tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6305030.post107412078391078616..comments2024-03-15T10:20:34.198-07:00Comments on Rhosgobel: Radagast's home: Multiple ovulations?Radagasthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01419540565463343922noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6305030.post-26631108502791634302010-05-12T21:49:54.436-07:002010-05-12T21:49:54.436-07:00Importing comments:
NatureIsProfligate
I'm s...Importing comments:<br /><br />NatureIsProfligate <br />I'm still mystified by all of this. I did a Science Citation Index search too to see if Pierson had any more recent papers about human ovulation that might be the source for these numbers. Nope.<br /> <br />I had one more thought, which was that perhaps a six of the women ovulated more than one egg in their final, ovulatory "wave." Again, I see no explicit mention in the paper. And this type of double ovulation has very different implications for human fertility than would ovulations at different periods during the menstrual cycle. <br />When interviewed, the authors do seem to expect that these "waves" would sometimes result in multiple ovulations (for instance here,http://alpha.montclair.edu/~DavidsonM/MultipleOvulation.html,where they say this can explain dizygotic twins with different conception dates).<br />January 14, 2004, 4:52:47 PM PSTRadagasthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01419540565463343922noreply@blogger.com