Speculative biology is simultaneously a science and form of art in which one speculates on the possibilities of life and evolution. What could the world look like if dinosaurs had never gone extinct? What could alien lifeforms look like? What kinds of plants and animals might exist in the far future? These questions and more are tackled by speculative biologists, and the Speculative Evolution welcomes all relevant ideas, inquiries, and world-building projects alike. With a member base comprising users from across the world, our community is the largest and longest-running place of gathering for speculative biologists on the web.
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A huntsman spider that wastes time on the internet because it has nothing better to do
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Also known as:
Anomonys
Gender:
male
Terraraptor411
Dec 7 2017, 12:29 PM
Insect Illuminati Get Shrekt
Dec 6 2017, 04:25 PM
Terraraptor411
Dec 5 2017, 06:43 PM
LittleDrummerGirl
Dec 4 2017, 02:57 PM
Off the top of my head, the validity of the taxon has been controversial. Not sure if things have changed since, but here's Mark Witton's thoughts from back in 2015.
Well, it was nice having Aerodactyl while it lasted XD. In all honesty he makes a good point, Pterodactylus taxonomy is hectic. Personally I hope Aerodactylus remains a unique species but its also possible it doesn't.
Not sure if hybrids count as obscure taxa, but as the only known hybrid of African and Asian elephants, Motty deserves his time in the limelight. His father was an African and his mother Asian, Motty was born at the Chester Zoo. His ears and legs more closely resembled the African bodyplan, but his toe count and single "fingered" trunk were Asian. He died only 12 days after birth due to infection.
What caused the infection?
According to Wikipedia, it was an umbilical cord infection.
Did it have anything to do with being a hybrid?
Projects Punga: A terraformed world with no vertebrates Last one crawling: The last arthropod
ARTH-6810: A world without vertebrates (It's ded, but you can still read I guess)
Potential ideas- Swamp world: A world covered in lakes, with the largest being caspian sized. Nematozoic: After a mass extinction of ultimate proportions, a single species of nematode is the only surviving animal. Tri-devonian: A devonian like ecosystem with holocene species on three different continents.
Quotes
"Arthropod respiratory systems aren't really "inefficient", they're just better suited to their body size. It would be quite inefficient for a tiny creature that can easily get all the oxygen it needs through passive diffusion to have a respiratory system that wastes energy on muscles that pump air into sacs. (Hence why lungless salamanders, uniquely miniscule and hyperabundant tetrapods, have ditched their lungs in favor of breathing with their skin and buccal mucous membranes.) But large, active insects already use muscles to pump air in and out of their spiracles, and I don't see why their tracheae couldn't develop pseudo- lungs if other conditions pressured them to grow larger."-HangingTheif
"Considering the lifespans of modern non- insect arthropods (decade-old old millipedes, 50 year old tarantulas, 100+ year old lobsters) I wouldn't be surprised if Arthropleura had a lifespan exceeding that of a large testudine"-HangingTheif
"Humans have a tribal mindset and it's not alien for tribes to war on each other. I mean, look at the atrocities chimpanzee tribes do to each other. Most of people's groupings and big conflicts in history are directly or obliquely manifestations of this tribal mindset."-Sceynyos-yis
"He's the leader of the bunch You know his Coconut Gun is finally back to fire in spurts. His Coconut Gun Can make you smile If he shoots ya it's firing in spurts. His Coconut Gun Is bigger, faster, stronger too! He's the gun member of the Coconut Crew! HUH!
C.G.! Coconut Gun! C.G.! Co-Coconut Gun! Shoot yourself with a Coconut Gun! HUH!"-Kamineigh
"RIP, rest in Peytoia."-Little
"In Summary: Piss on Lovecraft's racist grave by making lewds of Cthulhu and Nyarlathotep.
Then eat arby's and embrace the void."-Kamineigh
"Dougal Dixon rule 34."-Sayornis
Phylogeny of the arthropods and some related groups
"Six-foot feather duster with suicidal tendencies!" - Ross Noble's perfect description of emus
Also known as:
The Gondwanian, Western Quoll
We all know about the amazing Thylacine (Thylacinus cynocephalus). By the Holocene, it was the last of its kind, having been driven from New Guinea and Australia where it once roamed as a predator of fast-moving prey like macropods and emus, living only in Tasmania. Sadly, it perished less than a century ago due to the activities of man. However, did you know about some of its prehistoric relatives?
