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Saturday 30 June 2018

Sweat

Humans are the sweatiest primates alive. We have up to five million sweat glands producing a maximum of three gallons of sweat per day. 

Pixabay

A man working in a mild climate loses up to five pints of sweat a day, but a miner working underground can lose 13 pints on a single shift.

The production of sweat glands is inversely related to the production of hair.

While women have more sweat glands than men, men's sweat glands produce more sweat.

Droplets of perspiration on the skin. By Bibikoff 

Wearing white at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships began as a way of hiding the fact that women sweat.

In 1485, a disease named English sweating sickness broke out causing people to sweat to death in a matter of hours. The disease claimed the lives of tens of thousands before mysteriously vanishing.

People with spinal cord injuries resulting in quadriplegia can't sweat.

There are more sweat glands on the soles of your feet than on any other part of your body.

Socks absorb almost a half liter of sweat a day.

Some ancient Native Americans believed licking up their sweat, swishing it around in their mouths, then spitting it out was a hangover cure.

Most Koreans do not use deodorant due to a gene called ABCC11, which prevents sweat from producing odor.

Sweat isn't inherently smelly. In fact, it's nearly odorless. The stench comes from bacteria that break down one of two types of sweat on your skin

Demonstration of sweat By Dogbertio 14 - Own work, 

Deodorant contains some antibacterial power to stop the stink before it starts, while antiperspirants deal with sweat directly.

Cows sweat through their noses.

Pigs can’t sweat, which is why they roll around in mud to cool off.  So why do we have the expression “sweat like a pig?” The term is derived from the iron smelting process in which hot iron poured on sand cools and solidifies with the pieces resembling a sow and piglets.

Guinea pigs and rabbits can't sweat. 

Hippo sweat has a reddish-orange coloration that acts as a natural sunblock. The sticky substance also helps regulate the hippo's body temperature and discourages bacterial infection.

Source Huffington Post

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