Ababil (ah-bah-bil)

Ababils (Ah-bah-bill) were majestic three headed golden eagles. Their habitat traditionally covered the northern hemisphere of Eular (Euplar and Auslar) supercontinent. These huge birds were powerful enough to pick up 13,000 lbs which they then dropped on unsuspecting predators so the ababil could feast upon the carcass. Their diet was mostly made up of scavenged meat from reptiles, mammals, and fish. Other scavengers would often follow ababil flocks in the hopes of stealing food from carcasses. Early people, namely centaurs, charted the migration patterns of ababil to feed themselves. Ababils caught on to this practice and started dropping large rocks on hunting parties, necessitating a stealthy approach by tribal scavengers to avoid detection.

With three heads, the ababil was always watchful for predators. Each head possessed equal control of the body, requiring an enormous amount of cooperation for the bird to even move. Ababil hatchlings often flew much later than other birds because their heads wouldn’t work together. It was usually the middle head which commanded the other two. Cases where the left or right were dominant was rare, but were cited by a few Ornithologists.

Mythology

In the Quran, the ababil was an enormous three-headed bird who dropped red bricks on elephants sent by the King of Yemen to attack the city of Mecca when the Prophet Mohammad was born.

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