Thylacinidae, a quick overview Footage of captive thylacines. We are lucky to have footage of this now extinct creature. The Thylacine has an ancient family tree. Splitting from other dasyuromorph mammals by the Late Oligocene, from small, quoll-like beginnings they evolved and changed over time into the dog-like shapes we know today. Here is a quick overview all known Thylacinid species.
Late Oligocene Badjcinus turnbulli was one of the most primitive of all thylacinids. A small carnivore, it is possible that this species was arboreal, like a quoll. Its fossils were found in the famous Riversleigh deposits of north-west Queensland, a vital site for Neogene fossils. I also have the suspicion that it is named in honour of our current prime minister Malcom Turnbull, though don't quote me on that.
Early Miocene Nimbacinus dicksoni was a rather quoll-like animal. The jaws of this species were strong like that of a Tasmanian Devil or Spot-tailed Quoll. It seems to have been less specialised than the modern thylacine and likely had a wider range of prey. It was also found at Riversleigh, as well as Bullock Creek.
Wabulacinus ridei is another Riversleigh discovery. In appearance it resembled a dog with a long snout.
Ngamalacinus timmulvaneyi seems to be closely related to the previous species, and shared the same appearance and features. It was also found at Riversleigh.
Thylacinus macknessi is the oldest known member of its genus, the modern thylacines. Like the previous two species, it looks like a long-snouted dog. Yet again this is a Riversleigh discovery.
Middle Miocene Maximucinus muirheadae was the largest thylacinid of all time. It looks like other thylacinids; a dog-like animal with a long snout. Guess where they found it? Riversleigh, of course. It is a world heritage area, in case your were wondering. I have heard this species may have also lived in the Late Oligocene.
Muribacinus gadiyuli looks similar to other thylacinids. This species was the size of a fox terrier dog. I don't need to tell you where they found it... cough 'riversleigh' cough cough
Mutpuracinus archiboldi looks like other thylacinids, but is the smallest of all, weighing only (approximately) 1.1 kilograms. It was found at... Bullock Creek! Finally, a species not found at Riversleigh! Some diversity, yay!
Nimbacinus richi is one of the few Middle Miocene species to still resemble quolls. Its fossils were found at Bullock Creek. Good to have a break from Riversleigh.
Late Miocene Thylacinus potens was the largest of its genus, being an absolutely staggering 5% bigger than the modern species (sarcasm). It was found in the Alcoota scientific reserve near Alice Springs in the Northern Territory.
Tjarrpecinus rothi was also discovered in the Alcoota scientific reserve. It is known only from fragmentary remains.
Thylacinus megiriani looks like other thylacinids. I'm gonna stop saying that now, as they are all part of the same genus by now. Like the previous two species, it was found at Alcoota, which would have been forest at the time these animals were alive.
Early Pliocene-Holocene Thylacinus cynocephalus, we all know this one. It is the thylacine we all love, and dearly miss.
Two other Thylacinus species, T. rostralis and T. yorkellus, are also known, but I couldn't find much on them. Both lived quite recently.
Hey, who else noticed that every genus ended with cinus? It's great to see taxonomists keeping names consistent.
While it seems sensible to accept the Thylacine as extinct, there are proposed sightings every year. Not just in Tasmania (although this is where most sightings take place), but occasionally on the mainland as well and there have even been a few reports from New Guinea. It is possible they have hung on in some remote corner, living their ancient lives away from humanity's prying eyes. Tasmania is certainly wild enough to allow them to remain hidden. However, for now, and possibly forever, it seems we must accept a harsh reality; its gone.
They'll not find him in the hills he's gone to earth in an unknown valley with legends of coal and Time in stone, with the sly fern, with the gully. -Vivian Smith, ‘Thylacine’
Active projects: Van Diemen's Land- Where Gondwanan life found sanctuary in the cool Southern Ocean Wollunqua- Australia during the Recurocene. Final reboot of The Late Simpson and Land Down Under
Dead projects (may be rebooted one day): The Last of the Dinosaurs- Dinosaurs really did survive the extinction The Late Simpson- The last piece of the Outback in a changing world. Land Down Under was an attempted reboot Cascus- A world familiar yet different Land Down Under- The weird and wonderful world of post-Holocene Sahul. Rebooted as Wollunqua
Batodontoides, a tiny shrew from the Eocene 53MYA to 42MYA, shown here with an Etruscan Shrew (the big one). The smallest species was only around one gram in weight and grew only to the size of around an inch.
