Am I the only one who noticed the fly in that video? I can't tell if the fly was on the television monitor while they were filming the footage or if the fly was actually on the open lung tissue in the operating room...
According to experts, the plant would need light, water, and carbon dioxide.
Yeah, where would a plant get water/moisture and carbon dioxide in a human lung. It's not like we breathe out Co2 or moisture. WOW, what an idiot. I can honestly believe it. A plant/pod has enough stored energy/food to break through the surface after it is buried. And I am guessing that enough light might just pass through, even diffused, the human chest cavity to allow it to attain growth to such a small height.
can anyone come up with a suitable Yakov Smirnof line for this? i was thinking something along the lines of 'pine tree scent breathes you', but that just plain SUCKS...
@miss_so_unknown: well, if you swallow something incorrectly, it will most likely end up in your right lung (this is why people are at risk for aspiration pneumonia in the hospital/ICU - aka "cough up your stomach contents and swallow it into your lungs" pneumonia) ... the right mainstem bronchus is shaped just right for it to make it easy for stuff to end up in your lung when your epiglottis doesn't close off your airway when swallowing.
@OctaviaAmyntor: That's really interesting - I didn't even think about it that way. I guess I should stop assuming that bodies work the way they're supposed to all the time. Thanks for the insight.
Um, don't most plants wait until they've broken the surface to make leaves and things? These days Pravda reports all kinds of crazy psuedoscience as bare fact. A quick perusal of the English site they have now includes an article on how the Theory of Relativity is going to make Belorussian tanks indestructible and how an 'Indigo Child' invented a new Venus Rover. Also one about a magnetic woman. So pretty much they are the World Weekly News except maybe more people take it seriously.
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Ahh! Wait!! I got it! They need to contact Dr. Greg House to explain it all.
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Yeah, where would a plant get water/moisture and carbon dioxide in a human lung. It's not like we breathe out Co2 or moisture. WOW, what an idiot. I can honestly believe it. A plant/pod has enough stored energy/food to break through the surface after it is buried. And I am guessing that enough light might just pass through, even diffused, the human chest cavity to allow it to attain growth to such a small height.
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It's not small, no, no, no
Tree branch got a big big taste
Big big crunch for a big big bite
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Did they remove half the guy's lung with the sapling? I'm confused. What is that mass of tissue around the sapling?
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What's that Mr. Peabody AKA the internet?
You can debunk something io9 sorta published as fact?
Wow!
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I'm so so sorry.
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?
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In Soviet Russia, you breathe tree.
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"The doctors suspect that Sidorkin INHALED a bud, which later grew into the tiny tree."
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(Questioning my reading comprehension as it applies to a man growing a tree in his body = personal fail.)
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