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"She's wearing a beautiful dress and she is surrounded by dogs," says the woman in the green blouse with her hands on her head and large frogs in various poses. "I think that she is engaged to my dog." The main thing about women engaged with animals, is that many times they feel like when engaged, their love for animals becomes stronger than anything else. They often go above and beyond what most people would do to find new ways of enjoying their animal companion, such as dressing them up in colorful clothes or exchanging roles where they become the caretaker while their partner becomes their pet. In some cases, women come to love their dogs more than their partners. In this particular case, the woman in the photograph and his dog were wearing identical outfits and had matching hairstyles and makeup. She isn't even wearing a bra, and her lipstick is smudged, just like her husband's. "The photo is one of the most fascinating images we have ever seen," says Dr. JoAnn Mayer of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute at the University of Panama in Panama City. The photo was taken in 1928 in "Mathigua" on Isla Taboga, off Panama. The island is known for its fair number of animals such as monkeys, parrots and even monkeys that can be domesticated. In the photo, the woman is being kissed by a dog. A blue ribbon with a white bow is tied around a tree behind her. The dog is wearing a necklace with a red cloth tied to his tail and what appears to be a medallion on his neck. This dog's name was "Yagua" and he was the property of Francisco Guallar, who had started to place monkeys as pets on the island. This particular monkey breed might have been bred as companion animals rather than as pets because they were large enough for people to ride on like horses since they had shorter tails and shorter legs than most other monkey species. There is a speculation that the woman in the photo is Guallar's wife, but this has never been confirmed. "What's so fascinating to me about it is how close her dog is to her," notes Dr. Sarah Otto, an anthropologist at Iowa State University in Ames. "There has been some criticism that sometimes people call these relationships pet keeping, and there are good reasons for that: on some levels these people are like pet keepers."She says that it's very clear from the photo and other similar pictures of humans and their pets together, not just this one woman and his dog, that they were close companions. More than one family member may have had a special bond with Yagua. Tyrannosaurs were large, heavily-built carnivores that lived throughout the Mesozoic Epoch, which lasted from approximately 200 million years ago to 65 million years ago. They are known primarily for their size and speed. The only tyrannosaurid species to survive into the Late Cretaceous was Tyrannosaurus rex. It is one of the largest known animal species ever, rivaled in size only by the largest dinosaurs, the sauropods. Although not all tyrannosaurs were large enough to be apex predators, they all had extremely powerful bite forces compared with other animals of their size. cfa1e77820
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