he was eaten by the rotting corpse of a basking shark?!Nah, the rotting corpse of a Basking Shark the Japanese hauled up and claimed was a Plesiosaur.
He is a very funny teacher. His nickname is 'Chips' but all he'll tell us is that he did a bad thing in high school with wood chips. My school has a very interesting faculty.![]()
he was eaten by the rotting corpse of a basking shark?!
In that case I have to presume that said basking shark was a re-animated corpse, and I think we can all agree that a zombie shark is much more scary than a mermaid!!
by the beach.....mermaid?
Because I am in a good mood today, I will let you in on a silent joke: Hix is making fun of you. The ass out of you and me cliche' has been around a while, so Hix was being facetious, as we have all heard it before.![]()
maybe it wasn't a mermaid nor a zombie shark, but an aquatic sabre-tooth! Has anyone else here read Karl Shuker's "Mystery Cats Of the World"?
No is the Aquatic Saber-Tooth in it!? That's just plain stupid (unless it's a fiction novel, then it's still stupid but slightly humorous).
Hey! You guys want to go grab my copy of Monsterology and Dragonology and we can all talk about all the amazing animals that science has missed dispite them living right in front of you and us beign able to contact them so easily?
no it was indeed an aquatic sabre-tooth cat. Apparently in the rivers of the Central African countries there are massive aquatic creatures with tusks. Basically walruses that attack boats and kill the occupants. But being Africa they can't be walruses, and hence Shuker postulates that sabre-tooth cats in Africa became aquatic, grew to gigantic size due to bouyancy of the aquatic environment, their legs evolved into flippers for swimming, etc etc.
He wrote all this completely seriously. Its a very interesting book but with lots of questionable content![]()
no it was indeed an aquatic sabre-tooth cat. Apparently in the rivers of the Central African countries there are massive aquatic creatures with tusks. Basically walruses that attack boats and kill the occupants. But being Africa they can't be walruses, and hence Shuker postulates that sabre-tooth cats in Africa became aquatic, grew to gigantic size due to bouyancy of the aquatic environment, their legs evolved into flippers for swimming, etc etc.
He wrote all this completely seriously. Its a very interesting book but with lots of questionable content![]()
that "snarf snarf" was doing my head in trying to remember where it was from, so I had to Google it! Wish I hadn't; won't be able to get Thundercats out of my head now.Yes, it ate its heart. Snarf snarf.
that "snarf snarf" was doing my head in trying to remember where it was from, so I had to Google it! Wish I hadn't; won't be able to get Thundercats out of my head now.
oh I just remembered the South Park three-part-episode "Imagination Land": that's where I knew the "snarf snarf" from!! (I knew the voice in my head was all wrong for the "real" Snarf from Thundercats!)