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- Cerastes - Wikipedia
The cerastes (Greek: κεράστης, transliteration: kerastēs, meaning "having horns" [1]) is a creature of Greek legend, a serpent that is incredibly flexible—so much so that it is said to have no spine
- Cerastes - Mythical Encyclopedia
Cerastes is a mythical creature that has been a part of Greek legend for centuries The creature is a serpent that is incredibly flexible and is said to have no spine Cerastes can have either two large ram-like horns or two pairs of smaller horns
- Medieval Bestiary : Beasts : Cerastes
It has either two horns, which are like a ram's horns, or four pairs of small horns The cerastes hides in the sand so that only its horns show; animals, thinking the horns are food, come close and are killed by the serpent
- Horned Viper Animal Facts - Cerastes cerastes - A-Z Animals
The Saharan horned viper (Cerastes cerastes) is a wild snake with no history of domestication It is sometimes kept in zoos, research collections, or by a few private venomous keepers, but that does not make it domesticated
- The Desert Horned Viper, Cerastes cerastes - DesertUSA
According to the Oxford Journal of Medicine, C cerastes has two close relatives One, the horned and similar-sized C gasperettii, occupies a range extending from southern Israel eastward across Iraq into eastern Iran
- Cerastes cerastes (Desert Horned Viper) | INFORMATION | Animal . . . - ADW
Found throughout the Sahara in Northern Africa, C cerastes inhabits a variety of habitats within the desert, including rock hills, sandy deserts, and wadis Members of this species can sometimes be found in dunes, and are rarely found on rock pavement and gravel plains
- Cerastes | A Book of Creatures
The Cerastes, “horned”, is one of the many snakes born from the blood of Medusa in the Libyan desert It receives a passing mention in Lucan’s catalogue of snakes
- Cerastes — Greek Creature: Story Facts | Greek Mythology Notes
Lucan placed cerastes among the serpents born from Medusa 's blood as it dripped onto Libyan soil during Perseus 's flight home This origin story connected the cerastes to the broader Gorgon mythology and explained — in mythological terms — why Libya harboured so many venomous snakes
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