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  • A Theraphosa leblondi, the world's largest tarantula, caught by Yanomami youths, roasting on the embers of a fire. Chaurino stuns the leblondi by whacking it with a stick, gathers its legs, and lowers it onto the fire. The spider makes a final hiss as its insides heat up and it shoots out a yard-long spurt of hot juice. Sejal, Venezuela.(Man Eating Bugs page 174 Top)
    VEN_meb_36_cxxs.jpg
  • Santos Perez, of the indigenous Yanomami people, looks at a freshly captured Theraphosa leblondi, the world's largest tarantula, on the edge of his machete, Sejal, Venezuela. He roasted and ate it. (Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects)
    VEN_meb_28_cxxs.jpg
  • A live specimen of Theraphosa leblondi, the world's largest tarantula before being fire-roasted, by Yanomami boys, in Sejal village, near the Orinoco River, Venezuela. Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Ven_meb_21_xs.jpg
  • A live specimen of Theraphosa leblondi, the world's biggest tarantula before being fire-roasted, by Yanomami boys, in Sejal village, near the Orinoco River, Venezuela. (Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects)
    VEN_meb_24_xxs.jpg
  • Chaurino Perez Andrate, 17, offers a plate-sized sample of roasted Theraphosa leblondi, the world's largest tarantula in his village of Sejal, Venezuela. Chaurino stuns the leblondi by whacking it with a stick, gathers its legs, and lowers it onto the fire. The spider makes a final hiss as its insides heat up and it shoots out a yard-long spurt of hot juice. After it is roasted for about seven minutes, its charred hairs are rubbed away and the legs pulled off. When we crack them open, there's white meat.(Man Eating Bugs page 175)
    VEN_meb_37_xxs.jpg
  • Spider web: Orb web of Araneus diadematus on coastal sage habitat in la Costa, California (San Diego County). The Fieldstone Corporation owns the land of a future housing subdivision site that is also California gnatcatcher habitat (a threatened species).
    USA_ANML_16_xs.jpg
  • Scorpion lit with a black light in Thousand Palms (desert) of California.
    USA_ANML_15_xs.jpg
  • As Mark Tilden's Spyder 1.0 approaches like a tiny but menacing arachnid, its circuits try to optimize actions, walking in this case, with minimal energy. Perturbed by the environment, its patented "nervous net" seeks the minimum state, its legs moving almost randomly until it succeeds. In 1990, Spyder 1.0 was the first walking robot to use Tilden's nervous net control system. When Tilden first achieved such complex behavior from such minimal components, the results astonished some roboticists. Los Alamos, NM. From the book Robo sapiens: Evolution of a New Species, page 118-119.
    USA_rs_19_qxxs.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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