Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Laundromat East Side Manhattan

dagger toothed cats at the Ur-Rhine



Video: "Reconstrucción del tigre" dientes de sable "Paramachairodus" of "smart planet" at http://www.youtube.com/watch "YouTube"
? v = m9YnTR6He9I

Wiesbaden (saber-tooth cat-blog) - The so-called dagger-toothed cat has Paramachairodus in the Miocene, about ten million years to 8.5 on the banks of the ancient Rhine lived and hunted. Remains of this big cat is known from Eppelsheim, Esselborn from Wissberg in Gau-Weinheim and from Dorn-Dürkheim (Rheinland-Pfalz in all). This is from the paperback "saber-toothed cats. Machairodus from up to Smilodon" out of the Wiesbaden science author Ernst Probst.

The type Paramachairodus ogygius reached - after finds from Batallon at Torrejon de Valasco south of Madrid, close to - a shoulder height of 58 centimeters eta and a total length of about 1.50 meters from the represented approximately 30 inches on the tail. This species was a contemporary of the great lion saber tooth cat Machairodus aphanistus, also between ten to 8.5 million years at the Ur-Rhine existed. The latter was significantly larger, she had a shoulder height of about one meter and a body length (excluding tail) of about 1.90 meters.

The title of "saber-toothed cats" is published in "GRIN for academic texts and the Internet address http://www.grin.com/e-book/127539/saebelzahnkatzen as a printed paperback and as an electronic e-Book erhältich . The paperback and e-books are richly illustrated. In the pictures there are several drawings of the English illustrator Mauricio Antón in Madrid, which is considered a master of his craft. The reconstruction of Paramachairodus from the above video is from Mauricio Antón. Ernst Probst has published 2009, the paperback and the e-book "cave lions. Felines during the ice age" leg "GRIN". "GRIN" titles are available in all good bookstores and online book stores around 1000.

*

summary of the pocket book "saber-toothed cats":

saber-toothed cats and saber-tooth tiger, as they were called earlier fascination since time immemorial, people all over the world. These big cats and, in extreme cases up to 28 inches long canines are among the best known prehistoric mammals. The first of them already raced in the Miocene about 15 million years ago on our "Blue Planet". The last disappeared at the end of the Ice Age 11,700 years ago, forever out of nature. . Dealing with these more or less impressive big cats in the paperback "saber-toothed cats" of the Wiesbaden science author Ernst Probst It is in Germany, Europe, Africa, Asia and America discovered species from the saber-toothed cats and dagger-toothed cats and other prehistoric predators, namely, Mosbacher lions, cave lions, European jaguars, leopards, snow leopards, cheetahs and pumas. The idea for this paperback about saber-toothed cats matured during the search for the 2009 was released the titles "The Ur-Rhine. Rheinhessen ten million years "and 2Höhlenlöwen. Wild cats in Ice Age "by Ernst Probst. For this it was often to saber-toothed cats and dagger toothed cats. The paperback" saber-toothed cats ", Professor Dr. Helmut Hemmer of Mainz, Thomas Keller from Wiesbaden and Dick Mol of Hoofddorp (Netherlands) perspectives. Professor Dr. Helmut Hemmer is an internationally renowned expert in fossil cats and was formerly at the Zoological Institute of the University of Mainz active. Dr. Thomas Keller works as a paleontologist at the State Conservation Office in Wiesbaden, Hessen and has sought to explore the Mosbach sands and their fossil Animals rendered outstanding. Dick Mol is an expert on fossil mammals from the Ice Age from (in particular mammoth) Hoofddorp (Netherlands). All three have often helped the author with great patience during the research for different books. Ernst Probst has published over 30 books and paperbacks. The most famous of his works "Germany in prehistoric times", "Germany in the Stone Age", "Germany in the Bronze Age," are "records of ancient times", "Dinosaurs in Germany" (with Raymund Windolf) "Records of the primitive man" and " monsters on the track. "

0 comments:

Post a Comment