WONDERS WILL NEVER END I SHOCKED AFTER WATCHING THIS HUGE TRAPPED CROCODILE
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Mesothelioma Survival Rates About 40 percent of patients with mesothelioma survive the first year after diagnosis. That survival rate depends on many factors, including age, cancer stage, cancer type, race and gender.
Long-term survivors attribute their success to treatment from a mesothelioma specialist, alternative medicine and nutritional changes. Average mesothelioma survival rates Mesothelioma claimed nearly 30,000 American lives between 1999 and 2010. About 40 percent of U.S. patients live to the one year mark. By the second year, about 20 percent of patients are still alive.
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And by the third year, the number is 8 percent. How is survival rate measured? Researchers describe the mesothelioma survival rate in several ways. They usually talk about it in terms of one-year survival, the percentage of people who survive for a year after diagnosis. Through their studies, they also look at longer survival times, including the number of people who live two years, three years and five years.
All crocodiles are tropical species that, unlike alligators,
are very sensitive to cold. They separated from other crocodilians during the
Eocene epoch, about 55 million years ago. Many species are at the risk of
extinction, some being classified as critically endangered.
Crocodiles are the largest reptiles. They are also the
largest of all predators that spend some time on land. The biggest crocodiles
are bigger than the biggest tigers and lions and polar bears. In the water only
Great White sharks and Killer Whales are bigger predators..
A big crocodile, according to National Geographic writer
Rick Gore, "is cunning enough to stalk a human, strong enough to bring
down and dismember a water buffalo, yet gentle enough to crack open its own
eggs to release its young." Dr. Daphne Soares, a neuroscientist at the
University of Maryland, told the New York Times, “I absolutely love these
creatures. They're beautiful, elegant and goofy at the same time..."An
alligator looks like nothing so much as a big, amphibious and grievously
misunderstood kitten. Sure, it sports thick scales and bulging bony knobs
called osteoderms rather than fur, and 80 teeth to the house cat's 30, and a
tail."
Describing why crocodile are not loved like some other
animals, Wayne King of the New York Zoological Society said: "They're not
cuddly. They don't have big soulful eyes like seals. Most of the animals the
world is concerned with are beautiful, or they tug at your heartstrings.
Crocodiles have a pretty toothy leer. They eat dogs in Florida---sometimes even
people. Who could love them?" [Source: Rick Core, National Geographic,
January 1978]
Explaining mankind's fascination with crocodiles and other
dangerous animals the eminent biologist E.O. Wilson once wrote: "We're not
just afraid of predators, we're transfixed by them, prone to weave stories and
fables and chatter endlessly about the them, because fascination creates
preparedness and preparedness, survival. In a deeply tribal sense, we love our
monsters.
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