Any one of numerous species of Old World venomous makes belonging to Vipera, Clotho, Daboia, and other genera of the family Viperidæ
The Viper telescope is a 2 5 meter off-axis telescope designed for CMBR studies at the South Pole Currently, ACBAR (a small angular scale CMBR anisotropy experiment) and SPARO (a submillimeter polarimeter) are the instruments used on the telescope Viper was built and maintained by CARA
A viper is a small poisonous snake found mainly in Europe. = adder. Any of about 200 species (family Viperidae) of venomous snakes in two subfamilies: Viperinae (Old World vipers of Europe, Asia, and Africa) and Crotalinae (pit vipers). Two long, hollow, venom-injecting fangs attached to the movable bones of the viper's upper jaw can be folded back in the mouth when not in use. Vipers range in length from less than 12 in. (30 cm) to more than 10 ft (3 m). They eat small animals and hunt by striking, then trailing, their prey. Many Old World vipers are terrestrial; a few are arboreal or burrowers. Most bear live young
Any of various venomous snakes, of the family Crotalinae, found in Asia and the Americas, with a deep pit or fossa on either side of the head that enables them to detect prey by infrared
(Ticaret) Macrovipera lebetina (Common names: blunt-nosed viper, Lebetine viper, Levant viper) is a venomous viper species found in North Africa, much of the Middle East, and as far east as Kashmir
(Ticaret) Macrovipera lebetina (Common names: blunt-nosed viper, Lebetine viper, Levant viper) is a venomous viper species found in North Africa, much of the Middle East, and as far east as Kashmir
(Ticaret) Macrovipera lebetina (Common names: blunt-nosed viper, Lebetine viper, Levant viper) is a venomous viper species found in North Africa, much of the Middle East, and as far east as Kashmir
Any of various venomous snakes of the family Crotalidae, such as a copperhead, rattlesnake, or fer-de-lance, characterized by a small sensory pit below each eye. Any species of viper (subfamily Crotalinae) that has, in addition to two movable fangs, a heat-sensitive pit organ between each eye and nostril which together help it accurately aim its strike at its warm-blooded prey. Pit vipers are found from deserts to rain forests, primarily in the New World. They may be terrestrial, arboreal, or aquatic. Some species lay eggs; others produce live young. See also bushmaster, copperhead, fer-de-lance, moccasin, rattlesnake