Veterans, Families Echo Call To Try To Remember And Honour History At Saskatoon Remembrance Day Ceremony
They weaponize naked bits of skeleton they “grow faster than any other animal bone,” says Doug Emlen, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Montana. At the height of spring and summer season, some big-bodied cervid species can sprout antlers at a rate of about an inch a day, surpassing the pace of fetal formation and even cancerous tissue development. The pace is so speedy that deer have to pillage minerals from other parts of their skeleton, only to cast…