Jar Preserved Baby Dragon Fetus
- DarkFlameWolf
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- Mobius
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Is it really worth mentioning that that animal's chest would have to be about a foot deeper with a keel-like Sternum in order for the wings to actually get it airborn?
Dragons never seem to have enough musculature, and seeing as they are *somewhat* larger than birds (Birds without feathers are tiny - and they have hollow bones) they would require and awful lot more flight muscles than birds. The only way to anchor flight muscles is against bone, and evolution already worked out once the best way to achieve this: a keel. My prediction is that a "dragon" wouldn't be able to walk on all fours if they were capable of flight, the keel would be so big it'd prevent the front legs from touching the ground.
Also, are people aware of any six legged dinosaurs or mammals? Because a wing is a modified leg. There'd be fossil evidence of any branch of animals that developed 6 legs/arms.
Dragons never seem to have enough musculature, and seeing as they are *somewhat* larger than birds (Birds without feathers are tiny - and they have hollow bones) they would require and awful lot more flight muscles than birds. The only way to anchor flight muscles is against bone, and evolution already worked out once the best way to achieve this: a keel. My prediction is that a "dragon" wouldn't be able to walk on all fours if they were capable of flight, the keel would be so big it'd prevent the front legs from touching the ground.
Also, are people aware of any six legged dinosaurs or mammals? Because a wing is a modified leg. There'd be fossil evidence of any branch of animals that developed 6 legs/arms.
You could go into a host of things that would prove that thing to be fake Mobi. I think anyone with a decent education could tell that it is a hoax. Just one of many reasons why I didn't go into a whole rant about "why" it is fake.
Also...
Sol, I'm not certain on that one. I'm no expert on the matter, but from what I've seen most reptiles aren't born with protruding umbilical chords once hatched
Also...
It pays to read the replies on that pageThe UK newspaper The Telegraph has just exposed this story as a hoax. Alistair Mitchell, a frustrated writer, devised the plan to create the dragon in order to create publicity for his planned thriller for adults and children, which features a dragon. He is reported to have said: "Essentially I created the hoax to market my book even before it was published." The dragon was created by the professional model-makers behind the BBC's Walking With Dinosaurs television programs (shame on them if they knew they were involved in a hoax!). The glass jar was made by a well-known glass-blowing studio in the Isle of Wight that I visited once.
For more details, go to: http://www.rense.com/general50/hoax.htm
and to:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jh ... xhome.html
Sol, I'm not certain on that one. I'm no expert on the matter, but from what I've seen most reptiles aren't born with protruding umbilical chords once hatched
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Of course it's not an umbilical cord. But, is it something that would leave a mark? How are yolks physically attached to the bird/reptilian/etc.?Tyranny wrote: Sol, I'm not certain on that one. I'm no expert on the matter, but from what I've seen most reptiles aren't born with protruding umbilical chords once hatched
the umbilical cord would have been disconnected once the dragon was born outof it's egg. so i guess it never got that far (egg was damaged and the partially developed fetus died, so it was salvaged into this jar)
maybe a dragon will not fly until it is of a certain age, when it has grown it's scales. and the scales are used for leverage.
now we just need someone to explain how any possible "fire breath gland" would work haha.
there are some insects that set off violent chemical explosions within their body (that they direct out an opening, used as a defence mechanism). or perhaps a dragon could have a habit of swallowing FLINT, like how birds swallow rocks to aid digestion.
then the flint can be grinded and regurgitated into a powder, that is VERY easily and explosively combustable.
this is fun
good eyes mobi.Mobius wrote:Is it really worth mentioning that that animal's chest would have to be about a foot deeper with a keel-like Sternum in order for the wings to actually get it airborn?
maybe a dragon will not fly until it is of a certain age, when it has grown it's scales. and the scales are used for leverage.
now we just need someone to explain how any possible "fire breath gland" would work haha.
there are some insects that set off violent chemical explosions within their body (that they direct out an opening, used as a defence mechanism). or perhaps a dragon could have a habit of swallowing FLINT, like how birds swallow rocks to aid digestion.
then the flint can be grinded and regurgitated into a powder, that is VERY easily and explosively combustable.
this is fun