snake
Woman bitten by snake in bed
Daily Telegraph - 2 hours, 20 minutes ago A woman was admitted to hospital after being bitten by a snake while she slept in her bed.
snapper
It's a lonely gig
The Cincinnati Enquirer - 2 hours, 41 minutes ago For the past four years, Patrick Farfsing has been the long snapper for the UC football team, but until this week he had never talked to a reporter. Only the most die-hard Bearcat fans know who he is.
oyster
Sparks Sink Oyster Bay Pirates 3-0
Garden City News - Nov 16 9:00 PM The Garden City Sparks (GU11) dominated the Oyster Bay Pirates from the opening minute of the match last Saturday. The victory avenged a loss last year that was the only blemish on the Sparks Fall 2005 season. Two minutes into the match Erin Connolly hammered in a goal from close range after quick
panther
Major project could devastate panther population
NBC 2 Fort Myers - Nov 16 3:38 PM There are new concerns over the largest development ever proposed in Collier County - Big Cypress. Environmentalists say the 22,000 acre project could be devastating to the panther population and showed their research to NBC2.
penguins
Penguins set to beat Bond at U.S. box office
Reuters via Yahoo! News - 42 minutes ago Animated penguins will fight a new James Bond at the weekend box office, with "Happy Feet" likely to take the crown, potentially reaching the $50 million mark.
pigment
Akron exits lead paint suit, won't state why
The Plain Dealer - Nov 16 2:20 AM Akron has dropped its lawsuit against Sherwin-Williams Co. and other former manufacturers of lead pigment, but it's not saying exactly why. Meanwhile, a downstate lawmaker hopes to amend a law that would derail other attempts to go after the Cleveland paint company over lead hazards.
poison ivy
Body Can Be Coaxed Into Poison Ivy Immunity, Scientists Say
Fox News - Nov 14 3:52 PM Plagued by poison ivy allergy? Researchers say it might be possible to coax the body to build up immunity to poison ivy.
poison sumac
Old Leaves Need To Die In Time Or They Will Bring A Plant Down
Science Daily - Nov 02 3:07 AM In a study from the November issue of the American Naturalist, researchers Alex Boonman and co-workers from the Netherlands show that it is beneficial for plants growing in a dense stand to shed their oldest, lower leaves once these become shaded. By using transgenic tobacco plants that do not shed their lower leaves, they were able to show that shaded old leaves become a burden to a plant
poisonous spiders
Big spider claims he's not so mean Post a comment
Akron Beacon Journal - Nov 14 12:33 AM Those people in Barberton thought they were scared? Imagine what my life was like! Here I am, minding my own business, walking around in a vineyard somewhere in the southern United States, just checking out the grapes, and this big machine comes along and grabs me.
poison
Justice Recalls Treats Laced With Poison
New York Times - Nov 16 7:59 PM Sandra Day O?Connor, the retired Supreme Court justice, said that each justice had received in the mail a package of home-baked cookies that contained poison.
praying mantis
Praying Mantis Kit Now Available at Sillyasstoys.com
[Press Release] PR Web - Nov 16 12:14 PM New product is an addition to unusual science and nature toys offered this Christmas. (PRWeb Nov 16, 2006)
shark
Man punches attacking shark
News 24 South Africa - 1 hour, 32 minutes ago A surf skier who was helping a young angler reel in a Zambezi shark had to punch it three times on the nose when it attacked him.
snakes
Snakes in a bad movie
Rapid City Journal - Nov 16 11:00 PM Terry Phillip, who takes care of the venomous snakes at Reptile Gardens, doesn’t like how Hollywood portrays snakes. “Movies make them out to be horrible, horrible animals, and it escalates the fear the general public has of snakes,” he said.
spider
"Spider-Man" Star Tobey Maguire is a Brand New Daddy
WTOL 11 Toledo - Nov 16 6:50 AM LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Magazines are reporting that "Spider-Man" star Tobey Maguire and his fiancee, Jennifer Meyer, are parents of a baby girl. Meyer, a 29-year-old jewelry designer, gave birth Thursday in Los Angeles, Us Weekly and People magazines reported on their Web sites.
squirrel
Q&A on the News
Arizona Daily Star - Nov 16 11:18 PM Question: A postal carrier who was attacked and bitten by a squirrel was given rabies shots as a precaution. When our son was bitten by a squirrel, we were told that it would be impossible for our son to get rabies. So, can squirrels pass on rabies?