"Six-foot feather duster with suicidal tendencies!" - Ross Noble's perfect description of emus
Also known as:
The Gondwanian, Western Quoll
Everyone knows of the American Harpy Eagle, but did you know it has an equivalent down under? Part of the same group of giant raptors as the American Harpy and Crested Eagles, I introduce the New Guinea Harpy Eagle (Harpyopsis novaeguineae).
Also known as the Papuan Eagle, Papuan Harpy Eagle, New Guinea Eagle or Kapul Eagle, it is the only member of its genus and New Guinea's top predator. While the American species eats monkeys, sloths and deer (among other things), the New Guinean species eats possums, tree kangaroos and wallabies. They have even been known to kill and eat New Guinea Singing Dogs. They have a wingspan of over 1.5 meters and require pristine rainforest to survive, and as such have been classified as Vulnerable. Luckily, New Guinea's highlands, this predator's stronghold, are likely to remain undisturbed due to their unsuitable terrain for either farming or housing.
Active projects: Van Diemen's Land- Where Gondwanan life found sanctuary in the cool Southern Ocean Wollunqua- Australia during the Recurocene. Final reboot of The Late Simpson and Land Down Under
Dead projects (may be rebooted one day): The Last of the Dinosaurs- Dinosaurs really did survive the extinction The Late Simpson- The last piece of the Outback in a changing world. Land Down Under was an attempted reboot Cascus- A world familiar yet different Land Down Under- The weird and wonderful world of post-Holocene Sahul. Rebooted as Wollunqua
Deviantart Account: http://elsqiubbonator.deviantart.com In the end, the best advice I could give you would be to do your project in a way that feels natural to you, rather than trying to imitate some geek with a laptop in Colorado. --Heteromorph
"god knows you will finally see,scars will heal but were meant to bleed
Also known as:
Archeo or that guy who misspells
Teratomyzon
Dec 8 2017, 08:00 AM
Batodontoides, a tiny shrew from the Eocene 53MYA to 42MYA, shown here with an Etruscan Shrew (the big one). The smallest species was only around one gram in weight and grew only to the size of around an inch.
image not working,seems is bc of the link
Astarte an alt eocene world,now on long hiatus but you never know Fanauraa; The rebirth of Aotearoa future evo set in new zealand after a mass extinction coming soon......a world that was seeded with earth´s weridest and who knows what is coming next...........
" I have to know what the world will be looking throw a future beyond us I have to know what could have been if fate acted in another way I have to know what lies on the unknown universe I have to know that the laws of thee universe can be broken throw The Spec I gain strength to the inner peace the is not good of evil only nature and change,the evolution of all livings beings" "
Spoiler: click to toggle
coming soon......a world seeded by outcast clades and some important easily forgotten ones.the world of the caecilians and company and who knows what is coming next...........[comming soon/spoiler]
Spoiler: click to toggle
Did you ever hear the tragedy of Darth Lyvatan The Wise? I thought not. It’s not a story the newbies would tell you. It’s a forum legend. Lyvatan was an admin of the forum, so powerful and so wise he could use science to influence the human imagination to create life… He had such a knowledge of the forum that he could even keep the ones he cared about from leaving.Speculative Evolution is a pathway to many abilities some consider to be unnatural. He became so powerful… the only thing he was afraid of was losing his admin power, which eventually, of course, he did. Unfortunately, he taught his apprentice everything he knew, then his apprentice banned him while he was offline. Ironic. He could save others from leaving the community, but not himself.
Speccer´s Quotes "The moral of the story: never trust a catfish"-Bettleboy
Forum user Uncanny Gemstar drew what is supposed to be a me. Thanks!
Spoiler: click to toggle
As they walk in, they're greeted by a small, poorly kept pathway leading to a poorly constructed Japanese-style gate. Behind this, a small field made up of corn, rice, wheat, potatoes, among other plants is contrasted by large piles of books, as well as a few rather out of place looking laptops. Off in the corner, a small woman, with long, striped, and strikingly colorful socks, no shoes, unremarkable denim shorts, a large, fancy black coat, arm warmers, glasses, a tuque, and somewhat unkempt, mid-length blue-and-pink-streaked red hair, is rummaging through a trash bin, located behind a sign saying "employees only". She continues this for a while (walking behind a wall to change her outfit now and then), until one of her visitors coughs. Startled, she looks up, apologizes, and grabs a handful of textbooks and novels before daintily running off to join them.
What, you want me to tell you what these mean?
