The Morning Call (Sunday)

Studies on beards, wads of gum win ’21 Ig Nobel prizes

- By Mark Pratt

Beards aren’t just trendy — they might also be an evolutiona­ry developmen­t to help protect a man’s delicate facial bones from a punch to the face.

That’s the conclusion of a trio of scientists from the University of Utah who are among the winners of this year’s Ig Nobel prizes, the Nobel Prize spoofs that honor — or maybe dishonor, depending on your point of view — strange scientific discoverie­s.

The winners of the 31st annual Ig Nobels that were announced Thursday included researcher­s who figured out how to better control cockroache­s on U.S. Navy submarines; animal scientists who looked at whether it’s safer to transport an airborne rhinoceros upside-down; and a team that figured out just how disgusting that discarded gum stuck to your shoe is.

For the second year in a row, the ceremony was a roughly 90-minute prerecorde­d digital event because of the worldwide coronaviru­s pandemic, said Marc Abrahams, editor of the Annals of Improbable Research magazine, the event’s primary sponsor.

While disappoint­ing in many ways because half the fun of a live ceremony is the rowdy audience participat­ion, the ceremony retained many in-person traditions. Those included real Nobel laureates announcing the prizes, and the world premiere of a mini opera called “A Bridge Between People,” about children who literally build tiny suspension bridges to join two angry adults.

No faces were punched for

the beard study published in the scientific journal Integrativ­e Organismal Biology.

Instead, University of Utah scientists Ethan Beseris, Steven Naleway and David Carrier used a fiber epoxy composite to simulate human bone, and sheepskin to act as the human skin — sometimes with the fleece still on, sometimes sheared. They then dropped weights on them.

The sample with the fleece still attached absorbed more energy than the sheared samples.

“If the same is true for human facial hair, then having a full beard may help protect vulnerable regions of the facial skeleton from damaging strikes, such as the jaw,” they said. “Presumably, full beards also reduce injury, laceration, and contusion to the skin and muscle of the face.”

It’s obvious that those wads of discarded chewing gum found on sidewalks around the world are pretty revolting.

But just how revolting? Researcher­s from a Spanish university determined the already-chewed gum that has been stuck to the sidewalk for three months is teeming with bacteria.

It sounds like a silly study, but as usual, there was some method to the madness.

“Our findings have implicatio­ns for a wide range of discipline­s, including forensics, contagious disease control, or bioremedia­tion of wasted chewing gum residues,” Leila Satari, Alba Guillen, Àngela Vidal-Verdu, and Manuel Porcar from the University of Valencia wrote in their paper, which was published at Nature.com.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA/AP ?? Shigeru Watanabe of Japan receives the Ig Nobel award in chemistry in 2019 for estimating the total saliva volume produced per day by a typical 5-year-old.
ELISE AMENDOLA/AP Shigeru Watanabe of Japan receives the Ig Nobel award in chemistry in 2019 for estimating the total saliva volume produced per day by a typical 5-year-old.

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