#2 So the fact that young animlas were often eaten and milk in their stomachs could turn to cheese after they die and before they were butchered... would not predate the random use of a stomach as a nice pouch for fluids?
#1 I would like to see the evidence of this... the rattle is added onto each molt, so either the snakes are younger, or they molt badly and can't retain the rattle. Also dryer weather can cause rattles to break more easily, so of course climate change has nothing to do with it either.
#2 So the fact that young animlas were often eaten and milk in their stomachs could turn to cheese after they die and before they were butchered... would not predate the random use of a stomach as a nice pouch for fluids?
#1 I would like to see the evidence of this... the rattle is added onto each molt, so either the snakes are younger, or they molt badly and can't retain the rattle. Also dryer weather can cause rattles to break more easily, so of course climate change has nothing to do with it either.