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#Arctic Creatures
spanishplaydates · 1 year
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Polar Animals Bingo Game - Your Gateway to Spanish Immersion Fun
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Polar Animals Bingo Game - Your Gateway to Spanish Immersion Fun!
Welcome to an exciting world of language and adventure. Dive into the frosty realm of Arctic creatures with our immersive bingo game in Spanish class. 🐧🌟
Explore the wonders of polar animals while enhancing your language skills. Join us for a thrilling journey where education meets entertainment.
Get ready for a bingo experience like no other. Subscribe now and let the learning begin!
Visit:https://youtu.be/HFGKQ9LwWcU
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uhbasicallyjustmilex · 4 months
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alex turner + staying hydrated
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chunkfunkgunk-offishal · 11 months
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crocodile icefish pls they are my favorite bony fish. if u want a cartilaginous fish greenland sharks are my fav of those 👀👀👀
Today on CHUNK! FUNK! GUNK! We rate
the CROCODILE ICEFISH:
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1/10 Chunk
10/10 Funk
0-1/10 Gunk
Today is the crocodile icefish! (also called the white-blooded fish because apparently they don’t have hemoglobin in their blood) Awhile ago I did the other half of this anonymous user’s request, so today I finally finish their ask!
They are very bony, low chunk. The crocodile icefish is super funky though, getting style points from its cool frill and see-through bits. Also, it doesn’t have red blood cells, which is very weird and I’m kind of jealous. Extreme funk. I couldn’t find much in my brief research about their slime or mucous secretion, so I am left to assume that if they have any, it’s probably not that remarkable. Low gunk.
Overall: 8/10
It reminds me of something I would see in the game Subnautica! Also they’re really cute. Look at its little face.
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What a guy (=´∀`)
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Will the teasing of the fire be followed by the thud? [x]
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anyaboz · 8 months
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Cedar and Aspen Foxes Available in my site shop Sunday January 21st at 12pm EST.
I'm in love with these winter photos! We got snow at the perfect time. It made for some lovely romantic shots.❄️
See how they are made in my Patreon.
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snowrea0 · 1 year
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words cant describe how much i love this creature
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vamprisms · 3 months
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if victor frankenstein made pinocchio and gepetto made the creature their respective stories would still have been exactly the same
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soath · 4 days
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in so many stories gods are like megafauna. to me. vital part of an ecosystem whose disappearance would have significant though not necessarily apocalyptic effects—the food chain suffered when the moa was hunted to extinction but it adapted. often intelligent and social (hands up for k-selected species) but can’t be held to human moral standards. everyone understands why they can be beautiful at a distance but it’s very easy to get hurt if you encounter them up close. as a general rule, you don’t actually want them in your house.
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mtg-cards-hourly · 15 days
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Arctic Wolves
"No matter where we cat warriors go in the world, those stupid slobberers find us." —Mirri of the *Weatherlight*
Artist: Steve White TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
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fishyfishyfishtimes · 8 months
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Daily fish fact #678
Arctic skate!
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It lives in the freezing waters of the Arctic Ocean and near the Antarctic Ocean, 140 to 2 500 meters deep (460 to 8 200 feet). The temperature of its habitat is extremely cold, but the Arctic skate is so well adapted to its environment that it can successfully hatch eggs at only 0°C!
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uhbasicallyjustmilex · 10 months
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my propellor, boston 08/05/2009
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thecometcat · 3 months
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the terror ep 2: shows the large and distinctly un-bearlike footprints of the creature
the tiny version of graham casner who lives rent-free in my head and has a lot to say about this show: bears don't have FUCKING thumbs
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tiny kitten ♥️
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babayanska · 1 year
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unrestrained fun
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pleistocene-pride · 1 year
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The lion's mane jellyfish (Cyanea capillata), also known as the giant jellyfish, arctic red jellyfish, or the hair jelly is a species of large jellyfish which inhabits the cold, boreal waters of the Arctic, northern Atlantic, and northern Pacific Oceans and is especially common in the English Channel, Irish Sea, North Sea, and in western Scandinavian waters. Lion's mane jellyfish remain mostly very near the surface, at no more than 66ft in depth (20m) depth. Their slow pulsations weakly drive them forward, so they depend on ocean currents to travel great distances. The jellyfish are most often spotted during the late summer and autumn, when they have grown to a large size and the currents begin to sweep them to shore. Unlike most pelagic jellyfish, they are completely solitary and rarely travel in groups. The lion's mane jellyfish uses its stinging tentacles to capture, pull in, and eat prey such as fish, zooplankton, sea creatures, and smaller jellyfish. Lion’s mane jellyfish are themselves eaten by sea birds, sunfish, other jellyfish species, and sea turtles particularly the leatherback sea turtle. Lion's mane jellyfish are named for their showy, trailing tentacles reminiscent of a lion's mane. They can vary greatly in size from a bell diameter of 20 inches (50cms) to upwards of 6.5ft (2m), with tentacles reaching up to 120ft (36.6m) in length making them amongst the longest animals on earth. They vary in coloration from orange, to tan, to red. While most jellyfish such as the moon jelly have a circular bell, the bell of the Lion's Mane is divided into eight lobes, resembling an eight-pointed star. Each lobe contains about 70 to 150 tentacles, arranged in four fairly distinct rows. Along the bell margin is a balance organ at each of the eight indentations between the lobes – the rhopalium – which helps the jellyfish orient itself. From the central mouth extend broad frilly oral arms with many stinging cells called Cnidocytes. Closer to its mouth, its total number of tentacles is around 1,200. Like other jellyfish, lion's manes are capable of both sexual reproduction in the medusa stage and asexual reproduction in the polyp stage. Lion's mane jellyfish have four different stages in their year-long lifespan: a larval stage, a polyp stage, an ephyrae stage, and the medusa stage.
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feather-bone · 2 years
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Arctic cod! Chilly fish.
[ID: an illustration of a purple-ish and orange-ish and is facing to the left. It is on a background resembling ice chunks in very clear water. End.]
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