homeMy Original Celtic Art & Humorous Tshirts & Giftsaffordable celtic art, fine art, and photographic printsMy Art and Photo Gallery - Free Ecardsabout/contact info
FoxVox Things:
About FV
Weblog Archives
Art of FV Tshirt & Gift Shop
Celtic, Photo & Fine Art Prints
Art of FV Ecards
FoxVox at DeviantArt
FoxVox at Livejournal

Our Other Projects
Food Follies Weblog
T-shirt Casserole Reviews
Out of Context Quotes
Art Squared Art Weblog
Art Up Your Walls
Green Dragon RPG (Text)
Conscious Creation
It Should Be Easy Being Green
Parabolic Mirror (Satire)

Our Shopping Sites
Celtic Christmas Shop
Funny Punny T-shirts
Geeky Guy Gifts
John's Find A Tee Blog
Find A Tote Bag Blog
Winter Holiday Central
Food Follies Gift Shop
More Food Follies Gifts
Wine Taster Tees
Women's T-shirts Plus
Paranormal T-shirts
Tshirt University
Conscious Creation Shop
Out of Context Quotes
Powered By T-shirts
Question T-shirts
Telepathic Frog Designs
Retroglyphs

quotes


Recent Posts From Our
Food Follies Blog






Other Stuff:
Great Gear News
Rotem Gear Informer
Cashmere Kitty
Outside Shooter
Barbara Burns
Buy Tees Blog
Your Art Online - Squidoo
DeYoung Photo Pages
Cafepress
Etsy.com
Holiday Gift Squidoo Lens

Technical Stuff:
Powered by Blogger
Hosted by DreamHost

Syndicate this Site - atom.xml
Subscribe with Bloglines

Visual Art Blogs - Blog Catalog Blog Directory
ArtWanted.com

Friday, October 20, 2000


I'm beginning to think these kinds of stories are either about dimensional shifts or time shifts - or overlapping realities of some sort: "The last of the pterodactyls (flying reptiles with leathery wings and long, toothy beaks) died about 100 million years ago, according to established scientific opinion. But in the experience of a number of startled French workmen, the last one died in the winter of 1856 in a partially complete railway tunnel between the St. Dizier and Nancy lines. In the half-light of the tunnel, something monstrous stumbled toward them out of a great boulder of Jurassic limestone they had just split open. It fluttered its wings, croaked, and died at their feet. The creature, whose wingspan was 10 feet 7 inches, had four legs joined by a membrane, like a bat. What should have been feet were long talons, and the mouth was arrayed with sharp teeth. The skin was like black leather, thick and oily. At the nearby town of Gray, the creature was immediately identified by a local student of paleontology as a pterodactyl. The rock stratum in which it had been found was consistent with the period when pterodactyls lived, and the limestone boulder that had supposedly imprisoned the winged reptile for millions of years was found to contain a cavity in the form of an exact mold of the creature's body." (from Blue Moon News)
posted:8:00 AM | link |