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Inquetober 2023 - 22
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CyberCornEntropic
CyberCornEntropic's Gallery (756)

Inquetober 2023 - 23 - Rodentday

Inquetober 2023 - 24

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Inquetober 2023 - 22
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Inquetober 2023 - 16 - Rodentday
Inquetober 2023 - 30
My first try at a zaftig garden party girl.  Hopefully, she'll be decorated with flowers sometime in the future.

Mini-theme: Brain-Squeezin's & Rodentday

Art © 10/2023  Marvin E. Fuller

Fun fact: Although the modern two species are native to South America, in prehistoric times, capybara species roamed parts of North America.

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female 1,098,902, rodent 35,101, dress 18,900, inktober 8,244, inktober2023 540, capybara 467, inktubre 433, inquetober 207, inquetober2023 46
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Type: Picture/Pinup
Published: 1 year, 7 months ago
Rating: General

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MviluUatusun
1 year, 7 months ago
That's true.  Also, the jaguar was as far east as Florida and south Georgia and as far north as Oklahoma, if I recall correctly.
CyberCornEntropic
1 year, 7 months ago
The (now extinct) North American subspecies, Panthera onca augusta, ranged at least as far north as Oregon and did indeed make it to Florida and Maryland, but then, unlike caviomorphs like the capybaras, jaguar ancestors came down from the north, having crossed Beringia when it was a land bridge instead of a strait.  As for the capybaras, only one, Neochoerus pinckneyi, managed to make it north all the way to the States, the other North American species pretty much staying confined to Mexico or Central America.
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