Activity for Cazadorroâ€
Type | On... | Excerpt | Status | Date |
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Comment | Post #278075 |
can you focus your question? I'm not exactly sure of the *one* question you are ultimately interested in us answering. If it's possible for ligments that were used for locomotion to be used for sexual reproduction later in life? Octopus is close, some inject sperm through one of the arms IIRC. (more) |
— | over 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #277434 |
Forgot to put I intended this animal to be more intelligent than traditional mammalian apex predators, both ideas are unique and interesting, never thought of a "cuckoo" strategy. (more) |
— | over 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #277414 |
Finally, I didn't ask if my creature was possible to begin with, *my question was about hiding such an animal at certain ranges*. I even specified it's hiding strategy didn't need to work 100% of the time (or even 10% apparently!), and that environmental changes could be part of what makes it work. ... (more) |
— | over 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #277414 |
Additionally the animal I propose is *not* fast and agile, and like other large animals carnivores and other animals, like bears, would rely on *sprinting* for short distances, shorter distances than other carnivores, hence why I said it needed to be so close to pick prey off and get just enough dist... (more) |
— | over 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #277414 |
3000kg is huge, but that's no where near the largest size a terrestrial carnivore ever, T Rex by comparison was 8000kg to 15000kg, and much more comparable in mass to it's own prey, being even larger than some (Edmonosaurus was 9000kg for example), heck, my Giant Hyena even shares some of the same ch... (more) |
— | over 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #277200 |
So if I understand this correctly, technically you could accomplish this in some sense, but you would already be dead by the magnetic forces required to accomplish it? (more) |
— | over 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #277084 |
@Enfield your question is way too specific. I'm not even sure what your question exactly is. Are you just saying "Suppose there was another earth, and it was devoid of life, how would we revive it?" If so, you should edit your question to have way less exposition. (more) |
— | over 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #276696 |
This answer is great, and would still serve as a useful post if it stayed as is, it provides lots of useful information, but @OlinLathrop is correct. Merely applying pressure or force on the second ship isn't the issue I was worried about (though maybe I should be if it is scaled up further orders of... (more) |
— | almost 4 years ago |