This Gecko can’t stop smiling when he’s around his toy
Gecko. The stunning images will make your day special having a hard day at
work. Stop what you’re doing and take a moment to look at this smiling gecko. This
Gecko has first brought to public attention by Youtuber Taylor Nicole Dean. This
gorgeous little gecko and his toy are extremely BFF goals. They look so joyful
in every pic; simply looking at them will make your day! See for yourselves
below and be sure to follow this ray of sunshine on Instagram! Geckos are neat
animals, having very chill and laid back. To all you naysayers, he's still adorable. Let a little light into
your jaded souls.
Tuesday, 23 May 2017
Friday, 19 May 2017
Researchers Find The Cells At The Root Of Balding & Gray Hair?
PG Wodehouse once wrote about cure of gray hair, called
Guillotine, but now scientists have found another way. Now they’ve recognized
the cells that let our hair to grow, so long as further insight into the
mechanisms that causes hair to turn gray and bald. Scientists say this could be
used to make treatments for graying hair and balding in the near future. These
new findings are published in the journal Genes & Development.
Thus, researchers explored stem cells deep in the hair
follicles identified as hair progenitor cells, along with two proteins called
KROX20 and stem cell factor (SCF). They’ve found that KROX20 “turned on"
in skin cells that became the hair shaft; however hair progenitor cells then
produced SCF, which is vital for hair pigmentation. Thus, if cells with both
KROX20 and SCF are existing they move up from the follicle, interact with
pigment-producing melanocyte cells, and grow into pigmented hairs.
Therefore, once the team “deleted” the KROX20-producing cells
in mice, they didn’t grow any hair and became bald. Moreover, when they deleted
the SCF gene in the hair progenitor cells in mice, their hair turned white.
Thus, this new discovery was stumbled upon by coincidental, as KROX20 is naturally
associated with nerve development. The scientists found the cells though
studying a disorder called neurofibromatosis type 1, a rare genetic disease
that causes tumors to grow on nerves.
Dr Lu Le, the lead researcher from the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center, said in a statement, that this project was begin
in an effort to comprehend how certain kinds of tumors form, as it ended up
learning why hair turns gray and discovering the identity of the cell that
directly gives rise to hair. Hence, with
this knowledge, we are confidence in the future to make a topical compound or
to safely deliver the essential gene to hair follicles to precise these
cosmetic problems and next step is to find out how both the KROX20 in cells and
the SCF gene stop working correctly as people age, as well as their role in
male pattern baldness. In the meantime, it’s time to start accept that gray
streak or rocking the bald look.
Friday, 12 May 2017
The Life Changer Butte Nugget
If you have larceny in your heart, you are out of luck, a
dream by its nature is usually etherial and vaporous, but that is not the case for
an unknown person of Paradise. The “Butte Nugget” was found by a prospector in California
in 2014 by using a metal detector. He dig up a piece of iron rubbish, but
unearthed lifetime of this monster nugget. It is believed to be one of the
largest gold discoveries in California in the past century, weighing more than five
pounds of solid gold. The Butte Nugget confirmed weight was 75 troy ounces, it
has no quartz inclusions and gold from this area is generally very high purity.
Somehow the place of discovery was not revealed, but it was found somewhere in
Butte County, which has always been a major producer of gold in the state. Many
millions of ounces in gold have been found here since the early days of the
gold rush. The Butte Nugget is the second largest extant placer gold nugget in
California. The biggest nugget is the 100 troy ounces "Mojave
Nugget." The estimates value put this as going for between $250,000 and
$400,000.
Some of the primary mining districts in Butte County when it
comes to producing gold are Magalia in Yankee Hill and Oroville District. The
Yankee Hill district had the largest lode production between 1929 till 1959;
approximately 30,000 ounces of gold were produced. Although substantial
production took place during the 1800’s but very poor production records exist
during that time. The Oroville District the southern part of Butte County
production records 1964130 ounces of gold between 1903 and 1959. This
impressive amount of gold that was found within the Oroville district made it
the largest producer of gold in Butte County, primarily obtained because of
bucket line dredge operations that worked the river gravels.
