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  2. Creeper (Minecraft) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creeper_(Minecraft)

    This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 5 March 2025. Fictional Minecraft hostile creature Fictional character Creeper Minecraft character A creeper from Minecraft First game Minecraft (2011) Created by Notch In-universe information Home Overworld A creeper is a fictional creature in the sandbox video game Minecraft. Creepers are hostile mobs ...

  3. Religious restrictions on the consumption of pork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_restrictions_on...

    Pigs should not be eaten because they do not chew their cud. The ban on the consumption of pork is repeated in Deuteronomy 14:8. During the Roman period, Jewish abstinence from pork consumption became one of the most identifiable features of Jewish religion to outsiders of the faith. One example appears in Tacitus' Histories 5.4.1-2.

  4. Savaging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savaging

    Light exposure has the potential to prevent or limit savaging in pigs as pigs exposed to light for 16–24 hours a day in farrowing room experienced a decrease in the prevalence of savaging. [5] The industry has also attempted to avoid savaging behavior by limiting reproduction in gilts and sows that have previously savaged their offspring.

  5. Pig intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pig_intelligence

    Pigs can remember which humans and pigs they like and act accordingly. They differentiate humans, even people dressed alike, by recognizing human faces, and can also tell apart humans by their olfaction and hearing. [1] Pigs have shown to fear stranger humans but lose the fear after the person played with the pigs with toys. [14]

  6. Boar hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boar_hunting

    A 14th-century depiction of boar hunting with hounds. Boar hunting is the practice of hunting wild boar, feral pigs, warthogs, and peccaries.Boar hunting was historically a dangerous exercise due to the tusked animal's ambush tactics as well as its thick hide and dense bones rendering them difficult to kill with premodern weapons.

  7. Why does Mizzou use live pigs to train doctors? Should they ...

    www.aol.com/does-mizzou-med-school-train...

    The pigs used are young adults weighing around 90 to 150 pounds that the program sources from Mizzou’s swine research and teaching farm 5 miles south of the school’s main campus.

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  9. Pig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pig

    Exceptionally, a pig called Big Bill weighed 1,157 kg (2,551 lb) and had a shoulder height of 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in). [5] Pigs possess both apocrine and eccrine sweat glands, although the latter are limited to the snout. [6] Pigs, like other "hairless" mammals such as elephants, do not use thermal sweat glands in cooling. [7]