According to National Geographic, the basilisk lizard digs a shallow trench to lay her eggs. The eggs are covered with dirt and left to hatch on their own. Hatchlings are born being able to run, climb, and swim.
capilary action ! It's actually cohesion. Good luck with E2020.
Iguana is one type of new world lizard
He's a chameleon
skink
iguana iguana
wasps can nest anywhere so they can nest in your kayak
capilary action ! It's actually cohesion. Good luck with E2020.
A large mass of sticks, similar to a bald eagle's nest.
A crude nest built out of sticks, more like a platform.
A little nest type thing in shade on the ground. They protect it constantly
Bald eagles make a nest of sticks, returning each year and adding on til the nest can weigh nearly a ton.
A basilisk is a mythical heraldic snake-like dragon, reputed to be so venomous that its gaze was deadly, or a type of dragon used in heraldry.
A basilisk is a serpent with nine pairs of legs and the head of a cockeral. Its stare kills and its breath turns you to stone. It is featured in Harry Potter
Birds don't build a shelter to live in. They build nest only for hatching eggs any other time they live in trees, hedgerows etc.
There are two answers to this question - yes and no.No it was a mythThe Basilisk was a mythical creature - a cocatrice and considered King of the Serpent world. It left scorched ground wherever it went and in some legends, it could turn a person to stone by gazing at someone. It was said to be part rooster, snake and lion.The mythical basilisk never existed.Yes they live in South AmericaThere is a type of lizard called the Plumed Basilisk. It lives in a wide area from Mexico all the way to Ecuador. This green beauty is plentiful.This question goes under the Harry Potter catagory as well so I'll include an answer relevent to that:-No, the Basilisk was stabbed through the head by the sword of Godric Gryffindor and then died.
One type of Basilisk, the Golden Basilisk, kills with the third eye upon his forehead.
It would depend on the type of lizard.