User:Itai
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![]() - ![]() | This user is a translator from Hebrew to English on Wikipedia:Translation. |
![]() - ![]() | This user is a translator and proofreader from Hebrew to English on Wikipedia:Translation. |
Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/February 19
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My Wikipedia time is limited at the moment, but I'm still around.
- ... that Antimonumento +65 (pictured) bears the names of 65 miners who were trapped 19 years ago today and died during the Pasta de Conchos mine disaster?
- ... that Joanna of Montfort became known as the "Flame of Brittany" after she led the successful defence of Hennebont against a besieging French army in 1342?
- ... that Nagi Nemoto made her VTuber debut on a classic television set?
- ... that National Hockey League players have not yet participated at the Olympics since the league entered its second century of operation?
- ... that Swen Swenson was born in Norway but pioneered a drainage system for Nicollet County while living in New Sweden?
- ... that the Alt Llobregat insurrection took place without any looting or killing?
- ... that Devello Z. Sheffield petitioned for the release of an assailant who had left him with over 30 wounds?
- ... that the 1924 film Tkies-kaf had no director until its lead actor volunteered?
- ... that the Māori-language name for Cave Rock, Sumner—Tuawera—means 'cut down as if by fire'?
The oak eggar (Lasiocampa quercus) is a common moth in the family Lasiocampidae found in Europe and northern and western parts of Asia. The larvae feed on a wide variety of plant species, low down, including blackthorn, hawthorn, viburnum, dogwood, ivy and ling, but are not known to feed on oak. They can be infected by baculoviruses, which change their behaviour and cause them to climb out of the protection of low scrub and leave them open to predation, facilitating the spread of infection. Oak eggar larvae eventually pupate on the ground inside a silken cocoon, the exterior of which is hard and yellowish, and resembles an acorn, from which the common name "oak eggar" is derived. This oak eggar larva in the form of a fourth-instar caterpillar, with a body length of 53 millimetres (2.1 inches), was photographed on a branch in Keila, Estonia. The photograph was focus-stacked from 59 separate images.Photograph credit: Ivar Leidus
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7 February 2025 |
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