• Adults Only Website 18+

    If you are under 18 you are not permitted to submit personal information to us or use this website. If discovered you will be banned.

    We will ban and report anyone posting illegal content.

    We will ban any forum user who breaks our terms.

    Freedom of speech should be wide open as long as it doesn't incite violence.

    We have a 15 year old thriving community here with 400,000+ members and hundreds of people online at any given moment, we encourage you to join!, there are 1000's of topics to discuss. Please be aware before registering and read our terms of service and privacy policy.

    By dismissing this notice and proceeding, you agree to the above.

Cow astonishes scientists with rare use of tools

BBC:



Scientists are rethinking what cattle are capable of after an Austrian cow named Veronika was found to use tools with impressive skill.

The discovery, reported by researchers in Vienna, suggests cows may have far greater cognitive abilities than previously assumed.

Veronika, a cow living in a mountain village in the Austrian countryside, has spent years perfecting the art of scratching herself using sticks, rakes, and brooms.

Word of her behaviour eventually reached animal intelligence specialists in Vienna, who found Veronika used both ends of the same object for different tasks.



If it were her back or another tough area that warranted a good scratch, she would use the bristle end of a broom.

When a softer touch was needed, such as on her sensitive underbelly, she would use the smooth handle end.

This kind of tool use is rarely seen in the animal kingdom and has never been documented in cattle before.

The smart uddered gal at work:
IMG_3995.webp

Dr Antonio Osuna-Mascaro of the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna said: "We were not expecting cows to be able to use tools, and we were not expecting a cow to use a tool as a multipurpose tool. Until now this has only been consistently reported in chimpanzees."

Chimpanzees show the most varied range of tool use outside of humans. They use sticks to gather ants and termites, and stones to crack nuts.

However, despite about 10,000 years of humans living alongside cattle, this is the first time scientists have documented a cow using a tool.

The researchers say their discovery shows that cows are smarter than we think and that other cows could develop similar skills, given the chance.

As for Veronika's owner, organic farmer Witgar Wiegele, he hopes her unexpected talents will inspire people to value the natural world.

As he puts it: "Save the nature, then you protect yourself. Nature diversity is the key to survive on this planet."

The study is published in the journal Current Biology.

(There is a video of the moo girl with brains using the tool on the article page)

Link: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cj0n127y74go




My comments:
This is pretty amazing actually. You know how a certain amount of humans, like below 10 percent I think it is, have the brain/intelligence of an Einstein. Well I wonder if this could be true of other animals, like maybe cows. Maybe this is a genius cow, almost none, actually as far as we know for sure NO COW EVER before this girl. Maybe that happens with other apes as wells, or dolphins or whales. I like biology a lot and I’ve wondered that in the past, this story made me think of it again.
 
BBC:



Scientists are rethinking what cattle are capable of after an Austrian cow named Veronika was found to use tools with impressive skill.

The discovery, reported by researchers in Vienna, suggests cows may have far greater cognitive abilities than previously assumed.

Veronika, a cow living in a mountain village in the Austrian countryside, has spent years perfecting the art of scratching herself using sticks, rakes, and brooms.

Word of her behaviour eventually reached animal intelligence specialists in Vienna, who found Veronika used both ends of the same object for different tasks.



If it were her back or another tough area that warranted a good scratch, she would use the bristle end of a broom.

When a softer touch was needed, such as on her sensitive underbelly, she would use the smooth handle end.

This kind of tool use is rarely seen in the animal kingdom and has never been documented in cattle before.

The smart uddered gal at work:
View attachment 953110
Dr Antonio Osuna-Mascaro of the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna said: "We were not expecting cows to be able to use tools, and we were not expecting a cow to use a tool as a multipurpose tool. Until now this has only been consistently reported in chimpanzees."

Chimpanzees show the most varied range of tool use outside of humans. They use sticks to gather ants and termites, and stones to crack nuts.

However, despite about 10,000 years of humans living alongside cattle, this is the first time scientists have documented a cow using a tool.

