The Surprising Study on “Nature’s Tooth Fairy”

by time news

Flash of good news

(Photo: Noil Harris)

We open the good news flash with the 555-toothed fish, which loses 20 of them every day and grows news at a dizzying pace. The star of the good news flash is the Linkod fish, called “Nature’s Tooth Fairy”. It has two large jaws, and now – a new study indicates that these fish do indeed lose teeth at a rate of 20 teeth a day and other breeders.

It is a carnivorous fish that lives in the northern Pacific Ocean and reaches a length of up to half a meter. Hundreds of his teeth help him grind everything, some of the teeth are small and can only be seen under a microscope, and he renews them on a daily basis.

The fascinating study was conducted at a university in Florida, where they examined 20 such fish and their teeth. A few days after the start of the study, the researchers said that they really had to “sweep” the aquarium from the amount of teeth that fell out, but when they checked the mouths again – they were full of teeth.

And from here to a cool trailer in Madrid, driven by – the sun! Yes, it is a unique vehicle powered by solar energy, and was first developed by engineering students in the Netherlands, to encourage automakers to accelerate the transition to green energy.

The car has “wings”, which open to solar panels. The panels load the trailer for long journeys, but not only: but also a refrigerator inside, a coffee machine, even a laptop. He recently completed a tour of Europe to spread the word.

And we will end with a greeting that ended well: “Hello Mr. Alligator,” as a two-year-old boy greeted the “turtle” he found in the sewer outside the restaurant where he was staying with his parents in Jacksonville.

When his father, Joe Brenner, heard about his little son’s new boyfriend, he went out looking and came across a giant alligator. “It’s a big turtle,” the toddler told his father, but in a Facebook post with photos he posted stating – it’s not a turtle at all.

The good news flash is published on Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday

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