2023’s Ig Nobels: Bizarre Discoveries Include Deceased Spider Claws and Unique Toilet Prints

2023’s Ig Nobels: Bizarre Discoveries Include Deceased Spider Claws and Unique Toilet Prints

Reanimating dead spiders to use ​them as robot claws, licking rocks, ​backwards⁢ talking and a toilet‌ that⁢ scans “anal-prints”: this year’s Ig Nobel prizes again put a spotlight on the quirky side of science.

The 23rd edition of the annual awards, given out “for achievements ​that first make people laugh, then make⁤ them think”, ⁤was⁣ broadcast in an online ceremony on Thursday ⁣evening US-time.

Real⁤ Nobel prize winners—some wearing silly hats—gave out the prizes and a $10 trillion bill in⁤ essentially worthless, inflation-ravaged Zimbabwean⁣ dollars.

Here ⁤are the 10 winners of this year’s Ig ⁣Nobels, which are ⁣produced by the science humor magazine Annals of​ Improbable ⁤Research.

The chemistry and geology Ig Nobel went to Jan Zalasiewicz, a ⁤geologist at the UK’s University of Leicester, “for explaining why many⁣ scientists like to lick rocks“.

2023-09-17‌ 12:48:03
Original from phys.org

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