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  2. Woman Delighted After Finding Unexpected Visitor on Late ...

    www.aol.com/woman-delighted-finding-unexpected...

    Their name means “little armored one” in Spanish, which is possibly the cutest thing ever. Armadillos are insectivores and are adept at digging for meals of grubs, ants, and other bugs.

  3. Glyptodont - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glyptodont

    Glyptodonts are an extinct clade of large, heavily armoured armadillos, reaching up to 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) in height, and maximum body masses of around 2 tonnes.They had short, deep skulls, a fused vertebral column, and a large bony carapace made up of hundreds of individual scutes.

  4. List of cingulates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cingulates

    Nine-banded armadillo (Dasypus novemcinctus). Cingulata is an order of armored placental mammals.Members of this order are called cingulates, or colloquially, armadillos.They are primarily found in South America, though the northern naked-tailed armadillo is found mainly in Central America and the nine-banded armadillo has a range extending into North America.

  5. Cingulata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cingulata

    Cingulata, part of the superorder Xenarthra, is an order of armored New World placental mammals. Dasypodids and chlamyphorids, the armadillos, are the only surviving families in the order. [1]

  6. Spike in leprosy cases point to armadillos - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/2015/07/23/spike-in-leprosy...

    The question you have to ask is why would anyone want to touch an armadillo in the first place? But there's a very good reason to avoid the odd-looking armored mammals completely. Your health.

  7. Glyptodon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glyptodon

    Glyptodon (lit. ' grooved or carved tooth '; from Ancient Greek γλυπτός (gluptós) 'sculptured' and ὀδοντ-, ὀδούς (odont-, odoús) 'tooth') [1] is a genus of glyptodont, an extinct group of large, herbivorous armadillos, that lived from the Pliocene, around 3.2 million years ago, [2] to the early Holocene, around 11,000 years ago, in South America.

  8. Armadillo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armadillo

    The word armadillo means ' little armored one ' in Spanish; [2] [3] it is derived from armadura ' armor ', with the diminutive suffix -illo attached. While the phrase little armored one would translate to armadito normally, the suffix -illo can be used in place of -ito when the diminutive is used in an approximative tense. [4]

  9. San Antonio Zoo Armadillo’s ‘Basketball’ Skills Have People ...

    www.aol.com/san-antonio-zoo-armadillo-basketball...

    Zoos share some cute things that they catch their animals doing, and some of them really surprise people. Take for instance this video that San Antonio Zoo shared on Instagram on Sunday, July 21st ...