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Furry GPT-2: A new original species?

After seeing the AI Weirdness post showing text generated by the GPT-2 neural network, I decided to try some of my own prompts.

Each document starts with a human-written prompt shown in bold, followed by computer-generated text. Everything that the computer generates is completely fictional and should not be taken seriously.

A new original species?

The ocelot (Leopardus pardalis) /ˈɒsəlɒt/ is a small wild cat native to the southwestern United States, Mexico, Central and South America. It is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List as the population is estimated to comprise more than 40,000 mature individuals and is considered stable. Its fur was once regarded as particularly valuable, but legal trade of its fur ceased decades ago.[2] This page presents information on ocelots from a national database maintained by the American Poison Research Center in Chilliwack, North Carolina.

Barva zeberg is an ancient Australian lynx endemic to southern Australia, Australia, and elsewhere. It is a Python-like living bipedal reptile with red blood cells and horn-like nostrils reminiscent of a snake. A barva aldgauae obtained in the late 1920s was a common laborer for Italian-Americans on the southwestern US border during the Civil War. Evidence of wild ocelots in residential Arkansas has apparently been absent since 1928, and the US Department of Agriculture visited this small patch a few years later. [3]

Obelisk and barva dolphins measured at the prospect of physical contact to both human and mammal. Barva can also be distinguished from soft-tired barva by their rectangular, traditional double-strima bifacial humpback build and large middle jaw cavities. At 3-feet, this barva is the longest present on the genus tree.

Australian Barva

Research on Barva has focused on one species at its home island on the small island of Wilson Bay, known as the Barva Stag (Trichordas rwardigii). Barva have been studied for nearly 60 years by the U.S. Geological Survey, the largest zoological organization in the world and the largest possible listing of Australian Barvoids:

In March 2010 , Australian Department of Fish and Wildlife rehabilitated as one of the newest public-domain specimens of Barva and also covered 196 that were unestablished claims; some answers include alleged sightings from female aquariums with unidentified animals.

The West Australian Barva was well known throughout Australia as a turtle that had fins and bit and found no good to feed on before early 17th century, possibly the earliest humans. BarAtra could never convert to current turtle because Bolton's reburial was too immobilized in both the skeletal case (and fibrous intestinal small intestine), where the mites usually touched the flesh , and blood and faeces . The reputation of Barva isn't known, but three sightings between December 1, 2007 and March 15, 2008 appeared to ban site Helen Piper from penetrating Orrick conservation property in the West Australian bush, allowing pan-Klemmer authorities to demolish a farm Jeep equipped with metal cavities for locally purchased barse. Taming these interpreted when as a novel window avoiding time for human