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  2. Jaguar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaguar

    In South America, the jaguar is larger than the cougar and tends to take larger prey, usually over 22 kg (49 lb). The cougar's prey usually weighs between 2 and 22 kg (4 and 49 lb), which is thought to be the reason for its smaller size. [73] This situation may be advantageous to the cougar.

  3. Jaguars in Mesoamerican cultures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaguars_in_Mesoamerican...

    As the jaguar is quite at home in the nighttime, the jaguar is believed to be part of the underworld; thus, "Maya gods with jaguar attributes or garments are underworld gods" (Benson 1998:64). One such god is Xbalanque , one of the Maya Hero Twins who descended to the underworld, and whose entire body is covered with patches of jaguar skin.

  4. Maya jaguar gods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_jaguar_gods

    Less clearly classifiable as deities are jaguar protectors (perhaps ancestors) and jaguar transformers. The Water Lily Jaguar (so called because of the water lily on its head) is both a giant jaguar protector, looming large above the king (e.g., Tikal wooden lintel 3, temple I), and a transformer often shown amidst flames.

  5. Panthera onca mesembrina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panthera_onca_mesembrina

    Panthera onca mesembrina, also known as the Patagonian panther, [1] is an extinct subspecies of jaguar (Panthera onca) that was endemic to southern Patagonia during the late Pleistocene epoch. It is known from several fragmentary specimens, the first of which found was in 1899 at " Cueva del Milodon " in Chile .

  6. Paseo del Jaguar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paseo_del_Jaguar

    Paseo del Jaguar (Spanish: "Path of the Jaguar") is a proposed interconnected system of refuges and conservation corridors running from the United States through Mexico and Central America into South America.

  7. Werejaguar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werejaguar

    In this latter book, Indian Art of Mexico & Central America, Covarrubias included a family tree showing the "jaguar mask" as ancestral to all (later) Mesoamerican rain gods. [ 6 ] At about this time, in 1955, Matthew Stirling set forward what has since become known as the Stirling Hypothesis, proposing that the werejaguar was the outcome of a ...

  8. Giant otter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_otter

    The giant otter has a handful of other names. In Brazil it is known as ariranha, from the Tupi word arerãîa, or onça-d'água, meaning water jaguar. [6] In Spanish, river wolf (Spanish: lobo de río) and water dog (Spanish: perro de agua) are used occasionally (though the latter also refers to several different animals) and may have been more common in the reports of explorers in the 19th ...

  9. Sudamérica XV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudamérica_XV

    The badge included a puma, a condor, a lapwing and a jaguar, representing Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Paraguay respectively. Rodolfo O'Reilly was appointed as coach. [5] Boys from other countries knew that (South America XV) was a facade, and, although they played some matches in the tour, it were the Pumas who played the tests