funny joke must have been very very hard
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TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TO
Sorry melposter. I know you're asleep right now, and I know it's not really brave of me to not tell you to your face, but MEL IS SHIT. Sorry
The remains of Afrovenator were discovered in 1993 in the Tiourarén Formation of the department of Agadez in Niger. The Tiourarén was originally thought to represent the Hauterivian to Barremian stages of the early Cretaceous Period, or approximately 132 to 125 million years ago (Sereno et al. 1994). However, re-interpretation of the sediments showed that they are probably Mid-Jurassic in age, dating Afrovenator to the Bathonian to Oxfordian stages, between 167 and 161 mya.[1] The sauropod Jobaria, whose
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funny joke must have been very very hard
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>image board >can't post images
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TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TOWA TO
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Sorry melposter. I know you're asleep right now, and I know it's not really brave of me to not tell you to your face, but MEL IS SHIT. Sorry
0 votes
0%
The remains of Afrovenator were discovered in 1993 in the Tiourarén Formation of the department of Agadez in Niger. The Tiourarén was originally thought to represent the Hauterivian to Barremian stages of the early Cretaceous Period, or approximately 132 to 125 million years ago (Sereno et al. 1994). However, re-interpretation of the sediments showed that they are probably Mid-Jurassic in age, dating Afrovenator to the Bathonian to Oxfordian stages, between 167 and 161 mya.[1] The sauropod Jobaria, whose
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