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๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Absolutely. So with all this, you're trying to race to get the poop before it sinks.
What a magical, mystical, fleeting booger of a turd.
What a magical, mystical, fleeting booger of a turd.
What a magical, mystical, fleeting booger of a turd.
Colette says it feels like really high stakes. And so she's doubting herself when they're out looking for this whale scat for the first time. And then she starts to see little specks in the water. And she thinks this could be anything until she turns to the whale expert in the boat, Deborah Giles.
Colette says it feels like really high stakes. And so she's doubting herself when they're out looking for this whale scat for the first time. And then she starts to see little specks in the water. And she thinks this could be anything until she turns to the whale expert in the boat, Deborah Giles.
Colette says it feels like really high stakes. And so she's doubting herself when they're out looking for this whale scat for the first time. And then she starts to see little specks in the water. And she thinks this could be anything until she turns to the whale expert in the boat, Deborah Giles.
They did it. It worked. And from a boat, no less. I mean, that just goes to show you how good Jack's nose is.
They did it. It worked. And from a boat, no less. I mean, that just goes to show you how good Jack's nose is.
They did it. It worked. And from a boat, no less. I mean, that just goes to show you how good Jack's nose is.
Yeah, so this was one of the questions that I asked Lauren DeGrief. She's a forensic chemist at Florida International University, and she studies the compounds dogs are smelling in the air when they detect things.
Yeah, so this was one of the questions that I asked Lauren DeGrief. She's a forensic chemist at Florida International University, and she studies the compounds dogs are smelling in the air when they detect things.
Yeah, so this was one of the questions that I asked Lauren DeGrief. She's a forensic chemist at Florida International University, and she studies the compounds dogs are smelling in the air when they detect things.
So for dogs, the air coming in through their nose goes to two separate places, their lungs and the spongy area in the back of their snout, which means that the scents are getting collected and concentrated instead of getting diluted from the air.