MarcusForrest
MarcusForrest t1_jc60mu4 wrote
Reply to comment by SuperNovaEmber in New study finds plant-based diet may help combat fibromyalgia by BoundariesAreFun
> Maybe a bot? Who knows!
You almost solved it yourself - OP is clearly not a bot... Who eats plants? Not bots - Giraffes! OP is probably a Giraffe trying to spread the Great Gospel of Greenery Growth and Greens
MarcusForrest t1_j9t2dj6 wrote
Reply to comment by yirush in this bread bag tie is made of cardboard. by yirush
It probably depends on the brand!
I always get Bon Matin bread (huge variety, whole ingredients, excellent nutritional profile - personal favourite is the Protein one) and they switched to cardboard bag ties some years ago - more reasons to like them!
MarcusForrest t1_j9t12y4 wrote
Reply to comment by yirush in this bread bag tie is made of cardboard. by yirush
> Definitely not here. Quebec.
My bread bags have had cardboard/carton bag ties for at least 2-3 years - also Québec, Montréal - so definitely here, Québec too
Haven't bought bagged milk for a while though, not sure about those bag ties
MarcusForrest t1_j9mawu5 wrote
Reply to comment by senorbolsa in TIL - That avocado seeds are so large because they depended on extinct megafauna to eat and disperse them. by byronhadleigh
> It's just a well considered hypothesis for why the seeds are so large.
Actually, it isn't even related to the method of distribution, but the direct competition they face in jungles and forests - for a plant to grow amongst multiple rivals, the seed needs to be pretty big to contain enough nutrients so the plant has a chance to grow over/before its rivals, and then live off the soil, sun light, water, air and all
Also, although they were still pretty big back then, big seeds were not as large as they are today - they are this large today due to human interaction and selection - the seeds are bigger, but the proportion of flesh vs seed is also growing bigger, too! Because that's what we like
Modern avocados are alive due to human efforts - fun fact: the most popular cultivar, the HASS AVOCADO is not even 100 years old yet!
MarcusForrest t1_j9maa0t wrote
Reply to comment by BlueKnightBrownHorse in TIL - That avocado seeds are so large because they depended on extinct megafauna to eat and disperse them. by byronhadleigh
> few hundred years ago.
A few thousand years ago, (woolly mammoth extinct about 10 000 years ago) not hundred - off by a few magnitudes ahahaha
MarcusForrest t1_j9ma2e5 wrote
Reply to comment by Dirtroads2 in TIL - That avocado seeds are so large because they depended on extinct megafauna to eat and disperse them. by byronhadleigh
- 2.2 m (7.2 feet) from tail to snout
- 100 kg (220 lbs)
- Teeth up to 15 cm (6 inches) long
- Modern beavers have a major impact on forests due to their dams, imagine the impact the Casteroides left! How big their dams would be!
- Could stay underwater for long periods of time thanks to its enlarged lungs
- Interestingly enough, modern beaver brains are (proportionally) larger than Casteroides so it is theorized the ancient Casteroides had less complex thoughts and interacted with their environment a little less
- They probably went extinct during the Pleistocene–Holocene Transition (12,800–11,500 years ago)
MarcusForrest t1_iycpbd2 wrote
Reply to comment by Nutsnboldt in TIL that beans are banned in Spacecraft because they can produce "1-3 cups of flatus" in an environment where there are no windows by April_Spring_1982
The reason doesn't matter - if something is officially prohibited, it is effectively banned.
MarcusForrest t1_ixhf9qk wrote
Reply to comment by EnnWhyCee in TIL the Great Pyramid of Giza is not the largest pyramid in the world, Great Pyramid of Cholula, also known as Tlachihualtepetl, is the largest archaeological site of a pyramid in the New World, as well as the largest pyramid by volume known to exist in the world today. by Mind-Matters-Not
This recent thread is an excellent start - as is this other thread and also this excellent thread
In short,
- He doesn't really give any evidence for his claims, only a lot of "what ifs"
- He doesn't seem to understand how science works. He claims archeologists oppose his theory, because it's "an attack against the current paradigm, and archeologists are reluctant to change the paradigm", but that's simply untrue. The paradigm changes constantly every time new evidence is discovered.
