The animal with the strongest sense of smell is the __. |  |
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 | Numbers Don't Lie |
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 | Estimated percentage of people who are anosmic, meaning they have no sense of smell | 5 |
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|  | Year the first modern perfume was created, for Queen Elizabeth of Hungary | 1370 |
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 | Estimated frequency (in days) at which human olfactory receptor cells are replaced | 60 |
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|  | Years ago that olfactory receptors emerged in nature, in fishlike animals known as lancelets | 550 million |
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 | Humans are more sensitive than dogs when it comes to certain scents. |
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The human nose often takes a backseat to other famous sniffers in the animal kingdom. Dogs, pigs, and elephants have nasal biology jam-packed with olfactory receptors, which makes them particularly gifted at smelling scents. But no two scents are exactly alike, and research from Rutgers University argues that the human nose — with our measly 400 different kinds of olfactory receptors — can actually sniff out smells important to humans better than even the most skillful bloodhound. For example, human noses are more sensitive to amyl acetate, a main odorant found in bananas, because ripe fruit was important for our survival thousands of years ago. For dogs, finding such fruit was much less important, and thus biologically de-prioritized. Human noses can also sniff out the smell of fresh rain on dirt, a scent known as "petrichor," better than a shark can smell blood in the sea, likely due to our essential need for fresh water. So don't downsell your sense of smell — instead, take pride in what your nose knows. | |
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