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A Cat Blows a Snot Bubble
The cat caught a cold and blow a snot bubble with its breath. This footage was filmed by Mr. Xie, in Xinji, Shijiazhuang, Hebei, at 16:07, on September 24, 2024.
Probably by blowing snot bubbles to keep their noses at a lower temperature, as this heat map shows. (Image credit: Christine Cooper) The first clue came when Cooper's doctoral student was ...
It's BlackGirlMagic snot. The Lemonade of cinematic saliva. Viola Davis will continue to win awards and will continue to be as consistently awesome and awe-inspiring as she's always been.
An echidna’s snot bubbles coat the spiny critter’s nose with moisture, which then evaporates and draws heat from the sinus, cooling the blood.
Watch the Trailer for Snot Bubble Boy, a Visionary Animated Short. By Amanda Dobbins. Apr. 5, 2011. save d. Save this article to read it later.
Echidnas blow snot bubbles and do belly flops to keep themselves cool in the Australian heat, new research has found. The native animals are believed to be less tolerant to hot weather than other ...
But how exactly does a snot bubble reduce an echidna's body temperature? When the booger bubbles burst, it wets the tip of their snout which can then evaporate and cool the blood just under the skin.
Funky-Cute Echidnas Blow Snot Bubbles to Keep Cool in the Heat Amanda Kooser Freelance writer Amanda C. Kooser covers gadgets and tech news with a twist for CNET.
Echidnas blow snot bubbles to cool a pool of blood at the top of their elongated beaks, researchers from Curtin University have discovered. They also perform belly flops on cool surfaces ...