they don't eat it because they can't get to it...but....they do eat shellfish!
they do just not from the sand
A Horn lizard becuase when it is buried under sand it will shake it body so it could get out of the sand
Only some buried sand bags. The village is not protected.
in a delta from sand grains deposited, buried, and cemented together by minerals.
i dont know the anwser
they don't eat it because they can't get to it...but....they do eat shellfish!
they do just not from the sand
There are many edible shellfish who live in the sand. Many people enjoy eating clams and mussels. Clams and mussels are bivalve mollusks who live in the sand. People also like crabs. Crabs are crustacean shellfish who live in the sand.
Yes but they either dont go very deep or dont have wide holes otherwise they would get buried alive.
Its on the sand as if in the sand that means one has buried it self in sand
some jobs in sahara desert are yet to be found...because the establishiments were buried deep under the sand so please... try to visit their inquiries stations...which were also buried under the sand...so if i were you...there are two choices...first....be buried under the sand to find jobs there...or stop looking for jobs your hopeless...dont you know that...ha...?...your hopeless i tell you..
A Horn lizard becuase when it is buried under sand it will shake it body so it could get out of the sand
The pipi is a burrowing bivalve shellfish (paphies Australis) that is common in coastal areas right around New Zealand and is a traditional food of Maori. They are easiest to find buried just below the surface of mud or sand in tidal estuaries at low tide.
No
The Frilled Venerid live partly buried in fine sand between 600 to 1200 meters in depth.
bigbuts
Pyramyds