Rhinoceros

  1. Rhino
  2. Rhinoceros: Habitat, Behavior, and Diet
  3. Rhinoceros
  4. Rhinoceros 3D
  5. Fascinating rhino facts for kids


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Rhino

Overview Rhino can create, edit, analyze, document, render, animate, and translate Special features include: • Uninhibited free-form 3D modeling tools like those found only in products costing 20 to 50 times more. Model any shape you can imagine. • Accuracy needed to design, prototype, engineer, analyze, and manufacture anything from an airplane to jewelry. • Compatibility with all your other design, drafting, CAM, engineering, analysis, rendering, animation, and illustration software. • Read and repair meshes and extremely challenging IGES files. • Accessible. So easy to learn and use that you can focus on design and visualization without being distracted by the software. • Fast, even on an ordinary laptop computer. No special hardware is needed. • Development platform for hundreds of • Affordable. Ordinary hardware. Short learning curve. Affordable purchase price. No maintenance fees. • Rhino for Mac: The world’s most versatile 3D modeler, available on macOS. Learn more… New in Rhino 7 Rhino 7 is the most significant upgrade in our history. Create organic shapes with our new Thanks to thousands of prerelease users, we were able to field test and refine Rhino 7, making it the fastest and most stable version ever. More details… Model Creation Tools Points: Points, point clouds, point grid, extract from objects, mark (intersection, divide, draftangle, ends, closest, foci). Curves: Line, polyline, polyline on mesh, free-form curve, circle, arc, ellipse, rectangle, polygon, h...

Rhinoceros: Habitat, Behavior, and Diet

There are five species of Rhinoceroses— Ceratotherium simum, Diceros bicornis, Rhinoceros unicornis, R. sondaicos, Dicerorhinus sumatrensis—and for the most part, they live in widely separated ranges. By most counts, there are less than 30,000 rhinoceroses alive today, a steep plunge in population for a mammal that has existed on the earth, in one form or another, for 50 million years. Scientific Name: Five species are Ceratotherium simum, Diceros bicornis, Rhinoceros unicornis, R. sondaicos, Dicerorhinus sumatrensis Common Name: White, Black, Indian, Javan, Sumatran Basic Animal Group: Mammal Size: 4–15 feet tall, 7–15 feet long, depending on species Weight: 1,000–5,000 pounds Lifespan: 10–45 years Diet: Herbivore Habitat: Subharan Africa, Southeast Asia, Indian subcontinent Population: 30,000 Conservation Status: Three species are Critically Endangered (Javan, Sumatran, black), one is Vulnerable (Indian), one is Near Threatened (white) Description Rhinoceroses are Considering how big they are, rhinoceroses have unusually small brains—no more than a pound and a half in the largest individuals, and about five times smaller than a comparably sized elephant. That is a common attribute in animals which have elaborate anti-predator defenses like body armor: their " The largest rhinoceros species, the white rhinoceros ( Ceratotherium simum) consists of two subspecies—the southern white rhinoceros, which lives in the southernmost regions of Africa, and the northern white rhinoce...

Rhinoceros

Ambassadors from another age: The rhinoceros looks as though it has lumbered into our time from some primeval era. Its heavyset body stands on sturdy legs like tree trunks. Its eyes peer from a massive head that tapers to that battering ram of a horn. In our imaginations, the rhino is the embodiment of brute strength. Yet most of the time this fearsome creature is content to browse peacefully on vegetation. The rhino’s lineage is an ancient one—its ancestors walked the Earth 55 million years ago. One of these ancestors, the paraceratherium, was 25 feet (7.6 meters) long and 18 feet (5.5 meters) high at the shoulder, the largest land mammal ever known. Throughout the eons, close to 100 known rhinoceros species have existed. Today, only five species continue the line: two native to Africa and three native to Asia. What all rhinos have in common are one or two horns, a broad chest, thick skin, poor eyesight, excellent hearing, and a fondness for rolling in the mud. Their thick skin acts like protective plating but is sensitive, as the blood vessels are close to the skin’s surface, and can be easily scarred. Rhinos soak in mud or roll in dust as protection against sunburn and insect bites. Because rhinos are very nearsighted, they often charge when startled; in the wild, rhinos have been observed charging at boulders or trees. This defense mechanism has given them an undeserved reputation for having a bad temper. Their ears can move independently of each other, and one may be ...

Rhinoceros 3D

Rhino 7 / December8, 2020 ;2 years ago ( 2020-12-08) Available in Multilingual Website .com .com Rhinoceros (typically abbreviated Rhino or Rhino3D) is a Rhinoceros is used for computer-aided design (CAD), Rhinoceros is developed for the Overview [ ] Characteristics [ ] Rhinoceros is primarily a File formats [ ] The Rhinoceros file format (.3DM) is useful for the exchange of NURBS geometry. The Rhino developers started the openNURBS Initiative to provide computer graphics software developers the tools to accurately transfer 3-D geometry between applications. An open-source toolkit, openNURBS includes the 3DM file format specification, documentation, C++ source code libraries and .NET 2.0 assemblies to read and write the file format on supported platforms – Windows, Windows x64, Mac, and Linux.

Fascinating rhino facts for kids

Learn all about one of our planet’s coolest creatures with our ten top rhino facts! Fast rhino facts! Phylum: Chordata Family name: Rhinocerotidae Classification: Mammal IUCN status: Black, Javan and Sumatran rhino: Critically endangered. White rhino: Near threatened. Indian rhino: Vulnerable. Lifespan (in wild): Weight: 500kg -2,500kg Body length: 2.5m-4m long Top speed:55km/hour Diet: Herbivore
Habitat: grassy plains, rainforests and swamps. 1) Our planet is home to five species of rhinoceros– the black rhino and the white rhino, which live in Africa, and the Sumatran, Javan and Indian (or greater one-horned) rhino, which inhabit the tropical forests and swamps of Asia. 2) These brilliant beasts are known for their awesome, giant horns that grow from their snouts – hence the name “rhinoceros’, meaning “nose horn”. Javan and Indian rhinos have one horn, where as the white, black and Sumatran rhinos have two. 3) These incredible creatures are some of the biggest animals in world! The largest of the five species is the white rhino, which can grow to 1.8m tall and and weigh a massive 2,500kg – that’s the weight of 30 men! 4) Despite their huge size and strength, these bulky beasts don’t prey on other animals for food. They’re herbivores, and instead like to munch on lots of grass and plants at night, dawn and dusk. 5) During the heat of the day, these magnificent mammals can be found sleeping in the shade or wallowing in muddy pools to cool off. They love...