Predenterra The (Lost) Lost World The Standing World
Read First
Clarifications on my sex and gender Sorry if I come off as rude, I don't put much thought into word choice sometimes. I'm also super prone to editing my posts, sometimes multiple times, in the minutes following posting. For the love of god, take my posts from my earlier days on the forum with a grain of salt. I was not particularly knowledgeable or mature back then. Some of them are so cringe-worthy I can't even bring myself to look at them.
Words Maybe
Great Words
Words To Spec By
It would have to be something extremely alien, pushing the limits of our imagination. But those are always my favorite kinds of life. ~~The Words of The Xenologist
Words To Live By
Ignorance is never insulting if you're willing to learn, we're all ignorant about most things. ~~The Words of Lamna
Words I Live By
Yeah, and even if you don't agree with creationists on that concept, that doesn't mean they can't be decent people. I have friends who are creationist (possibly even young earth) that I get along with fine in general life. I don't think they're right of course, but that doesn't make them intellectual degenerates. ~~The Words of forbidden3
Member Quotes
jman123
Ass-breathing fish-lizards? Sounds like a punk rock band
Sheather
"Holy fucking shit a toilet paper roll! Our favorite thing!"
Urufumarukai
Tyrannosaurus aquastronka
Kamineigh
Myo, if you don't stop reading the YouTube comments...
Lamna
Are you saying what I think you're saying?
Sheather bathes in cum?
Cephylus
And last night I dreamed I was blowing up a Kindergarten with a grenade launcher for no particular reason...
revin
Oh, and of course more people get killed by selfies than by sharks. Of course.
The smell of rotting flesh really kills my appetite, surprising, but the visual appearance of corpses makes me hungry. Is that weird?
Ebervalius
I mean, let us say I'm a genderfluid blurflux demi-romantic woman who is sexually attracted to men, but only if they are Melanesian and have a voice like that of Nicholas Cage. Okay, so what?
trex841
When I first saw that picture, I thought you were dissecting a condom.
Mr Mysterio
All hail Robo-Stalin.
Peashyjah
Seems like everything in this project is now dead.
Stealth Rock
Seagulls are pretty much trees, right?
Watcher
We all must finish chapters of our lives to go on to the next. Sometime this means leaving behind versions of ourselves that don't want to die.
Yiqi15
For April fool's, we had to make an orgasm that resembled a human foot.
Flisch
im the black market
CaledonianWarrior96
He was a skater birb, she said tweet you later birb
Most People at Some Point
Quotes
Some dude called plucas1 from Youtube comments
Funny, isn't it, that our world needs Clark Kent a lot more than Superman.
Xenoblade Chronicles
Even though he is our creator, that does not afford him the right to take our lives on a whim. But that is the thinking of a homs. He is a god. Such morals cannot apply to gods. So you think we should just shut up and die?! If that is the fate decided by a god. You are mistaken if you think we will simply accept such a fate and wait to die. We'll never stop fighting. Not till the end. To Zanza, the outcome is the same. Thus your logic is flawed.
Hades - Kid Icarus Uprising
When freaky aliens give you lemons, make freaky alien lemonade.
Kid Icarus Uprising
But Souls are delicious. They're like bacon - they taste good on anything. But if you eat them, you completely remove them from existence! They can't move on or... or be reincarnated! Huh. I never really gave it much thought. Besides, what do you mean by reincarnation anyway? You know, being reborn as someone or something else. Which means different body, different memories, different experiences, yes? So isn't being reborn as "something else" the same as being "removed from existence"? I... I... eating souls isn't right! That depends on your definition of "right". All living things survive by eating other living things. So what? You're a god. You should be above all that! Gods are above living things, which doesn't necessarily mean we care about them.
While most of the Hadrosaurs are most well-known from Asia and Laramidia, several genuses of the group are known from Appalachia (modern-day east North America), albeit in more fragmentary remains then else. Among the most notable of them is the giant Hypsibema, there are two other known, both from the Mooreville Chalk in Alabama. What's interesting about these two species is that both are found outside of the main subfamilies Lambeosaurinae and Saurolophinae, and are thus more basal taxons. As a result of this, scientists have suggested euhadrosaurs evolved in Appalachia.
Lophorhothon atopus is a species of hadrosaur first found in 1946, from the . It is more basal out of the two listed, to the point at least one paleontologist has suggested its an iguanadont[1].
Eotrachodon orientalis is a more unique species, first described last year in 2016, dating back to the Santonian ( 86.3-83.6 mya). It is more advanced, being closely related to closely to taxa like Hadrosaurus and Tethyshadros[2].
