An egg-laying mammal. No teeth. Reptilian gait. Built-in body armor. If the short-beaked echidna sounds like a checklist of contradictions, that"s because it is—and it owns it. Native to Australia, Tasmania, and parts of New Guinea, it"s one of the few surviving monotremes, or mammals that lay eggs. Despite the headlines, it still qualifies as a mammal: it has fur, produces milk, and is warm-blooded. The twist? Milk is released through specialized skin patches rather than nipples, leaving the young to lap it up.
Short-beaked echidna, Adelaide Hills, Australia
Today in History
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Cross this bridge if you dare
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Leap day
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Great Salt Lake Shorelands Preserve in Layton, Utah
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World Photography Day
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Spring equinox
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In Sicily, history is everywhere
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Happy Mothers Day!
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Kochia, Hitachi, Ibaraki prefecture, Japan
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Presidents Day
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World Wildlife Day
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Merced River, Yosemite National Park, California
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Ravens
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A keel-billed toucan in Costa Rica
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Anybody out there?
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Great hornbill, Thailand
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Oloupena Falls, island of Molokai, Hawaii
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Oh, to sleep under the northern lights
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Black bear cub emerging into spring
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It s Tolkien Reading Day
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Bridge to infinity
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Eurasian scops owl
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Siblings that play together…
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A castle fit for a count
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The birthplace of Cinco de Mayo
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Golling Waterfall, Salzburg, Austria
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Ready. Set. Snow.
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Sand, sun, and sk8ers
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Atrani, Amalfi Coast, Italy
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World Maritime Day
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American goldfinch
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