temperature conversion
Climate chaos? Don't believe it
Daily Telegraph - Nov 04 4:26 PM Last week, Gordon Brown and his chief economist both said global warming was the worst "market failure" ever. That loaded soundbite suggests that the "climate-change" scare is less about saving the planet than, in Jacques Chirac's chilling phrase, "creating world government".
temperature
Researcher Says Water Temperature Triggers Salmon Runs
Oregon Public Broadcasting - Nov 16 2:33 PM An Idaho researcher says he's come to believe that water temperature is the key trigger for salmon to return to their spawning grounds.
turtles
Towels for turtles?
Boca Raton News - Nov 16 9:06 PM Dogs are man’s best friend? Not according to Kyle Williams. He’s found friendship with a very green, and very water-loving, turtles. Williams, a fourth-grade student at St. Joan of Arc School in Boca Raton, has been on a mission- to collect as many towels as possible for turtles.
twins
Twins' Santana wins AL Cy Young Award
AP via Yahoo! News - Nov 17 12:42 AM Johan Santana's second Cy Young Award is in the bag. Next week, he might have a chance to take home the AL MVP, too. Santana won the league's top pitching honor Thursday for the second time in three years, and the Minnesota Twins' ace was a unanimous choice once again.
yellow jacket
A&M-Commerce invites students to Art Day
Dallas Morning News - Nov 17 1:03 AM High school juniors and seniors and community college students majoring in art and photography are invited to Texas A&M University-Commerce Art Day on Saturday. Events will include hands-on workshops, information sessions and a portfolio contest for a scholarship.
bare mineral
Those lips! Those eyes!
Louisville Courier-Journal - 1 hour, 35 minutes ago You love your lip balm but still want some color on your lips. Leslie Blodgett, CEO of Bare Escentuals, producer of mineral-based cosmetics, offers this tip ...
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snake
It has been suggested that Snake food be merged into this article or section. (Discuss)
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For other uses, see Snake (disambiguation).
?Snakes
Fossil range: Cretaceous - Recent
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A coral snake
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| Scientific classification |
| Kingdom: |
Animalia
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| Phylum: |
Chordata
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| Class: |
Sauropsida
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| Order: |
Squamata
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| Suborder: |
Serpentes
Linnaeus, 1758 |
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Superfamilies and Families
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- Aniliidae
- Anomochilidae
- Boidae
- Bolyeriidae
- Cylindrophiidae
- Loxocemidae
- Pythonidae
- Tropidophiidae
- Uropeltidae
- Xenopeltidae
- Anomalepididae
- Leptotyphlopidae
- Typhlopidae
- Acrochordidae
- Atractaspididae
- Colubridae
- Elapidae
- Hydrophiidae
- Viperidae
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Snakes (from Old English snaca, and ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European base *snag- or *sneg-, "to crawl"), also known as ophidians, are cold-blooded legless reptiles closely related to lizards, which share the order Squamata. There are also several species of legless lizard which superficially resemble snakes, but are not otherwise related to them. A love of snakes is called ophiophilia, a fear of snakes is called ophidiophobia. A specialist in snakes is an ophiologist.
An old synonym for snake is serpent (which comes from Old French, and ultimately from *serp-, "to creep"); in modern usage this usually refers to a mythic or symbolic snake, and information about such creatures can be found under serpent (symbolism). This article deals with the biology of snakes.
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Contents
- 1 Evolution
- 2 Feeding
- 3 Skin
- 4 Perception
- 5 Internal organs
- 6 Locomotion
- 7 Reproduction
- 8 Snake bites
- 9 Venomous snakes
- 10 Evolution of Snakes
- 11 Snake charmers
- 12 Snake trapping
- 13 Human consumption of snakes
- 14 Symbolism
- 15 Films
- 16 See also
- 17 Notes
- 18 References
- 19 External links
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Evolution
The phylogeny of snakes is poorly known due to the fact that snake skeletons are typically small and fragile, making fossilization unlikely. It has however been generally agreed, on the basis of morphology, that snakes descended from lizard-like ancestors. Recent research based on genetics and biochemistry confirms this; snakes form a venom clade with several extant lizard families.
