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Not my kitty but…

A one-month-old female cheetah cub, that was delivered via a rare cesarean section, gets her tiny claws stuck on cheetah keeper Gil Myers' glove as she is bottle fed milk at the National Zoo in Washington, Wednesday, May 23, 2012. (Jacquelyn Martin/Associated Press)

May not be Milo or Thor, but still awfully cute.

WASHINGTON – Two cheetah cubs have a new home at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and are being raised by human hands after a risky birth last month at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Virginia.

The zoo offered a first look at the now healthy cubs Wednesday and hopes to place them on view to the public in the cheetah yard by the end of the summer.

Cheetahs are the fastest animals on land, but scientists said every surviving cub is critical to sustaining the species, which is threatened with extinction in the wild. These cubs are genetically valuable because their mother and father were first-time parents.

Do you have a favorite zoo?

* This story was originally published as a post from the blog "Huckleberries Online." Read all stories from this blog