Friday, 5 May 2017
The Walking Palm Tree
There is a palm tree that has allegedly developed a rather
unique ability unbecoming of a plant “the ability to walk”. The palm tree is “Socratea
exorrhiza”, also nicknamed the “Walking Palm”. The scientists are incapable of
elaborate the tree’s strange stilt-like roots. This palm tree can found in
tropical rainforests of Central and South America, develops long and sturdy
roots, grow outwards from the base of the tree, several feet off the ground,
and take root in the soil around, giving it the appearance of multiple legs. It
wasn’t long before people started to observe that palm tree roots actually act
like legs enabling him to literally walk in the forest. This unbelievable story
of the walking palm tree has been told by rainforest guides to visitors for many
years, and appears in many sources both in social media and print. It is believed,
tree “walks” from shade to sunlight by growing roots in the direction it wants
to travel, and then letting the old roots to gradually lift into the air and
die. This allows the tree to sluggishly move towards the side where the new
roots are growing. This process takes couple of years, however, one
palaeobiologist signifying the tree moves two or three centimeters per day. It’s
such a fascinating story that many tend to believe it, like our palaeobiologist
friend, unluckily; the walking tree is a myth. In 1980, John H. Bodley first
present the idea of the walking tree, who thought this ability lets the palm to
“walk away” from the point of germination if another tree falls on the seedling
and knocks it over. Hence, this way the tree can move away from obstacles that
are major hazards for immature palms. S. exorrhiza flowers mostly during the
dry season and is considered to be beetle pollinated, seeds weigh around 3.5 g
and are around 2 cm long and 1.5 cm wide, only around 45% of them germinate and
around one quarter of these die. The palm tree trunk is used in the
construction of houses and other structures, as well as hunting spears. It is
usually split lengthwise before it is used, but it can also be hollowed out and
used as a tube.
The Socratea exorrhiza, detailed study observed that the
walking tree can't walk because its roots don't move. A few roots on one side
or another may die off, but the trunk itself remains rooted to the spot. Some
people want to see the Socratea exorrhiza walking. Also, no such time lapse movie
exists. Hence, the belief of the walking palm is just a myth. The palm tree
could actually track canopy light changes by moving slowly over the forest
floor is a myth that tourist guides find diverting to tell visitors to the
rainforest. This myth was also debunked in the December 2009 when no one is
around trees walk the rainforest floor, it is a mere myth. However, researchers
are still uncertain what role these exclusive stilt roots play. Some suggest
that the multiple roots let the tree to be more stable in swampy areas, or when
there is too much debris in the ground as they can avoid it by moving their
roots. Moreover, it has been suggested that stilt roots let the palm to grow
taller to reach light without having to increase the diameter of the stem, thus
investing in less biomass in underground roots than other palms. Of course,
none of these theories have ever been confirmed. Thus, the noteworthy point is
that, nobody has seen these palm trees walk.
Friday, 28 April 2017
The Mysterious Fukang Meteorite
When it slammed into the surface of Earth, there was little sign of the beauty that lay inside, because cutting the Fukang meteorite open yielded a breathtaking sight. Within the rock, translucent golden crystals of a mineral called olivine gleamed among a silvery honeycomb of nickel-iron. In China in 2000, the mysterious fukang meteorite, unearthed believed to be some 4.5 billion years old, which is as ancient as Earth itself. It is a pallasite, a type of meteorite with translucent golden crystals of a mineral called olivine embedded in a silvery honeycomb of nickel-iron. It’s a dazzling meteorite, and maybe the most spectacular extraterrestrial piece of rock man has ever seen. This majestic Fukang meteorite was found by a hiker, who had often stopped and had lunch on this giant rock, and he always questioned what the metal and crystals were. Eventually he decided and took a hammer and chisel and broke some pieces off, which he sent to the USA to confirm that it was a meteorite.
The original meteorite weighted just over a 1,000 kilogram, but the rock was so dazzling that everybody wanted a piece of it. Since then it has been divided into dozens of thin slices and auctioned or distributed around the world. Therefore, a total of 31 kilograms of specimen is on deposit at University of Arizona. Marvin Kilgore of the University of Arizona's Southwest Meteorite Centre holds the largest portion weighing at 420 Kg. In Feb 2005 saw the Chinese space rock transported all the way to the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show, in Tucson, Arizona. The U.S. lab claims their polished slice of the original meteorite is the world's biggest pallasite cross section, measuring 36in by 19in.
In 2008, this piece was expected to fetch $2 million at an auction at Bonham's in New York, but unluckily, the likely bidders were more impressed with a couple of pieces of 130-million-year-old fossilized dinosaur’s dung that day, which sold at more than twice the estimate. According to Bonhams, pallasites are composed of approximately 50 % olivine and peridot crystals and 50 cent nickel-iron, and believed to be the relics of forming planets. They actually make up less than one per cent of meteorites, and believed to originate from deep inside intact meteors formed during the formation of the solar system about 4.5 billion years ago and very few specimens are thought to have survived their descent through Earth's atmosphere.