[1] Hadrosaurs are cladistically iguanadonts, so there's that. [2] A more basal species from Italy
Current/Completed Projects - After the Holocene: Your run-of-the-mill future evolution project. - A History of the Odessa Rhinoceros: What happens when you ship 28 southern white rhinoceri to Texas and try and farm them? Quite a lot, actually.
Future Projects - XenoSphere: The greatest zoo in the galaxy. - The Curious Case of the Woolly Giraffe: A case study of an eocene relic. - Untittled Asylum Studios-Based Project: The truth behind all the CGI schlock - Riggslandia V.II: A World 150 million years in the making
Potential Projects - Klowns: The biology and culture of a creepy-yet-fascinating being
Off the top of my head, the validity of the taxon has been controversial. Not sure if things have changed since, but here's Mark Witton's thoughts from back in 2015.
Well, it was nice having Aerodactyl while it lasted XD. In all honesty he makes a good point, Pterodactylus taxonomy is hectic. Personally I hope Aerodactylus remains a unique species but its also possible it doesn't.
Not sure if hybrids count as obscure taxa, but as the only known hybrid of African and Asian elephants, Motty deserves his time in the limelight. His father was an African and his mother Asian, Motty was born at the Chester Zoo. His ears and legs more closely resembled the African bodyplan, but his toe count and single "fingered" trunk were Asian. He died only 12 days after birth due to infection.
What caused the infection?
According to Wikipedia, it was an umbilical cord infection.
Did it have anything to do with being a hybrid?
Officially no. He died of an E.coli infection and necrotizing enterocolitis, both of which are common ailments among newborns, especially those premature. However, his being a hybrid could have increased the odds of getting these and weakened his immune system. As far as I know that's the verdict.
Life can seem a challenge. Life can seem impossible. It's never easy when there's so much on the line.
Before seals, sea lions, and even dolphins became as diverse as they are now, the small marine tetrapod niches were held not by mammals, but by birds. In the southern hemisphere, the birds in question were giant penguins. In the north, however, their place was taken by a completely different family that has no living members today--the Plotopterids. Plotopterids were more closely related to gannets and boobies than anything else, but they were flightless and could reach gigantic sizes, with the largest species growing up to six feet long. In other words, they were more or less real-life "Gannetwhales"! They seem to have mostly been restricted to the colder waters of the North Pacific, since their fossils have been found in Canada, Washington, British Columbia, and Japan; unlike their mammal counterparts they made no inroads into tropical seas. Height-wise, the largest plotopterids were larger then the largest of the giant penguins, but they were much less heavily built, with slender bodies and long, graceful necks, which caused them to somewhat resemble cormorants or anhingas. Their wings, like those of penguins, were reduced to mere flippers. Plotopterids existed for over 20 million years, from the Eocene to the Miocene; their extinction, like that of the giant penguins of the southern oceans, is believed to have coincided with the evolutionary radiation of pinnipeds and dolphins. No fossilized eggs or hatchlings of poltopterids have been discovered, so we don't know how these birds bred, but we can assume they did come ashore to lay eggs, if nothing else. Their feet were positioned far back on their bodies, making them awkward on land, so they must have been substantially aquatic.
Deviantart Account: http://elsqiubbonator.deviantart.com In the end, the best advice I could give you would be to do your project in a way that feels natural to you, rather than trying to imitate some geek with a laptop in Colorado. --Heteromorph
Blame is the playing of children and is given to many like a gift that cannot be returned. Acceptance is the tool of the mature that is rarely loaned out.
Also, there was an abstract a while back about how unusual their wing musculature was compared to penguins.
When life give you lemons.............Don't make lemonade!Make life to take the lemons back!Get mad and than.........Yell,demand and burn down their homes.
Forum user Uncanny Gemstar drew what is supposed to be a me. Thanks!
Spoiler: click to toggle
As they walk in, they're greeted by a small, poorly kept pathway leading to a poorly constructed Japanese-style gate. Behind this, a small field made up of corn, rice, wheat, potatoes, among other plants is contrasted by large piles of books, as well as a few rather out of place looking laptops. Off in the corner, a small woman, with long, striped, and strikingly colorful socks, no shoes, unremarkable denim shorts, a large, fancy black coat, arm warmers, glasses, a tuque, and somewhat unkempt, mid-length blue-and-pink-streaked red hair, is rummaging through a trash bin, located behind a sign saying "employees only". She continues this for a while (walking behind a wall to change her outfit now and then), until one of her visitors coughs. Startled, she looks up, apologizes, and grabs a handful of textbooks and novels before daintily running off to join them.
