Not exact matches
In a dissection of 18 male and
female Caucasian
cadavers from Pittsburgh, Waller and her colleagues found that the human face has more variation in muscle than any other body component except possibly the forearm.
It turns out that male mites approached the non-infective
cadavers more often than they did healthy
females.
Perhaps the mites have not evolved sensory apparatus that allows them to reliably distinguish between
cadavers and live
females — so they may just be a bit confused.
They also touched and guarded some
cadavers more frequently than the living
females.
This result was similar to the findings of a more comprehensive analysis of 11
cadavers (6 male and 5
female), which found that the weight of the gluteus maximus was 13 % of the total lower body musculature.