SciShow Tangents - SciShow Tangents Classics - Pee
Episode Date: May 10, 2022We're hard at work on a cool new project, but we needed a little extra time to work on it! So this week, please enjoy a rerun of the all-time classic Pee episode!And did you know there's a video versi...on of this episode? You can check it out here!Head to https://www.patreon.com/SciShowTangents to find out how you can help support SciShow Tangents, and see all the cool perks you’ll get in return, like bonus episodes and a monthly newsletter!And go to https://store.dftba.com/collections/scishow-tangents to buy your very own, genuine SciShow Tangents sticker!A big thank you to Patreon subscribers Garth Riley and Tom Mosner for helping to make the show possible!Follow us on Twitter @SciShowTangents, where we’ll tweet out topics for upcoming episodes and you can ask the science couch questions! While you're at it, check out the Tangents crew on Twitter: Ceri: @ceriley Sam: @im_sam_schultz Hank: @hankgreen
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We here at SciShow Tangents Laboratories are hard at work on a special project.
We can tell you more about that really soon, but we needed a little more time to make it perfect.
So this week, please enjoy this very special classic episode about pee.
Now I gotta get back to work. See you soon! Hello and welcome to SciShow Tangents, the lightly competitive knowledge showcase.
I am your host, Hank Green, and I'm joined as always by resident science expert, Sari Riley.
This is the sixth episode in which I've called you our resident science expert.
Are you comfortable with this title yet? I feel like it's starting to wash over me a little bit
and just nodding as you speak through the intro, but the imposter syndrome is strong,
where I am not an expert in science. I am just good at Googling things sometimes,
and I fact check you both when I can, but not always. Gotta love being good at Googling things. We are I fact check you both when I can,
but not always.
Gotta love being good at Googling things.
We are also joined by our resident everyman,
Sam Schultz.
Hello.
Who was always here to be like,
that didn't make any sense at all.
Yeah, please explain.
We're recording this episode as a video that we're putting up on our YouTube channel,
SciShow P,
which hasn't had an episode of content
posted to it in two years.
So it is an Easter egg.
But if you want to see us in real life where you can
see Sam's cute office
and Sari's weird towel,
then you can do that.
Sam, I know
that you were raised in Butte, Montana.
And Sari, I know that
you've been a nerd for your whole life.
So I kind of want to hear the wildest
party you have ever been to.
Oh, I'm going to get in so much trouble.
Do not tell me if you're going to be in trouble with the law.
This is going to sound absurd, but in high school, in my opinion,
I would very frequently have parties that were pretty much like the kind of movie high school parties that you'd see.
Yeah.
Red Solo Cups and Alice in Hannigan and all that?
Uh-huh.
My parents were divorced and one of them was always out of town.
So every weekend, one of my houses would be free to just get so, so drunk.
I mean, if this is tying into peeing,
there was pee everywhere, I'm sure.
Yeah, I feel like the wildest party I've ever been to
has either been, was definitely as an adult,
and it was either VidCon or our staff retreat.
Like that's, I'm just a boring man.
Yeah, I feel like I'm also fairly boring.
I was often the friend who, if I would get really drunk, then I would put myself to bed or would like take care of my other friends.
Like I had a store of Otter Pops for when no one wanted water.
So I'd be like, here, suck on this sugar stick and then get hydrated. But in college, my freshman year, I went to my first real college party
at a frat house in Boston,
and I played beer pong for the first time
and was, like, good at it,
and so I played a lot.
And I remember very distinctly
walking back to my dorm in the winter
and stopping to pee several times,
just, like, in random behind-a-bush patches of snow where I was like, I don't want to pee several times just like in random behind a bush patches of snow
where i was like i don't want to pee my pants but everyone else is walking ahead i'd be like
one second and i just like run behind a bush pee and then run up catch up with my friends and then
keep trotting through the snow how long did it take you yeah what what kind of walk was this
it's probably like a 30 minute walk what the the heck's going on, man? I don't understand.
Once you break the seal, once I
start peeing after drinking, it's
my bladder's just like
wee-woo, wee-woo, let's go.
Well, that was Sari Reilly with the science
poem, all done.
She just performed it.
So every week
here on SciShow Tangents,
we get together to try to one-up a maze
and delight each other with science facts.
We're trying to stay on topic,
but we're not always great at that,
which is why we call it Tangents.
We're playing for glory,
but we're also playing for Hank Bucks,
which I will be awarding as we play.
