Size DOES Matter...
Despite what people think I am not all about giant boat sinking giant squides...
I am also about big other animals...
So i would like to take this thread to post freakishly big other things, could be animals, can be trucks, trains, tanks, or dicks, clits, tits and everythign in betweeen. Post at least one thign huge that impressed you with its size, length, or weight!
Sadly No picture of avaliable, but use your imagination. If a normal sized one can bite a funger or toe off this beast would be able to bite your whole arm or leg off!
Then we have the Alligator gar
http://www.okiefish.com/Image02.jpg
http://www.okiefish.com/Image03.jpg
http://louisville.edu/~gtcraw01/gar.htm
http://toothycritters.com/billcraig.jpg
http://www.ratemyfish.com/?action=ssp&pid=1066&cat=1
http://www.indianpointcamp.com/hunting-ontario-black-bear.htm
Wouldn't want to run into that 175-pounder without a firearm on me.
Despite what people think I am not all about giant boat sinking giant squides...
I am also about big other animals...
So i would like to take this thread to post freakishly big other things, could be animals, can be trucks, trains, tanks, or dicks, clits, tits and everythign in betweeen. Post at least one thign huge that impressed you with its size, length, or weight!
Sadly No picture of avaliable, but use your imagination. If a normal sized one can bite a funger or toe off this beast would be able to bite your whole arm or leg off!
Legend has it that a 403-pound Macroclemys was found in the Neosho River, Cherokee County, Kansas in 1937. However, the size of this specimen cannot be verified. The largest individual on record is a 236-pounder in the Brookfield Zoo, Chicago. A snapper skeleton which Peter Pritchard viewed in White Springs, Florida, had a carapace length of 31 inches and weighed over 200 pounds in life. These record-breaking individuals aside, Ernst and Barbour report that generally they can grow to a carapace length of 26 inches (66 cm) and weigh up to 176 pounds (80 kg).
Then we have the Alligator gar
http://www.okiefish.com/Image02.jpg
http://www.okiefish.com/Image03.jpg
http://louisville.edu/~gtcraw01/gar.htm
http://toothycritters.com/billcraig.jpg
http://www.ratemyfish.com/?action=ssp&pid=1066&cat=1
http://www.indianpointcamp.com/hunting-ontario-black-bear.htm
The average wolf is no bigger than an Alaskan Malamute. Wolves range in size from about 45 pounds for an adult arabian wolf to well over 100 pounds for a large timber wolf. In Alaska, where perhaps the biggest wolves are found, a wolf that weighs more than 120 pounds is uncommon. The largest wolf on record is a 175 pound animal killed on 70 Mile River in extreme east central Alaska by a government hunter on July 12, 1939. Wolves are sometimes mistaken to be larger than they are due to their large amounts of fur (wolves and some breeds of dogs have TWO coats of fur).
Wouldn't want to run into that 175-pounder without a firearm on me.