lol @ Sooner! :D
I learned about this by reading Sue Johanson, noted Cdn. Sex Educator, and well-known for her Sunday Night Sex Show on radio and TV.
url: http://www.lumrix.net/medical/gynecology/skene%27s_gland.html
In human anatomy, the Skene's glands (also known as the lesser vestibular or paraurethral glands) are glandslocated on the upper wall of the vagina, around the lower end of the urethra. They drain into the urethra and near the urethral opening. The location of the Skene's glands is also known as the Gräfenberg spot or G-spot; the general area is the urethral sponge. The Skene's glands are homologouswith (that is to say, the female equivalent of) the prostate glandin males.
Some believe that the Skene's glands are the source of female ejaculation.
In 2002, Emanuele Janniniof L'Aquila Universityin Italy showed that there may be an explanation both for the phenomenon and for the frequent denials of its existence. Skene's glands have highly variable anatomy, and in some extreme cases they appear to be missing entirely. If Skene's glands are the cause of female ejaculation and vaginal orgasms, this may explain the observed absence of these phenomena in many women.
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Sue Johanson, noted sex educator, believes otherwise. She teaches that the clear liquid is g-spot fluid, secreted by the Skene's glands, and released in large quantity in conjunction with a G-spotorgasm.
(note: bold italics mine)
tal