jueves, 23 de junio de 2011

How dinosaurs became extinct

Study: Dinosaurs Died Within Hours After Asteroid Hit Earth 65 Million Years Ago
May 24, 2004
According to new research led by a University of Colorado at Boulder geophysicist, a giant asteroid that hit the coast of Mexico 65 million years ago probably incinerated all the large dinosaurs that were alive at the time in only a few hours, and only those organisms already sheltered in burrows or in water were left alive.

The six-mile-in-diameter asteroid is thought to have hit Chicxulub in the Yucatan, striking with the energy of 100 million megatons of TNT, said chief author and Researcher Doug Robertson of the department of geological sciences and the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences. The "heat pulse" caused by re-entering ejected matter would have reached around the globe, igniting fires and burning up all terrestrial organisms not sheltered in burrows or in water, he said.

A paper on the subject was published by Robertson in the May-June issue of the Bulletin of the Geological Society of America. Co-authors include CU-Boulder Professor Owen Toon, University of Wyoming Professors Malcolm McKenna and Jason Lillegraven and California Academy of Sciences Researcher Sylvia Hope.

"The kinetic energy of the ejected matter would have dissipated as heat in the upper atmosphere during re-entry, enough heat to make the normally blue sky turn red-hot for hours," said Robertson. Scientists have speculated for more than a decade that the entire surface of the Earth below would have been baked by the equivalent of a global oven set on broil.

The evidence of terrestrial ruin is compelling, said Robertson, noting that tiny spheres of melted rock are found in the Cretaceous-Tertiary, or KT, boundary around the globe. The spheres in the clay are remnants of the rocky masses that were vaporized and ejected into sub-orbital trajectories by the impact.

A nearly worldwide clay layer laced with soot and extra-terrestrial iridium also records the impact and global firestorm that followed the impact.

The spheres, the heat pulse and the soot all have been known for some time, but their implications for survival of organisms on land have not been explained well, said Robertson. Many scientists have been curious about how any animal species such as primitive birds, mammals and amphibians managed to survive the global disaster that killed off all the existing dinosaurs.

Robertson and colleagues have provided a new hypothesis for the differential pattern of survival among land vertebrates at the end of the Cretaceous. They have focused on the question of which groups of vertebrates were likely to have been sheltered underground or underwater at the time of the impact.

Their answer closely matches the observed patterns of survival. Pterosaurs and non-avian dinosaurs had no obvious adaptations for burrowing or swimming and became extinct. In contrast, the vertebrates that could burrow in holes or shelter in water -- mammals, birds, crocodilians, snakes, lizards, turtles and amphibians -- for the most part survived.

Terrestrial vertebrates that survived also were exposed to the secondary effects of a radically altered, inhospitable environment. "Future studies of early Paleocene events on land may be illuminated by this new view of the KT catastrophe," said Robertson.

Located on the CU-Boulder campus, CIRES is a joint institute of CU-Boulder and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.



Posted by Mateo Consagra

viernes, 17 de junio de 2011

Explaining the Concept of a "Scientific Theory"

Warning: the following video has no subtitles



This video points out how Theories are used in Science in order to explain the workings of the laws of the Universe.

Agustín Perez Villafañe

domingo, 12 de junio de 2011

Fast Food Effects on Health

In today's age of convenience, fast food needs no introduction. Everyone from a 2-year-old toddler to a 60-year-old grandpa seems to be enjoying it every chance they get. And why not? It's delicious, it's filling, is really affordable, and readily available just any time of the day, being only a drive through phone call away. What more can you ask for when you are living life in the fast lane?
Well, plenty "“ fast food is all good tasting, except that it is not nutritionally balanced and, therefore, unhealthy in the long run if consumed on a regular basis.
Fast food is loaded with calories from refined sugar and fats (especially, the artery-clogging saturated and hydrogenated fats, which are repeatedly reheated to high temperatures for frying purposes).
It is also very high in sodium, coming from common salt and other additives. On top of all this, fast food is deficient in dietary fiber and essential micro-nutrients like vitamins and minerals.  
To make matters worse, heaps of fast food are normally guzzled down with gallons of sugar-rich colas which many fast-food restaurants serve free with food as an incentive.
To make a long story short, all this results in piling up of unused empty calories in the body, which get stored as body fat "“ till one day you look in the mirror and realize that your great figure has been replaced by this creature in the mirror.

But that's not the end of the story, it's just the beginning "“ consuming too much fast food not only turns a handsome guy into an unsightly obese man, but as Eric Schlosser points out in his book it is a big health hazard too.

And being physically inactive only adds to the problem of obesity. Not many people who love fast food are ready to acknowledge that obesity is not simply an eyesore "“ it is a major risk factor for a large number of deadly diseases like hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, heart disease, and even many types of cancers. 

Recent scientific studies have shown that high-calorie foods rich in fats,
refined sugar and salt could reconfigure the hormones in the body in such a way that they make you crave for such foods and always leave you asking for more.

In other words, fast food is kind of addictive; you get hooked on to it and continue consuming it in an uncontrolled way in spite of knowing that it is unhealthy. The more you consume, the more difficult it is for you to opt for
healthy foods.

The situation is worse in case of children who from a very young age get hooked on fast food. Making them change their food habits from fatty and sweet foods and develop a taste for health-promoting
fruits and vegetables is a task easier said than done. Such children would grow up to be obese adults who have never felt the advantages of being a healthy weight.

To sum up, consuming fast food on a regular basis leads to many health hazards. But bringing about changes in eating habits is not easy. 

To start with, a simple change that one could make is to successively reduce the frequency of eating fast food and eat more frequently home-cooked food, with plenty of fresh foods and vegetables.
If your a female there is a great free suport group called Diet Bug. They are there to encourage and help you.
Slowly your taste will change and your body will respond with new found energy.That doesn't mean you can never have fast food again. All it means is that you cut the fast food way back. I still occasionally(once a month)will have my #1 at McDonalds. Big Mac Rules!

domingo, 5 de junio de 2011

PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES by MICHAEL ( CPE )

Lexicon

   Preposition in phrases:

Above all: ‘Be kind and polite but above all be helpful’.
Ahead of: ‘ There was a long queue ahead of us’.
Along with:’ I passed the piano exam along with three aother people in the class’.
Apart from: ‘ Your essay is very good, apart from a few spelling mistakes.
As for me,you, etc : ‘ My family is moving to Canada. But as for me, I don’t want to go’.
At the end of: ‘Let’s meet up at the end of the month when we are less busy’.
At first: ‘I was angry at first but then I realised she was very sorry’.
At home: ‘ I stayed at home because of the awful weather’.
At (long) last: ‘I’ve found out a good tennis coach at (long) last’.
At the moment: ‘At the moment, I’m living in Athens’.
At that very moment: ‘I was turning the corner and at that very moment a child ran into the road’.
At any rate: ‘I think they are coming- at any rate that’s what they told me’.
At risk: ‘Your health is at risk if you smoke’.
Because of: ‘We can’t go for a walk because of  the rain’.
By accident: ