Jump to content

User:LoopZilla

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


This user has been on Wikipedia for 20 years, 10 months and 2 days.

In a previous life... I was User:N12345n (First edit: Jan 23, 2004 21:42:07).

But how busy???

WP:ANI for Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents

WIP

[edit]
About Me
This user enjoys photography.
This user attended Wikimania 2014 in London, United Kingdom.
CGThis user's alignment is Chaotic Good: the "Rebel."
This user lives in London.
inclThis user is an inclusionist.
This user contributes to OpenStreetMap.
This user has created a global account. LoopZilla's main account is on Wikipedia (in English).
This user has pending changes reviewer rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify)

Moi

[edit]

I live in the East End of London and have started to find an interest in local history.

The Dagenham Roundhouse is in Dagenham in London, UK

Where is Lawrence Hall?

I am LoopZilla in the Commons but I am not Loopzilla.

Wikipedia is just like the real world and eBay.

I often listen to BBC Radio 4


Thecacera pennigera
Thecacera pennigera, also known as the winged thecacera, is a species of sea slug in the family Polyceridae. It has a cosmopolitan distribution, being found in temperate waters on either side of the North Atlantic Ocean, in the Mediterranean Sea, around South and West Africa, Brazil, Japan, Korea, Pakistan and more recently in Australia and New Zealand. There is a significant difference in colouring between Atlantic populations and Pacific specimens, however. Thecacera pennigera has a typical adult length between 15 millimetres (0.6 in) and 30 millimetres (1.2 in), featuring a short, wide head with two lateral flaps and two sheathed olfactory organs called rhinophores. The body is wedge shaped, being wide at the front and ending in a slender foot with a lateral keel on either side. The general colour of the body is translucent white and the upper side is covered with orange splotches and small black spots. Like other sea slugs, T. pennigera is a hermaphrodite with internal fertilisation and a mating mechanism whereby pairs of animals exchange packets of sperm. This T. pennigera was photographed in the Mar Piccolo of Taranto, Italy.Photograph credit: Roberto Strafella

First Course

Second Course

History

[edit]
Bootstrapping...

Some people the upstairs room in a pub....


End Notes

[edit]

This is not the end!