And at the end of every episode,
one of you will be crowned the winner.
Now, as always, we introduce this week's topic
with the traditional science poem this week from me.
Here's one thing, you know, it's no mystery. Everybody pees. Everybody pees.
On into the future and in deep history. Everybody pees. Everybody pees. When you have a cup of coffee, do you know where it goes? Everybody pees. Everybody pees. It's the reason that you never eat
the yellow snows. Everybody pees. Everybody pees. When you have a Coca-Cola and you feel something stirring,
everybody pees.
Everybody pees.
It's probably your body made a whole lot of urine.
Everybody pees.
Everybody pees.
From your blood to your kidneys to your bladder to your urethra,
everybody pees into the sewers down beneath you.
What?
The structure of that one was puzzling
uh yeah it kind of overstayed its welcome uh yeah it felt like so our topic for the day is
pee uh urine um i don't know what else we call it and it's the it's the water part of our excretions
and i guess i should stop talking and let Sari define what pee is.
I mean, you were doing great. It is not always liquid, but in mammals,
like humans, urine is the liquid form. In birds and reptiles, it's solid or semi-solid because
it gets mixed up with other stuff. And I think also just like the urine containing compound is
a little bit chunkier. From what I can tell, pee or urine is any excrement that is formed by the biological system
that includes the organs that you listed.
So, like, kidneys, urinary, bladder, ureters, urethra.
Instead of, like, defining it by its components or by its state of matter,
we define it by it's the stuff produced by the kidney and the bladder.
Yeah, it's the stuff that goes through
these particular tubes.
But birds don't have all the same,
but I guess they do have bladders.
Yeah, so they don't have all the same piping,
but the cloaca collects the waste,
but there are three main sections of it.
There's the coprodium, the urodium,
and the proctodium, which-
What's the proctodium for?
So the urodium collects urine from the ureters or bladder.
The coprodium collects fecal matter from the colon.
And then they both empty into the proctodium
before being excreted outside the body.
Mix them up.
So if you hated someone,
would you call them a procto...
What?
That one? Or would you call them the procto-what? That one?
Or would you call them the copra one?
Like, which one is worse?
The poop bucket or the poop and pee bucket?
I think the one where they both get combined.
Yeah.
That seems more disrespectful to me.
Okay.
Because then you're all the waste.
All the garbage possible.
And that one is the proctodium.
Yes.
You are all the garbage possible.
I love it. Yes. You are all the garbage possible. I love it.
Yes.
Okay, I'm putting that one in my back pocket for when I insult people, which happens never.
Only us on this podcast.
Yeah.
It's true.
Oh, God.
That's great.
That makes perfect sense to me.
And I'm sure never has any kind of fuzziness to it at all.
Just like its etymology has no kind of fuzziness to it.
Parentheses, it does.
But pee, the word, came out of an abbreviation
because we know us humans,
we don't want to say long words
when we could say shorter ones.
And so pee did come about fairly recently,
meaning to urinate is from around 1879.
Wow.
And the noun meaning to urinate is from around 1879. Wow.
And the noun meaning active urination was first recorded around 1902.
Wow.
So like very, very recently, within the last couple of centuries.
And it is a euphemistic abbreviation of piss.
Okay. So we stopped wanting to say piss and we thought, you know, it would be simpler.
We just say P.
So like the letter P for piss, and then somebody tacked an E on to the end of it?
Yeah, you had to spell it somehow.
Why would you want to stop saying piss?
That's not the point of the episode.
I assumed that piss would be the slang that came later, but no.
Humans came up with piss a long time ago.
It was
from vulgar Latin.
So the official
Latin verb meaning to urinate
was mingere.
I don't know if it was a soft G, but mingere.
Which gives us medical
words like micturition.
Don't know how that related to urinate because
that came from the same stem as
water. So separate tree channel altogether.
But then people were like, that's not the sound it makes when you pee.
That's like piss.
And so then there's the vulgar verb pissier.
And then that became piss, which was used like commonly through the 13th, 14th century through a couple centuries ago.
I would have not have gotten there, but it's onomatopoetic.
It's just that's what it sounds like to piss.
Piss.
They're not wrong.
Okay, great.
I mean, that was the one I've liked the most so far of all of the etymologies that we've done.
Oh, good.
Well, I'll try to get some more vulgar words in there.
Yeah, we're going to have to start covering some more nasty stuff.
