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lqse WSJ: The Next iPhone Will Have at Least a 4-Inch Screen - Jeaoneuntor - 12-24-2024 Uxdd 10 Frightening Facts You Probably Didn t Know About Ants We ;ve heard a lot of different theories attempting to explain why the hardy Neanderthals went extinct, but this one 82 stanley cup 17 probably the most original, if not the strangest. According to a new study, Neanderthals had extraordinarily good vision 鈥?an attribute that came at considerable expense. stanley ca Earlier studies showed that Neanderthals featured skulls just slightly different than our own, but not by much. By measuring total cranial volume, paleontologists noticed that Neanderthals and humans shared similar brain volume, so they figured that the internal organization was stanley termosky probably the same. But this is not the case, say Eiluned Pearce, Chris Stringer, and R. I. M. Dunbar, who argue that Neanderthals had a different visual system 鈥?one that, along with greater body mass, resulted in smaller endocranial capacities compared to humans. In other words, Neanderthals dedicated so much power to their visual systems that their high-level processing was compromised. This prevented them from developing complex social networks, which may have resulted in their inability to thrive. The BBC elaborates: The research team explored the idea that the ancestor of Neanderthals left Africa and had to adapt to the longer, darker nights and murkier days of Europe. The result was that Neanderthals evolved larger eyes and a much larger visual processing area at the back of their brains. The humans that stayed in Africa, on the other hand, continued to enjoy bright and beautiful days and so had Kccu How To Talk About the Election Online Without Pissing Everyone Off On March 6th, 1912, Nabisco produced the first ever Oreo biscuit at its factory in Chelsea. The cookie has since changed childhood, sandwiches, and sweets forever. We salute you Oreo, on your 100th birthday. Thank you for everything you ;ve done. The oft-imitated Oreo formula by now seems part and parcel with our knowledge of the world: Two decorated, chocolate-flavored biscuits on the outside, delicious cream filling on the inside. How could the geniuses at Nabisco have known the impact of their creation down the line It was nothing short of a cognitive revolution. I refuse to believe that childhood even existed before Oreos. People were young, sure, and they loitered with partially-developed brains pestering older people with fully-formed brains for sweets. But they weren ;t children. Not in the way we understand childhood. Before Oreos there were cookies, and there was fun. Two distinct silos of enjoyment. Oreos married them, advancing the process of eating cookies beyond the humdrum activity of chewing, tasting, and swallowing. The stanley vattenflaska Oreo turned the cooki stanley becher e into something you not only tasted but did. The possibilities are endless: You can twist the cookie apart, lick the insides and put it back together. You can take a bite of the cookie and then rip it apart. And if you have eye on a certain s stanley cup pecial someone across the playground, you can twist apart your cookie, and combine it with half of their cookie and seal your love forever in a delicious sandwich of cho |