Science

Out of context: Reply #264

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  • son0

    Species in the Rhinochimaera family are known as long-nosed chimaeras. Their unusually long snouts (compared to other chimaeras) have sensory nerves that allow the fish to find food. Also, their first dorsal fin contains a mildly venomous spine that is used defensively. They are found in deep, temperate and tropical waters between 200 to 2,000 m in depth, and can grow to be up to 140 cm (4.5 ft) in length.

    Chimaeras (also known as ghost sharks and ratfish) are an order of cartilaginous fish most closely related to sharks, but they have been evolutionarily isolated from them for over 400 million years.

    hmmm....in MY science, i correlate it back to me...

    in this case

    The gangleaders are called Chiméres.

    *thats science to me, the metaphysical...hmmm this word meta should be super understood here...but when i say melanin is in blood. no one hears me...well no one wants to be the...uuhhh...i get it... "you are only as strong as your weakest link" so...if everything has a weakness whats wrong w/ owning it...why did someone write millions & billions of pages about albinos in caves??? hmmm....

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yak…

    you should stop trying to shoot the messenger or at least this one, i work well w/ mirrors.

    • son, please read out loud to yourself what you wrote here, exactly as you wrote it.monospaced

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