
Photograph by Artist: Jorge Gonzalez / copyright: Guillermo Rougier

Paleontologist Guillermo Rougier, Ph.D., professor of anatomical sciences and neurobiology at the University of Louisville, and his team have reported their discovery of two skulls from the first known mammal of the early Late Cretaceous period of South America. The new critter, named Cronopio dentiacutus by the paleontologists, is a dryolestoid, an extinct group distantly related to today's marsupials and placentals. Credit: University of Louisville

Life imitates art?..........
Ping!........
Love that squirrel. Ha, ha,
Saber tooth or not... it’s a squirrel. My dogs would go after them, too!
They hit that nail on the head, didn’t they?
Love that movie. The first one. The second one sucked.

SQUIRREL!
put “Sabre Toothed Squirrels” on the list of potential new team nicknames for the University of North Dakota
I am just happy that the gazillion squirrel running around outside aren’t saber-tooth squirrels.
I am just happy that the gazillion squirrel running around outside aren’t saber-tooth squirrels.
Better a saber toothed squirrel than a priapic porcupine.
Careful guys. Those aren’t walnuts he’s gathering.
These look like the squirrels that destroyed my bird feeder.