"A graduate student of Khat, Bethane Fessies who also authors the study noted "The samples were really foul smelling and fishy, most of us who sorted the samples weren't able to eat for a couple of days.""
The subscript to this photo from CR McClain reads:
A species of holothurian, Pannychia, swarms a whale fecal mound in the abyssal Paficic. I really don't know what to say about that. It's possibly the best sentence ever written in the English language. And while there's nothing romantic about fecal mounds, it's nice to think that even such an unlikely item can bring communities (even of the sea cucumber variety) together. Isn't the world a beautiful place?
Thanks for the article, Rasmus. (this isn't an April Fool's post - fecal mounds are no laughing matter) Photo source: Deep-Sea News[Image]
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"A graduate student of Khat, Bethane Fessies who also authors the study noted "The samples were really foul smelling and fishy, most of us who sorted the samples weren't able to eat for a couple of days.""
What would professors do without grad students?
April 01, 2008
Grad students: the indentured servants of the academic world.
April 01, 2008
Yes, you are correct. That is a most remarkable sentence indeed!
April 01, 2008
Bwahahaha
April 01, 2008
Um, just in case I missed some jokey understatement in your post, this most definitely is an April Fool's joke. It's not real.
April 03, 2008
I always wondered what whale poop looked like...
April 07, 2008