@es.chaval: Buenas Noches❤️🌑#españa #explore #fyp #travel #viral #viral #alicante #travel

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Region: ES
Sunday 03 August 2025 21:49:08 GMT
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dantalent
Dan Lungu :
Bellissimo!
2025-08-04 10:39:55
1
mario.moquin8
MM2 :
hola que linda estas lougar🙏
2025-08-09 22:09:21
0
pedromoreno2102
PedroMoreno332 :
Estes vídeos están a aparecer tanto que creo que o propio TikTok xa escolleu o meu novo destino.
2025-08-22 15:37:42
0
ciro.benenati
Ciro Benenati :
la citta piu bella del mondo
2025-08-14 17:22:46
1
carlos.nunez3
Carlos Nunez :
ya de vacaciones..
2025-08-03 22:09:39
0
jeak7843
jeak :
my dream place one day inshallah 💯💯💯
2025-08-08 02:46:32
2
dlosangeles27
DlosAngeles27 :
Cómo le digo a mi yo de hace 7 años cuando vivía con mi niña de 1 añito en el Hogar Provincial de Alicante y a mí yo del 2020 en la pandemia, que tuvimos que mudarnos a Huesca por estar solas, que lo logramos. Que valió la pena tanto y ahora, en 2025 compramos un piso propio y vivimos en Alicante. ❤
2025-08-04 13:50:56
1
ligia.florea7
Ligia Florea :
superrrr!🥰🥰🥰🥰
2025-08-06 06:19:27
1
talha.aya
Talha Aya :
mizik août
2025-08-16 18:27:47
0
patriciamorale262
Patricia Morale26269 :
🤩Dios que tema aaaa🤩
2025-08-14 18:52:28
0
fatiha.fatiiii
Fatiha fatiiiiiii :
tooooooooooooop💯💕🥰
2025-08-16 13:15:07
0
user58822904297568
محمد نور :
صوت جميل
2025-08-06 10:33:53
0
hicham.hicham11111
hichamhicham9958 :
alicante
2025-08-08 11:37:56
0
look0058
look :
وين هذا اي مكان
2025-08-09 04:57:29
0
sanyok1977
sanyok1977 :
супер
2025-08-10 01:28:43
0
walaaboussetla1
walaa 💞 :
separ améri mio
2025-08-06 23:40:14
0
mana_mar2
mana mar 2 :
cool
2025-08-05 20:20:05
0
look0058
look :
جده
2025-08-09 04:57:48
0
queenrokaia
👑Queen roka👑 :
😍😍😍
2025-08-06 10:37:14
1
user4475495816235
Ēm mæ :
❤️❤️
2025-08-05 23:29:37
1
dounia2c2
DOUNIA :
❤️
2025-08-04 22:45:49
1
olga.myriam.diaz
olga myriam diaz perez :
😱😱😱😱
2025-08-04 21:55:24
1
paigemaze777
mazestrawberry7 :
💯💯💯
2025-08-04 10:46:01
1
bassemshaban52
bassem shaban :
❤️
2025-08-20 18:30:14
0
bela.zuroshvili0
Bela Zuroshvili :
❤️❤️❤️
2025-08-19 21:06:45
0
To see more videos from user @es.chaval, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Table for 6 please #Otodus #megalodon is the best-known-to-the-public fossil #shark (Jaws retains the top spot for #sharks in general :-)) thanks to its gigantic serrated teeth and fantastic jaw recreations that appear in museums around the world. This one is at the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center in Woodland Park, Colorado, just outside of Colorado Springs. With a mouth over 6 1/2’ wide, laden with over 250 gigantic teeth (the largest known is over 7” tall!) in 5 rows, this shark is deserving of its limelight!  In paleontologic circles, there is some debate on which genus the teeth of “The Meg” should be ascribed to. The tooth similarity to the Great White Shark (#Carcharodon carcharias) led researchers to ascribe it to the genus Carcharodon.  More recently, two camps have emerged, one arguing it belongs to the genus #Carcharocles, while the other argues it should be called Otodus. Both agree megalodon is the species. The cartilaginous bones of a shark mean that only in the rarest of circumstances does the cartilage actually fossilize, thus researchers invariably are left to conduct studies using only teeth. Not ideal! I sometimes wonder what we would have come up with if we didn’t have sharks alive today to compare the teeth to. Thankfully these teeth are numerous. Being shed throughout the life of a shark, each one left thousands of potentials fossils to be preserved. O. megalodon is the State fossil of North Carolina and its teeth are commonly found in rivers in the south and southeastern US. I have a friend who dives in low-visibility, faster flowing than he likes, rivers laden with alligators and snapping turtles to probe the muddy bottoms for teeth. A stickler for accuracy, he built a version of what you see here out of original teeth, with all teeth appropriately sized and placed (left uppers, right lowers). The giant size of Megalodon suggests it may have been endothermic like some sharks today.  This would have allowed it to operate in waters that were colder than a giant shark might normally be expected to inhabit, which is great for chasing whales, which we know they ate thanks to many chomped bones. #FossilCrates
Table for 6 please #Otodus #megalodon is the best-known-to-the-public fossil #shark (Jaws retains the top spot for #sharks in general :-)) thanks to its gigantic serrated teeth and fantastic jaw recreations that appear in museums around the world. This one is at the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center in Woodland Park, Colorado, just outside of Colorado Springs. With a mouth over 6 1/2’ wide, laden with over 250 gigantic teeth (the largest known is over 7” tall!) in 5 rows, this shark is deserving of its limelight! In paleontologic circles, there is some debate on which genus the teeth of “The Meg” should be ascribed to. The tooth similarity to the Great White Shark (#Carcharodon carcharias) led researchers to ascribe it to the genus Carcharodon. More recently, two camps have emerged, one arguing it belongs to the genus #Carcharocles, while the other argues it should be called Otodus. Both agree megalodon is the species. The cartilaginous bones of a shark mean that only in the rarest of circumstances does the cartilage actually fossilize, thus researchers invariably are left to conduct studies using only teeth. Not ideal! I sometimes wonder what we would have come up with if we didn’t have sharks alive today to compare the teeth to. Thankfully these teeth are numerous. Being shed throughout the life of a shark, each one left thousands of potentials fossils to be preserved. O. megalodon is the State fossil of North Carolina and its teeth are commonly found in rivers in the south and southeastern US. I have a friend who dives in low-visibility, faster flowing than he likes, rivers laden with alligators and snapping turtles to probe the muddy bottoms for teeth. A stickler for accuracy, he built a version of what you see here out of original teeth, with all teeth appropriately sized and placed (left uppers, right lowers). The giant size of Megalodon suggests it may have been endothermic like some sharks today. This would have allowed it to operate in waters that were colder than a giant shark might normally be expected to inhabit, which is great for chasing whales, which we know they ate thanks to many chomped bones. #FossilCrates

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