The commenter made a prehistoric beast joke. I felt it was a bit antiquated myself.
AmidFuror
Yes, and sometimes you have to throw in a real curve ball!
By the way, as head of quality at a saltworks in Europe, I should point out that there are as many shapes and sizes to processed salt as there are subtleties to their trace mineral concentrations. So "a grain of salt" isn't a well defined quantity.
I just wanted to add to the useless comments saying they don't know and can't be bothered.
Your link didn't work. Need to see babes.
Did only a few of us miss this? Seems like it could have been explained better up front.
This guy does the math before mating with sis.
Chloroplasts getting the shaft again, I see. Underrated organelles.
What about saying quee without the hard 'r'?
Plants don't appear to be of a different origin than animals on this planet. They share most of the genetic code* with all other life we know about. The simplest explanation is that we share a common origin, and furthermore that was a common ancestor that likely began from simpler materials on this planet.
*The genetic code is the translation of nucleotide triplets into amino acid sequences
I like what the original commenter did. Pointed to the resource and pasted the relevant answer. Now we can learn two things.
That was the point. It can be like voluntarily giving up rights by joining the armed services.
Should have used atwerdna, then.