Australia is Rajni Bhabhi 2.0 (2023) Hindi Short Filmhome to many different kinds of spiders, ranging from the venomous to the relatively harmless.
Although we'd bet you'd be hard pressed to find one bigger than Charlotte the huntsman spider, who was found and photographed by the folks at Barnyard Betty's Rescue in Queensland, Australia a year ago.
It's only in the last couple of days, that Charlotte has received lots of internet attention however, and there's little wonder why.
She's spectacularly, almost unrealistically big, as photos of her hanging on the end of a broom show.
SEE ALSO: Watch in awe as a giant huntsman spider carries off with a mouseCharlotte was rescued and released, and the people at Barnyard Betty's Rescue assure Facebook that it's not photoshopped."She was a beautiful, calm spider, not aggressive in any way and like most spiders she just wanted to go about her business eating bugs and living in peace.
"She didn't or doesn't need to be killed! Poor spiders are so misunderstood," the rescue centre said Facebook post on Wednesday.
The average huntsman spider has a body span of 2 centimetres (0.7 inches) for females, and 1.6 centimetres (0.62 inches) for males. Their leg span reaches up to 15 centimetres (5.9 inches).
According to Australian Museum arachnologist Graham Milledge, Charlotte is more a little out of the ordinary.
"The spider in the photo appears to be a Giant Green Huntsman Spider, Typostola barbata. This is one of the larger species of huntsman spider found in Australia, with a leg span of over 20cm (7.8 inches), and is mainly found in eastern Queensland," he told Mashablevia email.
So while Charlotte may look unreal, she definitely is.
UPDATE: Nov. 4, 2016, 12:01 p.m. AEDT Added comments from Graham Milledge.
O Pioneers! by Rachael MadduxStephen Marche and Arthur Phillips on Shakespeare by The Paris ReviewPoem: Episode by Jennifer Michael HechtLi Bing Bing at High Tea by Claudine KoAdvice to Our Scottish Readers by Lorin Stein and John Jeremiah SullivanThe Late, Great Theodora Keogh by Joan SchenkarStop Me If You've Heard This by Daniel HerbertSinging Cowgirl; Cigarette Boy by Chris FlynnTwo Poems: 'The Crew Change' and 'Rice in the Spoon' by Don ShareStaff Picks: Archaeologies of the Future, the Last Live Nude Girls by The Paris ReviewAntonio Lobo Antunes on 'The Land at the End of the World' by Anderson TepperBlair Fuller, Editor Emeritus by The Paris ReviewCats, Dogs, Men, Women, Ninnies & Clowns by Roz ChastParadise Lost by Vanessa BlakesleeElusive Epigraphs; Travel Books by Lorin SteinLarry David Humor; Fairies and Mushrooms by Sadie SteinThe Secret Bookstore by Thessaly La ForceRubbish Collector; Barman by Chris FlynnPortfolio: Miroslav Tichý by Deirdre FoleyStaff Picks: Microstyle, The Epiplectic Bicycle by The Paris Review Leavening Agent—Or Ticking Time “Say Stupid Shit”: A French Philosopher Mutters to Himself “An American in Paris” Leaps from Screen to Stage “Lady” and Its Discontents Steve DiBenedetto’s Cave Paintings for the Future Listen: An Archival Interview with Gail Godwin Hans Op de Beeck, Night Time A Letter from Ernest Hemingway: “Liquor is my best friend” Remembering St. Nicholas Magazine for Children “And I Was Like...” Exaggeration in Storytelling Gunter Grass Is Dead at Eighty Staff Picks: Bernard Berenson, Olivia Laing, Timothy Denevi Eavesdropping in the City Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and the Sexual Anxiety of the Lost Generation Photos from Our 2015 Spring Revel M. H. Abrams Is Dead at 102 Feminist Fumes: Anicka Yi’s Miasmatic Art Wordsworth’s Most Famous Poem Turns 200 Manet to Monet: Don’t Let Renoir Paint For Graduates: The Paris Review’s Commencement Gift Box
1.9319s , 10108.8125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Rajni Bhabhi 2.0 (2023) Hindi Short Film】,Feast Information Network