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Richard Harrison

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 4:55 pm


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Stashed in nooks and crannies throughout the room are various notepads. The pages of these notepads are covered with word that you may recognise as Arabic writing. Should you understand these words the life of Richard Harrision, the island's eldest inhabitant, becomes clear to you.
PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 4:58 pm


News!

First Newsletter Released!

Richard Harrison


Richard Harrison

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 4:59 pm


Name: Richard R. Harrison

Gender: Male

Age: 68

Birthday: October 31th, 1938

Hair: Unruly Grey hair

Eyes: Brown

Height: 6'3"

Weight: 350 lbs

Appearence: Richard is a large man. Very overweight but not morbidly so. He carries himself very well with confident plodding steps. He carries a old style straight cane with a sliver knob on the top. He wears a well tailored suit that is at least twenty years out of style, but the suit itself is looks fairly new. His grey his wavey and unruly. He wears small round glasses.
From all appearences this is a man who has aged rather well. The bushy mustach only adds to his grandfatherly appearence.

Occupation: Semi-retired, blogger

Birthplace: Lyme Conneticut USA

lanuages known: English, Arabic (Almost fluent)

Family: wife: Erica Harrision (deceased)

Likes: Food, Jazz, Spirited people, history, tradegy, justice, sky diving.

Dislikes: Salad, Geniuses, Golf, dishonesty, Homosexuals


Personality: Richard is usually polite, kind and honest. He speaks with a soft grandfather like authority. He has an easy smile and a hearty laugh. He nearly always expresses optimism no matter how grim the situation appears.

Richard is reckless when it comes to own safety. While he doesn't take risks needlessly he never shies away from them. It difficult to explain, while Richard isn't brave per se he doesn't fear for his life. Its somewhat like threatening an already condemed man with a knife. He is satisifed with the life he has lived and wouldn't terribly mind if it came to an end. This makes him nearly impossible to threaten or intimidate. He endeavors to face danger with a zen like calm. (Its done wonders for his blood pressure icon_wink.gif )
PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:01 pm


History: Richard was not a risk taker as a young man. In fact he did everything he could to avoid risks. He went to a 2nd rate college instead of yale so he would be sure of graduating without too much stress. He signed up with the national guard to avoid going in vietnam. He took a job at the same medical supply company (which was Feral labs) his father worked at instead of finding his own place in the world. He worked there in various positions until 1997. He rose to lab manager fairly quickly but further advancement was blocked by his lack of an advanced degree.

He met his wife, Erica through a mutal friend in 1961, he was 23. She was a firery feminist and he was a carefully stable if boring gentleman. Nobody throught the date would last the night. Least of all them. While it wasn't love at first sight, the first date proved to be spark that ingited an explosive romance. They were married within six months. While they were almost complete opposites they worked together perfectly. Richard was the pragmatic half while she was pure passion. She continued her activism, eventually becoming a newspaper reporter, while he funded the trips and comforted her when she met with frustation.

Richard wanted nothing more than to continue that path forever. To grow old with Erica and retire somewhere on a lake in Vermont. She of course would have perfered New York or Boston.

The choice of retirement real estate was never decided on. Erica was killed in a freak car accident in May of 1996. She was 56.

Richard did not take her death well. Her absence is a gaping wound in Richard's life to this very day. He had structured his existance around her causes and supported her endevors. He plodded on with his go nowhere job like an engine driven by her passion. Without it, he simply stopped. He managed to muster the effort to take an early retirement package from feral labs shortly after his wife's death.

1997 was spent infront of the TV watching world start to crumble and wondering how it would be different if Erica was still alive. The crushing depression managed to isolate him from most of his friends, as one by one, they gave up on him.

The depression might have killed him if he hadn't stepped into his local bank on febuaray 14th, 1998. In his own world of self hate and regret he didn't noticed that the man in front of him was nervious and jumpy. He barely noticed when everyone around suddenly got down on the floor. What he did notice, but only in an abastract fashion that there was a gun pointed at his head. It was little gun, but he could see the bullet in the chamber at the back of the barrell.

He looked at the man, the man looked back him, shouting at him. Richard asked the man to shoot him. The man was confused. Richard asked him again, adding a please. The man started to back away, Richard followed, repeating his request. This confrontation continue for minutes until the man was tackled by another man in the bank. People said he was a hero, the cops told him he was a lunatic. Richard learned alot about people, himself and fear that day.

