there one alle for free ear-lobes and another allele for attached if your gene for ear-lobes is made up of two alleles for free ear-lobes your ear-lobes are NOT attached and if you have two attache-ear-lobes alleles your ear-lobes are attached
From experience, if it does get infected, it will close, or at least try to. If you decide to keep your gauges out for a while, yes the hole will shrink. It depends on how long you keep the gauge out of your ear.
There are none. Earlobes fuse to the head during the development stages of a baby
100% of humans can wiggle their ears. Most just don't know how.
Good question! It is formed around the cartilage support of the "pinna" (outer ear/ear flap). It is most comparable to our own ear lobes. As far as I know it has no major function, like the lobes of our own human ears, but it's size and shape will be dictated genetically. It is most likely a remanant of fetal ear development in the womb.
The most common drawback of getting your ear gauged is that the hole may never close. If you find that in a few years you no longer wish to have your ear gauged, you might be stuck with it.
there one alle for free ear-lobes and another allele for attached if your gene for ear-lobes is made up of two alleles for free ear-lobes your ear-lobes are NOT attached and if you have two attache-ear-lobes alleles your ear-lobes are attached
gauged stands for Giga, Awesome, Understated, Gummy, Epic, Duck so that means a giga awesome understated gummy epic duck ear
Yes they can, because they could get the genes from a grandparent, or even farther back if they didn't have detached ear lobes.
depends on how big your lobes get. but chances are they will never look the same.
About eighty years old.Why do you concern about this question?
diffrent genes you idiot
He has them gauged. He wears talons and tapers.
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certainly, you can try it.
lasheslegslipsliverlungslymph nodesleft hand, left side, left ear, left ventricle etc.ligamentslobes (lobes of the brain, ear lobes . . .)
maybe