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fieldmuseumphotoarchives:Mammal Monday, Camel.  “Please, pay no attention to that man behind

fieldmuseumphotoarchives:

Mammal Monday, Camel. 

“Please, pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.”

© The Field Museum,  Z79948

Head of camel sticking out of a curtain near the door of a brick building. Hand of a man in the lower left corner. Lincoln Park Zoo. 1900.

 4x5 inch glass negative

1900


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Secretary bird - Sagittarius serpentarius I love me some secretary birds. They’ll up and stomp a sna

Secretary bird - Sagittarius serpentarius

I love me some secretary birds. They’ll up and stomp a snake just for gettin’ in their territory. And don’t come at them when they’ve got eggs! Breeding season is year-round depending upon food supply, so you never know when you’ll be smacked down!

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Their name is thought to be because of their quill-feathers, resembling a secretary with a quill pen behind their ear, as was common at the end of the 18th century, when the bird was first described by a European.

While they’re one of only two terrestrial birds of prey (the Caracaraof Central America and northern South America being the other), secretary birds fly easily. They’re about 4.5 ft (1.4 m) tall, and primarily hunt small animals. Mice, hares, crabs, and lizards make up the bulk of their diet, but they’ve been known to hunt snakes, tortoises, baby gazelle, and even baby cheetah at times.

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Album of Abyssinian Birds and Mammals. Entries by Louis Agassiz Fuertes. Published by the Field Museum of Natural History [Chicago]. 1930.


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 Rosie the Tarantula at Field Museum

Rosie the Tarantula at Field Museum


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