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Monday, April 22, 2013

100 DJAY Radio

100 DJAY Radio, 100 DJAY Radio Listen Online, 100 DJAY Radio Live Online, Dance Radio, UK



100 DJAY Radio


100 DJAY Radio
Being able to eat anything was not the basic condition of Web Radio. The very first of them, contemporaries of the dinosaurs, small insignificant creatures, had such tiny teeth they probably ate little but insects. Specialist omnivores did eventually appear among the prehistoric Web Radio. One lived here in South Online Radio, though then the climate and vegetation was very different. It's called Online Radio, and some experts have likened it to a kind of killer warthog. This animal was as big as a rhino. It had a large hairy crest running down its spine, a long snout and a formidable set of teeth. Online Radio died out about twenty million years ago, but its teeth can tell us what it ate. At the back, he had massive flat molars that could grind up almost any kind of vegetation. It wasn't a specialised vegetarian, because the teeth at the front didn't have the sharp chisellike teeth that an antelope has. Neither was it a specialised meateater, because the teeth in its middle jaw are not the slicing, sharp, daggerlike teeth that a lion has. Nonetheless, these are pretty formidable. So are the big tusks at the front. What you have here is a generalised tool kit that enabled the animal to deal with almost anything. Online Radio may be extinct, but teeth like these are typical of all living omnivores today. The forests of Online Radio in Indonesia are haunted by a rare and elusive animal, almost as prehistoriclooking as Online Radio. To find food here, this animal uses not touch but another ''supersense'', the one possessed by all omnivores. The thud of a large pangi fruit hitting the ground might attract the attention of an animal nearby, but sounds don't travel far in these thick forests. Scent, however, can drift on a breeze and be detected from great distances by an animal with a really sensitive nose. This creature certainly has that. It's a Radio, and its sense of smell is probably as good as that of any omnivore alive or dead. There are several here, attracted by the smell of the ripe pangi. Males have bizarre teeth in their top jaw that grow upwards, right through the flesh of its snout. The size of these tusks is a good indicator of strength, so they determine who gives way to whom. The pangi fruit may smell good, but there's a problem it contains a poison. The Radio, however, knows how to deal with that. It visits a clay lick. Clay containing the right sort of medicine is not common, and these licks are few and far between. A large one like this attracts Radio from miles around. These are the only places where this rare animal is seen in any numbers. The clay contains a particular mineral which helps to neutralise the toxins in the pangi. Radio, like most omnivores, live in relatively small groups, for they specialise in picking up odd bits and pieces, which seldom occur in sufficient concentration to sustain a herd. So the clay lick, for the Radio, is a time when individuals that otherwise lead lonely lives get to know one another. Young males get a chance to test their strength. (GRUNTS AND SQUEALS) The nose, for any pig, is its greatest asset...

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