It’s a tongue twister that’s been included in many a pub conversation over the years: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
The longer the conversation went on, the harder it was to say.
But two scientists came up with an ‘answer’. It appeared in the Annals of Improbable Research and, while we’re not at all saying this is a peer-reviewed journal and incredibly reputable, the two scientists are actual scientists.
PA Paskevich and TB Shea have co-written such light reading as how ‘aluminum salts induce the accumulation of neurofilaments in perikarya of NB2a/dl neuroblastoma‘ but turned their hands to something lighter on this occasion.
There… Read the full story