Undomesticated
  Home FAQ Contact Sign in
 
Advanced search
MATCHING GROUPS



more...
POPULAR GROUPS

more...

found 6 articles for 0.000 sec
Re: Where Do Darwinist Atheists Get Their Moral Values?     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Undomesticated in alt.philosophy
Author: veritas
Date: May 16, 2008 21:24

... is closer to man. I believe they are considered intelligent, and are they not the ones that the Navy has go blow up mines? I would think that fatal to the porpoise, but again, they are undomesticated, they can be trained, but not domesticated. But, the porpoise is of course the choice. The mushroom, while I have never eaten any that did anything but made my omlet better, as (I'm writing...
Show full article (2.62Kb) · Show article thread
Re: Baldwin Effect-Patent Nonsense (until you investigate more closely)     

Group: sci.bio.evolution · Group Profile · Search for Undomesticated in sci.bio.evolution
Author: whitesickle
Date: Nov 9, 2006 13:30

..." in a human population but I imagine it wouldn't be overnight. Michael Ragland Feral Children Encyclopedia of Childhood and Adolescence The term "feral" means wild or undomesticated. Psychologists have studied feral children--children reared in complete or nearly complete isolation from human contact--to gain insights into aspects of human socialization and development. When ...
Show full article (7.06Kb) · Show article thread
Re: Are Hens Eggs Both Male and/either Female? (or is "The Birds and Bees",the worst possible Sex analogy ?     

Group: sci.bio.evolution · Group Profile · Search for Undomesticated in sci.bio.evolution
Author: Ron O
Date: Aug 16, 2006 09:38

... like the males in humans you get a 50:50 split in the bird eggs that will contain either sex chromosome. I am not even sure of the general 1:1 m:f general population ratio in undomesticated birds (but the concept a rooster's harem would certainly NOT seem to desire a system that produces a 1:1 ratio of offspring/contenders ) The ratio is close to 1:1. In chickens there is ...
Show full article (6.94Kb) · Show article thread
Re: Are Hens Eggs Both Male and/either Female? (or is "The Birds and Bees",the worst possible Sex analogy ?     

Group: sci.bio.evolution · Group Profile · Search for Undomesticated in sci.bio.evolution
Author: Perplexed in Peoria
Date: Aug 16, 2006 09:38

... by the meiosis divisions of the 1:4 sperm and 1:1 egg, multiplication/divisions as I understand them. I am not even sure of the general 1:1 m:f general population ratio in undomesticated birds (but the concept a rooster's harem would certainly NOT seem to desire a system that produces a 1:1 ratio of offspring/contenders ) But my final question is......... Are the (...
Show full article (5.67Kb) · Show article thread
Re: Are Hens Eggs Both Male and/either Female? (or is "The Birds and Bees",the worst possible Sex analogy ?     

Group: sci.bio.evolution · Group Profile · Search for Undomesticated in sci.bio.evolution
Author: r norman
Date: Aug 16, 2006 09:38

... by the meiosis divisions of the 1:4 sperm and 1:1 egg, multiplication/divisions as I understand them. I am not even sure of the general 1:1 m:f general population ratio in undomesticated birds (but the concept a rooster's harem would certainly NOT seem to desire a system that produces a 1:1 ratio of offspring/contenders ) But my final question is......... Are the (...
Show full article (3.79Kb) · Show article thread
Are Hens Eggs Both Male and/either Female? (or is "The Birds and Bees",the worst possible Sex analogy ?     

Group: sci.bio.evolution · Group Profile · Search for Undomesticated in sci.bio.evolution
Author: DrBenway
Date: Aug 15, 2006 10:03

... by the meiosis divisions of the 1:4 sperm and 1:1 egg, multiplication/divisions as I understand them. I am not even sure of the general 1:1 m:f general population ratio in undomesticated birds (but the concept a rooster's harem would certainly NOT seem to desire a system that produces a 1:1 ratio of offspring/contenders ) But my final question is......... Are the (unfertilized) ...
Show full article (4.17Kb)