That's exactly the problem.
Got to keep it spicy here on SciShow Tangents.
So now that we're done shooting the piss,
I guess we will move on to the quiz portion of our show.
I've got a game for you.
It's called Recipe.
Uh-huh. Fun. So urine is a waste product. It's made of nitrogenous wastes and other chemicals that our body doesn't need. But just because
our body doesn't want that stuff doesn't mean that no one wants it. Human creativity knows no bounds.
And that involves exercising some chemical creativity with urine. The following are recipes that involve your pee.
And you will have to guess what you might be making with that pee.
There are three of these.
So you can get three points or you can get no points.
Let's see how you do.
They're multiple choice.
So wait for it.
Question number one.
So imagine you've been exhibiting your wares at the market for some time, but the flowers,
the bark, and the berries that you've been using to make your goods, they're not cutting
it anymore.
Never fear.
This industry favorite recipe is here.
Collect some good old-fashioned urine in a chamber pot, mix it with some alum, and then
combine with your favorite vibrant natural ingredients to bring out their natural beauty.
Are you making A, watercolors, B, fabric dye, C, lipstick, or D, potpourri?
All I know about alum is that in Looney Tunes, when they put alum in their mouth, their mouth gets really tiny.
You know what I'm talking about?
I think it is fabric dye. I was thinking fabric dye also,
because if they have it around in Looney Tunes time,
that seems like the most logical thing to be using it for.
You are both correct.
One point to each of you.
Urine is a good source of ammonia,
and ammonia is good at getting the chromophores in a dye
to bind to a piece of cloth.
That is a property that is so useful that there's a bunch of different compounds like this,
and there's a name for it.
They're called mordants.
And in the 16th century, so significantly before Looney Tunes time,
specific chamber pots and urinals were actually set aside to collect urine.
So there's like a special pot for just pee.
And then barrels of that stuff were sent to Yorkshire to age and mix with alum.
Minus the alum and mordant recipes,
urine has also been used
to directly make dyes.
Woad is an indigo-like color.
It can be made from fermenting
the leaves of the woad plant in urine.
Is dye making still a urine-heavy situation?
I do not believe so.
I think that we have eliminated urine
from the dye making
process at this point. Question number two. Now, it may seem strange to use urine to make this
powder, but sometimes you make do with what you have. Just take all your starting materials,
sprinkle with a bit of ash, and then add just enough urine to keep it moist. Stir it weekly
until you start to see your desired whitish powder
forming on the top. Are you making A, topsoil, B, ceramic coating, C, toothpaste powder, or D,
gunpowder? Oh no, this one I don't have such a strong feeling about. Those are all powdery.
Well, yeah, I wouldn't have said powder if I wasn't going to give you four powders.
Yeah, well, could have caught you on a slip up there.
I've made dumb mistakes in my answer choices.
I've heard of people using urine for toothpaste purposes, like ancient Rome or something like that.
So that seems, by deduction, I'll just go with that one because I have no idea.
Sam's in for toothpaste powder.
Okay, I'll go for gunpowder just to diversify because
those were the two I was caught between two and I have no
idea. The answer is
gunpowder. Though
Sam, you were right that urine has
been used as a mouthwash.
But they didn't do anything to it
before they used it? I think that they
may have let it sit around for a little
while to increase the ammonia content.
Yeah.
So one of the main ingredients of gunpowder
is potassium nitrate or saltpeter,
which you can find in natural deposits.
You can mine it or you can make it.
Before we learned how to synthesize saltpeter
in large quantities,
sometimes we mixed pee with manure, ash,
and leaves for months
and the ammonia and the pee would react with oxygen to create the nitrates that then bonded to the potassium manure, ash, and leaves for months, and the ammonia in the pee would react with oxygen
to create the nitrates that then bonded to the potassium
in the ash, creating potassium nitrate.
Useful stuff, that pee and poop.
Yeah, that one had pee and poop in it.
Final question.
Humans don't produce the only valuable urine out there,
which is probably good for you in this story
because you work in an industry
known for its discerning customers
and selective
ingredients. What better helper than the rock hyrax, which looks like a medium-sized rodent,
but is actually closely related to the elephant. But you don't need to find the animal itself.
You just need to find the ancient petrified mixture of their urine and feces called Hiracium.
Inside, you will find an oily mixture that will help balance out your final product.
Are you making perfume, wine, face cream, or cheese?
I wouldn't think you could eat it.
