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I've seen a lot of nice plesiosaur diagrams posted here recently (by Slate Weasel and DaCaTaraptor), and while working on the Elasmosaurus article, I realised the current life restoration with a man for scale is inappropriate, since it shows the animal foreshortened, so therefore doesn't show the size correctly.
The organization currently issues a 'Certified Paleo' certification mark, [1] with a previous iteration called "Paleo Friendly", [2] for food products and dietary supplements that meet its standards. By 2018, it had certified food products from various food retailers and companies including Whole Foods , [ 3 ] Walmart , [ 4 ] and General Mills ...
User-made paleoart should be approved during review before being added to articles. Images that have been deemed inaccurate should be tagged with the Wikimedia Commons template "Inaccurate paleoart" [5] (which automatically adds the "Inaccurate paleoart" category [6] ), so they can be prevented from being used and easily located for correction.
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A Tiger's Milk bar. Tiger's Milk is a nutrition bar created and introduced in the 1960s by Plus Products owned by James and Arthur Ingoldsby. It was later acquired by Weider Nutrition in the 1980s. The brand is currently owned by McCormick & Company.
The Paleolithic diet, Paleo diet, caveman diet, or Stone Age diet is a modern fad diet consisting of foods thought by its proponents to mirror those eaten by humans during the Paleolithic era. [ 1 ] The diet avoids food processing and typically includes vegetables , fruits , nuts , roots , and meat and excludes dairy products , grains , sugar ...
Paleobotany, also spelled as palaeobotany, is the branch of botany dealing with the recovery and identification of plant remains from geological contexts, and their use for the biological reconstruction of past environments (paleogeography), and the evolutionary history of plants, with a bearing upon the evolution of life in general.
Lärabar was created by Denver native Lara Merriken, who was looking to make a "very healthy product that tasted delicious". [2] [3] According to the General Mills website, Merriken's inspiration for the snack occurred during a hiking trip in 2000 through the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. [4]