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Moschops were heavy set dinocephalian synapsids, measuring 2.7 metres (8.9 ft) in length, [1] and weighing 129 kg (284 lb) on average and 327.4 kg (722 lb) in maximum body mass. [2] They had small heads with broad orbits and heavily built short necks. Like other members of Tapinocephalidae, the skull had a tiny opening for the pineal organ. [3]
Months after opening in Louisville, Witches Brew Coffee on Frankfort Avenue continues to draw tons of buzz.
C. aguti was a small captorhinid reptile that lived during the Permian Period [4] 286 MYA to 245 MYA when the continents were still connected as Pangea. [5] An abundance of fossils have been found in Oklahoma, [6] and Texas, [7] including a skull, [4] hindlimb bones, [8] spinal vertebra, ribs, and forelimb bones. [7]
Coeloconica are a type of sensory organ found in various insects, including mosquitoes, ants, and centipedes. [1] They are typically cone-shaped structures with a pore at the tip, and they are believed to function as chemoreceptors, detecting chemicals in the environment.
Named Gondwanax paraisensis, the four-legged reptile species was roughly the size of a small dog with a long tail, or about 1 meter (39 inches) long and weighing between 3 and 6 kg (7 to 13 pounds ...
Coffee: Coffea spp. Seed: [57] caffeine 0.06-3.2% Stimulant: The earliest credible evidence of either coffee drinking or knowledge of the coffee tree appears in the middle of the 15th century, in Yemen's Sufi monasteries. [58] The Sufi monks drank coffee as an aid to concentration and even spiritual intoxication when they chanted the name of ...
The osmeterium is a defensive organ found in all papilionid larvae, in all stages. [1] The organ is situated in the prothoracic segment and can be everted when the larva feels threatened. The everted organ resembles a fleshy forked tongue (not unlike a snake tongue), and this along with the large eye-like spots on the body might be used to ...
The Middle Permian reptile Eunotosaurus from South Africa was seen as the "missing link" between cotylosaurs and chelonians throughout much of the early 20th century. [8] However, more recent fossil finds have shown that Eunotosaurus was either a parareptile or a diapsid , and therefore unrelated to captorhinids.