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User:JustShin

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JustShin.

About Me
This user is a participant in
WikiProject Korea.
This user is a participant in
WikiProject New Zealand.
This user lives in New Zealand.
This user is mixed-handed.
This user uses Wikipedia as a primary point of reference.
XPThis user uses Windows XP.
This user loves using Google Earth.
bandThis user plays in a band.
This user plays their music in the treble clef.
This user knows intermediate
music theory.
This user eats cheese.
This user would likely die without eating the occasional curry.
This user eats chili.
VThis user eats Vegemite regularly.
This user eats tomatoes.
This user eats eggplant.
This user eats potatoes.
This user eats salad.
This user eats chicken.
This user eats fish.
This user will eat fish raw.
Here fishy, fishy, fishy.
This user eats sushi.
This user eats chocolate.
This user likes pie.
This user drinks water regularly.
MATHThis user's favorite subject is Mathematics.
This user enjoys thinking in Four Dimensions.
=1This user knows that 0.999... is exactly 1, but acquired a migraine learning it.
This user knows the Ultimate Answer.
This user does not smoke.
This user supports
renewable energy.
This user is a Lego enthusiast
RedThis user loves the colour red.
This user scored 9570 on the Wikipediholic test (revision 230444291).
Male Alpine ibex
Female Alpine ibex

The Alpine ibex (Capra ibex), also known as the steinbock, is a species of goat that lives in the Alps of Europe. Its closest living relative is the Iberian ibex. Alpine ibex have brownish-grey coats and sharp hooves adapted to steep, rough terrain. Found at elevations as high as 3,300 metres (10,800 feet), they are active throughout the year, primarily feeding on grass in open alpine meadows. Adult males, which are larger than females, segregate from them for most of the year, coming together only during the breeding season, when they fight for access to the females using their long horns. The Alpine ibex has been successfully reintroduced to parts of its historical range, but all individuals living today descend from a population bottleneck of fewer than 100 individuals from Gran Paradiso National Park in Italy. The species has few predators and is not threatened, but it has very low genetic diversity. These Alpine ibex, a male in winter and a female in summer, were photographed at Creux du Van in Switzerland.Photograph credit: Giles Laurent