Comparing Teenagers to Bonobos, Babies to Dogs, Ancient Cats to Modern Cats: A Saturday Exploration Including Photons!

Comparing Teenagers to Bonobos, Babies to Dogs, Ancient Cats to Modern Cats: A Saturday Exploration Including Photons!

This week, scientists contemplated teenage hormones, described ‌cat noises, visualized photon ‍entanglement⁣ and—oh!—landed ​on the moon.

Moon popular: The Indian Space Research Organization landed ​a spacecraft near the moon’s south pole this⁣ week, ‌deploying the Chandrayan-3 rover just ⁤hours later. All scientific instruments in the lander and rover were activated and the mission will begin ⁣studying⁤ the moon’s mineral composition, atmosphere and‌ seismic activity. Notably, Russia’s Luna-25 spacecraft, bound for the same lunar region, spun out of control and ⁣crashed on the surface‍ just days earlier.

Humans ordinary: There’s a‌ longstanding consensus that the ⁢adolescent growth spurt is a trait unique to humans. “Yep, we’re special,‍ let’s close the⁢ book on that one,” said biologists, slamming it shut with a plume of ‌dust that settled across all of the methodological errors by which‍ they arrived at that conclusion.

A multi-institutional collaborative recently dusted off all those scaling problems and incorrect comparisons between body length and weight, ‍producing a⁢ new scale-corrected method. They applied it to a dataset of 258 bonobos⁣ (slogan: “Bobobos: Like chimpanzees, but⁢ nicer”) and found distinct growth spurts in body weight and length in both sexes corresponding​ with hormonal changes similar ⁤to those observed in human teenagers. Data for other primate species also ⁤revealed teenage growth spurts and hormonal changes.

So what now, humans, ⁣how can‌ you stand apart from all the other primates? Maybe wearing a jaunty little beret or something.

2023-08-26 10:48:02
Article from phys.org

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