The doctor visited John at his home. She TOOK A PULSE and LISTENED to his breath. Then she
examined the boy's TEMPERATURE .
iT WAS rather high. She said it wasn't FLU but just a bad cold. John was SNEEZING and coughing
all the time. She PRESCRIBED medicine for his headache and his THROAT . She asked John to STAY IN BED for 3 days, to drink warm milk with butter or honey. HE WOULD RECOVER SOON
Then he wouldIt was bright red. Doctor checked John's .Soon
Объяснение:
Очевидно, что текст скопирован некорректно.
So why did a change in climate 36,000 years ago drive the Siberian unicorn extinct, but not the woolly rhinoceros or the saiga?
To answer this question, our study took fossil bones from the Siberian unicorn, woolly rhino, and saiga, and looked at the nitrogen and carbon they contained — as differences in these elements reflect an animal's diet.
We found that before 36,000 years ago the saiga and the Siberian unicorn behaved very similarly, eating grass almost exclusively. After this point, the carbon and nitrogen in saiga bones showed a major dietary shift towards other plant types.
But shifting from a grass diet proved too difficult for the Siberian unicorn, with its special folded wear-resistant teeth and a low-slung head right at grass height.
Relatives such as the woolly rhino had always eaten a more balanced array of plants, and were much less impacted by a change in habitat.
Importantly, the change in climate that drove the Siberian unicorn extinct was actually much less pronounced than those which occurred during the Ice Age that followed. Or the changes that we will face in the near future.
The story of the Siberian unicorn is a timely reminder that even subtle changes in plant distributions can have devastating knock-on effects for large animal species.
Legends of the unicorn, or a beast with a single horn, have been around for millennia.
Some have argued that the horn of the rhino may have been the basis of myths about unicorns, although other animals - such as the tusked narwhal - are more likely contenders.
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