Recent fossil evidence suggests that snakes directly evolved from burrowing lizards, either varanids or some other group. An early fossil snake, Najash rionegrina, was a two-legged burrowing animal with a sacrum, fully terrestrial. One extant analog of these putative ancestors is the earless monitor Lanthanotus of Borneo, although it also is semi-aquatic. As these ancestors became more subterranean, they lost their limbs and became more streamlined for burrowing. Features such as the transparent, fused eyelids and loss of external ears, according to this hypothesis, evolved to combat subterranean conditions (scratched corneas, dirt in the ears). According to this hypothesis, snakes re-emerged onto the surface of the land much as they are today. Other primitive snakes are known to have possessed hindlimbs but lacked a direct connection of the pelvic bones to the vertebrae, including Haasiophis, Pachyrhachis and Eupodophis) which are slightly older than Najash.
Modern boas do have vestigal hind limbs, tiny, clawed digits known as anal spurs and used to grasp during mating.
The alternative hypothesis, based on morphology, suggests that ancestors were related to mosasaurs — extinct aquatic reptiles from the Cretaceous — which in turn are thought to have derived from varanid lizards. Under this hypothesis, the fused, transparent eyelids of snakes are thought to have evolved to combat marine conditions (corneal water loss through osmosis), while the external ears were lost through disuse in an aquatic environment, ultimately leading to an animal similar in appearance to sea snakes of today. In the Late Cretaceous, snakes re-colonized the land much like they are today. Fossil snake remains are known from early Late Cretateous marine sediments, which is consistent with this hypothesis, particularly as they are older than the terrestrial Najash rionegrina. Similar skull structure; reduced/absent limbs; and other anatomical features found in both mosasaurs and snakes lead to a positive cladistical correlation, though some features are also shared with varanids. Supposedly similar locomotion for both groups is also used as support for this hypothesis. Genetic studies have indicated that snakes are not especially related to monitor lizards, and (it has been claimed) therefore not to mosasaurs, the proposed ancestor in the aquatic scenario of their evolution. However, there is more evidence linking mosasaurs to snakes than to varanids. Fragmentary remains that have been found from the Jurassic and Early Cretaceous indicate deeper fossil records for these groups, which may eventually refute either hypothesis.
The great diversity of modern snakes appeared in the Paleocene, probably correlated with the adaptive radiation of mammals following the extinction of the dinosaurs.
In a recently published book, Global Warming: The Causes and Effects, information suggests that a rise in only a few degrees of the earth's temperature are causing snakes, a non-migratory animal, to create migratory patterns to more desirable climates.
Feeding
All snakes are carnivorous, eating small animals including lizards and other snakes, rodents and other small mammals, birds, eggs or insects. Some snakes have a venomous bite which they use to kill their prey before eating it. Other snakes kill their prey by constriction. Still others swallow their prey whole and alive. Most snakes are very easy to feed in captivity, apart from a minority of species. Read more about snake food.
Snakes do not chew their food and have a very flexible lower jaw, the two halves of which are not rigidly attached, and numerous other joints in their skull (see snake skull), allowing them to open their mouths wide enough to swallow their prey whole, even if it is larger in diameter than the snake itself. It is a common misconception that snakes actually dislocate their lower jaw to consume large prey.
After eating, snakes become torpid while the process of digestion takes place. Digestion is an intensive activity, especially after the consumption of very large prey. In species which feed only sporadically, the entire intestine enters a reduced state between meals to conserve energy, and the digestive system is 'up-regulated' to full capacity within 48 hours of prey consumption. So much metabolic energy is involved in digestion that in Crotalus durissus, the Mexican rattlesnake, an increase of body temperature to as much as 14 degrees Celsius above the surrounding environment has been observed.[1] Because of this, a snake disturbed after having eaten recently will often regurgitate its prey in order to be able to escape the perceived threat. However, when undisturbed, the digestive process is highly efficient, dissolving and absorbing everything but hair and claws, which are excreted along with uric acid waste. Snakes have been known to occasionally die from trying to swallow an animal that is too big. Snake digestive acids are unable to digest most plant matter, which passes through the digestive system mostly untouched.
Snakes do not normally prey on people, but there are instances of small children being eaten by large constrictors in the junglecitation needed]. While some particularly aggressive species exist, most will not attack humans unless startled or injured, preferring instead to avoid contact. The majority of snakes are either non-venomous or possess venom that is not harmful to humans.
