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Thread 5066418

71 posts 64 images /an/
Anonymous No.5066418 [Report]
Post spooky animal skeletons
Anonymous No.5066429 [Report] >>5066430 >>5066431 >>5066462 >>5068227
>AI Overview:
>This is a skeleton of a cottontail rabbit.
>Cottontail rabbits belong to the genus Sylvilagus.
>They are known for their distinctive fluffy, white tails that resemble cotton balls.
>They are found throughout the Americas, from southern >Canada to northern Argentina.
>Cottontail rabbits are herbivores and primarily eat grasses, legumes, and other plants.
Anonymous No.5066430 [Report]
>>5066429
why would you make this point what is the point of you why is the point of anything, please kill yourself
Anonymous No.5066431 [Report] >>5070728
>>5066429
ah yes the cottontail, known for its sharp teeth, large claws, and long whip like tail with a fuzzy white ball on the end

(its a lemur)
Anonymous No.5066434 [Report] >>5066437
Interestingly, Chimp skulls are nearly identical to those of most old world monkeys.
Anonymous No.5066436 [Report] >>5066707
Anonymous No.5066437 [Report]
>>5066434
Old-world monkeys are closer related to apes then they are to new world monkeys.
Anonymous No.5066442 [Report] >>5066490 >>5066777
The skull of Macrauchenia
Anonymous No.5066443 [Report] >>5066742 >>5070723
gibbon
Anonymous No.5066445 [Report] >>5066484 >>5066792
Anonymous No.5066462 [Report]
>>5066429
AI is so fucking retarded lmao
Anonymous No.5066470 [Report] >>5066968 >>5070748
Real spider skeleton
Anonymous No.5066482 [Report]
Anonymous No.5066484 [Report] >>5066495
>>5066445
is this not an exoskeleton?
Anonymous No.5066490 [Report]
>>5066442
This looks like a poorly designed skull you’d see in a sci fi movie
Anonymous No.5066495 [Report]
>>5066484
still inside the skin layer, and it's still got a normal, bona fide spinal chord etc. It doesn't create housings in which material is pushed or pulled against, so no, not an exoskeleton. But definitely more like an exoskeleton than the average tetrapod's endoskeleton, very understandable.
Anonymous No.5066666 [Report] >>5066671
Anonymous No.5066671 [Report] >>5066676
>>5066666
Why do apes need such robust rib cages?
Anonymous No.5066676 [Report] >>5070292
>>5066671
They’re herbivores and need space for the extra guts

Humans are carnivores with reduced digestive tracts.
Anonymous No.5066677 [Report]
Anonymous No.5066707 [Report] >>5066725
>>5066436
Camel?
Anonymous No.5066725 [Report]
>>5066707
Seems like it
Anonymous No.5066726 [Report] >>5067282
Anonymous No.5066728 [Report]
I’m beginning to wonder why Bonobos are considered a separate species instead of a subspecies.
Anonymous No.5066742 [Report]
>>5066443
best monke
Anonymous No.5066762 [Report] >>5066794
Coolest predator ever, it's like a sabretooth tiger had a baby with a crocodile.
Anonymous No.5066777 [Report] >>5066994
>>5066442
This thing must've looked neat in life, it's a shame the humans who killed them off never made any cave paintings of them.
Anonymous No.5066792 [Report]
>>5066445
Why aren't there more vertebrates whose endoskeletons have turned into exoskeletons?
Anonymous No.5066794 [Report]
>>5066762
What is a Ne pas and why does the skeleton touch it?
Anonymous No.5066961 [Report]
Vova No.5066968 [Report] >>5070169
>>5066470
AI slop
Anonymous No.5066994 [Report]
>>5066777

