Posted by Alex in Health on July 13, 2007 at 2:45 am
If sexual orientation is biological, then are there other traits that correlate with gayness?
New York Magazine has an interesting article on the science of analyzing physical characteristics that society interprets as "gay-like." For example:
Statistically, for instance, gay men and lesbians have about a 50 percent greater chance of being left-handed or ambidextrous than straight men or women. The relative lengths of our fingers offer another hint: The index fingers of most straight men are shorter than their ring fingers, while for most women they are closer in length, or even reversed in ratio.
About 23 percent had counterclockwise hair whorls. In the general population, that figure is 8 percent.
… gay men, like straight women, have an increased density of fingerprint ridges on the thumb and the pinkie of the left hand; and overall their arms, legs, and hands are smaller relative to stature (among whites but not blacks)
Ichthyologist (that’s a fancy word for scientist that study fish) Pablo Lehmann named a new species of catfish discovered in Colombia after Batman: Otocinclus batmani.
Photographer Michel Tcherevkoff created the "Shoe-Fleur" above using leaves and flowers:
“I decided early on that I wouldn’t mix different types,” he says. “Every shoe and handbag [most of the shoes in the book have matching purses] would be made from one particular plant or flower.” Tcherevkoff shot blossoms and stems, twisting and knotting and weaving and tying them to bring nature’s flora to heel as meticulously as a third-generation Italian cobbler.
Mike Rowe on QVC Selling Crinkly Cat Bag "Mike Rowe (host of Dirty Jobs) worked in (very) late-night TV selling crap to idiots on QVC. He used the opportunity to its full comedic potential."
You can see that he was charming even back then: Link
The Truth Behind the Death Star Destruction Did you think that Skywalker’s one in a million shot can destroy a killer moon? I smell a massive government cover up …
Missile Defense Explained in 30 Seconds Confused about the controversial North American missile defense? Canadian comedian Rick Mercer explains it in 30 seconds.
RUSSIA (ALSO OUTER SPACE): In 1957, a stray dog from the streets of Moscow became the first dog in space& – proving that dogs always can be tricked into going for a ride, no matter how far. The mission also proved that yes, dogs can live in space, and yes, dogs can die in space… especially when they don’t have any food or oxygen. Laika [wiki] (known to Americans as Muttnik) was cremated upon reentry 163 days after launch.
First Lady Grace Coolidge with her pet raccoon Rebecca at the White House Easter Egg Roll on April 18, 1927 (Image Credit: Herbert E. French, Library of Congress)
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The White House saw raccoons roaming the halls under Calvin Coolidge; Teddy Roosevelt’s son’s pony took a ride in a White House elevator; Benjamin Harrison’s presidential goat, Old Whiskers, escaped and had to be chased down Pennsylvania Avenue; and Warren Harding’s Airedale terrier sat in on cabinet meetings. Apparently, it’s not easy to find human friends when you’re the president. Harry Truman summed it up: "If you want to find a friend in Washington," he once said, "get a dog."
PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA: In the 1960s and ’70s Mao Zedong decided that dogs (even being raised as livestock) were filthy manifestations of bourgeois decadence and had them all killed, proving once again that anyone carrying pictures of Chairman Mao ain’t gonna make it with anyone anyhow. But now, 30 years later, the Chinese taboo on pets is slowly lifting. In a country where Big Brother says you can only have one child, these days he’ll let you have several dogs
GERMANY: Even Hitler had a dog. Blondi [wiki] was a German (surprise!) shepherd who slept by Hitler’s bed every night in his Berlin bunker and probably gave an evil man pure and unconditional love. In return for this service, Hitler let her have a cyanide tablet right before he and Eva Braun ate their own.
Long John Silver by Monro S. Orr (1934)
THE HIGH SEAS: Animals aboard pirate ships may have been well loved, but hard life on the high seas trumps love. Whole swaths of the Earth’s oceans were dubbed Horse Latitudes, where winds stopped blowing and horses were slaughtered and consumed. As for parrots, they were kept in cages and used to bribe port officials in the 18th century because their feathers carried considerable value. Oh, and the bird on Long John Silver’s shoulder? It was an invention of author Robert Louis Stevenson and would probably have created an unacceptable mess for an actual swashbuckler.
Burmese Python in Florida’s Everglades National Park (Image Credit: Buzzle.com)
THE EVERGLADES: Pet Burmese pythons have long been "set free" in Florida’s Everglades after reaching unmanageable lengths, and the python population in the Everglades now seems to be self-sustaining. If you fear pythons (and who doesn’t?), the man to ask for intercession is Saint Patrick. The patron saint of Ireland is also the man some believe responsible for having thus far kept Ireland a snake-free isle.
From mental_floss’ book Scatterbrained, published in Neatorama with permission.
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