Skin
The skin is covered in scales. Most snakes use specialized belly scales to move, gripping surfaces. The body scales may be smooth, keeled, or granular. Their eyelids are transparent "spectacle" scales which remain permanently closed, called brille. They shed their skin periodically. Unlike other reptiles, this is done in one piece, like pulling off a sock, with the snake rubbing its nose against something rough, like a rock, for instance, creating a rip in the skin around the nose and the mouth until the skin is completely removed.[1] The primary purpose of shedding this is to grow; shedding also removes external parasites. This periodic renewal has led to the snake being a symbol of healing and medicine, as pictured in the Rod of Asclepius. In "advanced" (Caenophidian) snakes, the broad belly scales and rows of dorsal scales correspond to the vertebrae, allowing scientists to count the vertebrae without dissection. If there is not enough humidity in the air while snakes are shedding their skin, it can be very dangerous for the snake, because the dry skin does not shed. Skin that remains attached to the snake can harbour diseases and parasites. A tail tip that is not removed can constrict as the snake grows, cutting off the blood supply to the end of the tail causing it to drop off. A retained spectacle can cause the snake to become blind in the affected eye.
Perception
Thermographic image of a snake eating a mouse.
While snake vision is unremarkable (generally being best in arboreal species and worst in burrowing species), it is able to detect movement. Some snakes, like the Asian vine snake, have binocular vision. In most snakes, the lens moves back and forth within the eyeball to focus. In addition to their eyes, some snakes (pit vipers, pythons, and some boas) have infrared-sensitive receptors in deep grooves between the nostril and eye which allow them to "see" the radiated heat.
Snakes have no external ears, but they do have a bone called the quadrate under the skin on either side of the head which focuses sound into the cochlea.[2] Their sense of hearing is most sensitive to frequencies around 200–300 Hz.
A snake smells by using its forked tongue to collect airborne particles then passing them to the Jacobson's organ or the Vomeronasal organ in the mouth for examination. The fork in the tongue gives the snake a sort of directional sense of smell. The part of the body which is in direct contact with the surface of the ground is very sensitive to vibration, thus a snake is able to sense other animals approaching.
Internal organs
The left lung is very small or sometimes even absent, as snakes' tubular bodies require all of their organs to be long and thin. To accommodate them all, only one lung is functional. This lung contains a vascularized anterior portion and a posterior portion which does not function in gas exchange. This 'saccular lung' may be used to adjust buoyancy in some aquatic snakes and its function remains unknown in terrestrial species. Also, many organs that are paired, such as kidneys or reproductive organs, are staggered within the body, with one located ahead of the other. The most primitive snakes, including boas and pythons, have anal spurs, a pair of claws on either side of the cloaca which are used by the males for stimulation of females during mating.
Locomotion
Snakes utilize a variety of methods of movement which allows them substantial mobility in spite of their legless condition. All snakes are capable of lateral undulation, in which the body is flexed side-to-side, and the flexed areas propagate posteriorly, giving the overall shape of a posteriorly propagating sine wave. In addition, all snakes are capable of concertina movement. This method of movement can be used to both climb trees and move through small tunnels. In the case of trees, the branch is grasped by the posterior portion of the body, while the anterior portion is extended. The anterior portion then grasps the branch, and the posterior portion is pulled forward. In the case of tunnels, instead of grasping, the body loops are pressed against the tunnel walls to attain traction, but the motion is otherwise similar. Another common method of locomotion is rectilinear locomotion, in which the snake remains straight and propels itself via a caterpillar-like motion of its belly-muscles. This mode is usually only used by very large, heavy snakes, such as large pythons and vipers. The most complex and interesting mode is sidewinding, an undulatory motion used to move across slippery mud or loose sand.
Not all snakes dwell on land; sea snakes live in shallow tropical seas.
Studies of the motion and muscle activity of moving snakes have shed light on how each of these modes is achieved.
In terrestrial lateral undulation, posteriorly propagating unilateral waves of muscle contraction occur. The regions of muscle activity for each side extend from the most concave point on that side posteriorly to the most convex side. Thus, when a point on the snake's body is maximally flexed to the right, the right muscles activate, bending it back to the left until it's maximally right-convex, at which point the right side muscles turn off, and the left side muscles turn on. Speed is modulated primarily by alteration of frequency. Aquatic lateral undulation appears superficially similar, but the muscle activation pattern is different, with the regions of muscle activity being 'shifted' posteriorly to where they would be in terrestrial lateral undulation. The reasons for this difference are not fully understood.