There is possible cave art but its ambiguous
Anonymous No.5067000 [Report] >>5067348 >>5067377
Anonymous No.5067010 [Report] >>5069693
Anonymous No.5067113 [Report]
Anonymous No.5067282 [Report]
>>5066726
A curse be upon thee!
Anonymous No.5067348 [Report] >>5067973
>>5067000
Same energy
Anonymous No.5067377 [Report] >>5067748
>>5067000
eye bone?
Anonymous No.5067587 [Report]
Anonymous No.5067748 [Report]
>>5067377
Sclera ring. It's something reptiles have
Anonymous No.5067749 [Report] >>5067871 >>5069671 >>5069799
The classic "proof" retards bring up when arguing "le scientist would reconstruct this wrong, so I'm right to say dinosaurs looked like bright orange turkeys"
Anonymous No.5067871 [Report]
>>5067749
A very cool skeleton
Anonymous No.5067872 [Report]
Anonymous No.5067973 [Report]
>>5067348
kek exactly what I thought
Anonymous No.5068227 [Report]
>>5066429
brown hands copied and pasted this out
Anonymous No.5069671 [Report]
>>5067749
Anon you need to understand that those normalfags have no idea what muscles and far are or attachment points, also they cant understand the difference between a reptile and a mammal, like the cloaca and uterus.
Anonymous No.5069693 [Report] >>5069794
>>5067010
Has there been any thought to the extreme neck being more for defense/observation than food access?
>I'm going to put my tiny processing center wayyy up here where it can't be hit, and also having my eyes up here means I can see things that might think they're hiding or are far away
Anonymous No.5069794 [Report]
>>5069693
I think the major issue with your suggestion is that placing the feeding apparatus so high up effectively requires you to also feed so high up. Sauropods that fed on grasses and other low-lying vegetation often had very different dentary. And also, most of the supermassive sauropods lived in a pre-grass world, so there were unironically large areas of dust/dirt/mud/sand/rock between the vegetation; it wasn't like today where foliage covered every square inch of ground, as surprising as that is. But being vigilant was absolutely an advantage, and likely at least one of the driving factors of their growth nonetheless.
Anonymous No.5069799 [Report]
>>5067749
/an/ would argue that the close to life reconstruction with giant lips hiding the tusks is a direct attack on their masculinity
Anonymous No.5069808 [Report] >>5070730
Anonymous No.5069998 [Report] >>5070729
Anonymous No.5069999 [Report] >>5070750
Anonymous No.5070000 [Report] >>5070036
Anonymous No.5070036 [Report] >>5070074
>>5070000
what the fuck is that?
Anonymous No.5070074 [Report] >>5070080 >>5070152
>>5070036
Sling-jaw wrasse
Suction feeding fish skulls are crazy
Anonymous No.5070080 [Report]
>>5070074
https://youtu.be/yYSkg9FyhPg
Anonymous No.5070087 [Report] >>5070575
Anonymous No.5070152 [Report]
>>5070074
That's kind of disgusting
Anonymous No.5070169 [Report]
>>5066968
No it isn't. It's a shitty Halloween decoration that they've been selling for years now.
Anonymous No.5070292 [Report]
>>5066676
They are omnivores. This means they can consume and digest both plant and animal-based foods.
Anonymous No.5070575 [Report]
>>5070087
Chad monkey
Anonymous No.5070723 [Report]
>>5066443
gibbons are goofy down to their bones
Anonymous No.5070728 [Report]
>>5066431
>lemur
it's a colugo
Anonymous No.5070729 [Report] >>5070963
>>5069998
wyvern skeletton
Anonymous No.5070730 [Report] >>5070731
>>5069808
it kinda freaks me out that their bills aren't completely solid and have flesh and skin stretched over them
Anonymous No.5070731 [Report]
>>5070730
That plus it being made of keratin B instead of keratin A makes its bill super weak compared to turtle or bird beaks.
Anonymous No.5070748 [Report]
>>5066470
Spiders are so silly.
Anonymous No.5070750 [Report] >>5070756
>>5069999
the FUCk is this thing? Horseshow crab?
Anonymous No.5070756 [Report] >>5070781
>>5070750
Stingray
Anonymous No.5070781 [Report]
>>5070756
Oh. Those tiny legs inside confused me. I thought it was a bug
Anonymous No.5070963 [Report]
>>5070729
This made me wonder, how come media always makes wyverns fold their wings in completely made up ways instead of just copying how bats do it?