A man’s punch is 162% stronger than a woman’s

Sergio Parra explains in the results of a paper that demonstrate the difference in physical strength between a man and a woman: The average force of men when delivering a punch is 162% greater than that of women, according to a new study. Even the weakest man remains stronger than the strongest woman if we evaluate it on the power of his punch. The difference in strength can be explained by sexual dimorphism: variations in external physiognomy (shape, color or size) between males and females of the same species. He paper was published in the Journal of Experimental Biologyand adds that:

Men’s upper bodies have, on average, 75% more muscle mass and 90% more strength than women’s. However, the evaluation of the power of a punch is where the man seems much stronger, not in the rest of the areas, since the authors of the study have not found the same magnitude of difference when throwing something above the head. This reinforces the idea that this greater upper body strength has been specialized for fighting rather than throwing objects.

Studies of biological physiognomy do not seek to justify men’s violence, as many would say, but rather support and reinforce the judicial arguments of anti-gender violence laws. .

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