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发表于 2024-11-5 00:45
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About 20 to 40 million years ago, entelodonts鈥攊mmense, snaggletoothed, pig-like beasts鈥攖rotted throughout Eurasia and North America. But despite their 3-foot jaws studded with an alarming number of triangular teeth, these barnyard nightmares apparently had a typically porcine diet. New findings, published recently in the journal Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, shed a light on feeding habits of these strange, extinct mammals and some of their closest relatives, revealing clues about the changing world th stanley cups ey inhabited. Researchers now understand that mammals like whales and hippopotamuses have a close evolutionary stanley thermobecher kinship. But the fossil record shows stanley kaffeebecher that these groups once shared the planet with multiple now-extinct related families, some of which were beyond weird. There were anthracotheres, which were like Dachshund hippos with stretched out, narrow heads. There were also those vaguely piggish entelodonts: buffalo-sized rage swine with wide, winged cheekbones, barreling along on unnervingly athletic legs. They have a very strange morphology. Theyre like a combination of different animals, said Florent Rivals, an evolutionary paleoecologist at the Catalan Institute of Human Paleoecology and Social Evolution in Spain, citing features of entelodont skulls and teeth that resembled those of both pigs and carnivorous mammals. A skull of Archaeotherium mortoni, an entelodont from North America Photo: H. Zell Entelodonts and anthracotheres arent well-understoo Ytvr Mike Curtis
Katarzyna Bialasiewicz鈥擥etty ImagesIdeasBy Lori GottliebApril 1, 2019 11:13 AM EDTGottlieb is a psychotherapist, writes a weekly column for The Atlantic called Dear Therapist and is a New York Times bestselling author. Her latest book comes out April 2, 2019 and is titled Maybe You Should Talk to stanley cup Someone: A Therapist, HER Therapist, and Our Lives Revealed.Most people come to therapy to talk about relationships mdash; with their partners, parents, children, and, of course, themselves mdash; only to discover how significant their relationship wi stanley quencher th their therapist will become. In fact, studies show that the most important factor in the success of therapy is your connection with your therapist, the experience of feeling felt. This matters more than the therapistrsquo training, the kind of therapy being done, or the type of problem you have. It makes sense, then, that patients who donrsquo;t feel felt might cut things off.The reverse, however, is also true: Sometimes therapists break up with their patients.You may not consider this when you first step into a therapistrsquo office, but our goal is to stop seeing you. stanley cup In the bittersweet way that parents raise their kids not to need them anymore, therapists work to lose patients, not retain them, because the successful outcome is that you feel better and leave. Can you imagine a worse business model But occasionally we have to say goodbye sooner.Nearly every therapist has initiated a breakup at some point, |
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