They may be dangerous when provoked and can cause bites and wounds to an adult human but are not critically dangerous. They are mostly scavengers and do not attack prey that is larger than young Kangaroos.
Tasmanian devils, despite their reputation, are actually timid and shy creatures which would rather hide from people than confront them. They never attack people, but will certainly defend themselves, and they have exceptionally powerful jaws.
yes Tasmanian devils are nice they're the one how try to keep us from littering in the first place
Tasmanian Devils are the only members of their Genus, which means they have no close relatives. They are, of course, distantly related to other marsupials and, since marsupials are technically mammals, even more distantly related to the rest of us. == ==
With Devils Amongst Us All was created on 2006-08-22.
They appeal to us through intellect and hard work
The Tasmanian tiger, or Thylacine, which was not a tiger but a marsupial, is now extinct. Not even the largest specimen was as talk as a human.
They can help you by teaching you to spell sea correctly
They didn't like them, but possibly not as strongly as the term would imply to us. Every group has a term for "people not like us" and this term can sometimes be translated as "devils."
Yes. Devils are evil spirits that have been said in christianity and bibles to make people violent, rude, cruel, or greedy.
No. The carbon isotope Carbon-14, or radiocarbon, is found in the human body in the same proportions as there is carbon in the atmosphere. It comes to us from the food we eat, but the levels are too low to be dangerous, either to us or to the environment.
Same era as us, the Cenozoic era, the age of the mammals. If an animal is a mammal, they probably are from the Cenozoic. Tasmanian tigers, or thylacines, went extinct in the 1930s.
The devils are not in Hell (considered in this sense to be a place separate from our world), but rather are here among us.
No! Are you scared of old guys in aprons?