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Brace yourself - coywolf fursonas are coming
All around the haunted house the writer teased the werewolf. The writer thought 'twas all a game... POP goes the werewolf."
What are your thoughts on the movie Brother Bear?
I started listening to the soundtrack (Phil Collins, 2003), and I forgot how much I really loved that movie. I think it swayed me a lot more than the Lion King. So, if you saw the movie recently, or as a kid, what are you thoughts on it?
Growing up in the Pacific Northwest, it reminds me of home.
submitted by Wahots[link] [7 comments]
The Little Ones Shall Inherit The Earth
Late in 2014 there appeared a new full-color very anthropomorphic comic called Squarriors, written by Ash Maczko and illustrated by Ashley Witter. “In a post-human world, two tribes of animals find themselves on the brink of war. Will they survive and find peace, or follow humanity into extinction?” For reasons not clear, humanity has vanished and been replaced by various forest animals, lead by the squirrels… and engaged in deadly, very bloody battles over territory. Now that the first 4-issue story arch has been completed, later this month publisher Devil’s Due is releasing them all together as a single trade paperback. Take a look at their web site — but be warned: When we say bloody, we mean it.

image c. 2015 Devil’s Due
What got you into the Furry Fandom?
I'm just curious, I think for me it was a lot of Disney and a series of books called Warriors and the forum boards dedicated to said book series, where I also started getting seriously into art.(RIP Warrior Cat Forums I will miss you)
submitted by WitchofPeanuts[link] [49 comments]
/r/teenfur Revival.
I'm the admin of /r/teenfur and I just wanted to poke in to mention that I'm going to make an attempt to revive it. I've never made a subreddit before this one, but I want to see the true potential in this subreddit fulfilled. Much support and suggestions is appreciated.
submitted by CCrispyy[link] [18 comments]
Z's Furry Showerthoughts, continued: Osteology and forensic anthropology in a furry world
As a student of archaeology, I study lots of bones. It's very fun (instead of just looking at people and trying to figure out what they look like naked, you start thinking about how they'd look without and soft tissues) and very demanding. One single bone, whether it's a mandible, clavicle, vomer (it's in yo nose!) or a phalange (finger or toe bone) has multiple regions and parts. Foramina, fossas, tubercles, processes, tuberosities, grooves. They change throughout a person's life and vary between sexes, and the non-sexually-dimorphic features can vary from person to person too. A feature that's really obvious on Person A's temporal bone might be barely there on Person B's. But at least we're all one species, it's reasonably simple to pick out non-human bones if you've been trained to do it, and traits tied to ancestry are fairly minor.
But oh god, what if we were a global community of beings with wildly varying morphologies (aka, furries)? How long would it take to ID remains if you had to work out species, feral or anthro, etc. before you could even begin to figure out details like sex and age? The teeth of a feral wolf and a bipedal dog would look quite similar. The skulls of many birds would show little sexual dimorphism. Snakes are indeterminate growers.
Would anything ever get solved? Discuss.
submitted by EmbarrassingShit[link] [10 comments]