The researchers say their discovery shows that cows are smarter than we think and that other cows could develop similar skills, given the chance.

As for Veronika's owner, organic farmer Witgar Wiegele, he hopes her unexpected talents will inspire people to value the natural world.

As he puts it: "Save the nature, then you protect yourself. Nature diversity is the key to survive on this planet."

The study is published in the journal Current Biology.

(There is a video of the moo girl with brains using the tool on the article page)

Link: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cj0n127y74go




My comments:
This is pretty amazing actually. You know how a certain amount of humans, like below 10 percent I think it is, have the brain/intelligence of an Einstein. Well I wonder if this could be true of other animals, like maybe cows. Maybe this is a genius cow, almost none, actually as far as we know for sure NO COW EVER before this girl. Maybe that happens with other apes as wells, or dolphins or whales. I like biology a lot and I’ve wondered that in the past, this story made me think of it again.
Even a cow is more skilled than you.
Congratulations, you worthless retard.
 
BBC:



Scientists are rethinking what cattle are capable of after an Austrian cow named Veronika was found to use tools with impressive skill.

The discovery, reported by researchers in Vienna, suggests cows may have far greater cognitive abilities than previously assumed.

Veronika, a cow living in a mountain village in the Austrian countryside, has spent years perfecting the art of scratching herself using sticks, rakes, and brooms.

Word of her behaviour eventually reached animal intelligence specialists in Vienna, who found Veronika used both ends of the same object for different tasks.



If it were her back or another tough area that warranted a good scratch, she would use the bristle end of a broom.

When a softer touch was needed, such as on her sensitive underbelly, she would use the smooth handle end.

This kind of tool use is rarely seen in the animal kingdom and has never been documented in cattle before.

The smart uddered gal at work:
View attachment 953110
Dr Antonio Osuna-Mascaro of the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna said: "We were not expecting cows to be able to use tools, and we were not expecting a cow to use a tool as a multipurpose tool. Until now this has only been consistently reported in chimpanzees."

Chimpanzees show the most varied range of tool use outside of humans. They use sticks to gather ants and termites, and stones to crack nuts.

However, despite about 10,000 years of humans living alongside cattle, this is the first time scientists have documented a cow using a tool.

The researchers say their discovery shows that cows are smarter than we think and that other cows could develop similar skills, given the chance.

As for Veronika's owner, organic farmer Witgar Wiegele, he hopes her unexpected talents will inspire people to value the natural world.

As he puts it: "Save the nature, then you protect yourself. Nature diversity is the key to survive on this planet."

The study is published in the journal Current Biology.

(There is a video of the moo girl with brains using the tool on the article page)

Link: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cj0n127y74go




My comments:
This is pretty amazing actually. You know how a certain amount of humans, like below 10 percent I think it is, have the brain/intelligence of an Einstein. Well I wonder if this could be true of other animals, like maybe cows. Maybe this is a genius cow, almost none, actually as far as we know for sure NO COW EVER before this girl. Maybe that happens with other apes as wells, or dolphins or whales. I like biology a lot and I’ve wondered that in the past, this story made me think of it again.
I'll bet that ribeye tastes as good as it's martness
 
To be fair, we bred them to be this way on purpose. We bastardized the mighty aurochs 10,000 years ago to what you see now. View attachment 953476
im talking about the suggestion just a few yrs ago of the cows being slaughtered because of their farts depleting the ozone. by those who put more shit in the air with their "luxuries",that deplete the ozone at a much greater pace than cows.
 
im talking about the suggestion just a few yrs ago of the cows being slaughtered because of their farts depleting the ozone. by those who put more shit in the air with their "luxuries",that deplete the ozone at a much greater pace than cows.
Oh yeah. That turned out to be a complete lie. More anti cattle propaganda. Fuck the UN. This is why no one reads their papers anymore. Only 200 people on average and those could be bots or the UN jerking themselves off.
 
Back
Top