Ezechiel
Paranormal Adept
Ever wonder about the small mouths depicted by contactees? Well poop might explain it
Picture this ! You're a member of an interstellar crew injected into a tight saucer... with not a lot of space to move or poop for that matter. There's no ecosystem to process poop and the food available is mostly in liquid form and calibrated to meet the basic minimum requirements to support their organic frame through long voyages and stasis. You could be tempted to think that maybe their home planet is overpopulated and everybody's on a regulated diet ... but then this might just be the normal disposition of inter-stellar space travelers.
Thank insects and microbes that we aren’t over our knees in feces | Science News
Beyond poop...
The sense of smell... a remnant of prior evolution on a planet (smell is a survival tool in primitive competitive organic environments) is as important as our small toe and explains the small holes below the large eyes.
If I was forced to image a sentient being living outside an ecosystem, I'd probably pick the two guys below. The extreme technologies they master compensates for the limited physical strength of their organic shells. You have to wonder if this is what independence looks like ?
Picture this ! You're a member of an interstellar crew injected into a tight saucer... with not a lot of space to move or poop for that matter. There's no ecosystem to process poop and the food available is mostly in liquid form and calibrated to meet the basic minimum requirements to support their organic frame through long voyages and stasis. You could be tempted to think that maybe their home planet is overpopulated and everybody's on a regulated diet ... but then this might just be the normal disposition of inter-stellar space travelers.
Thank insects and microbes that we aren’t over our knees in feces | Science News
Have you ever paused to wonder why we’re not all drowning in poop? Well, you should. After all, in the United States alone, cows produce 900 billion kilograms of poop per year. In Finland, 1 million cattle produce about 4 billion kilograms of dung per year, enough to make a cube 160 meter high and comfortably bury the Statue of Liberty. That’s just cows. It’s not counting the human waste. Take a moment to imagine how that might pile up.
Beyond poop...
The sense of smell... a remnant of prior evolution on a planet (smell is a survival tool in primitive competitive organic environments) is as important as our small toe and explains the small holes below the large eyes.
If I was forced to image a sentient being living outside an ecosystem, I'd probably pick the two guys below. The extreme technologies they master compensates for the limited physical strength of their organic shells. You have to wonder if this is what independence looks like ?