Your farts may smell like roses to you! But why do other people’s farts smell so much worse?
Also… if farts can spread disease can they spread Ebola?
Enjoy!
It may be crude, but it’s often the case. There’s no other way to say it: most people like the smell of their own farts. But why? As gross and hilarious as it may seem, scientists have confirmed that in a blind smell test, people prefer the smell of their own gas to other people’s brew.
Well, we’ve always wondered how this happens. And now we know, thanks to Men’s Health Magazine.
Open a can of beans and follow along.
Ever child learns the important ‘scientific’ poem as a child: Beans, beans their good for your heart, the more you eat the more you fart. But why do we get gassy after eating healthy beans? Giant Ant explains the digestive process of beans in this cute and very viral animation they made for Men’s Health.
The Flatula Backfire could be the solution to Planet Earth’s energy crisis as well as pollution problems! Well, if only it could actually run on the source that it says.
Here’s a video that I came across on the World Wide Interweb, and it literally had our whole team in a laughter riot. You can also click here to watch the video directly on YouTube.
We all have heard about the energy crisis that will engulf our planet, at some point of time or the other. Also commomplace is the knowledge that our dependence on fossil fuels is a vicious circle. These hydrocarbons will definitely run out in the future, leaving us in the lurch for alternative sources of energy. Not only that, the use of fossil fuels aggravates our problems of pollution and global warming.
That’s where alternative sources come into prominence. Humans are on the lookout for a source that is clean, yet economical and most importantly, will sustain us for long time.
Who knew? The smell of farts may prevent cancer. I wonder if that’s the recommended cancer treatment under ObamaCare.
A new study out of the University of Exeter says catching a whiff of noxious gasses, like those in flatulence, could help the human body repair cell damage and prevent debilitating diseases such as cancer.
“Although hydrogen sulfide gas”—produced when bacteria breaks down food—”is well known as a pungent, foul-smelling gas in rotten eggs and flatulence, it is naturally produced in the body and could in fact be a healthcare hero with significant implications for future therapies for a variety of diseases,” Dr. Mark Wood said in a university release.
Although the stinky gas can be noxious in large doses, scientists believe that a whiff here and there has the power to reduce risks of cancer, strokes, heart attacks, arthritis, and dementia by preserving mitochondria.