tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1883838569462983439.post3029272788985881809..comments2024-03-28T11:09:20.894-04:00Comments on Progressive Eruptions: Sunday Science BlogShaw Kenawehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08637273000409613497noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1883838569462983439.post-84262719647449917352014-09-21T19:11:24.463-04:002014-09-21T19:11:24.463-04:00Ah Sweet Mystery of Life we'll never solve the...Ah Sweet Mystery of Life we'll never solve thee! ;-)<br /><br />The more we learn the more we should acknowledge how very ignorant we are, and how very little we really know.<br /><br />Thirty feet long and over eight-thousand pounds! Herbivore or not I'm awfully glad we're not likely to find one of these foraging among the vegetation in our back yards, aren't you?<br /><br />If this was, indeed, a direct ancestor of the parrot and the cockatoo, both of whom live on a vegetarian diet, I can tell you they can still use their beaks to bite you when aroused, and it can HURT.<br /><br />Imagine a four-ton parrot.<br /><br />CHILLING, isn't it?FreeThinkehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16682678301019952436noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1883838569462983439.post-25388747003699136712014-09-21T11:33:03.884-04:002014-09-21T11:33:03.884-04:00To me that looks like more of a beak than a nose. ...To me that looks like more of a beak than a nose. Dinosaurs make more sense anatomically when one stops thinking of them as lizards and remembers that they're actually more related to birds.<br /><br />After all this time we're still discovering new species. makes you wonder how many species we'll never know about because they didn't happen to leave any fossils that survived.Infidel753https://www.blogger.com/profile/10965786814334886696noreply@blogger.com