Sidewinding, though it appears complex and confusing, is actually a simple modification of terrestrial lateral undulation. At the points of maximal flexion, the dorsalmost muscle group (traversospinalis group) activates, lifting that portion of the body over the ground, and resulting in other portions of the body remaining in static contact. This mode is used to cross slick surfaces such as mud flats and sand, and has nothing to do with thermoregulation, as is sometimes erroneously stated. Many species of snake, including species commonly kept as pets and which do not usually encounter deserts or mud flats, will sidewind when placed on a slick floor or tabletop and enticed to move fast.
Concertina locomotion and rectilinear locomotion are less well understood. Studies of muscle activity have only been done for tunnel concertina locomotion, which shows that the muscles are unilaterally active in static regions of bending in order to brace the snake against the tunnel walls. Rectilinear is believed to rely on different muscles from the other modes; while they all rely on the large epaxial muscles, rectilinear locomotion seems to rely upon the small costocutaneous muscles. However, this has not been verified experimentally, due to the difficulties in working with these small muscles.
"Flying" snakes
Several species of snake have the ability to glide, all being in the genus Chrysopelea. They are quite capable at it, able to travel as far as 13.7 metres through the air. They tend to make slithering motions to steer and help propel themselves along, propulsion being something unusual among the many gliding animals. This has contributed, in ancient times, to the belief in Wyrms (Legless, snake-like dragons that could supposedly fly.)
Reproduction
A wide range of reproductive modes are used by snakes. All snakes employ internal fertilization, accomplished by means of paired, forked hemipenes, which are stored inverted in the male's tail. Most snakes lay eggs, and of those most species abandon them shortly after laying; however, some species are ovoviviparous and retain the eggs within their bodies until they are almost ready to hatch. Recently, it has been confirmed that several species of snake are fully viviparous, nourishing their young through a placenta as well as a yolk sac, highly unusual among reptiles, or indeed anything else outside of placental mammals. Retention of eggs and live birth are commonly, but not exclusively, associated with cold environments, as the retention of the young within the female allows her to control their temperature more effectively than if the developing young were in external eggs.
Snake bites
Documented deaths resulting from snake bites are uncommon in most areas of the world. Only about 450 species of snakes are venomous (with only about 250 that are able to kill a human), and among the 7,000 Americans bitten by venomous snakes every year, fewer than fifteen die (lightning kills more). See snakebites for more information, including prevention of snake bites and first aid treatment.
Venomous snakes
- See also: Snake venom
A venomous snake is a snake that uses modified saliva, venom, delivered through fangs in its mouth, to immobilize or kill its prey. (In contrast, most non-venomous species are constrictors which suffocate their prey.) Snake venom can be either a neurotoxin or a hemotoxin. Neurotoxins attack the nervous system, while hemotoxins attack the circulatory system. Venomous snakes include several families of snakes and do not constitute a formal classification group used in taxonomy.
If a snakebite should occur, sucking the poison from the wound is not to correct course to take. This will merely result in the poison entering your bloodstream through the esophogus.
Venomous snakes that uses heomotoxins usually have their fangs to secrete the poison in the front of their mouths, making it easier for them to inject the poison into their victims. Snakes that use neurotoxins, such as the highly venomous mangroove snake, have their fangs located in the back of their mouths, with the fangs curled backwards. This makes it bot difficult for the snake to use its poison and for scientists to milk them.
Evolution of Snakes
A loose joint developed in the bottom jaw of even the most primitive extinct [snakes.http://coloherp.org/cb-news/Vol-31/cbn-0410/SnakeEvolution.php]
Venomous snakes are generally classified in four taxonomic families:
- Elapids - cobras, king cobras, kraits, mambas, copperheads, and coral snakes.
- Viperids - vipers, rattlesnakes, copperheads/cottonmouths, adders and bushmasters.
- Colubrids - boomslangs, tree snakes, vine snakes, mangrove snakes, and many others, though not all colubrids are venomous.
