I guess that explains Canada choosing the moose as one of their official national mascots
Anna - 08:08am on 08/22/2007
whistler, you cwazy wabbit. I’m going to get you.
/E. Fudd
docdave - 08:08am on 08/22/2007
Whatsamatta U
The Whistler - 08:08am on 08/22/2007
Wow. The moose’s emission of “green house gases” is limited to belching and flatulence? Does it not respirate as well? Perhaps is breathes in nitrogen and expels ammonia?
Won’t these global warming worries be shocked to find out that, after volcanism, animals, both land and sea, are the greatest source of carbon dioxide and methane.
kbiel - 08:08am on 08/22/2007
Reminds me of the time I climbed Whychataka Peak. Pretty smoggy up there, too!
Proof - 08:08am on 08/22/2007
The article says carbon dioxide, not methane, but then later alludes to that. For the record, if you eat 2000 calories per day, your carbon dioxide output is around 400kG. Scales roughly with weight, really.
Keel moose and squirrel!
Watch me pull a rabbit out of my hat.
I guess that explains Canada choosing the moose as one of their official national mascots
whistler, you cwazy wabbit. I’m going to get you.
/E. Fudd
Whatsamatta U
Wow. The moose’s emission of “green house gases” is limited to belching and flatulence? Does it not respirate as well? Perhaps is breathes in nitrogen and expels ammonia?
Won’t these global warming worries be shocked to find out that, after volcanism, animals, both land and sea, are the greatest source of carbon dioxide and methane.
Reminds me of the time I climbed Whychataka Peak. Pretty smoggy up there, too!
The article says carbon dioxide, not methane, but then later alludes to that. For the record, if you eat 2000 calories per day, your carbon dioxide output is around 400kG. Scales roughly with weight, really.
No comment on your likely methane output.
"I hate those miserable meeses to pieces!”
(anybody place the quote?)
Tom and Jerry?