- His formula is unscientific;
- Hancock describes something cool in vague, romanticized terms. This is often done in the first person in a journalistic style to provide an air of legitimacy without needing to be thorough
- Hancock asserts the thing's mysterious nature. He does this actively by showing how things archaeologists said 100 years ago (or never said at all!) fail to explain the thing, or passively by ignoring decades of research, positioning himself as the first person to ask these questions.
- Hancock offers an additional, enticing observation that, having had all other context stripped away, functions as the single knowable fact
- Hancock suggests his kooky hyper-diffusionist explanation for that observation that only makes sense if the handful of observations he's provided are the only ones you know
Because Hancock has stripped away all context for his observations, he can make whatever claims he wants. And because most readers have no familiarity with archaeological literature outside their high school history books, they don't know how much information Hancock is not telling them.
More recently, Hancock has shifted to theories that violate that first scientific fundamental. His book America Before is the culmination of his obsession with the Younger Dryas Impact Theory.
Sensationalized unproven claims while dismissing science is absolutely bad and should not be encouraged.
^(Note: 95% of this comment isn't my own stuff, but copy-pasted from the linked threads)
MarcusForrest t1_iw7n3wv wrote
Reply to comment by BrutalModerate in TIL the Nile crocodile has the strongest bite of all animals. by FutureRobotWordplay
Saltwater Crocodiles are often cited as having the strongest, but that isn't accurate anymore - their bite force is measured at 3700 PSI, but Nile Crocodiles, although smaller than Saltwater Crocodiles, have a bite force of 5000 PSI
MarcusForrest t1_iujukgq wrote
Reply to TIL that platypuses give off a biofluorescent green-blue glow under UV light and no one knows why... by Throwawayiea
Plenty of animals do - multiple reptiles fish, birds, mammals, insects, arachnids, other bugs
IMPORTANT DETAIL ABOUT THE ORIGINAL STUDY
The original study claiming platypuses are biofluorescent used dead platypuses (2020) - I couldn't find more recent research with live subjects
This can make a difference as various bacteria, fungi and other organisms are biofluorescent under UV, so a corpse could also be covered in those organisms. But again, some other mammals showcase Biofluorescence. Reasons are simply how the higher energy wavelengths of light is absorbed by the fur - it may not have an actual ''reason'' or ''use'' - it is probably just the way it is, but some experts suggest it might've been related to survival with a distant ancestor - it could've made predation from certain predators more difficult, a form of camouflage (but nothing really supports that theory)
MarcusForrest t1_iuaqwrd wrote
Tripping strangers (or enemies) is fine though
MarcusForrest t1_iuaqalv wrote
Reply to comment by ArizonaZia in Found an abomination in my Cheeto bag. Ripped it in half and it’s just a block of cheese. by hallovalerie
Save it as flavouring for Mac'n Cheese or Pop-corn 👌
MarcusForrest t1_iuaq82z wrote
Reply to comment by glisteningdinkus in Found an abomination in my Cheeto bag. Ripped it in half and it’s just a block of cheese. by hallovalerie
A CheetoKing would be a giant bundle of connected/intertwined cheetos - this is a block of flavouring powder
MarcusForrest t1_jc60wty wrote
Reply to comment by Kiflaam in Cancer researchers show introducing bacteria to a tumour’s microenvironment creates a state of acute inflammation that triggers the immune system’s primary responder cells to attack rather than protect a tumour. by unswsydney
Cold Virus is a Virus, this is from Bacteria
(Also, IIRC the Cold Virus one was only related to Skin Cancer, so very specific)
According to this study, they basically changed the behaviour of Neutrophils (a type of white blood cell that helps against infection) - while they usually and unfortunately promote cancer growth, in this case, they managed to change the behaviour to perform the opposite!