- Hydrophiidae - sea snakes
Snake charmers
A snake Charmer in Kochi, India
In some parts of the world, especially in India and Pakistan, snake charming is a roadside show performed by a charmer. In this, the snake charmer carries a basket that contains a snake which he seemingly charms by playing tunes from his flute-like musical instrument, to which the snake responds. However, snakes' sense of hearing is not very sensitive to the range of the charmer's instrument, so they may not be able to hear the music at all. Researchers have pointed out that many of these snake charmers are good sleight-of-hand artists. The snake moves corresponding to the flute movement and the vibrations from the tapping of the charmer's foot which is not noticed by the public. They rarely catch their snakes and the snakes are either nonvenomous or defanged cobras. Sometimes these people exploit the fear of snakes by releasing snakes into the neighbourhood and then offering to rid the residence of snakes. Other snake charmers also have a snake and mongoose show, where both the animals have a mock fight; however, this is not very common, as the snakes, as well as the mongooses, may be seriously injured or killed.
Snake charming as a profession is now dissuaded in India as a contribution to forest & snake conservation. In fact in some places in India snake charming is banned by law. citation needed]
Snake trapping
Despite the existence of snake charmers, there have also been professional snake catchers or wranglers. The tribals of "Irulas" from Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu in India have been practicing this art for generations. They generally don't use gimmicks and with the help of a simple stick catch the snakes from the fields or houses. They are also known to eat some of the snakes they catch and are very useful in rat extermination in the villages. Their knowledge of snakes and their behaviour is uncanny. Modern day snake trapping involves a herpetologist using a long stick with a "V" shaped end. Some like the late Steve Irwin prefer to catch them using bare hands.
At least one tribe of natives uses a specialized form of snake catching as a rite of passage to manhood.citation needed] The young man of interest will wrap his leg heavily in some type of cloth all the way to the inseam. He will then stick his leg in a burrow containing a large python, typically a reticulated python. After the snake swallows most of his leg several other members of the tribe will pull him out of the hole along with the snake. The snake is then killed and the man's leg removed from the snake. These snakes can be over 20 ft long and it is possible for the man to have his leg dislocated. The scent of a prey animal may be used to help convince the snake to swallow the leg.
Human consumption of snakes
In some cultures, the consumption of snakes is acceptable[3] or even considered a delicacy[4], prized for its alleged pharmaceutical effect of warming the heart. Western cultures document the consumption of snake under extreme circumstances of hunger[5]. However, human consumption of snake meat, especially when eaten raw, may lead to dangerous parasitic infections in humans. Rattlesnake meat is eaten in the western United States somewhat commonly. In Asian countries drinking the blood of snakes, particularly the cobra, is believed to increase sexual virility. The blood is drained while the cobra is still alive when possible, and is usually mixed with some form of liquor to improve the taste.
Symbolism
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Main article: Serpent (symbolism)
In Egyptian history, the snake occupies a primary role with the Nile cobra adorning the crown of the pharaoh in ancient times. It was worshipped as one of the Gods and was also used for sinister purposes: murder of an adversary and ritual suicide (Cleopatra).
In Greek Mythology snakes are often associated with deadly and dangerous antagonists. The 9 headed Hydra Hercules defeated and the three Gorgon sisters are literary examples. Medusa was one of the three Gorgon sisters who Perseus defeated. Medusa is described as a hideous mortal, with snakes instead of hair and the power to turn men to stone with her gaze.
Two medical symbols involving snakes that are still used today are Bowl of Hygieia, symbolizing pharmacy, and the Caduceus and Rod of Asclepius, which are symbols denoting medicine in general.
India is often called the land of snakes and is steeped in tradition regarding snakes. Snakes are worshipped as gods even today with many women pouring milk on snake pits (despite snakes' aversion for milk). The cobra is seen on the neck of Shiva and Vishnu is depicted often as sleeping only on a 7 headed snake. There are also several temples in India solely for cobras sometimes called Nagraj (King of Snakes) and it is believed that snakes are symbols of fertility. There is a Hindu festival called Nagpanchami each year on which day snakes are venerated and prayed to.
In Christianity the snake makes its infamous appearance in the first book (Genesis) of the Bible when a snake appears before the first couple Adam and Eve and tempts them with the forbidden fruit. It is also seen in Exodus when Moses, as a sign of God's power, turns his stick into a snake; snakes are similarly produced by the pharaoh's magic-practicing priests, but Moses' snake devours them. Later Moses made Nehushtan, a bronze snake on a pole that when looked at cured the people of bites from the snakes that plagued them in the desert. Jesus instucted his disciples to be be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves.
