Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Attenborough and the Giant Egg is a 2011 British nature documentary written and presented by David Attenborough. The documentary is a follow-up of an episode in Madagascar , filmed in 1960, for Attenborough's earliest nature documentary series, Zoo Quest .
Antarcticoolithus is an oogenus of large fossil eggs from the Maastrichtian part of the Lopez de Bertodano Formation of Seymour Island, Antarctica. The genus contains the type species A. bradyi, described by Legendre et al. in 2020. [1] The fossil egg, the first found in Antarctica, was discovered in 2011 by a Chilean team of researchers.
Macroelongatoolithus (41HV003-16) nest with eggs. While they were once considered to be the eggs of large tyrannosaurids (like Tarbosaurus) on the basis of their huge size, [9] egg shape and microstructural evidence suggests they are eggs of gigantic oviraptorosaurs (like Beibeilong or Gigantoraptor). [7]
A photo shows the brown spiders, including a female with a robust egg sac. The new species carries fewer but larger eggs than other, similar species, researchers said.
Lethocerus sp. with wings open. Unlike giant water bugs in the subfamily Belostomatinae, females do not lay the eggs on the backs of males. [4] Instead, after copulation (often multiple sessions [5]) the eggs are laid on emergent vegetation (rarely on man-made structures) high enough above the waterline that the eggs will not be permanently submerged.
Vegreville egg. The Vegreville egg is a giant sculpture of a pysanka, a Ukrainian-style Easter egg.The work by Paul Maxym Sembaliuk is built of an intricate set of two-dimensional anodized aluminum tiles in the shape of congruent equilateral triangles and star-shaped hexagons, fashioned over an aluminum framework.
The National Centre for the Performing Arts (NCPA) (国家大剧院), colloquially described as The Giant Egg (巨蛋), is an arts centre containing an opera house in Xicheng, Beijing, China. Designed by French architect Paul Andreu , the NCPA opened in 2007 and is the largest theatre complex in Asia.
Giant caenagnathids (like Beibeilong) may have sat directly in the empty center to avoid egg-crushing because of their massive body dimensions. The paleoenvironments in which Beibeilong lived consisted of relatively mesic (humid, well-watered) floodplains crossed by rivers with semi-arid to tropical climates .