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- Newsgroups: alt.peeves
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!network.ucsd.edu!nmt.edu!proterin
- From: proterin@nmt.edu (Paul Rotering)
- Subject: Re: Rhino virus peeve
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.095034.23192@nmt.edu>
- Organization: New Mexico Tech
- References: <C026Mz.DxH@news.iastate.edu>
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 09:50:34 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
-
- z1dan@exnet.iastate.edu (Dan Sorenson -- Agroignoramus) writes:
-
- >bberbeni@nyx.cs.du.edu (Bill Berbenich) writes:
-
- >>That brings to mind a question that I have never gotten a good answer to --
- >>What is the difference between horns and antlers?
-
- > Antlers are branched horns. Thus, if you find a deer with no
- >branches on his antlers, they are really horns. If you find a cow with
- >a split horn, it is really an antler.
-
- This would be correct but for two small errors. Cows don't have antlers and
- deer don't have horns.
-
- Obpedantry:
-
- Horn growth is limited to three groups - bovines, giraffe(s) and the American
- antelope.
-
- Male deer, elk, moose, and both sexes of reindeer and caribou grow antlers.
-
- Horns consist of a bone core covered in a keratin sheath, while antlers
- (when fully developed) consist entirely of bone.
-
- Antlers are shed. Horns are not.
-
- So if you find a deer with no branches in his antlers, he's probably a
- yearling or it's sometime between the end of the rut and the beginning of
- summer. If you find a cow with a split horn, you probably only grazed it
- and need to swing that combine around for another run.
-
- -Paul
-
-