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These are homemade, vegan, gluten free, bone shaped, broccoli-seaweed flavored treats.
"I was initially hesitant about the seaweed, but Bella loved it." -Bella, West Highland Terrier
"She really liked this one. She ate it very quickly and wanted more. Good size for a small dog." Ruby Ru, Pit Bull
"She loved this one. I love the name." Violet, Pit Bull
Ingredients:
(potato, pineapple juice, broccoli, roasted seaweed, canola oil, baking powder(Monocalcium Phosphate, Sodium Bicarbonate), vitamin e, vitamin c)
T Bone Steak
A carnivore (play /ˈkɑrnɪvɔər/) meaning 'meat eater' (Latin, carne meaning 'flesh' and vorare meaning 'to devour') is an organism that derives its energy and nutrient requirements from a diet consisting mainly or exclusively of animal tissue, whether through predation or scavenging.[1][2] Animals that depend solely on animal flesh for their nutrient requirements are considered obligate carnivores while those that also consume non-animal food are considered facultative carnivores.[2] Omnivores also consume both animal and non-animal food, and apart from the more general definition, there is no clearly defined ratio of plant to animal material that would distinguish a facultative carnivore from an omnivore, or an omnivore from a facultative herbivore, for that matter.[3] A carnivore that sits at the top of the foodchain is an apex predator.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Old Chinese camera models and then some
Please no glossy awards, scripted comments and thumbnails back to your own work. If you want to comment let me know what you liked, didn't like or some sort of input for improving. Either by email or comments. And I will reciprocate.
I've broken my rule by photographing the same 365 object two days running. When I decided to use the old bone I cast around for some other object as a foil. I considered laying the bone on leather, but then time ran out. Thanks to the amateur forensic archaeologists who commented on the first image I knew what tI should have used - a broken rule!
acet & bones over by the carrefour des morts. and a sneaker there in the corner.
(photo best viewed large.)
A Hardwood Divan with Bone Inlay
30” x 72” x 22”(76 cm x 183 cm x 56 cm)
Opening bid: PHP 20,000
Lot 1443 of the Leon Gallery auction on July 16 to 18, 2021. Please see leonexchange.com and leon-gallery.com for more details.
Edge of the Trees
by Janet Laurence and Fiona Foley
"Edge of the Trees is about contact. It acknowledes the indigenous place and people of Sydney, home of the Eora, and the many layers of occupation since 1788. Materials - stone, wood, steel - represent interface of natural and built environment. Substances - shell, hair, ochre, ash, bone - represent human presence and passing. Names - of Eora men and women, First Fleeters, plants and Koori callings of place - represent shared and separate custom, memory and knowledge. A place to enter, explore, contest anew; perhaps reconciliation?"
Museum of Sydney Forecourt
bone from southeast Oregon
Caloplaca stillicidiorum, which has been considered a variety of C. cerina appears in the North American Checklist as a distinct species.
C.W. Smith et al. (2009) The Lichens of Great Britain and Ireland - “The var. chloroleuca (Sm.) Th. Fr. (1861) (C. stillicidiorum (Vahl.) Lynge (1921) 1991 has a scurfy, green-grey thallus, and apothecia with thick, grey, somewhat flexuose thalline margins, and a plane, often green, pruinose disk…”
Soili Stenroos et al. (editors) 2016 Lichens of Finland
“Caloplaca stillicidiorum has sometimes been include in [C. cerina, typically on bark] it. The latter grows particularly on caciphilous mosses and on plant debris in the fjells. Today, C. stillicidiorum is conadsidered as separate but at the same time a very variable species.
I gather there is still disagreement, e.g. Ways of Enlichenment has it as a synonym of C. cerina.
I have found it on bone and moss, as is described in Thomson, J.W. (1997) American Arctic Lichens, 2. The Microlichens - “This species grows on humus, moss, old organic materials, including bones, and on soil.”
my lichen photos by genus - www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/collections/7215762439...
my photos arranged by subject, e.g. mountains - www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/collections
This is a kind of chinese traditional toy made by bone...when I was a little girl, I spent a lot of wonderful time with my friends on that...it has a complex rule, but it practises everything, from body to mental...really nice...
Now, I can't see any little girl play it ...
yesterday, I went to supermarket, and it was superised me that I saw this..so, I just took them back. put them into boiled water, and managed to dry them..now, it really looks same as the toy I played when I was young... =)
One of a postcard set from the Cemetery of the Capuchins. Art work made of human bones! Located beneath the church of Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini on the Via Veneto.
A bloody bone carefully wrapped in plastic, lying on the sidewalk along Boerum Place, just a block or so from the jail... who or what was it?