Giant Tunnels Dug by Massive Sloths
Deep inside Brazil, there are tunnels large enough for an individual to walk through. The tunnels are very neat symmetrical too have been caused by any known geologic process, may be lined with claw marks. These mammoth tunnels are perhaps the craft of giant ground sloths humongous "paleoburrows" that no longer walk the Earth. The largest tunnel measured 2,000 feet long, 6 feet tall and 3 to 5 feet wide. An estimated 4,000 metric tons of dirt and rock were dug out of the hillside to create the burrow. It was evidently the work of not one or two individuals but several generations.
However tens of thousands of years after these megafauna did their digging, those tunnels still dot this part of South America. This discovery has a great feature up about it and up until the 2000s; little was known or written about this bounty of holes. But since he came upon his first one near Novo Hamburgo, Brazilian scientist Heinrich Frank has found more than 1,500 tunnels, found burrows that measure hundreds of feet long. Researchers have exposed one with branching tunnels that. It had to have been dug by numerous creatures over generations, not by one or two giant sloths. However, the big open question comes in mind, why?
The tunnels appear to be much
larger than any burrowing animal would need to get away from bad weather or
hungry predators. Some believes the burrows were dug by a genus of giant ground
sloths, as large as modern elephants, that once lived in South America. Because
they were some of the biggest land mammals on earth exceeded in size only by
the mammoth. However, others believe that extinct armadillos, which were
smaller than the giant sloths, were responsible for the burrows. Courtsey: CP
Wednesday, 12 April 2017
Mysterious Underwater ‘Crop Circles’
Planet earth is so strange, what
lies keep underwater on earth has yet to be seen by human eyes. The discovery
of amazing little puffer fish capable of creating elaborately designed ‘crop
circles’ at the bottom of the ocean as part of an elaborate mating ritual. The
behavior was first documented by a photographer Yoji Ookata as articles bounced
around the web it was still difficult to imagine how a tiny fish could create
such a large design in the sand, even when staring directly at photographic
evidence.
Japanese’s photographer Yoji
Ookata devoted his life just for exploring the planet earth, spent the last 50
years exploring and documenting his discoveries off the coast of Japan. One
day, Ookata found something strange near Amami Oshima, which he had never been
witnessed before, rippling geometric sand patterns almost 6 feet in diameter,
80 feet below sea level.
He came back, and returned with
colleagues & television crew from the nature program NHK to document the
mystery circle. He holds the underwater camera to capture the mystery circle
and reasons behind this marvel. He &
his team discovered that strange design naturally design by small puffer fish
only few inches in length that swims tirelessly through day and night to create
vast organic sculpture using the gesture of a single fine.
Therefore, after careful
observation the team found the circles serve a variety of crucial ecological
functions, the most important of which is to entice mates. However, the female
fish are fascinated to the hills and valleys within the sand and traverse them
carefully to discover the male fish where the pair eventually lay eggs at the
circle’s center, the grooves later acting as a natural buffer to ocean currents
that protect the delicate offspring. Moreover, researchers also learned that
the more ridges contained within the sculpture resulted in a much greater
likelihood of the fish pairing.
Wednesday, 5 April 2017
The Transparent Glass Frogs, Which Internal Organs Are Visible Through Skin
Probably you’ve never seen such
breathtaking creatures on earth. Yeah, this is really transparent frogs! Known
to eat their own young! EEEK! The glass frogs
belong to amphibian family Centrolenidae (order Anura). Among the several strange
and captivating amphibians on our planet, very special are the Glass Frogs. While
the general background coloration of most glass frogs is primarily lime green,
the abdominal skin of some members of this family is translucent. The internal
viscera, including the heart, liver, and gastrointestinal tract, are visible
through the skin The beautiful Glass frogs are a diverse family, ranging from
Mexico to Panama, through the Andes from Venezuela and the island of Tobago to
Bolivia, with some species in the Amazon and Orinoco River basins, the Guiana,
and southeastern Brazil, and northern Argentina. As the global climate is
changing, some of the rain- and cloud forests where Glass Frogs live are
becoming too dry, making life difficult for the frogs. By watching the glass
frogs, scientists can learn what impact global warming has on these forests and
the astonishing species that inhabit them.
The Gross frogs are mostly live
in in trees along the river in forests and rainforests allows them to lay their
eggs on leaves hanging over the river. Hence,
at the time of eggs hatch, the tadpoles drop straight into the water. This wonderful
frog family has a transparent skin, letting you to view inside its small body, looks
as if they melt into the leaves and become one with them. Transparent animals
like these frogs are spectacular to see, however glassfrogs are mostly active
at night, which makes them very difficult to spot for predators. Conservationists
are especially interested in transparent frogs because they may be good
bioindicators. A bioindicator is a species that provides clues about the health
of the environment where it lives.
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