Some Interesting Facts about Sex and Reproduction
As
taboo as it may be in some places, sex is an important part of human life as a
facet of relationships and the means to reproduce. Here are a few things you
might not have known.
1. On any given day,
sexual intercourse takes place 120 million times on earth. Humans are a quickly
proliferating species, and with about 4% of the world's population having sex
on any given day, it's no wonder that birth rates continue to increase in many
places all over the world.
2. The largest cell
in the human body is the female egg and the smallest is the male sperm. While
you can't see skin cells or muscle cells, the ovum is typically large enough to
be seen with the naked eye with a diameter of about a millimeter. The sperm
cell, on the other hand, is tiny, consisting of little more than nucleus.
3. The three things
pregnant women dream most of during their first trimester are frogs, worms and
potted plants. Pregnancy hormones can cause mood swings, cravings and many
other unexpected changes. Oddly enough, hormones can often affect the types of
dreams women have and their vividness. The most common are these three types,
but many women also dream of water, giving birth or even have violent or
sexually charged dreams.
4. Your teeth start
growing 6 months before you are born. While few babies are born with teeth in
place, the teeth that will eventually push through the gums of young children
are formed long before the child even leaves the womb. At 9 to 12 weeks the
fetus starts to form the teeth buds that will turn into baby teeth.
5. Babies are always
born with blue eyes. The color of your eyes depends on the genes you get from
your parents, but at birth most babies appear to have blue eyes. The reason
behind this is the pigment melanin. The melanin in a newborn's eyes often needs
time after birth to be fully deposited or to be darkened by exposure to
ultraviolet light, later revealing the baby's true eye color.
6. Babies are pound
for pound, stronger than an ox. While a baby certainly couldn't pull a covered
wagon at its present size, if the child were the size of an oxen it just might
very well be able to. Babies have especially strong and powerful legs for such
tiny creatures, so watch out for those kicks.
7. One out of every
2,000 newborn infants has a tooth when they are born. Nursing mothers may
cringe at this fact. Sometimes the tooth is a regular baby tooth that has
already erupted and sometimes it is an extra tooth that will fall out before
the other set of choppers comes in.
8. A fetus acquires
fingerprints at the age of three months. When only a small fraction of the way
through its development a fetus will have already developed one of the most
unique human traits: fingerprints. At only 6-13 weeks of development, the
whorls of what will be fingerprints have already developed. Oddly enough, those
fingerprints will not change throughout the person's life and will be one of
the last things to disappear after death.
9. Every human spent
about half an hour as a single cell. All life has to begin somewhere, and even
the largest humans spent a short part of their lives as a single celled
organism when sperm and egg cells first combine. Shortly afterward, the cells
begin rapidly dividing and begin forming the components of a tiny embryo.
10. Most men have
erections every hour to hour and a half during sleep. Most people's bodies and
minds are much more active when they're sleeping than they think. The
combination of blood circulation and testosterone production can cause erections
during sleep and they're often a normal and necessary part of REM sleep.
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