Richard later reflected fear rules everyone's life. From the fear of emotional pain to the fear of one's death. He had loved Erica precisely because she didn't allow fear to rule her and that enabled her to do the things she did. In life, people are astonished by individuals who lack fear. That lack of fear allowed him to control that situation at the bank, although he wasn't aware of it at the time.

He considered, his wife was gone, his career was non existant. He never had children and most of his friends had abandoned him. Richard had over thirty years of happiness and now that he had lost that, all he could look forward to was aging and dying, probably alone. Faced with that possiblity, Richard decided he really didn't have anything to fear.

Richard reinventing himself, to teach himself to ignore fear he forced himself to face a life long one, heights. Heights had always been a problem for him previously, a mere ladder could make him dizzy. At first he thought he could conquer it step by step. Standing on step stools and the like. When that didn't work he signed up for skydiving lessons, his hand shook so badly that the had to fill out six order forms before he got one that was legible. Six months, over 300 jumps and a broken leg later he learned how to divorce himself from the body's biological panic. Skydiving barely causes an adrenalin spike anymore, unless something goes wrong.

He launched an internet blog entitled "Dangerous Places, Dangerous People." As he traveled to the world's hotspots over the next five years, reporting from the Congo, Afgainistan and Baghdad. The reports on the blog read like a vacation guide to hell on earth with vivid depictions of the living conditions of these war torn places. The blog had a small but loyal following that offset's his travel expenses. However it wasn't real journalism, as not having a formal degree and well being over 55 made it very hard to get a "real" job in the bussiness.

If he kept pursuing that mode of journalism Richard never would of come to Dr. Moreau's attention. Two years ago Richard changed the focus of his blog.
Richard had suffered a minor heart attack returning from a trip to Baghdad and while recovering he started profiling the personalities behind corperate misconduct in the US. He found the subject fasinating as he tracked the personallities that rose to pilot the massive corperations of the bussiness world. He didn't focus on profits but instead the people and the politics within the corperation. Heartened by phone interviews he conducted on the enron scandal and refreshed by the lack of a language barrier, Richard offically changed the focus of his blog to the dirty underwear of corperate America.

After a couple big stories, the last six months have been strangely scandalless. Not having any really obivious targets, Richard has been investigating the CEO's of upstanding companies. He focuses on the events that shape these people, lining up interviews with childhood friends and college professors.

He is currently assembling a profile on Dr. Nicholas Moreau. The genius CEO of Richard's former employer, Feral Labs Inc.

Richard Harrison


Richard Harrison

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:03 pm


Possessions:

Apple mac book pro.
GPS tracker (probably on the fritz/destroyed)
3 quality suites
A fine wooden cane
Cell phone with Satillite uplink (For uploading blog entries, probably destroyed by staff)
A gold wedding band
A diamond ring and wedding band worn on a sliver chain around his neck (His wife's)
A pocket watch
Numerious notepads and pencils stashed on his person.
A swiss army knife with compass.
A pipe with a pouch of tabbacco
Two decks of playing cards
Glasses
A hip flask contianing Johnny Walker Blue

Skills:
Excellent card player- In Richard's youth he was an avid player of anything that could be played with a standard deck of cards, from bridge to go fish. He knows the rules to dozens of games. When he lacks other players nothing settles his mind like a good game of solitare or building card castles when he is absolutely frustrated.

Very good animal surgeon- Richard spent 25 years at Feral lab in product development as a lab manager, not a primary investigator. His primary responiblity was training new lab technicians and performing work that was to delicate to be left to unskilled hands. He has performed nearly every procedure in common use today from mouse cremaster preparations in mice to cardiac bypasses in rabbits.

Knows Arabic- Richard invested heavily in privated tutors and language classes before he started taking trips to the middle east. It paid off. He can read and write Arabic. He also speaks it, although with a heavy american accent.

Has taken a hostage surivial class.

Smattering of DIY home improvement skills. Richard is handy with anything he can find a "how to" book on. He knows the basics of carpentry, plumbing and electrical wiring in the context of a house.
PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:05 pm


Progression of a monster

Currently:

75%: The Almost woman cat squid thing!

