enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Yellow-faced honeyeater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow-faced_Honeyeater

    The yellow-faced honeyeater is a medium-small, greyish-brown bird that takes its common name from distinctive yellow stripes on the sides of the head. [16] Yellow feathers form a narrow stripe above the gape, which broadens and curves below the eye to end in a small white patch of feathers on the ear coverts.

  3. Semnopithecus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semnopithecus

    Infants are born with thin, dark brown or black hair and pale skin. Infants spend their first week attached to their mothers' chests and mostly just suckle or sleep. [58] They do not move much in terms of locomotion for the first two weeks of their life. As they approach their sixth week of life, infants vocalize more. [59]

  4. Mythic humanoids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mythic_humanoids

    Shadow people – dark, nonspecific apparitions in folklore, often taken to be neutral, or harbingers of events. Skin-walker – (Navajo) Type of witch with ability to disguise themselves as an animal or turn into one. Squawkowtemus – (Abenaki) Female spirit that resides in swamps. Its cries lure people close. If it touches them, they die.

  5. Pregnant creature — with hairy lips and yellow ears ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/pregnant-creature-hairy-lips-yellow...

    Scientists found the flying animal in a forest of southern Mexico. Pregnant creature — with hairy lips and yellow ears — discovered as new species Skip to main content

  6. List of legendary creatures by type - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_legendary...

    Makara (Hindu mythology) – half terrestrial animal in the frontal part (stag, deer, or elephant) and half aquatic animal in the hind part (usually of a fish, a seal, or a snake, though sometimes a peacock or even a floral tail is depicted) Mug-wamp - (Canadian) giant sturgeon monster said to inhabit Lake Temiskaming in Ontario. Name is of ...

  7. List of hybrid creatures in folklore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hybrid_creatures...

    Sumi – An animal guardian spirit with the wings of a Thunderbird and the legs of an American black bear who is the mascot of the 2010 Winter Paralympics. Toodee – A blue monster with the body and skin of a dinosaur, the scales and spikes of a dragon, and the face, ears and whiskers of a rabbit. She is debuted in Yo Gabba Gabba!.

  8. Manticore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manticore

    the face and ears of a man, the body of a Tyger, and whole footed like Goose or Dragon; yet others make it with feet like a Tyger, etc., and also noting that they may be horned or unhorned. [70] The manticore first appeared in English heraldry in c. 1470, as a badge of William Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings; and in the 16th century. [71]

  9. Long-eared jerboa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-eared_Jerboa

    Long-eared jerboas in most cases are nocturnal, [3] The long-eared jerboa's fur according to the book 100 animals to see before they die "is reddish yellow to pale russet with white underparts." [4] Very little is known about the species.