I’m a Scientist is like school science lessons meet the X Factor! School students choose which scientist gets a prize of $1000 to communicate their work.
Scientists and students talk on this website. They both break down barriers, have fun and learn. But only the students get to vote.
This zone is the Organs Zone. It has scientists studying health and disease in various parts of our bodies. Who gets the prize? YOU decide!
A number of theories about the reasons for having toe and fingernails abound. Most relate to human evolution, suggesting that they are related to the claws which other members of the animal kingdom have. Fingernails especially are highly useful to perform daily tasks, and toenails sometimes come in handy as well, depending on the situation. While toe and fingernails may be vestigial remains of our wild past, most people who have lost nails agree that they are much more valuable than they look.
One theory about fingernails and toenails suggests that they are designed to protect the delicate nail bed. This supposition has been dismissed by many doctors, who point out that people who permanently lose nails develop tougher nail beds. It seems more likely that the delicate tissue or quick under the nail evolved in response to the presence of fingernails, rather than the other way around.
The more likely reason for the presence of fingernails and toenails is that they are useful. Fingernails help humans to scratch things, peel fruit, open things, pick away the outer layers of other edibles, undo knots, and perform a variety of other tasks. In a more distant past, fingernails probably assisted humans with the capture of body lice, as is still seen among the great apes. When the feet were used more like hands, toenails served a similar function, helping humans to open vital food objects, strip bark to build structures, and other such things.
Fingernails help the hands to grip things and start rips and tears. If you remain unconvinced of the usefulness of fingernails, try trimming them to the quick or covering them in tape for a day. Having fingernails out of commission makes it much more difficult to scratch itches, clean the hair and scalp, open foods, and perform a wide variety of delicate manipulations with the hands. Toenails may not be quite as useful, but when you imagine the feet as hands, their presence makes much more sense
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Scientists in Florida have ‘nailed’ this one on the head.
They looked for clues by examining the oldest evidence of nails in modern primates to date, the 55.8 million year-old specimens of Teilhardina brandti, an extinct lemur-like monkey. These scientists believe that the T Brandti used its nails to grasping small branches and manipulating small food items such as fruits, nuts and flowers. Claws were out, and nails were in. These nails are likely the precursors of the nails that we see on primates today, including humans.
So nails evolved to be tools.
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Fingernails give strength to pick and hold things. Without them, we’d only have floppy and squishy fingers, and be unable to grasp things. Look at certain tree living creatures. They have these long and powerful fingernails to grasp/ hold onto branches and tree bark.
On our legs, they serve a similar purpose. When we walk or run, we push off with our toes. The fingernails again provide strength so that we can push off and move forward.
Hope this makes sense 😀
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