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African Animals

African Animals

⭐️5 / 5
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🙌1
Ratings
📼3 scs
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📦w/o updates
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🗣❌ unsupported
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All Versions of African Animals

3.1

January 15, 2016

This app has been updated by Apple to display the Apple Watch app icon. 1. Background music 2. Add sound effects 3. Cup for winner! 4. Support for iPad pro 5. Optimized for iOS 9
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3.0

October 8, 2014

Changed sound system. Added the names of animals in the pictures. Adapted for IOS 8. Added localization in 28 languages​​.
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2.8

September 18, 2014

Updated sound system. Other minor changes.

2.7

March 13, 2014

1 Application adapted to IOS 7 2 Changed the button layout 3 Added background music (african ethnic) 4 Other minor changes
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2.1

April 19, 2013

1. Fixed screen rotation on the iPhone 2. Added animation when the screen is rotated 3. Fixed other minor errors
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2.0

April 2, 2013

1. Now work on iPhone and support iPhone 5 2. Add launch image

1.1

January 21, 2013

1. Add New Game - Catch animals! 2. Fix landscape mode

1

December 6, 2012

Price History of African Animals

Description of African Animals

Our application will introduce you to the animals living on the African savannah, you will hear the sounds of wildlife. Each animal produces multiple sounds, which makes it possible to learn how to better communicate with animals. Also, you can enjoy high-quality images of animals in their natural habitat. The application include three mini-games. Whereas the earliest traces of life in fossil record of Africa date back to the earliest times, the formation of African fauna as we know it today, began with the splitting up of the Gondwana supercontinent in the mid-Mesozoic era. The continents Laurasia-Gondwana 200 million years ago After that, four to six faunal assemblages, the so-called African Faunal Strata (AFSs) can be distinguished. The isolation of Africa was broken intermittently by discontinuous "filter routes" that linked it to some other Gondwanan continents (Madagascar, South America, and perhaps India), but mainly to Laurasia. Interchanges with Gondwana were rare and mainly "out-of-Africa" dispersals, whereas interchanges with Laurasia were numerous and bidirectional, although mainly from Laurasia to Africa. Despite these connections, isolation resulted in remarkable absences, poor diversity, and emergence of endemic taxa in Africa. Madagascar separated from continental Africa during the break-up of Gondwanaland early in the Cretaceous, but was probably connected to the mainland again in the Eocene. The first Neogene faunal interchange took place in the Middle Miocene (the introduction of Myocricetodontinae, Democricetodontinae, and Dendromurinae). A major terrestrial faunal exchange between North Africa and Europe began at about 6.1 Ma, some 0.4 Myr before the beginning of the Messinian salinity crisis(for example introduction of Murinae, immigrants from southern Asia) During the early Tertiary, Africa was covered by a vast evergreen forest inhabited by an endemic forest fauna with many types common to southern Asia. In the Pliocene the climate became dry and most of the forest was destroyed, the forest animals taking refuge in the remaining forest islands. At the same time a broad land-bridge connected Africa with Asia and there was a great invasion of animals of the steppe fauna into Africa. At the beginning of the Pleistocene a moist period set in and much of the forest was renewed while the grassland fauna was divided and isolated, as the forest fauna had previously been. The present forest fauna is therefore of double origin, partly descended of the endemic fauna and partly from steppe forms that adapted themselves to forest life, while the present savanna fauna is similarly explained. The isolation in past times has resulted in the presence of closely related subspecies in widely separated regions Africa, where humans originated, shows much less evidence of loss in the Pleistocene megafaunal extinction, perhaps because co-evolution of large animals alongside early humans provided enough time for them to develop effective defenses. Its situation in the tropics spared it also from Pleistocene glaciations and the climate has not changed much
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African Animals: FAQ

Is African Animals available on iPad devices?

Yes, African Animals is iPad-friendly.
African Animals was created by Aleksey Neronov.
The African Animals app currently supports iOS 6.0 or later.
The African Animals app has a consumer rating of 5.0 and gets a lot of positive feedback.
The App Category Of African Animals Is Games.
3.1 is the current version of African Animals.
The latest African Animals update was released on July 7, 2024.
The African Animals app originally came out on February 5, 2023.
{{ name}} doesn’t contain potentially objectionable material and is rated Aleksey Neronov.
Currently, African Animals supports Arabic, Catalan, Czech and 24 more.
Sorry, African Animals is not part of Apple Arcade.
Sorry, there are no in-app purchases available in African Animals.
Sorry, African Animals is not designed for integration with Apple Vision Pro.

Screenshots of African Animals

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