In a Sauna it can be 98ºC, not the same extern temperature and body temperature. You’ll die when your body temperature is over 42ºC, but you can support way higher extern temperatures (for a certain time)
Most also less, but it also can get higher. Always important the preparation before and after the session a cold bath, apart of an strict time control to avoid accidents, sometimes deadly.
In a Sauna it can be 98ºC, not the same extern temperature and body temperature. You’ll die when your body temperature is over 42ºC, but you can support way higher extern temperatures (for a certain time)
The hottest you should have a Sauna is 90°C.
Most also less, but it also can get higher. Always important the preparation before and after the session a cold bath, apart of an strict time control to avoid accidents, sometimes deadly.
The term is “warm-blooded” but if the outside temp is above 37C then it’d technically be more accurate to say “cool-bloods” or something.
Endotherms vs ectotherms!
Holy fuck I did not know they were so hot, how does a human body even survive that for any amount of time.
Dry air doesn’t conduct heat as well as humid air, and allows evaporative cooling through sweat