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What new species have humans discovered in recent years?

Photos of a giant bat with a strangely shaped head have appeared on the Internet, and netizens around the world have begun to wonder whether it is a real creature. The bat species known as the "hammer-headed bat" is found mainly in equatorial Africa and feeds on bananas and figs. One of the largest bat species in Africa. It reaches over a meter in full, with males usually being significantly larger than females. Their huge snouts make sounds to attract the opposite sex. In Nigeria and Congo, people don't like them because they destroy human plants. This massive object has been extinct for many years, but its existence was unknown until humans. This phosphorus is famous for the excavation of longosaur fossils, and occasionally a dinosaur or two are found. The newly discovered Elephantosaurus had a long snout, suggesting it was likely adapted to some form of predation or niche differentiation within the larger ecosystem.

Researchers have discovered a new species of velvet spider in Iran. At first glance, it is easy to recall the face of the Joker in the iconic Batman film series. Their hair is smooth and thick, nicknamed velvet, and their webs are often filled with debris and sand. This spider is not poisonous to humans but may have venom that kills insects. The new spider is black all over and has hairy joints. There is a bright red line on the back with a white outline on the edge, like a clown's smile. A team of researchers led by Virginia Tech paleontologists has formally described a species called Yilingiaspiciformis. It is reported that this is the first species to walk on the sea floor and share its body. It was also the first creature to have an identifiable front-to-back body symmetry, a feature shared by nearly all animals today.

Anthropologists discovered more than 1,500 ancient human fossils belonging to 15 young, adult and old people in a cave northwest of Johannesburg, South Africa. Scientists named it Nalidar Homo. Naridian humans were one of the earliest discovered species, living between 2.5 million and 2.8 million years ago. They were about 1.5 meters tall, close to modern humans, could walk upright, and even mastered firearms technology. But other features, such as long, small hair, crooked fingers, and an odd thumb, suggest the animal was likely mobile and grabbing prey in the trees. According to the new findings, it is very likely that the Naridians hid the bodies of their dead colleagues deep in the caves, which is considered to be a custom that humans have evolved to a certain period from now on. People have been studying how strange circular patterns form on underwater beaches near Japan.

Researchers finally found the "artist" behind this exquisite circle - torquigener Albomapuloss. Male fish are only 13 centimeters long, but form circular patterns 2 meters in diameter in the sand on the ocean floor. The well-designed "artwork" of males is their capital to attract females. As the females admire the males, the females mate with each other and produce offspring in the center of the circle.