Yes, but your pelvis is still shaped differently to that of a man. And your belly button still occupies a different relative level., even if your hips aren't wide.
There are narrow female hips, and there are male pelvises. A female pelvis and a male pelvis are fundamentally and structurally different.
The pelvis is the surefire way to identify the sex of a skeleton. Nevertheless, there are clusters of skeletal clues, not just the pelvis.
Can you answer me something honestly? Can you take a look at this famous actress and answer me this: Are you looking at a biological male or a biological female, just based on the skull and face alone?
I agree, our skeletons are unique to our sex (male or female).
But sometimes it’s not as visible on the outside as much as others, that is what I’m pointing out.
Yes, but your pelvis is still shaped differently to that of a man. And your belly button still occupies a different relative level., even if your hips aren't wide.
There are narrow female hips, and there are male pelvises. A female pelvis and a male pelvis are fundamentally and structurally different.
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/7b/2b/5e/7b2b5ea41f7d9cfa4841f6a89f201c5e--human-anatomy-vs.jpg
https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3034/2283718939_0939370dc0_z.jpg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1Qm7d4cCt8
The pelvis is the surefire way to identify the sex of a skeleton. Nevertheless, there are clusters of skeletal clues, not just the pelvis.
Can you answer me something honestly? Can you take a look at this famous actress and answer me this: Are you looking at a biological male or a biological female, just based on the skull and face alone?
https://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/06/03/article-0-1A20262E000005DC-72_634x708.jpg
I agree, our skeletons are unique to our sex (male or female). But sometimes it’s not as visible on the outside as much as others, that is what I’m pointing out.
that's true, however what was your answer to my last question re Glenn Close.
Is that photo one of a male or female?