The Ouroboros is a symbol that is associated with many different religions and customs, and is also claimed to be related to Alchemy. The Ouroboros or Oroboros is a snake manifesting its own tail in a clock-wise direction (from the head to the tail) in the shape of a circle, representing manifestation of one's own life and rebirth, leading to immortality. The Ouroboros is also associated with the popular manga, Fullmetal Alchemist or Hagane no Renkinjutsushi by Hiromu Arakawa.
Snake belongs to one of the 12 celestial animals of Chinese Zodiac, in the Chinese calendar.
Chinese Zodiac
In the chinese zodiac, people born in the year of the snake (1917, 1929, 1941, 1953, 1965, 1977, 1989, 2001) are meant to be deep. They say little and possess great wisdom. They never have to worry about money; they are financially fortunate. Snake people are often quite vain, selfish, and a bit stingy. Yet they have tremendous sympathy for others and try to help those less fortunate. Snake people tend to overdo, since they have doubts about other people's judgment and prefer to rely on themselves. They are determined in whatever they do and hate to fail. Although calm on the surface, they are intense and passionate. Snake people are usually good-looking and sometimes have marital problems because they are fickle. They are most compatible with the Ox and Rooster.
Films
- Snakes on a Plane (2006)
- Venom (2005)
- Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005)
- Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002)
- Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid (2004)
- Anaconda (1997)
- Boa (2000)
- Python (2000)
- Python II
- Boa vs. Python
- Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
- The Jungle Book (1967)
- King Cobra
- Venomous
- Kill Bill Volume 1 and 2
- Snake King
- Ssss snake
See also
- Snakebot
- Snake teeth
- Snakebite
- Snake venom
- Snake scales
- Snake skeleton
- Snake (Zodiac)
- Exploding snake
- Snake worship
- Snake Shyam
- Harmful snakes
- List of Serpentes families
- Classification of snakes
Notes
- ^ The thermogenesis of digestion in rattlesnakes. Journal of Experimental Biology 207 pp. 579-585. The Company of Biologists (2004). Retrieved on 2006-05-26, 2006.
References
- Romulus Whitaker (English edition); Tamil translation by O.Henry Francis (1996). நம்மை சுட்ரியுள்ள பாம்புகள் (Snakes around us, Tamil). National Book Trust. ISBN 81-237-1905-1.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Snakes
- Snake Rescue and Reptile Protection in India
- Numerous articles from journals on snakes (mainly Australasian)
- Integrated Taxonomic Information System Serpentes
- EMBL Database
- the Lancelet: "The serpent beguiles?" Explanation of the current controversy over snake origins in the Cretaceous
- The medicinal use of snakes in China
- Poisonous snakes and lizards
- Snake Bites - Outdoor emergency treatment from Survive Outdoors.
- Snake venom LD50 values
| Chordata - Reptilia - Squamata - Families of Snakes |
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HENOPHIDIA
Acrochordidae- Aniliidae- Anomochilidae- Boidae- Bolyeridae- Cylindrophiidae- Loxocemidae- Pythonidae- Tropidophiidae- Uropeltidae- Xenopeltidae
TYPHLOPOIDEA
Anomalepidae- Leptotyphlopidae- Typhlopidae
XENOPHIDIA
Atractaspididae- Colubridae- Elapidae- Hydrophiidae- Viperidae
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Categories: Articles to be merged since June 2006 | Articles with unsourced statements | Snakes | Pet reptiles
Woman bitten by snake in bed
Daily Telegraph - 2 hours, 20 minutes ago A woman was admitted to hospital after being bitten by a snake while she slept in her bed.
Aussie drunk driver threatens cops with snake
The Register - 41 minutes ago Slippery customer A drunk driver pulled in Australia's Northern Territory made good his escape after threatening officers with a snake, National Nine News reports.…
Warne's spinners more venomous than snake bites, says Tufnell
Yahoo! India News - Nov 17 12:41 AM London, Nov 17 (ANI): English left arm spinner turned umpire Phil Tufnell has said that Aussie spin wizard Shane Warne's deliveries were even more venomous than a poisonous snake's bite. Tufnell, named Cat, the last English cricketer to enjoy a triumph in Australia, when he won TV's I'm A Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here three years ago, said the type of delivery Warne had in his armoury could still
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