#5 I looked it up and its wrong. There are 2 highly alkane lakes in Tanzania and at one of them a photographer put dead animals, he found there, in life-like positions. Those lakes have a flourishing ecosystem.
Arie, Disney admitted it years ago, Disneyland's original Pirates of the Caribbean ride did use real human skeletons. The Imagineers, who designed the ride, sourced the skeletons from UCLA because the fake skeletons available at the time were not considered realistic enough. While the ride has since been updated, the skeletons were eventually replaced with models, and the original remains were returned to their countries of origin.
#5 I looked it up and its wrong. There are 2 highly alkane lakes in Tanzania and at one of them a photographer put dead animals, he found there, in life-like positions. Those lakes have a flourishing ecosystem.
Arie, Disney admitted it years ago, Disneyland's original Pirates of the Caribbean ride did use real human skeletons. The Imagineers, who designed the ride, sourced the skeletons from UCLA because the fake skeletons available at the time were not considered realistic enough. While the ride has since been updated, the skeletons were eventually replaced with models, and the original remains were returned to their countries of origin.
Those lakes have a flourishing ecosystem.
better not look up the other "facts"
Disney admitted it years ago, Disneyland's original Pirates of the Caribbean ride did use real human skeletons. The Imagineers, who designed the ride, sourced the skeletons from UCLA because the fake skeletons available at the time were not considered realistic enough. While the ride has since been updated, the skeletons were eventually replaced with models, and the original remains were returned to their countries of origin.