Up next

12 Weirdest Things Found Inside Animals

4,735 Views· 10/25/20
Origins Explained
Origins Explained
2,063 Subscribers
2,063

From a real live bomb ready to explode to an entire suit of armor, here are 12 of the weirdest things found inside animals. Follow us on instagram! https://www.instagram.com/katrinaexplained/ Subscribe For New Videos! http://goo.gl/UIzLeB Check out these videos you might like: Unbelievable Animals SAVING Other Animals! 🐯https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HxehUWvMr38 LARGEST Animals Ever Discovered! 🐙https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Yj7F_tPYsU Wild Animals That SAVED Human Lives! 🐻https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mllqeVSsIl0 12. Live Bomb In a shocking and potentially life-threatening discovery, a Chinese seafood salesman found a live bomb inside the animal at his market stall in 2013. The squid, which measured over three feet (1 meter) long, had actually somehow managed to eat the eight-inch (20 cm) device. 11. Human Body Parts In late 2019, a shark-catching program intended to reduce attacks off La Reunion, an island in the Indian Ocean, yielded two human arms and a bracelet. The body parts, found inside the stomach of an 11-foot (3.4 meters) tiger shark, were believed to belong to a missing man, who disappeared weeks earlier. His family identified the bracelet as belonging to him. 10. Spheres in Snake At first glance, the insides of this snake look like dozens of balls. And there are several cases of snakes that have swallowed golf balls most likely mistaking them for chicken eggs. But this unfortunate specimen was instead carrying hundreds of eggs. 9. Full Suit of Armor One of the earliest scientists to try to study and understand sharks, French naturalist Guillaume Rondelet is credited with writing the first complete “book of fishes” in 1554. 8. Frog Vomits New Ant Species In September 2016 in Ecuador, scientists reported the discovery of a previously unknown ant species, Lenomyrmex hoelldobleri, inside the stomach of a little devil frog, or diablito (Oophaga sylvatica). The bright orange poison frog is known for its preference for ants, ant specialist Christian Rabeling of the University of Rochester told National Geographic, and the new ant species was named after German evolutionary biologist and ant expert Bert Hölldobler. 7. Bras in Rottweiler Back in 2010 in the U.K., a Rottweiler named Molly was taken to the vet at only half the normal weight for her age. Emergency surgery produced the culprit: 12 bras, weighing a cumulative 11 pounds (5 kg), were found inside the canine’s stomach. 6. Finger In Trout While cleaning a trout after fishing in Idaho’s Priest Lake in September 2012, a fisherman named Nolan Calvin found a human finger inside the fish’s body. However alarmed the man may have been, he regained his composure well enough to put the appendage on ice and call the local sheriff’s office. 5. Human-Eating Crocodile Earlier this year, the remains of a missing Indonesian man named Syafri turned up inside the stomach of a saltwater crocodile when local villagers hunted the animal down and cut it open. 4. Newspaper Inside Sunfish After collecting a massive, 10-foot (3 meters) sunfish in Sydney Harbour on December 12, 1882, zoologist Edward Ramsay gutted the creature and shipped it off to London, where it was stored. The plan was for the fish to be exhibited at the 1883 Great International Fisheries Exhibition, and then for it to be donated to the London Museum. 3. Coin-Eating Turtle There was a green sea turtle that lived in a pond in Thailand and people would throw coins at it wishing for good luck. Named “Omsin,” or “Piggy Bank,” she was estimated to be about 25 years old but someone noticed that she looked ill and was rescued by Thai navy personnel. 2. Electric Blanket In Python A 12-foot (3.7 meters) long Burmese python must have been feeling chilly because it ate a queen-size electric blanket, including the cord and control box. Named Houdini, the snake’s life was saved thanks to a surgeon in 2006, after its owner, Karl Beznoska, realized something was gravely wrong and rushed his pet in for emergency care. 1. Polar Bear In a jaw-dropping instance of one apex predator versus another, in 2008, researchers found the remains of a young polar bear inside the stomach of a Greenland shark. Discovered off the Norwegian Arctic archipelago of Svalbard, the four-inch (10 cm) bone had perplexed scientists scratching their heads. #weirdestthings #foundinsideanimals #strangediscoveries #originsexplained

Show more

 0 Comments sort   Sort By


Up next