|
BluMonkee
keeper of thelittle people

Registered: 06/23/03
Posts: 867
Loc: Lookin' for an Incident
Last seen: 18 years, 6 months
|
Re: post some pictures! [Re: Hermes_br]
#2040921 - 10/24/03 08:23 PM (20 years, 3 months ago) |
|
|
WOW!!! that, my friend, is an amazing shot!!! Thanks for that one!!!
-------------------- "If I don't see ya' in the future, I'll see ya' in the pasture"
|
SkorpivoMusterion
Livin in theTwilight Zone...


Registered: 01/30/03
Posts: 9,954
Loc: You can't spell fungus wi...
|
Re: post some pictures! [Re: BluMonkee]
#2040967 - 10/24/03 08:49 PM (20 years, 3 months ago) |
|
|
Quote:
BluMonkee said:

you basically have the monkey-equivalent of the hello.jpg tattooed on you,...wow..that takes..balls. or should I say, monkey balls? Nah. balls. cuz after all, we're all some forms of monkeys. Or, Hairless-beach-apes as certain sunday comic cartoons prefer to refer us as. But, what do they know? I mean, they were only around like, oh, say 4 million years longer than man has been around..right? it all evolved from some of the earliest most primitive life forms to ever take place, on this spaceship called Mother Earth. Trilobites.
Above is an image showing the "typical" environment (constructed by me in Lightwave 3d) that trilobites once inhabited, sharing their waters with predatory cephalopods (the squid-like creature), crinoids (the flower-like creature to the right/foreground - relative of the starfish), and rugose corals (the anemone-like creature to the left/background). The particular trilobite species shown here is a Flexicalymene meeki.
Trilobites were an extinct group of Paleozoic arthropods, somewhat like a crustacean (i.e. crabs, lobsters, sowbugs, etc.), but more similar to modern-day horseshoe crabs. They are found in rocks ranging from the Cambrian to the Permian, with them being most common in the Cambrian and Ordovician, fairly common in the Silurian and Devonian, less common in the Mississippian, and rare in the Pennsylvanian and Permian periods. Their bodies are divided into three lobes lengthwise, hence the name tri-lob-ite. The central "spine-like" lobe is termed the axial lobe and the two side lobes the pleural lobes. The parts of the trilobite are termed the cephalon (head), a segmented thorax (middle), and pygidium (tail). In addition, the "nose" is termed the glabella, the "cheeks" are termed the librigenae if they are shed while molting and fixigenae if they remain affixed to the cephalon. The segments of the thorax are termed pleurae. Entire trilobites are relatively uncommon, due to the fact that exoskeletons when molted tend to break apart. Most often, an entire specimen found records the death of that individual (although there are species of trilobites where we have a significant number of preserved molted exoskeletons).
-------------------- Coffee should be black as hell, strong as death, and sweet as love.
|
BluMonkee
keeper of thelittle people

Registered: 06/23/03
Posts: 867
Loc: Lookin' for an Incident
Last seen: 18 years, 6 months
|
|
I knew there was a reason I got that tat now just look at the knowledge I gained from it....I think /me goes to sit quietly now and ponder what just happened
-------------------- "If I don't see ya' in the future, I'll see ya' in the pasture"
|
kosmic_charlie
Truckin' in style


Registered: 03/18/01
Posts: 5,203
Loc: Deep Elem
Last seen: 1 month, 14 days
|
Re: post some pictures! [Re: zampanohol]
#2041248 - 10/24/03 11:55 PM (20 years, 3 months ago) |
|
|

A girl I met at my cousin?s wedding reception when I was really drunk. Her mom asked me if I would dance with her daughter so I did. I never saw her again after the reception but we started emailing back and forth then one day she stopped answering my emails.

Here is what appears to be a naked woman dancing or freaking behind Bob Weir. 

Sleeping bats.
Cool bus.
--------------------
Goin' where the water tastes like wine.
|
|