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  1. Jaguar (9341 bytes)
    2: {{Taxobox_begin | color=pink | name=Jaguar}}<br />{{StatusConcern}}
    3: {{Taxobox_image | image = [[Image:0089jaguar.png|200px]] | caption = }}
    16: ...]. [http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761554717/Jaguar_(animal).html]
    19: ...l Geographic]] special titled “In Search of the Jaguar,” was named pound for pound the strongest anima...
    21: ...guar's bite is unmatched by other feline. Captive jaguars have been documented putting 1/4 [[inch]] (6 mm)...

Page text matches

  1. Marilyn Monroe (30186 bytes)
    4: ...ld eventually become the most celebrated actor in film history, Marilyn's beginnings were humble to sa...
    6: ...'s mother, Gladys Pearl Monroe Baker, worked as a film-cutter. However in later years, more and more h...
    12: ...hbor's son, James Dougherty, who would become her first husband. The Goddard family was moving to the ...
    15: [[Image:Pb1253.jpg|frame|right|Cover of the first issue of ''[[Playboy]]'']]
    18: While her first husband James Dougherty was at war, the young ...
  2. Mammal (11782 bytes)
    43: ...epending on the [[scientific classification|classification scheme]] adopted. The mammals include the l...
    59: *[[Jaguar]]
    146: ... that had no hair at all, it would still be classified as a mammal.
    154: ...pushing upward. The middle layer, the dermis, is fifteen to forty times thicker than the epidermis. ...
    162: ...cursors, [[therapsida|therapsid]]s, and more specifically the [[eucynodont]]s, 220 [[million years ago...
  3. Formula One (29650 bytes)
    11: The sport is regulated by the FIA, [[F餩ration Internationale de l'Automobile]], ...
    18: ...ampionship was not formalized until [[1947]], and first run in [[1950]]; a championship for constructo...
    22: ...Fangio is remembered for dominating Formula One's first decade.
    24: The first major technological development, [[Cinquemani]...
    26: ...]], [[British racing green]] came to dominate the field for the next decade. Between [[Jim Clark]], [[...
  4. Sloth (5489 bytes)
    22: ...ulnerable. The main predators of sloths are the [[jaguar]], the [[harpy eagle]], and humans. The majority ...
    28: ...es: the "two-toed" sloths, however, have only two fingers. Two-toed sloths are generally faster moving...
    30: ...only one, the Maned Three-toed Sloth, has a classification of "endangered" at present. The ongoing des...
  5. Maya civilization (25116 bytes)
    18: ...nque and the [[statuary]] of Copᮠare especially fine, showing a grace and accurate observation of th...
    37: ...that one instance, in the city of [[Comalcalco]], fired-clay [[brick]]s have been found as a substitut...
    41: ...ten were built of a cut and stucco stone exterior filled with densely packed gravel. As is the case w...
    43: ...the sum total of 1,500 years of architectural modifications.
    48: ...ion platform, these were often accented by carved figures, altars and perhaps ''[[tzompantli]]'', a st...
  6. Jaguar (9341 bytes)
    2: {{Taxobox_begin | color=pink | name=Jaguar}}<br />{{StatusConcern}}
    3: {{Taxobox_image | image = [[Image:0089jaguar.png|200px]] | caption = }}
    16: ...]. [http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761554717/Jaguar_(animal).html]
    19: ...l Geographic]] special titled “In Search of the Jaguar,” was named pound for pound the strongest anima...
    21: ...guar's bite is unmatched by other feline. Captive jaguars have been documented putting 1/4 [[inch]] (6 mm)...
  7. Ocelot (4489 bytes)
    19: ...of the same gender. When mating, the female will find a den in a cave in a rocky bluff, a hollow tree...
    21: ... than it is. Studies suggest that they follow and find prey via odor trails, but ocelots also have ver...
    23: The ocelot's [[fur]] resembles that of a [[jaguar]]; it was once regarded as particularly valuable,...
  8. Tiger (11674 bytes)
    15: ...uited). Of all the big cats, only the tiger and [[jaguar]] are strong swimmers, and tigers may often be fo...
    25: ...preferred method of identification, due to the difficulty of recording the stripe pattern of a wild ti...
    31: ...oats for the fishermen on board or their catch of fish.
    42: ...ls, occurring predominantly in the island&rsquo;s five [[national parks]]. Recent genetic testing has ...
    46: ...', ''Manchurian'' or ''North China'' tiger, is confined almost totally to a very restricted part of ea...
  9. Olmec (8916 bytes)
    1: ...further though, Olmec artwork being found as far afield as [[El Salvador]]. The Olmec predominated in ...
    6: The Olmec were the first Mesoamericans to develop a [[hieroglyph]]ic [[...
    8: ...hrough human sacrifice) found in successor cults. Finally, their political arrangements of strongly hi...
