[Sw-l] ScienceWriting: A long-tailed macaque sitting on a branch stump with climbing posture found in Phetchaburi, Thailand
Valerie Sutton
sutton at SIGNWRITING.ORG
Mon Nov 1 19:41:00 UTC 2021
SignWriting List
November 1, 2021
Hello SW List members, and Sutthikhun (Ae)!
You never cease to amaze all of us, Ae! Writing the movements of the primate macaque from Thailand, and demonstrating that writing animal movement is indeed possible in SciW (I like your acronym ;-) - thank you for your energy and also the imaginative projects you are stimulating. I am looking forward to reading more animal movements. At one point years ago I briefly wrote horse, dog and spider movements. Thanks again for this posting. 😊
Sent from my iPhone
> On Oct 31, 2021, at 5:48 PM, Sutthikhun Phaengphongsai <suttikunep at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> Hello, members of SWList !
>
> As many of you are aware, in addition to SignWriting (SW) and DanceWriting (DW), Valerie Sutton has also invented MovementWriting, MimeWriting, SportsWriting, and ScienceWriting (SciW). Normally, the SW List consists primarily of SW content with a bit more of my DW work thrown into the mix, so today I want to bring back other sorts of the Writing as well. After SW and DW, SciW is the third option I want to write about because I enjoy observing the posture, movement, and behavior of various animal species as a biologist. So... In order not to waste any time, I'd like to present to you a SciW work about behavior of a primate species, the long-tailed macaque, living naturally in Southeast Asia. Detail as follows:
>
> "A long-tailed macaque sitting on a branch stump with climbing posture found in Phetchaburi, Thailand"
> Transcribed on 01 Nov 2021 by Sutthikhun Phaengphongsai
> Photo: Patta Vangtal (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/99867614)
>
> <MW_Others.png>
>
>
> Facts:
> - Most non-human primates have legs that are shorter than their torsos, and their arms are longer than those of humans by ratio.
> - Almost all primates have prehensile feet with a morph analogous to higher limbs, with the exception that human feet, with the development of bipedalism, are unable to grasp or hold objects efficiently.
> - Most non-human primates have feet that resemble the Flat, Thumb Side hand of humans in their regular gesture.
>
> Hope you all enjoy the loveliness in this work!,
> <sign (14).png>
> Sutthikhun
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