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  2. Weighing the pros and cons of free shipping clubs - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2010-05-12-free-shipping-clubs...

    Free shipping clubs -- which require members to pay money upfront to receive free shipping -- sound suspiciously like yet another scheme from online retailers to milk more money out shoppers, but ...

  3. Marine mammal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_mammal

    Marine mammals are mammals that rely on marine (saltwater) ecosystems for their existence. They include animals such as cetaceans (whales, dolphins and porpoises), pinnipeds (seals, sea lions and walruses), sirenians (manatees and dugongs), sea otters and polar bears. They are an informal group, unified only by their reliance on marine ...

  4. Vertebrate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vertebrate

    The vertebrates include mammals, birds, amphibians, and various classes of fish and reptiles. The fish include the jawless Agnatha, and the jawed Gnathostomata. The jawed fish include both the cartilaginous fish and the bony fish. Bony fish include the lobe-finned fish, which gave rise to the tetrapods, the animals with four

  5. Fish as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_as_food

    Sea-bound mammals are often treated as fish under religious laws – as in Jewish dietary law, which forbids the eating of cetacean meat, such as whale, dolphin or porpoise, because they are not "fish with fins and scales"; nor, as mammals, do they chew their cud and have cloven hooves, as required by Leviticus 11:9–12.

  6. Are whales mammals? Understanding the marine animal's ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/whales-mammals-understanding-marine...

    Whales do not lay eggs. Since they are mammals, they give birth to live young. There are only five known monotremes, or egg-laying mammals, according to the Carnegie Museum of Natural History ...

  7. Fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish

    A fish (pl.: fish or fishes) is an aquatic, anamniotic, gill-bearing vertebrate animal with swimming fins and a hard skull, but lacking limbs with digits.Fish can be grouped into the more basal jawless fish and the more common jawed fish, the latter including all living cartilaginous and bony fish, as well as the extinct placoderms and acanthodians.

  8. Animal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal

    Animals are multicellular, eukaryotic organisms in the biological kingdom Animalia (/ ˌ æ n ɪ ˈ m eɪ l i ə / [4]).With few exceptions, animals consume organic material, breathe oxygen, have myocytes and are able to move, can reproduce sexually, and grow from a hollow sphere of cells, the blastula, during embryonic development.

  9. Diversity of fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diversity_of_fish

    The term "fish" describes any non-tetrapod chordate, (i.e., an animal with a backbone), that has gills throughout life and has limbs, if any, in the shape of fins. [8] Unlike groupings such as birds or mammals, fish are paraphyletic, since the tetrapod clade is within the clade of lobe-finned fishes. [9] [10]