JA! Jeg er redd for det jeg ikke vet er der...
Rare ting i vannet
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knife. And that's really bad". Joey DeMaio, Manowar.
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DarthVidar wrote:Christine er vel snart middelaldrende og småbarnsmor, så det er vel sjalusi ute og går mot alle damer som ennu ikke har fått nedsig på den ene eller andre måten.
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Drukner gjør den hvis du hivern i vannet au. Evolusjon ass
Det maa bli slutt paa denne landssvikerpolitikken, og paa jukset i MGP!
Denne jævelskapen er kanskje ikke så mye å se til, men burde være motivasjon nok for å aldri noensinne bade i ferskvann i varme strøk:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naegleria_fowleri
(Abstract: Amøbe som kommer inn i nesa di, og spiser seg oppover nervene til den kommer til hjernen, som den også spiser.)
Leif wrote:Denne jævelskapen er kanskje ikke så mye å se til, men burde være motivasjon nok for å aldri noensinne bade i ferskvann i varme strøk:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naegleria_fowleri
(Abstract: Amøbe som kommer inn i nesa di, og spiser seg oppover nervene til den kommer til hjernen, som den også spiser.)
Eventuelt lite hygieniske svømmebasseng: Between years 1962–1965, 16 young people died of acute meningoencephalitides in Ústí nad Labem as a consequence of bathing in an indoor swimming pool.
Har ikke lest hele tråden, men denne er en fin fisk:
http://www.disclose.tv/action/viewvideo ... e_stream_/
Wimp: http://wimp.no/album/6182208
Bandcamp: http://exeloume.bandcamp.com/
Myspace: www.myspace.com/exeloumethrash
Tyrant leech king (Tyrannobdella rex)
There's a new leech king of the jungle.
The new species—dubbed Tyrannobdella rex, or "tyrant leech king"—was discovered in the remote Peruvian Amazon, according to a new study.
Puzzling scientists from the start, the up-to-three-inch-long (about seven-centimeter-long) bloodsucker has large teeth, like its dinosaur namesake Tyrannosaurus rex.
The T. rex leech uses its teeth to saw into the tissues of mammals' orifices, including eyes, urethras, rectums, and vaginas.
The leech was first recognized from a specimen plucked from the nose of a girl in Peru's central Chanchamayo Province in 2007. A local doctor sent the specimen to Siddall and colleagues, who were unable to place the toothy predator into established leech families.
Although the T. rex leech—which people encounter while swimming in rivers and lakes—usually isn't deadly, it can stay in a person's body forweeks, and could cause choking, Siddall said.
Physician Renzo Arauco-Brown spotted the blood-sucker hiding in the nose of the Peruvian child, who was said to take regular dips in lakes and rivers in the country's Amazonian region.
She became concerned after feeling a sliding sensation at the back of her nose, The Sun reports.
The creature's proper name - Tyrannobdella rex - means "tyrant leech king".
At 130 microns high, its teeth were slightly wider than the width of a human hair.
Researcher Mark Siddall, from the American Museum of Natural History in New York, said: "That's at least five times as high as other leeches. And everyone found with these had a frontal headache.
"Their teeth are big and these things hurt."