From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10547 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Friday, January 20 2023 Volume 14 : Number 10547 Today's Subjects: ----------------- 50+ Eat THIS to poop daily ["Clogged colon" Subject: 50+ Eat THIS to poop daily 50+ Eat THIS to poop daily http://vertigindizziness.shop/dUdbyVGRS6dCqYKph2Tcu3XR_nCqV1Z05lXmKPwWpMyHsVwDDA http://vertigindizziness.shop/aCMqfdsd90bnDizklmSdUYL3Li-AthDzTwUfpapw3Ym869XGdg w) fuse, is elongate in Peloneustes, and helped strengthen the jaw. An elevated ridge is located between the tooth rows on the mandibular symphysis. The teeth of Peloneustes are conical and have circular cross-sections, bearing vertical ridges on all sides. The front teeth are larger than the back teeth. With only 19 to 21 cervical (neck) vertebrae, Peloneustes had a short neck for a plesiosaur. The limbs of Peloneustes were modified into flippers, with the back pair larger than the front. Peloneustes has been interpreted as both a close relative of Pliosaurus or as a more basal (early-diverging) pliosaurid within Thalassophonea, with the latter interpretation finding more support. Like other plesiosaurs, Peloneustes was well-adapted to aquatic life, using its flippers for a method of swimming known as subaqueous flight. Pliosaurid skulls were reinforced to better withstand the stresses of feeding. The long, narrow snout of Peloneustes could have been swung quickly through the water to catch fish, which it pierced with its numerous sharp teeth. Peloneustes would have inhabited an epiconti ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 18 Jan 2023 10:02:57 +0100 From: "Consumer Rewards" Subject: Your Name Came Up For a Makita Power Drill customer Gift Your Name Came Up For a Makita Power Drill customer Gift http://syrvivaltool.rest/adwLvtzJYlvMRoQz0Lv_o_hzJGoVgj5BhOYu5yXdKyrD4xIsRQ http://syrvivaltool.rest/E0Moo4X1Q4LEJWe2SykeAqiEJMhNs245aDhSlRiKQs_zGhto9g The strata of the Peterborough Member of the Oxford Clay Formation have long been mined for brickmaking. Ever since the late 19th century, when these operations began, the fossils of many marine animals have been excavated from the rocks. Among these was the specimen which would become the holotype of Peloneustes philarchus, discovered by geologist Henry Porter in a clay pit close to Peterborough, England. The specimen includes a mandible, the front part of the upper jaw, various vertebrae from throughout the body, elements from the shoulder girdle and pelvis, humeri (upper arm bones), femora (upper leg bones), and various other limb bones. In 1866, geologist Adam Sedgwick purchased the specimen for the University of Cambridge's Woodwardian Museum (now the Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences, Cambridge), with the specimen being catalogued as CAMSM J.46913 and stored in the university's lecture room within cabinet D. Palaeontologist Harry Govier Seeley described the specimen as a new species of the preexisting genus Plesiosaurus, Plesiosaurus philarchus, in 1869. The specific name means "power-loving", possibly due to its large, powerful skull. Seeley did not describe this specimen in detail, mainly just giving a list of the known material. While later p ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10547 ***********************************************