Two-Headed Baby Deer
A mushroom picker in Minnesota came across a two-headed fawn close to Mississippi. It was the first known conjoined twin fawn to reach a full term in pregnancy and be birthed. Other twin fawns that were enjoined were only seen in the womb. The mushroom picker said he met the fawn in a near-perfect condition, which meant they had only recently died.
Researchers conducted some studies and found that the deers were female and converged halfway down the ribcage. Their fur, heads, and legs were perfectly normal, but their lungs looked like they had never breathed oxygen, proving they were stillborn. The twins shared a liver but had extra spleens, a pericardial sac, and two hearts, given their anatomy. Scientists say the fawns should never have been possible, but they were found groomed in a natural position meaning the mother did try to care for them after delivery.