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Why are things so big in Australia?

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New Zealand is worse.

carrots_2072993b.jpg


This picture is not photoshoped.

I hate wetas with a passion.

Used to find one in the house at least once every 2-3 months. Normally in the closet or something.

They look big and slow but they can move quick if you're trying to kill them :|
 
We also used to have

http://envirohistorynz.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/moa.jpg[/IMG

[IMG]http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m4lx2pW9YE1qmp68po1_500.jpg[/IMG

Such a shame they're both gone.[/QUOTE]That is crazy, a real life chocobo, and its main predator(apart from man) was an eagle!??!?
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/nklfm.jpg
(ostrich to the left)
 
My wife is a Kiwi (New Zealand...think of it as a classy Australia) and she's quite tall. They just grow shit bigger down there, I guess. We haven't been back in years though, so I havent had my taste of big giant spiders in quite some time. Or beautiful beaches and clean cities.
 
There's a really cool thing here, big hole in the ground. Hundreds of animals from all different time periods have fallen down it and died. There's fossils on top of fossils.
 
To be honest, I've lived in Australia my entire life and I've never seen a spider bigger than 2cm. I'm sure there's some indigenous species of spiders and insects in the remote regions that are larger, but no more than you'd expect from a country with a wider biological diversity.
You must be the only Aussie on GAF that hasn't seen dozens if not hundreds of huntsmans over the years, they're everywhere. A baby one (probably about 4cm) landed on my arm when I was winding out a hose just this morning. No problem, only moths freak me out ahah.
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Island_gigantism

To be honest, I've lived in Australia my entire life and I've never seen a spider bigger than 2cm. I'm sure there's some indigenous species of spiders and insects in the remote regions that are larger, but no more than you'd expect from a country with a wider biological diversity. There's also the fact that most of these spiders live in remote and uninhabited areas of Australia, which is of course the kind of areas tourists like to visit, so of course they come home with the impression that the entirety of Australia is covered with deadly, hideous species.
Completely agree.
 
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