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When you walk down a steep hill, the pressure on your knees is equal to three times your body weight.Apollo5000now thats semi-interesting
The average human body contains .1 mg of uranium, .2 mg of gold, and 7 mg of arsenic!Apollo5000Holy **** I'm gonna cut myself open until I find the gold!
[QUOTE="Apollo5000"]The average human body contains .1 mg of uranium, .2 mg of gold, and 7 mg of arsenic!gamerelite1Holy **** I'm gonna cut myself open until I find the gold! Thats probably not even a penny worth... Although they tend to be made out of bronze or copper so it might have some value to it. Not a lot though. I'd personally try and get the poison out first.
Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Â
If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Scn64
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.Â
...in a vacuum.Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Zeke129
Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Zeke129
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.[QUOTE="Zeke129"]...in a vacuum.Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Dark__Link
Shall we just say that all objects accelerate downward at the same speed on Earth? Let's not confuse people.Â
[QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Â
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Scn64
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
[QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Zeke129
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
lmao.[QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Zeke129
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
Digested food doesn't travel through our intestines.[QUOTE="Dark__Link"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]...in a vacuum.Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Zeke129
Shall we just say that all objects accelerate downward at the same speed on Earth? Let's not confuse people.
I think you've confused yourself.[QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Â
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Scn64
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
Digested food doesn't travel through our intestines.Irrelavent. Matter travels from our stomach to our butt in a few hours. Nothing can go from Earth to Pluto in a few hours.
Â
[QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Dark__Link"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]...in a vacuum.Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Dark__Link
Shall we just say that all objects accelerate downward at the same speed on Earth? Let's not confuse people.
Heh. The gravitational constant on Earth is 9.8 m/s^2. I have said nothing factually innacurate.Â
[QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Zeke129
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
Digested food doesn't travel through our intestines.Irrelavent. Matter travels from our stomach to our butt in a few hours. Nothing can go from Earth to Pluto in a few hours.
Said matter does not travel through the intestines so the length of the intestines is irrelevant.[QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Â
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Scn64
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
Digested food doesn't travel through our intestines.Irrelavent. Matter travels from our stomach to our butt in a few hours. Nothing can go from Earth to Pluto in a few hours.
Said matter does not travel through the intestines so the length of the intestines is irrelevant.However, this is not a discussion of how the intestines work. You claimed the average human intestine is a length equal to a round trip to pluto. In this case, the length is very relavent.Â
[QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Zeke129
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
Digested food doesn't travel through our intestines.Irrelavent. Matter travels from our stomach to our butt in a few hours. Nothing can go from Earth to Pluto in a few hours.
Said matter does not travel through the intestines so the length of the intestines is irrelevant.However, this is not a discussion of how the intestines work. You claimed the average human intestine is a length equal to a round trip to pluto. In this case, the length is very relavent.
Your argument was that the intestines can't possibly be that long because digested food is able to move through our bodies much faster than we could travel to Pluto. This shows your lack of understanding of the human body and, therefore, nullifies any credibility you once had.[QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Zeke129
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
Digested food doesn't travel through our intestines.Irrelavent. Matter travels from our stomach to our butt in a few hours. Nothing can go from Earth to Pluto in a few hours.
Except light...[QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Â
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Scn64
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
Digested food doesn't travel through our intestines.Irrelavent. Matter travels from our stomach to our butt in a few hours. Nothing can go from Earth to Pluto in a few hours.
Said matter does not travel through the intestines so the length of the intestines is irrelevant.However, this is not a discussion of how the intestines work. You claimed the average human intestine is a length equal to a round trip to pluto. In this case, the length is very relavent.
Your argument was that the intestines can't possibly be that long because digested food is able to move through our bodies much faster than we could travel to Pluto. This shows your lack of understanding of the human body and, therefore, nullifies any credibility you once had.20-25 feet.
Checkmate.
Â
Except light...Dark__Link
Light isn't matter. I was referring to matter.Â
[QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Â
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Zeke129
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
Digested food doesn't travel through our intestines.Irrelavent. Matter travels from our stomach to our butt in a few hours. Nothing can go from Earth to Pluto in a few hours.
Said matter does not travel through the intestines so the length of the intestines is irrelevant.However, this is not a discussion of how the intestines work. You claimed the average human intestine is a length equal to a round trip to pluto. In this case, the length is very relavent.
Your argument was that the intestines can't possibly be that long because digested food is able to move through our bodies much faster than we could travel to Pluto. This shows your lack of understanding of the human body and, therefore, nullifies any credibility you once had.20-25 feet.
Checkmate.
Â
That's not a credible source.
[QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"][QUOTE="Scn64"][QUOTE="Zeke129"]Any object - no matter how heavy - when dropped, will accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/s^2.
You'd be amazed at how many people don't know that.
Â
[QUOTE="Scn64"]If you took the intestines from an average human and stretched them out, they would reach from the Earth to Pluto and back.Scn64
Wrong. They're about 20 feet long.
That's a common misconception.Digested food would have to travel through us at about Warp 4. Our intestines are 20 feet long, give or take 5 feet.
Digested food doesn't travel through our intestines.Irrelavent. Matter travels from our stomach to our butt in a few hours. Nothing can go from Earth to Pluto in a few hours.
Said matter does not travel through the intestines so the length of the intestines is irrelevant.However, this is not a discussion of how the intestines work. You claimed the average human intestine is a length equal to a round trip to pluto. In this case, the length is very relavent.
Your argument was that the intestines can't possibly be that long because digested food is able to move through our bodies much faster than we could travel to Pluto. This shows your lack of understanding of the human body and, therefore, nullifies any credibility you once had.20-25 feet.
Checkmate.
Â
That's not a credible source.
That webpage cites 5 sources.
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