Keywords are search requests to search engines that people use to find some information. Keywords on a web page reflect what the page is about. Below are the keywords the site. Green line represents the frequency of keyword usage on the site.
Homepage links
Internal - 17
External - 5
Internal links from the site's home page define the general site's sections and serves as one of the most important factors of site ranking. External links tie the site with other sites and determines the site's theme. Relation of external links to internal links influences the distribution of the site's rank for search engines. It's desirable that the amount of internal links prevail.
Server information of Giraffenecks.com
The IP address of giraffenecks.com is 216.87.164.56
Server location
Fort Lauderdale, 33309, Florida, United States, US
There are two main hypotheses regarding the evolutionary origin and maintenance of elongation in giraffe necks . The original theory, the “competing browsers hypothesis,” was ...
2. Edyta's Research Paper: Evolution of the Giraffe Neck
Evolution of the Giraffe Neck Via Sexual Selection. Tallest of the mammals is the giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis) whose extremely long neck is a classic example of an ...
The Giraffe's Long Neck. I am very suspicious of the giraffe's long neck. Well, more to the point, I am suspicious of our explanations of how it got that way.
The story of the giraffe’s neck is a classic of high school biology textbooks. For this reason everyone “knows” that giraffes evolved longer necks in order to reach the ...
6. Can sexual selection account for giraffe necks? : Laelaps
A giraffe, photographed at the Bronx zoo. Why do giraffes have long necks? We know that modern giraffes must have evolved gradually, but figuring out what selection pressures ...
7. HowStuffWorks "If a giraffe's neck only has seven vertebrae, how ...
Giraffe necks are amazing feats of engineering that combine strength and flexibility. Learn how giraffe necks remain so flexible with only seven bones.
Betty Cunningham wrote: >As I understand it (from my Comparitive Anatomy professor MANY years >ago) the skulls of lions bred in captivity differs STRONGLY from ...
Message text written by INTERNET:[email protected] >Which illustrates another point about vertebrate anatomy and behavior: the feedback loop works both ways.