Archive for September, 2008

Who Ruled the Triassic Food Chain? A Crocamander (or Is It “Frogodile”?)

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Antarctica crocamanderAbout 240 million years ago, a 15-foot amphibian with a nasty bite ruled the Antarctic plains, say paleontologists who have described the creature for the first time. Fossils show that the predator, newly named Kryostega collinsoni, had an extra set of teeth protruding from the roof of its mouth, which helped it shred flesh and hold struggling prey still in its mouth.

The animal, which researchers called Antarctica’s top predator in the Triassic Period, resembled a modern crocodile but was actually a temnospondyl, a prehistoric amphibian that was an early relative of salamanders and frogs. Because of their odd mixture of characteristics, members of this group are sometimes nicknamed “crocamanders” or “frogodiles” [Discovery News]. The new species will be described in the forthcoming issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

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September 12th, 2008 Tags: , , , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Living World | No Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Alcohol-Busting Enzyme Also Protects the Heart During Heart Attacks

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heartAn enzyme that helps the human body break down alcohol has another beneficial function, researchers say: In rat studies the enzyme reduces the amount of damage during a heart attack. Researchers also developed an experimental drug that can increase levels of the enzyme in rats, and say these findings could lead to a drug that could prevent damage to the heart from heart attack[s] or during coronary bypass surgery and other events in which the heart does not receive enough blood [Reuters].

During a heart attack, a clot blocks blood flow to the heart. The lack of oxygen and build up of toxins causes tissue to die. This is also a danger during coronary bypass surgery, when blood flow is redirected to allow surgeons to operate [BBC News]. Researchers believe the enzyme works by removing toxic molecules known as free radicals from the cells that are struggling to live through the episode of oxygen deprivation. Although not all cardiac damage is avoided, “any time you can save cells, you have a better chance of recovery,” says study co-author Thomas Hurley [Scientific American].

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September 12th, 2008 Tags: ,
by Eliza Strickland in Health & Medicine | 4 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Whales Had Legs Until 40 Million Years Ago, Fossils Show

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whale legsA new fossil study has pinpointed the moment when whales lost their distinct legs and tail and developed flukes, sometimes called tail fins, instead: Flukes are the two wide, flat triangular lobes on a whale’s back end and are made of skin and connective tissue, with bones in the middle [National Geographic News]. Researchers say that the Georgiacetus vogtlensis, whose fossil was found in Alabama, was one of the last whales to have powerful back legs and a tail like a dog’s, and that whales evolved flukes between 40 and 38 million years ago.

Paleontologists already knew that the ancestors of whales once strode on land on four legs, just as other mammals do. Over time, as they evolved to dwell in water, their front legs became flippers while they lost their back legs and hips, although modern whales all still retain traces of pelvises, and occasionally throwbacks are born with vestiges of hind limbs [LiveScience].

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September 12th, 2008 Tags: , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Living World | 7 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Hairless Dogs Give up the Genetic Secret of Their Bald Glory

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hairless dogResearchers have discovered the gene that determines the baldness of several hairless dog breeds, and say it may offers new insight into the development of skin and hair in other animals – including humans [New Scientist].

Mexican hairless, Peruvian hairless and Chinese crested dog breeds all share the same mutation, researchers say, which probably appeared about 4,000 years ago in Mexican hairless dogs and eventually passed through breeding into the other two dog breeds, Leeb says. “It’s extremely improbable that an identical mutation would have arisen three times,” he says [Science News].

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September 12th, 2008 Tags: , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Living World | 1 Comment » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Dinosaurs Ruled the World Because They “Got Lucky,” Say Scientists

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crurotarsan archosaursThe dinosaurs that held dominion over the Earth in the Jurassic Period didn’t rule the lands because they out-competed every rival, a new study says. Researchers studied fossil evidence from an earlier epoch, the Triassic Period, and say that dinosaurs showed no evidence of being better adapted to their environment than their challengers. “For a long time it was thought that there was something special about the dinosaurs that helped them become more successful during the Triassic, the first 30 million years of their history, but this isn’t true,” said lead author of the study, Steve Brusatte [LiveScience].

Instead they may have just been lucky enough to survive a drastic climate shift when their rivals didn’t. Researchers compared fossils from the 30 million years in the Triassic when dinosaurs coexisted with crurotarsan archosaurs, a group whose only living relative is crocodiles. They found that not only did the groups evolve at the same rate, but the crurotarsans even developed a wider range of body types than dinosaurs, suggesting that the group as a whole was more successful at developing to live in different habitats and ecosystems [Telegraph].

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September 11th, 2008 Tags: , , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Living World | 4 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

British Jury Says Greenpeace Protesters Were Right to Vandalize Coal Plant

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Greenpeace coalA British jury has cleared six Greenpeace activists of causing criminal damage when they vandalized a power plant last year in a protest over global warming, based on the defense attorneys’ argument that the protesters were trying to prevent even worse damage from climate change. Yesterday’s verdict is expected to embarrass the government and lead to more direct action protests against energy companies [The Guardian].