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50%: User Image - Blocked by "Display Image" Settings. Click to show.

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The Original Man: Civil and grandfatherl

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Richard Harrison


Richard Harrison

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:07 pm


FanArts

By Mouse Pachinkorelli
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By Zarmina

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By Sola84:

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By Nikorasu-Kun:

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By Articulate.Penguin

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By Zee Oddwyn

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By Casey_Mae

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By Polecat Junkie

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By Kimari

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PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:09 pm


The Displacer Beast!

Quote:
From Planet AD&D:


Displacer Beast
Climate/Terrain: Temperate mountains
Frequency: Very rare
Organization: Pack
Activity Cycle: Any
Diet: Carnivorous
No. Appearing: 2-5 (1d4 +1)
Size: L (8'-12' long)
Morale: Elite (13-14)
XP Value: 975

The displacer beast is a magical creature that resembles a puma with two powerful black tentacles growing from its shoulders. Very rare, they stay far from human habitations.
The displacer beast has the blue-black coloring of a dark panther,and a long cat-like body and head. Females range in length from 8 to 9 feet, and weigh 450 pounds; males are 10 to 12 feet long, and weigh up to 500 Lbs. They have 6 legs. Tentacles are tipped with rough horny edges that can inflict terrible wounds. Their eyes glow bright green, even after death.

Combat: The displacer beast is a fierce, savage creature that hates all forms of life. Highly aggressive, the displacer beast will attack on sight, using its tentacles to inflict 2-8 (2d4) points of damage to its victims.
Their main advantage in combat is their magical power of displacement, which allows them to appear to be some 3 feet from their actual location. Anyone attacking a displacer beast does so at -2 on his attack roll. In addition, the beasts save as 12th-level fighters; adding +2 to their die rolls.
To determine the true position of the displacer beast and its illusion, roll 1d10. On 1-5, the illusion is in front of the creature, 6-7 to the creature's left, 8-9, to the right. On 10, the illusion is behind the beasts actual position. Although this ability is magical, the beast's location can not be determined by dispel or detect magic. Only true seeing will reveal its position.
Displacer beasts will not use their claws or teeth unless near death, or when in combat with a very large opponent. If they do employ them, each claw does 1-3 points of damage, and each bite does 1-8 points of damage.

Habitat/Society: Displacer beasts are carnivores. Unless they are raising young, they usually run in packs, carving a savage swath of destruction as they go. They hate all life, and will sometimes kill purely for pleasure. Fierce and vicious as they are, however, displacer beasts never fight among themselves. The pack is a well-run and highly efficient killing machine. When encountered in packs, displacer beasts are more than a match for many large creatures and have been known to make a meal of orcs, goblins, and bands of men. Any creature entering their territory is viewed as potential prey.
Displacer beasts mate in the autumn, and the young are born in spring. A mated pair of displacer beasts makes its home in a cave, producing litters of 1-4 young. The cubs, about the size of domestic cats, are born without tentacles and reach maturity, though not full size, within 4 months. They remain in the cave until their displacement abilities are fully developed. This is followed by a two month period during which the cubs are taught how to hunt. When this is completed, the family group disbands and the monsters wander off to join separate packs. While raising young, the monsters are fiercely protective of their lairs. One adult always remains with the cubs, usually the female, while the other goes off to hunt. Dead prey is dragged back to the lair to be eaten by the family. Lairs are littered with the bones, equipment, and the treasures of its victims.
Naturally vicious and almost evil at times, displacer beasts harbor an undying hatred of blink dogs. Many theories attempt to account for this enmity. Some sages believe it springs from antipathy in temperaments -- the lawful good blink dog would naturally be the enemy of a creature as savage and destructive as the displacer beast. Others argue that it is the displacement and blink abilities which cause this antipathy -- the two abilities, when in close proximity, somehow stimulate the nervous system and produce hostile reactions. Encounters between the two breeds are rare however, since they do not share the same territory.

Ecology: Displacer beasts have little to fear from other large predators, save perhaps trolls or giants. Some wizards and alchemists value their hides for use in certain magical preparations, and will offer generous rewards for them. The eyes of a displacer beast are a highly prized, if uncommon, good luck charms among thieves who believe that they will protect the bearer from detection.

