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The Fishmen are a race of fish-like humans from the anime One Piece. They are modeled after different aquatic lifeforms. The Fishmen can breed with Giants to create Wotans. Gill (aka Gil Moss) from "Kim Possible" [39] Goo, a mermaid character from Gumby [40] Hippocampus from Krapopolis is a piscine humanoid. [41]
Piscine and amphibian humanoids (people with the characteristics of fish or amphibians) which appear in folklore and fiction. Subcategories This category has the following 6 subcategories, out of 6 total.
The bishop-fish, from Poland in the 16th century. Lists of humanoids cover humanoids, imaginary species similar to humans.They are organized by type (avian, piscine and amphibian, reptilian, and extraterrestrial), and by medium (literature, comics, animation, television, film and video games).
An archaeologist believes the tiny humanoid species Homo floresiensis may still exist in Indonesia. ... around 50,000 years ago. But one professor thinks the apelike humanoids could still live ...
Piscine and amphibian humanoids (6 C, 28 P) S. Water spirits (11 C, 137 P) Pages in category "Mythological aquatic creatures" The following 49 pages are in this ...
The other reason is Wikipedia-internal. There was no consensus if "piscine and amphibian humanoids" is now a notable topic or not, and if they should be put together in one group or not, depending on how you read the found secondary sources. Which can always lead to more problems in the future, new deletion nominations and the like.
Yacuruna are said to inhabit underwater cities that mirror upside-down human cities. The cities can be interpreted as reflections on the surface of the water. Within the city, the Yucuruna live in palaces of crystal with multicolored walls of fish scales and pearl, reclining on hammocks of feathers under a mosquito net of butterfly wings.
Lissamphibia (extant amphibians) retain many features of early amphibians but they have only four digits (caecilians have none). 330-300 Ma Hylonomus. From amphibians came the first amniotes: Hylonomus, a primitive reptile, is the earliest amniote known.