Last October, the Greenpeace protesters scaled the smokestacks of a coal-fired power plant as a publicity stunt to protest the United Kingdom’s continued reliance on coal-fired power plants, which emit large amounts of the greenhouse gases responsible for global warming. The protesters were halfway through painting a slogan on the side of one smokestack (”Gordon, bin it,” a British way of asking Prime Minister Gordon Brown to chuck coal), when the police served the activists an injunction by helicopter and forced them to stop. They were charged with causing more than $50,000 in damages based on the cost of removing the paint. E.ON, which owns the power plant, said that the company was in a state of shock over the verdict [The Times].

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September 11th, 2008 Tags: , , , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Environment | 15 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Mysterious Stellar Blast in the 1840s Was a “Supernova Imposter”

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Eta CarinaeA remarkable stellar event that mesmerized astronomers in 1843 may have been a previously unknown kind of explosion, researchers say. That explosion, which made the star Eta Carinae one of the brightest in the Southern sky, could have been the precursor to the star’s expected explosion into a supernova.

Researchers began watching Eta Carinae after the star mysteriously brightened 1843, and astronomers in recent decades have photographed and studied the resulting cloud of gas and dust, known as the Homunculus Nebula, that billows away from the star. A farther-out faint shell of debris from an earlier explosion is also visible, probably dating from around 1,000 years ago. “Looking at other galaxies, astronomers have seen stars like Eta Carinae that get brighter, but not quite as bright as a real supernova,” said [lead researcher] Nathan Smith…. “We don’t know what they are. It’s an enduring mystery as to what can brighten a star that much without destroying it completely” [SPACE.com].

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September 11th, 2008 Tags: , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Space | 3 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Mount Vesuvius’ Destructive Power May Be Diminishing

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Mount Vesuvius 2Mount Vesuvius, the mighty Italian volcano that destroyed the Roman city of Pompei, has been gradually transforming into a less menacing presence, according to a new study. Researchers studied rock samples from four different eruptions, from the Pompei disaster in 79 AD to the Pollena eruption in 472 AD, and determined the pressure and temperature conditions under which the rocks were formed; the results showed that the magma chamber had gradually shifted upward throughout the centuries. This makes eruptions less dangerous, researchers say, because magma at shallower depths is under less pressure.

Researchers keep a careful eye on the towering volcano, for good reason. The blast in 79 AD was so violent that it covered Pompeii in nearly 100 feet of ash. If Vesuvius erupted today, it could kill up to 700,000 people in southern Italy, including the residents of Naples [Scientific American]. The last eruption was in 1944, when lava flowed down the volcano’s flanks and demolished several villages and military staging grounds.

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September 11th, 2008 Tags: ,
by Eliza Strickland in Environment | No Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Want to Capture Carbon? Protect Old Trees

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redwood forestForest scientists have come to a surprising conclusion regarding old growth forests and their majestic, mature trees: They’re not just relaxing in their arboreal old age, but are still actively taking in carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. The new study suggests that protecting old growth forests may be just as important as planting new trees in efforts to reduce carbon dioxide levels and fight global warming.

Previously, researchers believed that only young, fast-growing trees absorbed enough carbon dioxide to be considered significant “carbon sinks.” Old, crowded forests don’t allow for much new growth: The only new growth occurred in the small spaces that opened up when large old trees died and decomposed, releasing their accumulated carbon. The forests at large were therefore considered to be carbon neutral, and accounted as such in climate models [Nature News]. But the new study shows that the slow but continuous growth of old trees means that they continue to suck up more carbon than they release.

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September 11th, 2008 Tags: , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Environment | 4 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Brightest Gamma Ray Burst Ever Observed Was Aimed Straight at Earth

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gamma ray burstA massive burst of gamma rays from a star that exploded billions of years ago reached Earth on March 19, and clocked in as the brightest burst of gamma rays ever observed, astronomers say. The blast, dubbed GRB 080319B, came from 7.5 billion light years away, more than halfway across the universe. Despite the immense distance, it would have been visible with the naked eye at dark sites on Earth for 40 seconds [New Scientist]. Researchers say they burst was so bright because the jet of matter and energy was pointed directly at Earth.

Gamma ray bursts, the universe’s most luminous explosions, occur when massive stars, perhaps 20 to 30 times the mass of the sun, burn out their nuclear fuel. As a star’s core collapses, it creates a black hole that drives powerful gas jets outward [Reuters]. The collisions of particles within those jets create high-energy gamma rays, which heat up surrounding gas and produce visible light. Nobody knows whether anyone looked up at the right spot in the sky at the right moment on March 19 to see the pulse of light, but NASA’s robotic Swift observatory did what it’s supposed to when it detects a gamma-ray burst, and swung into action [Ars Technica].