The world is a many and varied place.
I guess so.
Perfume seems like the obvious choice to me.
Yeah.
Because they make perfume out of all kinds of wild stuff
that comes out of animals' butts and stuff.
You're right.
Like weird sacs and glands.
Oh, I'm going to go with my gut and say perfume.
Okay, Sam's saying perfume.
I'm also going to go with perfume
because Sam, your logic convinced me.
That's good logic.
My gut?
Is that what the logic was?
Okay.
And you are both correct.
Hiracium is used to add a dirty note to perfumes, which makes sense because it is the combined urine and feces of a rock hyrax.
So the situation here is that colonies of rock hyrax tend to poop and pee in the same spot over centuries.
And the waste products can petrify
into a brittle rock-like thing.
And the oil inside has been described
as having an intense, complex, fermented scent.
I bet it does.
Oh, man.
And that, Sari, means that you got all three correct.
And Sam, you got two correct.
So Sari is currently in the lead.
But it's okay, Sam.
There's a chance for you to come back after we go on our short break when it's time for the Fact Off.
Welcome back, everybody.
It is time for the Fact Off.
Our panelists have brought science facts to present in an attempt to blow my mind. After they have presented their facts, I will judge them and award Hank books as I see fit.
And to decide who goes first, I have a trivia question for you.
Cats of all sizes
are well known for using their urine
to mark territory. When a male
cheetah marks, they will turn their
back to the object they want
to mark and either point their penis
horizontally backward
or upward by
how many degrees?
What?
Where's zero degrees?
Where is zero degrees?
Where is, I think zero degrees is horizontal.
And they can point it behind them.
Yeah.
We need a chart.
Just picture if it's shooting straight back,
that's zero degrees.
If it's shooting straight up,
that would be 90 degrees.
It's somewhere in between those two things because you can't really go more than 90 degrees without pissing on itself.
I'm going to just go for a nice, even 45 degrees.
Every time it marks, it's just like perfect slope, right triangle, going to shoot P in an arc.
Man, I think they can go.
I think they can hit 60.
If you ask me, they can get way up there.
Sam, it's 60.
What the heck?
Whoa, Sam.
Sam, cheetah pee expert.
Now everybody opens some tabs and look at those cheetah peeing.
It's wild.
I don't know how you make a penis do that, but you do if you're a cheetah.
All right.
So that means, Sam, you get to decide who goes first.
I think Sarah should go first, personally.
That's all that matters. P expert Sam Schultz.
So because bringing anything up into space is expensive, it's important to find ways to reuse
or repurpose waste products. And turns out urine has a lot of potential, as we learned from Recipe.
And one of the most obvious uses in space is finding a way to recycle and purify the water in pee or fertilizing plants because of the nitrogen content in addition to water.
But those are boring.
Everyone knows about that.
So I came across a paper that argues we could be using pee to construct moon concrete.
Concrete is a really common material on Earth.
It's made of a bunch of gravel or rocks or stuff held together by a paste of cement,
which is various blends of dust like limestone, chalk, and other things, and water.
So in space, scientists think that moon dust could work as cement,
and we could get water from ice or possibly pee, but that's not the most important part,
because a really tricky balance in concrete manufacturing is the ratio of cement to water,
because more water
means less strong concrete, but less water means the concrete is hard to mix and pour because it's
not pasty. So instead of just adding a ton of water, we can add a tiny bit, like one to three
percent of per unit weight of chemicals called plasticizers, which to my understanding are
basically compounds that can break certain chemical bonds and or like push cement particles away from each other
using repellent charges to make the paste more goopy and easily moldable
without sacrificing the extra strength in the final concrete that's been cured
and dried so on earth we have synthetic plasticizers that are like waste
products from the paper industry or specially manufactured, and hauling them up to make moon concrete would be added weight.
So that brings me back to what scientists from Norway, Spain, the Netherlands, and Italy have been working on with the European Space Agency in a paper published in 2020, using urea from pee as a plasticizer in moon concrete.
P as a plasticizer in moon concrete. The urea did better than one common earth plasticizer and no plasticizer trials, and it did the same as another common earth plasticizer in bearing
heavy weights, keeping its shape, and surviving through simulated freezing and thawing cycles,
which would happen on the moon. So they say it, quote, exhibits promising properties as a
super plasticizer for 3D printing of lunar geopolymers.
But also, as scientists do, they don't want to promise anything before doing more research.
