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  2. Artificial gills (human) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_gills_(human)

    Artificial gills are hypothetical devices to allow a human to be able to take in oxygen from surrounding water. This is speculative technology that has not yet been demonstrated. Natural gills work because most animals with gills are thermoconformers (cold-blooded), so they need much less oxygen than a thermoregulator (warm

  3. Artificial gills - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_gills

    Artificial gills may refer to: Imitation gills put into stuffed fish for the sake of appearance in taxidermy; An inaccurate term for liquid breathing sets; Artificial gills (human), which extract oxygen from water to supply a human diver

  4. Why some people have a small hole in front of their upper ears

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2016-11-29-why-some-people...

    A Business Insider video about preauricular sinus points out that evolutionary biologist Neil Shubin suspects "these holes could be evolutionary remnant of fish gills."

  5. Talk:Artificial gills (human) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Artificial_gills_(human)

    Triton, "the world's first artificial gills technology" is a Swedish and Korean organization that claims they have created artificial gills for humans. [1] Released as an Indiegogo project on March 14, 2016, this technology claims to allow divers to spend 45 minutes underwater at depths of less than 15 feet.

  6. Respiratory system of gastropods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Respiratory_system_of...

    In most other gastropods, the right gill has been lost. In groups such as the turban shells the gill still retains its primitive bipectinate form, and in these animals, the water current is oblique, entering the mantle cavity on the left side of the head, flowing over the gill, and then being flushed out on the right side. The anus is also on ...

  7. External gills - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_gills

    External gills are the gills of an animal, most typically an amphibian, that are exposed to the environment, rather than set inside the pharynx and covered by gill slits, as they are in most fishes. Instead, the respiratory organs are set on a frill of stalks protruding from the sides of an animal's head. The axolotl has three pairs of external ...

  8. Humans have many wonderful qualities, but we lack something that’s a common feature among most animals with backbones: a tail. Exactly why that is has been something of a mystery.

  9. Pharyngeal slit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharyngeal_slit

    Pharyngeal clefts resembling gill slits are transiently present during the embryonic stages of tetrapod development. The presence of pharyngeal arches and clefts in the neck of the developing human embryo famously led Ernst Haeckel to postulate that " ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny "; this hypothesis, while false, contains elements of truth ...