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September 10th, 2008 Tags: , , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Space | 1 Comment » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Illinois Coal Mines Produce a New, Valuable Deposit: Fossilized Rainforests

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fossil fernIn a cluster of coal mines in eastern Illinois, researchers have discovered the fossilized remains of ancient rainforests that date from the Carboniferous era, including one forest that stretched for 39 square miles. Researchers say the forests date from both before and after an episode of intense global warming that occurred about 306 million years ago, and may shed light on the ecosystem’s reaction to the drastic climate shift.

Researchers published a report on the first fossilized rainforest last year, but announced this week at the British Association’s Festival of Science that they have since come across five more patches of ancient woods. Says paleontologist Howard Falcon-Lang: “Three of the forests predate global warming and the rest follow it, so we can compare the ecology of those rain forests to see what the effect of global warming was.” During that period the Earth’s climate flipped from being covered with large polar icecaps to a greenhouse state that was completely ice-free, he added [National Geographic News].

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September 10th, 2008 Tags: , , , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Environment, Living World | 1 Comment » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Super-Green, Algae-Derived Jet Fuel Passes Tests With Flying Colors

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algaeA green technology company has created a jet fuel from algae and announced yesterday that the new product meets vigorous aviation standards. The California-based company, Solazyme, said it’s near to creating cost-competitive fuels: “The end goal is to be at or less than the cost of fossil fuel and my best guess is we’ll be at that point within 24 to 36 months,” Jonathan Wolfson, the company’s chief executive, said [Reuters]. The company’s technology uses genetically modified algae, which convert the cellulose from materials like wood chips, switchgrass, or sawdust into oil.

Solazyme had its new fuel tested by an independent company to ensure that its product has the same density, thickness, and freezing point as conventional jet fuels. “This is not like conventional biodiesel, where you can take french fry grease from McDonald’s and turn it into oil in your garage,” said [company president] Harrison Dillon…. “Planes will fall out of the sky if you don’t have a high-quality fuel that meets strict standards. … What Solazyme has done is demonstrate the first-ever manufacture of high-quality jet fuel from algae” [San Francisco Chronicle].

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September 10th, 2008 Tags: , , , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Environment, Technology | 2 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Military Tests New Missile Defense System: Lasers Mounted on Jumbo Jets

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airborne laserMilitary contractors have successfully fired a high-energy laser attached to a modified commercial aircraft, in a ground test that is a step towards testing the airborne laser system in flight. Boeing and Northrop Grumman are working on the system, which is intended to shoot down ballistic missiles.

The laser is in the back half of a Boeing 747-400F jumbo jet. Subsequent tests will increase duration and power before the beam is sent through a fire control system to a turret mounted in the nose of the aircraft [AP]. A long series of ground tests and flight tests will build up to an attempt to intercept and destroy a ballistic missile in flight; that test is scheduled for August 2009. The Defense Department has already spent $4 billion on the airborne laser system, and the final price tag is expected to reach $5 billion.

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September 10th, 2008 Tags: , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Technology | 19 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

First Protons Whiz Around the Large Hadron Collider’s Track

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Large Hadron peopleToday at 10 a.m. Swiss time, researchers fired up the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), successfully sending a stream of protons all the way around a 17-mile track for the first time. The enormous collider has been eagerly anticipated by physicists, who hope the device will answer questions about the behavior of subatomic particles and reveal secrets of the universe, but some people have also worried (needlessly, physicists say) that its unprecedented experiments will cause the world to end. For all that hype, the action today was somewhat anticlimatic: Two white dots flashed on a computer screen indicating that the protons reached the final point of the world’s largest particle collider [AP].

As many scientists have pointed out, today’s test run didn’t involve any actual collisions; those will come later when particles shoot around the track in both directions and smash into each other. Therefore today’s event could never have produced any breathtaking results, it was simply intended to test the equipment.

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September 10th, 2008 Tags: , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Physics & Math | 9 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Male and Female Brains Are Wired Differently, Small Study Suggests

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neuron synapseA small study has found that the brains of men and women are wired differently in a region that is related to speech, memory, and hearing. Researchers studied the brain tissue from four men and four women who were all having a small portion of their brains excised as a treatment for epilepsy. They found that in the brain region called the temporal neocortex, men have a higher density of synapses, which are the connection points between brain cells.

For many years, scientists have searched for structural variations between men’s and women’s brains to explain psychological studies showing that, overall, the sexes think and act differently. Past studies found differences in brain mass and neuron density, but “they were hyped and untrustworthy,” [neuroscientist Edward] Jones says. This study is meticulously detailed, he notes. It is the first to show gender differences on such a fine scale — at the synapse [Science News].

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September 9th, 2008 Tags: , ,
by Eliza Strickland in Mind & Brain | 4 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >