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they use them on there dams(homes)to nail it together

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13y ago
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12y ago

.Well, pauls mum's muff may be known as a beaver, as it is rather hairy. also licked by paul himself. yum!

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10y ago

Beavers will slap their tail on the surface of the water as a danger warning to other beavers or sometimes in play.

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Q: What is the tail of the North American Beaver used for?
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Related questions

Do Beaver have tails?

The platypus does not actually have a tail like a beaver.The beaver's tail is broader and flatter than a platypus's, and covered with special scales. The platypus's tail is covered with dense fur.Their tails serve different purposes. The beaver's tail is used to help propel it along in the water. The platypus's tail is used as a rudder, for steering when it is swimming, but it also stores fat. A thicker tail is the sign of a healthier platypus.


What does a beaver tail's look like?

They were used as building Dams, and when they pat their tail against the water that means they warn predator's away or to signal danger.


Why does the platypus have a tail like a beaver?

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Where did diplodocus live?

The diplodocus lived in western North American at the end of the Jurassic period. This creature was a larger creature with a long tail that could be used as a whip.


What type of dye used for horses tail in North Africa?

henna


What is the noun used for beavers?

North American beavers are also known as Castor canadensis.


What toothpaste used a beaver as a logo?

The Green Beaver Company uses a beaver on the toothpaste box.


What does medabe mean in sign of the beaver?

In "Sign of the Beaver," "Medabe" is a Native American word meaning grandmother or elder woman. It is used to refer to Matt's grandmother in the story.


Why is that an otter like creature in South America is similar to Australia's platypus?

Beyond both being warm-blooded, semi-aquatic mammals which have fur, there are no other similarities between a platypus and a beaver. A better question would be "What are the differences between a platypus and a beaver?" These are:A beaver is a rodent which bears live young; a platypus is a monotreme (egg-laying mammal)A beaver has large front teeth; platypuses have a bill with no teeth, but grinding platesPlatypuses live in Australia and beavers live in North America and Canada.A platypus digs a burrow in the side of a riverbank or creekbank, with an extra chamber at the end for incubating and raising its young; a beaver chews down trees to eat and makes a dam to raise its young.The platypus is the only venomous mammal - the male has a spur on its hind leg with which to inject poison that is extremely painful and has long-lasting effectsThe beaver's tail is broader and flatter than a platypus's, and covered with special scales. The platypus's tail is covered with dense fur.Their tails serve different purposes. The beaver's tail is used to help propel it along in the water. The platypus's tail is used as a rudder, for steering when it is swimming.


Why was the beaver used to make beaver pelts and not other animals?

Because beaver pelts do not come from bears.


Why are platypus half beaver and half duck?

Neither. A platypus is totally different from either - it lays eggs and has a bill that does not actually even resemble the bill of a duck, as it has completely different functions. The platypus is an egg-laying mammal, or monotreme, in the same family as e echidna. it is not related to the beaver, which is a placental mammal; nor is it related to the duck, which is not a mammal at all, but a bird.


Horses used by the North American Plain Indians were descendants of animals introduced by people of what European heritage?

North American