urashima Tarō and princess of Horai, by Matsuki Heikichi (1899) Urashima Tarō (浦島 太郎) is the protagonist of a Japanese fairy tale (otogi banashi), who, in a typical modern version, is a fisherman rewarded for rescuing a sea turtle, and carried on its back to the Dragon Palace (Ryūgū-jō) beneath the sea.

  8. Calvin S. Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calvin_S._Hall

    The manifest dream content is not a true reflection of the self but is a distortion of oneself and one's wishes." [5] One may only infer what a dream means because there is more than one way to do something, or in other words, more than one meaning of a dream. [6]

  9. Cheloniidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheloniidae

    In contrast to their earth-bound relatives, tortoises, sea turtles do not have the ability to retract their heads into their shells. Their plastron, which is the bony plate making up the underside of a turtle or tortoise's shell, is comparably more reduced from other turtle species and is connected to the top part of the shell by ligaments without a hinge separating the pectoral and abdominal ...