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Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 13 3:04 pm)
At first, realizing this is Danish in origin, I thought they were egg case fragments from wandering benches, but then I realized that wandering Danish Benches only exist in my warped imagination.
I have no idea what these are, but for some reason I think they might be shells of some sort? From some kind of clams or muscles?
Hi Helle,
If it appears only in spring, so it can not be from Santa Claus.
Provided that, this guy in Denmark prefers springtime .:ohmy:
Now I think that it could be the shelling of a broken bird's egg.
And otherwise the feathers of a chicken or bird in moult, but that latest, I guess its 'nope', again!
But, as it would be a broken bird-egg, from which bird does this egg come, then?
From a strange bird, with difficult questions???
Not from any bird, so yes, it is a NOPE again :-)
As you see, I found four of them and they look the same, but not the same size.
The material could actually be same as with egg shells, but not for the same purpose.
Look again and notice, that they are turning the exact same way all 4.
BTW, they make me think about Yin and yang. :) But that has nothing to do with it.
They look like they would be custom-made storage shells for beetle's wings! Perhaps when the beetles fly from Denmark to America (on an airplane) they pack extra wings in these little suitcases. Just in case the first pair gets wet when they go to the beach ... you know, how you do! :)
Oh Helle ... I am at a loss! I think perhaps these exist only in your country.
Okay, here is my next question. You can ignore everything else, I'm just thinking out loud:
Do they have anything to do with insects? They look quite small.
"If your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough." ... Robert Capa
YUP! Tara it is exactly what it is... the front door to the same kind of snail, I oploaded on my gallery, even the very same day, as I started this thread HEHEHE!! Who is the sneaky one now?
But I must emphasize, that it was Geert (Girsempa), who came up first with the right answer ... kind of... well, he didnt say exactly, but it was very obvious, that he knew.
Yes! Which animal needs a front door? One that carries a house, of course...
Although in real life it's called a "calcareous epiphragm".
All repeat now:
"a Calcareous Epiphragm"
Here's a link that explains a bit more:
We do
not see things as they are. ǝɹɐ ǝʍ sɐ sƃuıɥʇ ǝǝs
ǝʍ
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