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3rd edition version:
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There are couple picture of the displacer beasts with armored plating along their spine and tentacles. These would be cool and add to the "what am I turning into factor!" Up to the artist since they arn't offical.

Links:

http://elfwood.lysator.liu.se/art/m/s/mspomeroy/displacer.jpg.html




Serums: Black Jaguar is the base with a multilimb serum and the tentacles are from a giant squid.

I'm having a real hard time trying to find more than a paragraph about jaguar behavior. Any ideas?


Quote:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

For other uses, see Jaguar (disambiguation).

?Jaguar
Conservation status: Near threatened[1]

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Felidae
Genus: Panthera
Species: P. onca
Binomial name
Panthera onca
(Linnaeus, 175 cool

The jaguar (Panthera onca) is a New World mammal of the Felidae family and one of four "big cats" in the Panthera genus, along with the lion, tiger, and leopard of the Old World. It is the third largest feline after the lion and tiger and the largest and most powerful in the Western Hemisphere [2]. The present range of the cat extends from Mexico (with occasional sightings in the United States) across much of Central America and southward to Paraguay and northern Argentina.

Physically, the spotted cats most closely resemble the leopard although behavioural and habitat characteristics are more akin to the tiger. They are a largely solitary, stalk and ambush predator, hunting a wide range of game over a variety of terrain. Dense jungle is their preferred habitat and they are notable, along with tigers, as a feline which enjoys water. The jaguar is an apex and keystone predator, playing an important role in stabilizing ecosystems and regulating the populations of prey species [3]. The jaguar has an unusual killing method, piercing directly through the skull of prey between the ears and delivering a fatal blow to the brain; its bite is thus exceptionally powerful, even relative to the other big cats [2].
Contents
[hide]

* 1 Etymology
* 2 Taxonomy
o 2.1 Subspecies
* 3 Biology
o 3.1 Physical characteristics
o 3.2 Reproduction and life cycle
* 4 Behaviour
o 4.1 Social structure
o 4.2 Hunting and diet
* 5 Ecology
o 5.1 Distribution and habitat
o 5.2 Ecological role
* 6 Conservation status
* 7 In mythology and culture
o 7.1 Mesoamerican culture
o 7.2 Contemporary culture
* 8 References
* 9 External links

[edit]

Etymology

The word jaguar comes from the South American Tupi-Guarani language, entering English via Portuguese [23]. The original and complete indigenous name for the species is Yaguareté, where Yagua means "fierce" and eté means "true" [24]. This generic name ("fierce true") originally came to refer to any carnivorous animal. According to one early European explorer, jaguara meant "a beast that kills its prey with one bound," an etymology that is still repeated [2][6]. However, this has been challenged as incorrect [25]. Jaguar is also a royal title bestowed to a royal prince, princess, or ruling monarch in many Maya traditions such as that of the Lencas.
[edit]

Taxonomy

Jaguars, panthera onca, are the only New World member of the Panthera genus. DNA evidence suggests the big cats last shared a common ancestor six million years ago, though the fossil record points to the emergence of Panthera just two to three million years ago [8]. Qualified evidence suggests that the genus is monophyletic (a single ancestor) rather than polyphyletic (multiple ancestral sources). Following from the pioneering work of British zoologist Reginald Pocock on the morphology of the panthera group, it was assumed that jaguars were most closely related to the leopard [9]. Recent DNA evidence is more ambiguous: it appears that a lion, jaguar, leopard clade appeared within panthera after the divergence of the tiger, yet the jaguar subsequently diverged first, followed by a lion and leopard split. Thus it cannot be clearly stated that the jaguar is more closely related to either cat; primitive lion and jaguar characteristics in panthera gombaszoegensis (European jaguar) and panthera astrox (American lion) are further suggestive that the jaguar and lion, rather than the jaguar and leopard, may be closer relatives[9].
[edit]

Subspecies

Taxonomic delineation of jaguar subspecies was last performed by Pocock in 1939. Working prior to major advances in DNA, his descriptions correspond to geographic origins and the study of skull morphology.

