[issue2215] He got incredibly hard in 30 seconds

Thalia Groh bts at bts.grml.org
Wed Aug 10 19:15:52 CEST 2016


New submission from Thalia Groh <ThaliaGroh at erectmiracle1.info>:

He Got Into Bed And His Package Was So Long And Hard
bts at bts.grml.org, give any man this to get hard in under 9 seconds
http://www.erectmiracle1.info/l/lt10X1469D57Y/693SI286H442SH58P12958940PM98964790

We started at 9pm and didnt finish until 12am - It was incredible
RATINGS
overall: 	98/100 	
  	 
speed: 	97/100 	
  	 
quality: 	97/100 	
  	 
safety: 	99/100 	
  	 
Long Term: 	98/100 	
  	 
feedback: 	98/100 	
  	 
reputation: 	98/100 	
  	 
Best time Of my life
 
Have A Wild Time This Weekend - Get Pleasured Good
http://www.erectmiracle1.info/l/lt11G1469L57Y/693MP286N442MT58M12958940GE98964790













Remove yourself from our list, please go this link If you Want, 
Write to : 837 s Erika ave Fayetteville AR 72701-7036
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Varanasi has been a Napier (1964) argued that it was very unlikely that single factor drove the evolution of Bipedalism. He stated "It seems unlikely that any single factor was responsible for such a dramatic change in behaviour. In addition to the advantages of accruing from ability to carry objects - food or otherwise - the improvement of the visual range and the freeing of the hands for purposes of defence and offence must equally have played their part as catalysts.” [37] Sigmon argued that chimpanzees demonstrate bipedalism in different contexts, and one single factor should be used to explain bipedalism. preadaptation for human bipedalism.[38] Day (1986) emphasized three major pressures that drove evolution of bipedalism 1.food acquisition 2. predator avoidance 3. Reproductive success.[39] Kwang Hyun Ko (2015) states there are two questions regarding bipedalism 1. Why were the earliest hominins partially bipedal 2. why did hominins become more bipedal over time. He argues tha
 t these questions can be answered with combination of prominent theories such as Savanna-based, Postural feeding, and Provisioning.[40] Savanna-based theory
A graph showing how the 0 tons of both the tuna and the pads.[9] The farming of nopal provides many subsistence communities with employment, food, income, and allows them to remain on their land. History
A graph showing how the According to the savanna-based theory, hominines descended from the trees and adapted to life on the savanna by walking erect on two feet. The theory suggests that early hominids were forced to adapt to bipedal locomotion on the open savanna after they left the trees. This theory is closely related to the knuckle-walking hypothesis, which states that human ancestors used quadrupedal locomotion on the savanna, as evidenced by morphological characteristics found in Australopithecus anamensis and Australopithecus afarensis forelimbs, and that it is less parsimonious to assume that knuckle walking developed twice in Genus' Pan and Gorilla instead of evolving it once as synapomorphy for Pan and Gorilla before losing it in Australopithecus.[41] The evolution of an orthograde posture would have been very helpful on a savanna as it would allow the ability to look over tall grasses in order to watch out for predators, or terrestrially hunt and sneak up on prey.[42] It 
 was also suggested in P.E. Wheeler's "The evolution of bipedality and loss of functional body hair in hominids", that a possible advantage of bipedalism in the savanna was reducing the amount of surface area of the body exposed to the sun, helping regulate body temperature.[43] In fact, Elizabeth Vrba’s turnover pulse hypothesis supports the savanna-based theory by explaining the shrinking of forested areas due to global warming and cooling, which forced animals out into the open grasslands and caused the need for hominids to acquire bipedality.[44] with an annual yield of 58,00and Dwārāvatī are the seven cities known as the givers of liberation.[12] Archaeological evidence
used by placing the device in the user?s lips which Rather, the bipedal adaptation hominines had already achieved was used in the savanna. The fossil record shows that early bipedal hominines were still adapted to climbing trees at the time they were also walking upright. It is possible that Bipedalism evolved in the trees, and was later applied to the Savannah as a vestigial trait. Humans and orangutans are both unique to a bipedal reactive adaptation when climbing on thin branches, in which they have increased hip and knee extension in relation to the diameter of the branch, which can increase an arboreal feeding range and can be attributed to a convergent evolution of bipedalism evolving in arboreal environments.[45] Hominine fossils found in dry grassland environments led anthropologists to believe hominines lived, slept, walked upright, and died only in those environments because no hominine fossils were found in forested areas. However, fossilization is a rare occurrence—the 
 conditions must be just right in order for an organism that dies to become fossilized for somebody to find later, which is also a rare occurrence. The fact that no hominine fossils were found in forests does not ultimately lead to the conclusion that no hominines ever died there. The convenience of the savanna-based theory caused this point to be overlooked for over a hundred years.[46] Some of the fossils found actually showed that there was still an adaptation to arboreal life. For example, Lucy, the famous Australopithecus afarensis, found in Hadar in Ethiopia, which may have been forested at the time of Lucy’s death, had curved fingers that would still give her the ability to grasp tree branches, but she walked bipedally. “Little Foot,” the collection of Australopithecus africanus foot bones, has a divergent big toe as well as the ankle strength to walk upright. “Little Foot” could grasp things using his feet like an ape, perhaps tree branches, and he was bipedal. Anci
 ent pollen found in the soil in the locations in which these fossils were found suggest that the area used to be much more wet and covered in thick vegetation and has only recently become the arid desert it is now.[44] Ancient period

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title: He got incredibly hard in 30 seconds

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