And it's going to be more complicated than just peeing into the concrete mixture because ratios are so important.
And the plasticizer they tested is specifically just like a little bit of urea, not all the things that come in pee.
just like a little bit of urea, not all the things that come in pee.
But who knows?
Maybe pee concrete will be a thing on Earth someday as a new eco-friendly construction option and on the moon.
I mean, for some reason, it's much more impressive if we do it on the moon.
But also like, hey, it's just hard to make anything on the moon to get stuff there.
So anytime you get to use something that you already have is great news.
I never thought about how hard getting water to the moon would be.
Yeah, I mean, luckily there is some water on the moon.
And we think maybe more than we, certainly more than we thought.
We will probably also not get it to the moon from the Earth because there's water in space.
And it's much easier to move stuff around in space than it is to move stuff off of the earth because it's heavy here cool well we're gonna have to build
some moon buildings so we might as well be figuring out how to do it right now sam what
do you have for me animals pee a lot and they pee all over everything especially on the ground which
is basically the one place that animals of all shapes and sizes can reach. And you might think when you pee on the ground, like Sari did in Boston, that the ground soaks it up and that's it. End of story. And
usually you're right. But there are some creatures out there who can make use of this pee-soaked
ground and what they do with it could give us a new weapon in the fight against climate change.
In 2019, Sophie Petit, a scientist based on Kangaroo Island, which is an island off the
coast of Southern Australia, has lots of kangaroos on it, I'm pretty sure, made a strange observation
completely by accident. Kangaroo Island is really sandy, I think. And when you add pee to sand,
sand does the same thing that it does whenever you add any other kind of water to sand,
it gets all clumpy. So one night, Petit observed some nocturnally scavenging sugar
ants swarming a patch of urine-soaked clumpy sand. Hmm, that's interesting, she must have thought to
herself because she continued observing over the course of the next few weeks and found that the
ants would return like in greater and greater numbers every night and basically mine the pea
sand like they were little pea miners, even after it all
dried up. So Petit and a team then ran tests to see what the ants liked so much about the pea.
They soaked sand with human urine and kangaroo urine and sugar water and concentrated urea.
And there's other documentation of ants being attracted to urine, especially urine that has
extra sugar in it because of complications like diabetes. But what this team found was that the ants consistently went for the
sand soaked in whatever compound had the most urea in it. And why would the ants be so into urea?
Well, many ant species, including these specific kind of sugar ants, have a bacteria in their
digestive system that allows them to process urea into nitrogen, which is a vital part of lots of functions of life, like making proteins and probably lots of other ones.
But we knew about the ants' ability to process urea, but this is the first time that we've observed them excavating dry urine for its urea content, which seems weird.
They must just always be doing it.
We never thought to look at pee pee ground.
So being able to process urea
means that the ants can survive in harsh places
like deserts and sand dunes
that don't have as many resources
because as long as there's kangaroos
and other weird Australian animals to pee,
then the ants have an easy source of nitrogen
and they can live their little lives.
But how can this help against global warming?
Another compound present in urine is ammonia,
which breaks down into nitrous oxide.
And nitrous oxide has 300 times the heat-trapping potential of CO2,
and it depletes the ozone layer, but it isn't banned,
or it doesn't have any official sanctions on it
or anything like other ozone-destroying chemicals do.
And emissions
of it have gone up substantially because of increasing not very regulated use of fertilizer
and people just peeing everywhere in my backyard and stuff. So researchers speculate that sugar
ants could be used to incidentally gather the ammonia while they gather urea before it breaks
down into nitrous oxide. They just like throw it on a field, I guess.
And the ants would just eat all the urea up and not let it escape into the atmosphere.
So thank you, sugar ants.
And in return for this, we promise to keep calling you sugar ants,
even though you are more like pee pee ants.
So here are my choices.
I've got space buildings made of pee that's pretty cool
it's pretty cool or i got where i got ants that like to eat pee yeah fun ants cute
and i don't i don't know if there's like a big come from behind
moment here for you this episode sam what why
sam and the sugar ants are crying but with hers you're you're going to a distant world and
building on that and with mine you're saving the one we already have man and beast to join together
save the planet come on i was i was wanting you to do a little to fight for yourself a little bit
so thank you for doing that.
Regardless, Sarah is the winner of this episode of SciShow Tangents.
Why?
You just wanted to see me wriggle around like a worm more?
Yeah, you proctodeum.