* Panthera onca onca: Venezuela, south and east to Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil
* P. onca palustris: Paraguay and northeastern Argentina
* P. onca peruviana: Coastal Peru
* P. onca centralis: Central America—El Salvador to Colombia
* P. onca hernandesii: Western Mexico
* P. onca arizonensis: Eastern Arizona to Sonora, Mexico
* P. onca veraecrucis: Southeastern Mexico to central Texas
* P. onca goldmani: Yucatan peninsula to Guatemala and Belize [8]



Biology


Physical characteristics

The jaguar is a compact and well-muscled animal. There is a significant variation in size, with average weights between 56 and 96 kg (124 and 211 lb). Record weights of between 131 and 151 kg (288 to 333 lb) have been reached (matching the average for female lions and tigers), while extremely low weights of 36 kg (80 lb) have also been reported. Females are typically twenty percent smaller than males. The length of the cat varies from 1.62 to 1.83 m (5.3 to 6 feet), and its tail may be a further 75 cm (30 in). They stand around 67 to 76 cm (27 to 30 inches) tall at the shoulder [10].

Further size variations have been observed across regions and habitats. Jaguars in southern Mexico and Central America are typically smaller, at 56 kg and 40 kg (123 lb and 90 lb) for males and females, respectively [11]. By contrast, a study of jaguars in the Brazilian Pantanal region found average weights of 100 kg (220 lb) [12]. Forest jaguars are frequently darker and considerably smaller than those found in open areas (the Pantanal is an open wetland basin), possibly due to lesser availability of large herbivorous prey in forest areas [13].

A short and stocky limb structure make the jaguar adept at climbing, crawling, and swimming [10]. The head is robust and the jaw extremely powerful. It has been suggested that they have the strongest bite of all felids and the second strongest amongst mammals, the bite force being an adaptation allowing them to pierce turtle shells [11]. A comparative study of bite force adjusted for body size ranked them as the top felid, alongside the snow leopard and ahead of the lion and tiger [26], while a National Geographic special suggested the jaguar is pound for pound the most powerful cat in the world [27]. It has been reported that "an individual jaguar can drag an 800-pound bull 25 feet [8 m] in its jaws and pulverize the heaviest bones" [28]. Jaguars hunt wild animals in the range of 300 kg and below in dense jungle and their short and sturdy physique is thus an adaptation to their prey and environment.
A melanistic form of jaguar.


The base coat of the jaguar is a tawny yellow but can range to reddish-brown and black. The cat is covered in rosettes for camouflage in the jungle habitat. The spots are irregular, both for given individuals and when compared: rosettes may include one or several dots and their shape varies. The spots on their head and neck are generally solid, as well as on the tail where the spots may merge to form a band. The underbelly, throat, and outer surface of the legs and lower flanks of the jaguar are white [10].

A condition known as melanism regularly occurs, creating jaguars that appear entirely black (although the spots are still visible if one looks closely). Relatively frequent melanism is due to the fact that a dominant rather than recessive allele causes the colouration [13]. Melanistic jaguars are informally known as black panthers, but do not form a separate species. Rare albino individuals, sometimes termed white panthers, also occur amongst jaguars as with the other big cats [17].

Jaguars look very much like leopards, but they are sturdier and heavier, and the two animals may be distinguished by their rosettes: the rosettes on a jaguar’s coat are larger, fewer in number, and usually darker with thicker lines that enclose smaller spots. The head of the jaguar is rounder and it has shorter, stockier limbs [6].
[edit]

Reproduction and life cycle


Jaguar females reach sexual maturity at about two years of age and males at three or four, the gap caused by male competition for mates. The cat will mate throughout the year, though most births occur when prey is plentiful [2]. Research on captive male jaguars has supported the suggestion of year round mating, with no seasonal variation in semen traits and ejaculatory quality found; low reproductive success has also been noted in captivity [29]. Roaring calls and urinary scent marks from both sexes are used by males to locate females during their estrous cycle, which lasts four weeks [12]. The pair separate after mating, with females providing all parenting [19]. The gestation period lasts 93 to 105 days, and females typically give birth to less than four cubs, raising no more than two of them to adulthood [citation needed].

The young are born blind and can see after two weeks. They remain with their mother for one to two years before leaving to establish a territory for themselves. Typical lifespan in the wild is estimated at around 12 years; in captivity, jaguars have lived up to 23 years, among the longest of any cat [12].

