The simple body test that proves the theory of evolution
March 21, 2016 at 5:22 pm
(This post was last modified: March 21, 2016 at 5:30 pm by TubbyTubby.)
http://dailym.ai/1pX4qJd
I'm a proper monkey boy, Palmaris Longus present in both my arms. I was a bugger for climbing trees as a kid to be fair.
"THE PALMARIS LONGUS TEST
Lie your arm on a flat surface, palm facing up.
Press your thumb together with your little finger and raise your hand up from the table.
If you see a tendon sticking out underneath your skin, that means you have a muscle in your forearm called the palamaris longus.
Around 10 to 15 per cent of people are missing this muscle on one or both of their arms.
But missing the muscle doesn't make the person weaker.
The muscle is a remnant of our ancestors who used forearms for climbing."
I'm a proper monkey boy, Palmaris Longus present in both my arms. I was a bugger for climbing trees as a kid to be fair.
"THE PALMARIS LONGUS TEST
Lie your arm on a flat surface, palm facing up.
Press your thumb together with your little finger and raise your hand up from the table.
If you see a tendon sticking out underneath your skin, that means you have a muscle in your forearm called the palamaris longus.
Around 10 to 15 per cent of people are missing this muscle on one or both of their arms.
But missing the muscle doesn't make the person weaker.
The muscle is a remnant of our ancestors who used forearms for climbing."