Survival of the fittest (ask Darwin)
do you mean what city? if you do then St. Louis Rams
In the 1999 season the St.Louis Rams were 13-3.
Click on the '1979 Los Angeles Rams Roster' below to see the roster along with stats and other information for the 1979 Rams.
Vikings had a metal helmet with no horns on so any one that told you that they did they are wrong. The idea of the Vikings having horns on there Helmets came from the Victorians
The Rams final game in Los Angeles was December 24, 1994 against the Washington Redskins. Their first season in St. Louis was the 1995 season.
Yes
The answer is ammonite
The answer is ammonite
they played rams horns
Many farm animals have horns. Those animals include: Cows Bulls Goats Rams Certain sheep Deer (a male is called a stag, the one with horns) Moose
A variation of it was. In ancient times, Rams' horns were used.
In 1948, Fred Gehrke, halfback for the Los Angeles Rams, painted horns on the Rams helmets.
The 'bone' on a ram's head is actually hollow, and it is called horns.
Dorper sheep, males and females are supposed to be polled, that is without horns. However it does happen once in a while that a dorper will have scurs ( horn material without the under laying bone) or even small horns. Large horns are frowned upon.
No, ram horns do not stab the back of the ram's head. A ram's horn headed full force at a human, however, can do serious damage.
A ram is a male sheep of any species. All Bighorn sheep have horns , male and female. The rams just have larger horns.
Let's be a bit more precise: a "ram" is a male sheep, a female sheep is a "ewe" so technically there is no such thing as a "female ram". To answer the question that I think was meant to be asked is "Do female sheep (ewes) have horns?"The answer is: it depends on the breed and sometimes.Horned vs. Polled (hornless)While originally all rams had horns, sheep can have horns or not, depending upon their breed, sex, and genetics. In some sheep breeds, both sexes are horned. In some breeds, only the rams have horns. Rams usually have larger, more striking horns than ewes. When neither sex is horned, the breed is said to be polled or naturally hornless.Some sheep breeds have both a horned and polled (hornless) strain. Partial or undeveloped horns are call scurs. While horns are sometimes removed from cows or goats for safety and management ease, horns are seldom removed from sheep unless they pose a danger to the animal.