Geez, Sarah just called you a proctodeum.
I know, I know.
You're both getting meaner and meaner to me every episode.
Oh, no.
Sam, you're a sweet sugar ant, but really that means you eat pee-pee.
Oh, no.
This is the meanest I've ever seen Sari.
For sure.
This is great.
Well, now it is time to ask the science couch.
We've got a listener question for our couch of finely honed scientific minds.
It's from at rm lynn 24 who asks
is p consistently yellow across the animal kingdom or is that just a mammal thing i know that it's
definitely not consistent across all animals but i do not know if it's consistent across mammals
there must be some some mammal that i've got colored pee. But birds basically have white pee, technically, right?
Yeah.
It's urine or something.
I guess it's piss.
It's bird piss.
So the reason why pee is yellow is because of a compound called urochrome or urobilin,
which is what hemoglobin gets broken down into and becomes the waste product.
And that's like yellow pee.
So if you have hemoglobin in your blood, which I think most animals do with some very few exceptions,
then pee is going to be at its standard color, yellow.
And I tried my best to look for non-yellow pees.
I recruited Deboki and we both used our Googling powers.
Like scientists don't document pee colors.
I would imagine that somewhere there should be a spreadsheet that's just like, what color
is this animal's pee?
No one has made that.
And it could be you.
Yeah.
Please do because the descriptions across the internet are wildly inconsistent.
So don't just mess around.
This is serious business.
I couldn't find anything about mammals.
Deboki found something about tortoise pee.
Urine was mostly clear
or colorless to pale yellow.
So, like, you got the clear
side of the spectrum with
small amounts of white urates.
Caterpillars, to pivot
in a different direction, poop little black
bags, which I assume also
includes their urine inside.
I don't know. Spiders.
There was a website that described the little uric acid spots as either white or colored,
which is not helpful.
Like, tell me about spiders.
The two options.
Yeah.
Like, human urine can vary in colors depending on, like, other byproducts that are in it.
SciShow has a great video about it. And I really, really tried to look into an organism like a horseshoe crab, which has
blue blood and hemocyanin in it.
And I learned that I don't I don't know about horseshoe crabs, but a lot of crustaceans
have their pee glands by their antennae.
So they spit pee out their front.
Yeah.
But I guess because that pee goes straight into the water, no one's ever collected a vial of it and been like,
oh, this is weird green pee.
But I imagine that the byproduct of hemocyanin breakdown
is different than hemoglobin.
Well, we just need to grab a lobster
and we need to strap some bags to its head.
Put a diaper on his face.
Yeah, a little piss diaper on his little piss face.
It looks like snowshoe hares have
orangey red pee
because of the vegetation that they eat, maybe.
Oh, yeah. These guys are all on the warm
end of the color spectrum. I want some blue
pee. Well, you might have to go to a different planet.
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Finally, if you want to show your love for SciShow Tangents, just tell people about us.
Thank you for joining us.
I've been Hank Green.
I've been Sari Reilly.
And I've been Sam Schultz.
SciShow Tangents is created by all of us and produced by Caitlin Hoffmeister and Sam Schultz,
who edits a lot of these episodes along with Hiroko Matsushima.
Our social media organizer is Paolo Garcia Prieto.
Our editorial assistant is Deboki Chakravarti.
Our sound design is by Joseph Tuna-Medish.
And we couldn't make any of this without our patrons on Patreon.
Thank you.
And remember, the mind is not a vessel to be filled, but a fire to be lighted.
But one more thing.
The Psittacosaurus was a small dinosaur that lived about 100 million years ago.
But just recently, scientists were able to use fossils in comparison with existing species
to create a 3D model of its cloaca,
that not just butthole used for reproduction and urination
in addition to defecation.
That's an amazing headline to be able to write.
Like, we have the first detailed image of a dinosaur butt.
Do you think one of the scientists stuck his finger
in the 3D model of the hole?
Oh, yeah, for sure.
Wait a second.
Can I put my finger in a dinosaur butt?
How much?
I think you could probably just show up and be like,
hi, I'm Hank Green, premier TikToker
and science communicator.
May I stick my finger in the butthole?
I need you to 3D print every butthole I need you to 3D print
every butthole
because putting my finger
just in a dinosaur butt
that's not going to tell me anything
I need something to compare it to
it's like there's a pain index
that guy's pain index
but you have the Hank Green index
for how far Hank Green's finger can go in