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This is a gallery of images that relate to the world of Cricket. These images are verified as being suitable for use in Wikipedia articles either by being under a free license or by being not subject to copyright.
The orthopteran family Rhaphidophoridae of the suborder Ensifera has a worldwide distribution. [1] Common names for these insects include cave crickets, camel crickets, spider crickets (sometimes shortened to "criders" or "sprickets"), [2] and sand treaders.
Cricket is a bat-and-ball game played on a cricket field (see image of cricket pitch and creases) between two teams of eleven players each. [75] The field is usually circular or oval in shape, and the edge of the playing area is marked by a boundary , which may be a fence, part of the stands, a rope, a painted line, or a combination of these ...
Create a link as such on Template:Cr-Aus/doc for Cricket Australia XI; Images. Add pictures (and remove template from address requests) in these Category:Wikipedia requested images of cricket people; Add pictures for grounds missing photos from here; On this day in cricket. Expand the anniversary coverage for Portal:Cricket at Portal:Cricket ...
Cricket flour is used in protein bars, pet foods, livestock feed, nutraceuticals, and other industrial applications. The United Nations says that the use of insect protein, such as cricket flour, could be critical in feeding the growing population of the planet while being less damaging to the environment. [58]
Freely available cricket pictures can be hard to come by, like this one released by the United States Army into the public domain. What is reasonable, may differ from topic to topic and should best be obtained by consensus with other editors. Well chosen and well placed images certainly enhance the ability of the reader to understand the article.
A standard cricket ground, showing the cricket pitch (brown), close-infield (light green) within 15 yards (13.6 m) of the striking batsman, infield (medium green) inside the white 30 yard (27.4 m) circle, and outfield (dark green), with sight screens beyond the boundary at either end. Boundary could be 2-3 metres inwards.
Mole crickets are the only insects that construct a sound-producing apparatus. Given the known sensitivity of a cricket's hearing (60 decibels), a night-flying G. vineae female should be able to detect the male's song at a range of 30 m; this compares to about 5 m for a typical Gryllus cricket that does not construct a burrow. [14]