Aww Birds And Animals

0 Followers

Aww Birds and Animals Description Hi this is Sid :) I'm a Diamond & Crystal Collector, Animation designer and YouTuber ! I Enjoy designed videos to new destinations and sharing my adventures on YouTube! LIFE IS BETTER WITH BIRD'S & ANIMAL'S 😊 Thanks for watching! 🐦🦜 Watch funniest budgies videos, Funny Animals Videos and try not to laugh. Funny birds, Cute birds, Funny Animals, Funniest Bird's and animals you name it. As time progresses, this channel will be adding more videos, attaining more and better filming equipment and 1-2 per week upload average so be sure to subscribe! You don't want to miss, many funniest videos that will be filmed will be available for you!

AnimalsWildlife88 has natures, natural scenery, birds, fishing, wildlife, pet animals video etc.

0 Followers

The Creator has created many kinds of animal to make our earth habitable. We have a lot to learn and see from this huge animal temple of the Creator. I have a small effort for that. AnimalsWildlife88 has natures, natural scenery, birds, fishing, wildlife, pet Animals Video etc. This Channel can help you to get knowledge about various type of animals in the earth. For more videos and Updates Please don't forget to Subscribe Our rumble Channel Regrads, AnimalsWildlife88.

Funny Animals and Birds

0 Followers

This channel containing collections of funny videos: funny cats, dogs, and many other funny animals. The channel was created to bring even more positive and joyful moments into your life! Funny cats (and other funny animals) will be released every day, subscribe, call your friends, and get a positive charge! Funny animals (funny cats, parrots, dogs, horses, rodents, s, squirrels and many other funny animals).Only the best funny animals on the channel! The funniest animals are only here on Funny Hillarious Nature.

Animal&birds16

0 Followers

bird, (class Aves), any of the more than 10,400 living species unique in having feathers, the major characteristic that distinguishes them from all other animals. A more-elaborate definition would note that they are warm-blooded vertebrates more related to reptiles than to mammals and that they have a four-chambered heart (as do mammals), forelimbs modified into wings (a trait shared with bats), a hard-shelled egg, and keen vision, the major sense they rely on for information about the environment. Their sense of smell is not highly developed, and auditory range is limited. Most birds are diurnal in habit. More than 1,000 extinct species have been identified from fossil remains. Since earliest times birds have been not only a material but also a cultural resource. Bird figures were created by prehistoric humans in the Lascaux Grotto of France and have featured prominently in the mythology and literature of societies throughout the world. Long before ornithology was practiced as a science, interest in birds and the knowledge of them found expression in conversation and stories, which then crystallized into the records of general culture. Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs and paintings, for example, include bird figures. The Bible refers to Noah’s use of the raven and dove to bring him information about the proverbial Flood. Various bird attributes, real or imagined, have led to their symbolic use in language as in art. Aesop’s fables abound in bird characters. The Physiologus and its descendants, the bestiaries of the Middle Ages, contain moralistic writings that use birds as symbols for conveying ideas but indicate little knowledge of the birds themselves. Supernatural beliefs about birds probably took hold as early as recognition of the fact that some birds were good to eat. Australian Aborigines, for example, drove the black-and-white flycatcher from camp, lest it overhear conversation and carry the tales to enemies. Peoples of the Pacific Islands saw frigate birds as symbols of the Sun and as carriers of omens and frequently portrayed them in their art. The raven—a common symbol of dark prophecy—was the most important creature to the Indians of the Pacific Northwest and was immortalized in Edgar Allan Poe’s poem “The Raven.” Eagles have long been symbols of power and prestige in many parts of the world, including Europe, where their representations are often seen in heraldry. Native Americans sprinkled eagle down before guests as a sign of peace and friendship, and eagle feathers were commonly used in rituals and headdresses. The resplendent quetzal—the national bird of Guatemala, which shares its name with the currency and is a popular motif in art, fabric, and jewelry—was worshipped and deified by the ancient Mayans and Aztecs. Highly symbolic birds include the phoenix, representing resurrection, and the owl, a common symbol of wisdom but also a reminder of death in Native American mythology. The bird in general has long been a common Christian symbol of the transcendent soul, and in medieval iconography a bird entangled in foliage symbolized the soul embroiled in the materialism of the secular world.