casebro
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2005
- Messages
- 19,788
I have never liked broccoli and now I have another reason not to like it.
I do like snakes though....
Me too. Roasted, boiled, or baked, I prefer them to broccoli.
I have never liked broccoli and now I have another reason not to like it.
I do like snakes though....
Transdimensional snake.KellyJ said:If the snake was in an air tight bag, how did it survive?
I'd buy more broccoli if I was guaranteed a snake in every bag.I have never liked broccoli and now I have another reason not to like it.
I do like snakes though....
My wife is a florist, and they are very careful when opening boxes of flowers. Most of these come from South America, and often contain lizards, spiders, and similar creatures. No snakes yet...
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snakes without a plane... poor snakes... snakes bereft of their natural habitat... the Boeing 747.... who, oh, who will help the snakes... antelopes in an Austin Martin?Well, I hope you didn't complain too loudly.Even worse. The caterpillar was white and by the time I realised it was a chunky caterpillar rather than a chunk of cauliflower it was stuck on my fork.![]()
Snakes actually have eyelids. They are just "fused", and transparent.
brill
Definition - A transparent scale covering a snake\'s eye.
Context - A transparent scale known as the brill and covering the eye takes on a milky hue-the clearest sign of the transformation to come.
http://discoveryschools.com.au/TEACHER'SGUIDE/guide.php?id=61&s=2
Eyelids imply they can open and close
Hm, I would think that it does. What else does a lid do, after all? You can open a lid, and close a lid. Can't say I've heard of anyone opening and closing their brills, though.No, it doesn't imply that.
Hm, I would think that it does. What else does a lid do, after all? You can open a lid, and close a lid. Can't say I've heard of anyone opening and closing their brills, though.![]()
An eyelid is a thin fold of skin and muscle that covers and protects an eye.
Wikipedia
The levator palpebrae superioris muscle retracts the eyelid to "open" the eye.
Wikipedia
My wife is a florist, and they are very careful when opening boxes of flowers. Most of these come from South America, and often contain lizards, spiders, and similar creatures. No snakes yet...
All snakes lack limbs; there are however, some species that have vestigial limbs in the form of small spurs. All snakes lack eyelids (there are some lizard species that lack eyelids, but none in Idaho).
From: http://imnh.isu.edu/digitalatlas/bio/reptile/main/serp.htm
Clear scales called spectacles cover the eyes. A snake has no eyelids, so it can't close its eyes. It can only see things up close.
From: http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/young_naturalists/snakes/index.html
Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries
Do snakes hypnotize their victims? No. Snakes lack eyelids, so their gaze is seemingly locked in a stare. Staring at a snake's eyes will not cause a person ...
www.wlf.state.la.us/apps/ netgear/index.asp?cn=lawlf&pid=613
As we know that snakes lack eyelids and instead they have a see-through scale protecting their eye. You should see the two "eye-scales". ...
www.icon.co.za/~mvdmerwe/skin_d.htm
Maryland's Wildlife Species - All About Snakes in Maryland ...
But did you know that snakes don't have eyelids or external ear openings? Their bodies are protected by a layer of scales. Each species of snake has a ...
www.dnr.state.md.us/wildlife/snakeinfo.asp
That snakes lack eyelids is common knowledge. In place of the missing eyelids are protective, clear scales called the spectacles or eye caps. ...
www.animalnetwork.com/reptiles/ detail.aspx?aid=2496&cid=3691&search
Snakes - Plant Management in Florida Waters
Snakes lack limbs, eyelids, and external ear openings. They are covered with scales and regulary shed their skin as they continuously grow throughout their ...
aquat1.ifas.ufl.edu/guide/snakes.html
Snake FAQ
Do snakes have eyelids? No. They have a protective layer over their eyes that shed when snakes shed their skin. Are Anacondas good pets? ...
www.geocities.com/shavano08/faq.html
Myths vs Fact
Snakes lack eyelids and thus their unblinking stare has given rise to this particular legend. Sometimes small prey animals will freeze from fear when ...
www.seanthomas.net/oldsite/myths.html
Snakes lack eyelids. A snake's eyes are protected by a specialize clear scale called a brille. The brille is shed with the rest of the skin as a snake grows ...
www.wnyherp.org/herp-information/reptile/snake.php
While they are rarely as hazardous to your health as tarantulas and snakes, transporting plants across the world is also a common way to introduce oligochaeta into new areas. For example, my supervisor at Uni discovered a hitherto unnamed Achaeta species in a greenhouse last autumn. Supposedly, the species is native to El Salvador, but the only known individual comes from Sweden. Only this week, I most likely discovered the first Biwadrilus outside Japan ever (as far as my supervisor and I are aware).
..... as glamorous as snakes and tarantulas, and never figure in the press (although the first Haplotaxis found in Sweden made a two-page article in a national science magazine).
Google returns over 200K cites for snakes and eyelids, most of which say snakes lack eyelids.
Even if snakes had muscles which move the eyelids in other veretbrates, they don't since they do not have eyelids.