Jaguars are occasionally mated with other big cats such as the lion, tiger and leopard. These hybridizations are usually carried out in controlled environments. For more information on hybrid cats see Panthera hybrid.
[edit]

Behaviour
[edit]

Social structure

Like most cats, jaguars are solitary beyond mother and cub groups. Adults meet only to court and mate, carving out large territories for themselves. Male ranges cover between 25 and 150 square kilometers, depending on the availability of game; massive roaming areas of 517 km² (200 m²) have been reported where game is particularly scarce [3]. Males travel further each day than females [20] and have larger territories. Female territories may overlap but the animals generally avoid one another. Scrape marks, urine, and feces are used to mark territory. Like the other big cats, jaguars are capable of roaring and do so to warn territorial and mating competitors away; intensive bouts of counter-calling between individuals have been observed [21]. Their roar often resembles a repetitive cough and they may also vocalize mews and grunts [12].

The jaguar is often described as nocturnal, but is more specifically a crepuscular animal (peak activity around dawn and dusk). It may hunt during the day if game is available and it is a relatively energetic feline, spending as much as 50 to 60% of its time active [11].

The jaguar's elusive nature combined with the inaccessability of much of its preferred habitat make it a difficult animal to sight, let alone study. Most information on their behaviour is thus gleaned from animals in captivity [20] and much of their biology and behaviour remain to be studied.
[edit]

Hunting and diet

Jaguars are opportunistic hunters and 85 species have been reported in their diet [13]. They prefer large prey and will take deer, tapirs, peccaries, and even crocodilian caiman species up to a certain size, but will also eat any small species they can catch, including frogs, mice, birds, fish, and domestic livestock. The jaguar's killing method is unique amongst cats, as they pierce directly through the temporal bones of the skull between the ears of prey (especially capybaras) with their canines in order to pierce the brain. Emmons (1987) has suggested this is an adaptation to "cracking open" turtle shells; following the late Pleistocene exctinctions, armoured reptiles such as turtles would have formed a super-abundant prey base for the jaguar [13]. It is because of this killing technique that jaguars often break teeth as they progress in age [citation needed]. With small prey such as dogs, a paw swipe to crush the skull may be sufficient.

Jaguars are considered a stalk and ambush predator and are not meant to run over long distances, preferring surprise. They will walk slowly down forest paths, watching and listening for prey, and then stalking, rushing, or ambushing. This may include leaping into water after prey, and a jaguar has been reported to have swum more than 700 metres with a felled cow [2]. This relatively active feline will hunt during both night and day.




[
Tenticle thoughts:

Okay after reading up on Squid tenticles and how they work I now realize I'm full of crap. smile

Squid tenticles are made of muscle. Thats it. Well there is a pretty big nerve in there too. Squids have two types of tenticles arms and well... tenticles. The arms are shorter and are for fine manipulation of prey. They are very similar to the arms of the octopus, with suckers down their length. The tenticles are what we need to look at here. These are long and with a "club" that is studded with suckers or in some species, hooks. There is no fine manipulation with these, they are made for rapid extension, retraction and the retrevial of prey.

pictures from www.tonmo.com thanks to Sabin for pointing them out.
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These are the clubs of giant squid. Nasty eh? I won't post it because it isn't relevant but the suckers on the arms of this species are saw toothed.

Richard Harrison


Richard Harrison

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:14 pm


Relationships:

Friends:

Awen

Tommy

Colche

Joli

Pyroth

Shenzi

Gaius

Emerwyn

Victor

Ambrose

Cody


Neutral:

Markye

Sophie

Kim

Billy

Newt

Lauren

Nita

Seth

Rachel

Laimh

Lucas

Charlie

Amaya

Brian

Caitlin

Sid

Chana

Jamal

Enemies:

Antony

Zach

Ginvera

Sabin

Moreau
PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:15 pm


Reserved 9

Richard Harrison


Richard Harrison

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:30 pm


Reserved 10
PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:31 pm


Reserved 11

Richard Harrison


Richard Harrison

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:42 pm


reserved 13
PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:43 pm


Reserved 14

Richard Harrison


Richard Harrison

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 5:44 pm


15?
Reply
The Duplexes

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