What, you want me to tell you what these mean?
Predenterra The (Lost) Lost World The Standing World
Read First
Clarifications on my sex and gender Sorry if I come off as rude, I don't put much thought into word choice sometimes. I'm also super prone to editing my posts, sometimes multiple times, in the minutes following posting. For the love of god, take my posts from my earlier days on the forum with a grain of salt. I was not particularly knowledgeable or mature back then. Some of them are so cringe-worthy I can't even bring myself to look at them.
Words Maybe
Great Words
Words To Spec By
It would have to be something extremely alien, pushing the limits of our imagination. But those are always my favorite kinds of life. ~~The Words of The Xenologist
Words To Live By
Ignorance is never insulting if you're willing to learn, we're all ignorant about most things. ~~The Words of Lamna
Words I Live By
Yeah, and even if you don't agree with creationists on that concept, that doesn't mean they can't be decent people. I have friends who are creationist (possibly even young earth) that I get along with fine in general life. I don't think they're right of course, but that doesn't make them intellectual degenerates. ~~The Words of forbidden3
Member Quotes
jman123
Ass-breathing fish-lizards? Sounds like a punk rock band
Sheather
"Holy fucking shit a toilet paper roll! Our favorite thing!"
Urufumarukai
Tyrannosaurus aquastronka
Kamineigh
Myo, if you don't stop reading the YouTube comments...
Lamna
Are you saying what I think you're saying?
Sheather bathes in cum?
Cephylus
And last night I dreamed I was blowing up a Kindergarten with a grenade launcher for no particular reason...
revin
Oh, and of course more people get killed by selfies than by sharks. Of course.
The smell of rotting flesh really kills my appetite, surprising, but the visual appearance of corpses makes me hungry. Is that weird?
Ebervalius
I mean, let us say I'm a genderfluid blurflux demi-romantic woman who is sexually attracted to men, but only if they are Melanesian and have a voice like that of Nicholas Cage. Okay, so what?
trex841
When I first saw that picture, I thought you were dissecting a condom.
Mr Mysterio
All hail Robo-Stalin.
Peashyjah
Seems like everything in this project is now dead.
Stealth Rock
Seagulls are pretty much trees, right?
Watcher
We all must finish chapters of our lives to go on to the next. Sometime this means leaving behind versions of ourselves that don't want to die.
Yiqi15
For April fool's, we had to make an orgasm that resembled a human foot.
Flisch
im the black market
CaledonianWarrior96
He was a skater birb, she said tweet you later birb
Most People at Some Point
Quotes
Some dude called plucas1 from Youtube comments
Funny, isn't it, that our world needs Clark Kent a lot more than Superman.
Xenoblade Chronicles
Even though he is our creator, that does not afford him the right to take our lives on a whim. But that is the thinking of a homs. He is a god. Such morals cannot apply to gods. So you think we should just shut up and die?! If that is the fate decided by a god. You are mistaken if you think we will simply accept such a fate and wait to die. We'll never stop fighting. Not till the end. To Zanza, the outcome is the same. Thus your logic is flawed.
Hades - Kid Icarus Uprising
When freaky aliens give you lemons, make freaky alien lemonade.
Kid Icarus Uprising
But Souls are delicious. They're like bacon - they taste good on anything. But if you eat them, you completely remove them from existence! They can't move on or... or be reincarnated! Huh. I never really gave it much thought. Besides, what do you mean by reincarnation anyway? You know, being reborn as someone or something else. Which means different body, different memories, different experiences, yes? So isn't being reborn as "something else" the same as being "removed from existence"? I... I... eating souls isn't right! That depends on your definition of "right". All living things survive by eating other living things. So what? You're a god. You should be above all that! Gods are above living things, which doesn't necessarily mean we care about them.
"Too many people have opinions on things they know nothing about. And the more ignorant they are, the more opinions they have." - Thomas Hildern, Fallout: New Vegas
Also known as:
The Sea Dumpling
Yiqi15
Dec 11 2017, 04:52 PM
Lophorhothon atopus is a species of hadrosaur first found in 1946, from the . It is more basal out of the two listed, to the point at least one paleontologist has suggested its an iguanadont
There are actually statues of Lophorothon at the Fernbank Museum of Natural History in Atlanta, GA:
PLEASE NOTE: If I come off as harsh or demanding whilst talking to you, please tell me. I apologize in advance.....