How'd ya like to find one of these suckers in your sleeping bag????

emmagata

DIS Veteran
Joined
Aug 7, 2001
Messages
4,157
It's a camel spider (actually, there are two in this photo).

image0014.jpg
 
OMG!!! I would fall over dead. Seeing that I have a fear of spiders anyway.

Great, now I am going to have nightmares about the dang things.
 
:scared1: :scared1: :scared1:

now that i have the heebie jeebies....


blech............
 

Snopes.com says........

Origins: It's hard enough for those serving in our country's armed forces to be sent halfway around the world, away from home and family. It's even worse to be stationed in some bleak desert outpost. But nobody should have to deal with creepy-crawlies the size of small cats in the bargain! We don't yet know the origin of this photo or what it's supposed to depict, other than to note that the picture is generally circulated with text proclaiming it to be an image of some U.S. soldiers with camel spiders.

Camel spiders, also known as wind spiders, wind scorpions, and sun scorpions, are a type of arthropod found (among other places) in the deserts of the Middle East. They're technically not spiders but solifugae (although, like spiders, they belong to the class Arachnida). Camel spiders are the subject of a variety of legendary claims, many of them familiar to Americans because they were spread by U.S. servicemen who served in the Persian Gulf War in 1991, and re-spread at the beginning of the Iraq War in 2003:
Camel spiders can grow to be as large as dinner plates.

Camel spiders can traverse desert sand at speeds up to 25 MPH, making screaming noises as they run.

Camel spiders can jump several feet in the air.

Camel spiders eat the stomachs of camels, hence the name "camel spider." (Legend includes the detail that camel spiders eat camel stomachs from either the outside in or the inside out. In the former case they supposedly jump up from the ground and grab onto camels' bellies from underneath; in the latter case exactly how spiders allegedly as large as dinner plates get into camels' stomachs intact remains unexplained.)

Camel spiders are venomous, and their venom contains a powerful anesthetic that numbs their victims (thus allowing them to gnaw away at living, immobilized animals without being noticed). U.S. soldiers were said to have been attacked by camel spiders at night but remained completely unaware of their plight until they awakened in the morning to find chunks of their flesh missing.
According to most spider experts, these claims are all false. Camel spiders (so named because, like camels, they can be found in sandy desert regions) grow to be moderately large (about a 5" leg span), but nowhere near as large as dinner plates; they can move very quickly in comparison to other arthropods (a top speed of maybe 10 MPH), but nothing close 25 MPH; they make no noise; and they capture prey without the use of either venom or anesthetic. Camel spiders rely on speed, stealth, and the (non-venomous) bite of powerful jaws to feed on small prey such as other arthropods (e.g., scorpions, crickets, pillbugs), lizards, and possibly mice or birds. They use only three pairs of legs in running; the frontmost pair (called pedipalpa) is held aloft and used in a similar manner to the antennae of insects. Camel spiders shun the sun and generally hide during the day, coming out at night to do their hunting.

Although whatever is depicted in the photograph above appears to be far too large for camel spiders, the creatures might just look unusually large because they were held close to the camera, creating an illusion of exaggerated size. However, since we don't know the source of the picture, we can't yet rule out the possibility that some other misdirection was involved (e.g., digital manipulation, a misdescription of what the photograph depicts, some soldiers goofing around with plastic figures or something else spider-shaped, etc.).


basically, those aren't really that big:teeth: :wave2:
 
Oh, I have a whole new respect for the military!! ICK!! I do not like spiders! :scared:
 
<a href='http://www.smileycentral.com/?partner=ZSzeb008' target='_blank'><img src='http://smileys.smileycentral.com/cat/23/23_11_42.gif' border=0></a>
 
Originally posted by IMGONNABE40!
:eek: :scared: :faint:

Thank you for debunking the myth, oddball27.


What myth???

It's still one big *** spider!!!!


Regardless of any myth, I still wouldn't want to have one snuggle up to me in my sleeping bag.
 
I do know a person that is serving over there and he writing reports back to his hometown and the local weekly paper which I get because it's the area I grew up in. He said they did finally see one of those and they are about 16-18 inches in size. And they were told specifically to look for them. Now if he would have just included a picture :D
 
"Camel spiders can traverse desert sand at speeds up to 25 MPH, making screaming noises as they run.

Camel spiders can jump several feet in the air. "

If that were true, I would never sleep again.
 
If you look at the picture, you can see the uppermost spider stretches from that soldier's fingertips to almost the cuff of his sleeve- that is a good 7-8 inches! I think it is the other soldier's legs in the background that make the size so decieving. An 8 inch spider is enough for me, I can't imagine a 3 foot one!
 
That thing would HAVE to die if it got anywhere near me!:faint:
 
A spider whose leg can grow to be 5 inches long means it's at least 10 inches long from one end of one leg to the other end of another leg. That is WAAAYYY bigger than ANY spider needs to be IMHO!
 














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