    14: ...ymbolic and sophisticated luxury artefacts that define Olmec culture.
    19: ...n representations of a divine [[jaguar]]. [[Olmec figurine]]s were also found abundantly through their...
  10. Aztec mythology (10599 bytes)
    6: *[[Amimitl]] - god of lakes and fishermen
    13: *[[Camaxtli]] - god of hunting, war, fate and fire
    19: ...] - a god of the underworld, [[Mictlan]] and sacrifices
    21: *[[Chantico]] - the goddess of hearth fires, personal treasure, and volcanoes
    37: ...utechuhtli'') - an ancient god of the hearth, the fire of life. Associated with the pole star and the ...
  11. List of mammals (1971 bytes)
    17: *[[Jaguar]]
  12. Mesoamerica (2665 bytes)
    1: ...[[Costa Rica]] that gave rise to a group of stratified, culturally related agrarian civilizations span...
    5: ...traits. Mesoamerica's economy and geopolitics benefited from extensive use of a [[lingua franca]], the...
    18: ...iconography: [[The jaguar in Mesoamerican culture|jaguar]]
  13. Puma (9263 bytes)
    15: ...lanism|melanistic]] variants of [[leopard]]s or [[jaguar]]s rather than pumas.
    46: ...ze30.jpg|thumbnail|300px|right|Melanistic form of Jaguar (Panthera onca), a larger relative of the puma.]]
    49: ...[[1890]] to January [[2004]], with 16 fatalities; figures for California were 14 attacks and 6 fatalit...
    54: ...s were provided by the [[California Department of Fish and Game]] and compiled for the ''[[Orange Coun...
    61: *Fight back if attacked. Mountain lions have been rep...
  14. Snow Leopard (2608 bytes)
    19: ...ortunistic feeders, eating whatever meat they may find; they often kill animals three times their size...
  15. Leopard (7605 bytes)
    16: ...'. (The others are the [[lion]], [[tiger]], and [[jaguar]].) They range in size from 1 to almost 2 meters ...
    24: ...on the ground, and they feed on insects, rodents, fish, and larger game such as antelope. Leopards eve...
    26: ...his largely nocturnal and arboreal predator is difficult to see in the wild. Perhaps the best site is ...
    36: ...sely related to, and appears very similar to, the jaguar; it is less often confused with the [[cheetah]]. ...
    38: .... The leopard is smaller and less stocky than the jaguar, although it is more heavyset than the [[cheetah]...
  16. Big cat (1404 bytes)
    1: ...t]], all of the big cats are [[carnivore]]s and efficient [[predator]]s.
    11: *[[Jaguar]] (the Americas from near the [[United States|U.S...
  17. Cougars (8083 bytes)
    15: ...lanism|melanistic]] variants of [[leopard]]s or [[jaguar]]s rather than pumas.
    46: ...ze30.jpg|thumbnail|300px|right|Melanistic form of Jaguar (Panthera onca), a larger relative of the puma.]]
    49: ...[[1890]] to January [[2004]], with 16 fatalities; figures for California were 14 attacks and 6 fatalit...
    54: ...s were provided by the [[California Department of Fish and Game]] and compiled for the ''[[Orange Coun...
    61: *Fight back if attacked. Mountain lions have been rep...
  18. Florida Panther (10551 bytes)
    15: ...guar and can refer to either the spotted or black jaguar.
    17: ...d that the puma is quite closely related to the [[jaguarundi]] and, surprisingly, to the [[cheetah]] (whic...
    28: ...ot have also been bred. Hybrids between pumas and jaguars have been reported, but none have been proven.
    57: ...ze30.jpg|thumbnail|300px|right|Melanistic form of Jaguar (Panthera onca), a larger relative of the puma.]]
    60: ...[[1890]] to January [[2004]], with 16 fatalities; figures for California were 14 attacks and 6 fatalit...
  19. Jaguars (9017 bytes)
    1: {{Taxobox_begin | color=pink | name=Jaguar}}<br />{{StatusConcern}}
    2: {{Taxobox_image | image = [[Image:0089jaguar.png|200px]] | caption = }}
    15: ...]. [http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761554717/Jaguar_(animal).html]
    18: ...l Geographic]] special titled “In Search of the Jaguar,” was named pound for pound the strongest anima...
    20: ...guar's bite is unmatched by other feline. Captive jaguars have been documented putting 1/4 [[inch]] (6 mm)...
  20. Leopards (8935 bytes)
    15: ...'. (The others are the [[lion]], [[tiger]], and [[jaguar]].) They range in size from 1 to almost 2 metres ...
    23: ...on the ground, and they feed on insects, rodents, fish, and larger game such as antelope. Leopards eve...
    25: ...his largely nocturnal and arboreal predator is difficult to see in the wild. Perhaps the best site is ...
    37: ...sely related to, and appears very similar to, the jaguar; it is less often confused with the [[cheetah]]. ...
    40: .... The leopard is smaller and less stocky than the jaguar, although it is more heavyset than the [[cheetah]...

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