A biological anthropologist explains why humans can't wiggle their toes in the same way they can wiggle their fingers.
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MINNEAPOLIS (WSVN) — A paralyzed hockey player in Minnesota is celebrating a small but incredibly significant victory — he was able to wiggle his toes nearly seven years after his devastating accident ...
LOS ANGELES, Calif. - A former Minnesota high school hockey player who became paralyzed says he can now move his toes. Jack Jablonski shared the good news on Twitter Monday night writing, "Moving my ...
Paralyzed hockey player Jack Jablonski took a shot on the Fourth of July and scored when he tried — and succeeded — wiggling his toes. Jablonski was a 16-year-old high school sophomore at Benilde St.
MINNEAPOLIS-It was the faintest of movements, three toes barely wiggling. Jack Jablonski was sitting on his parents' deck in Minneapolis before heading out to dinner on the Fourth of July when it ...
Struggling to wiggle individual toes? It's not you, it's your anatomy! Human feet evolved for balance and support, not fine motor skills like fingers. Shared tendons and brain wiring mean your toes ...