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First

Just how bright are they? That head sure looks small.
Second, wouldn't they be even cooler and more able to resist predators if they weighed a ton or so? I'm looking at you, genetic engineers with no particular system of ethics.
(blame the dragon's tales, although it doesn't take much to make me muse about replacing lost megafauna like terror birds orvelociraptors in F16s pachyderms, with new and improved versions)

Just how bright are they? That head sure looks small.
Second, wouldn't they be even cooler and more able to resist predators if they weighed a ton or so? I'm looking at you, genetic engineers with no particular system of ethics.
(blame the dragon's tales, although it doesn't take much to make me muse about replacing lost megafauna like terror birds or
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Date: 2009-05-27 04:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-27 06:41 pm (UTC)I mean hell, it's what I would do if I could build species to order.
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Date: 2009-05-27 07:46 pm (UTC)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glyptodon
would be somewhere near the top of my list of things to recreate.
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Date: 2009-05-27 04:47 am (UTC)Second: they would need several metric buttloads of ants, each and every day to sustain that mass. Besides, their defences are that they (i) store formic acid in their body, making their meat bad tasting and slightly poisonous, and (ii) massive claws which can rip a hole in stone-hard clay.
I don't know that any lion would try to eat an anteater twice.
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Date: 2009-05-27 06:03 am (UTC)What if instead of ants, they ate naked mole rats, or prairie dogs, or meerkats, or rabbits?
Hmmm, rabbits... they might try such an experiment in Australia for that reason alone.
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Date: 2009-05-27 06:37 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2009-05-27 03:17 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2009-05-27 07:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-27 02:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-28 01:59 am (UTC)[thinks a bit]
[uses google]
Well, that was easy. "The Man with the Anteater", Analog, July 1971. F. Paul Wilson.
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Date: 2009-05-27 10:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-27 11:00 am (UTC)There's a lot more known about hyenas and capybaras. But all else being equal, I think the extraordinary claim would be anteaters as much dumber. (Or much smarter.)
Cite?
Date: 2009-05-27 12:31 pm (UTC)Also, what are they using the brainpower for? Hyenas and capybaras, in their different ways, lead lives filled with activity and challenge. Anteaters... hum. Few predators, and life seems to consist of a series of pleasant ambles from one food source to another.
On the other hand, one could say much the same of orangutans.
Doug M.
Re: Cite?
Date: 2009-05-27 01:12 pm (UTC)Sounds like the lifestyle of a certain non-avian biped I could name.
Re: Cite?
Date: 2009-05-27 01:19 pm (UTC)'dude'?
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Date: 2009-05-27 04:50 pm (UTC)Thinking along those lines, I had thought if my karma dictates that I come back as a quadrupedal mammal, being a hedgehog would be quite nice. But, now that you mention it, a giant anteater might be better. Nice climate and less trouble with cars.
Re: Cite?
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Date: 2009-05-27 12:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-27 04:38 pm (UTC)...I'm going to have to go look up brain stats now.
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Date: 2009-05-27 05:11 pm (UTC)Yep, that was more what I was expecting.
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From:no subject
Date: 2009-05-27 03:55 pm (UTC)-- Steve always liked the look of anteaters.
obSF: one of those, standing bipedally and with shortened muzzle and tail, was my mental construct of what Brian Daley's Srillans (from the Floyt/Fitzhugh series) looked like.
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Date: 2009-05-27 05:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-27 07:04 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2009-06-01 11:50 pm (UTC)Apparently they catch the flu.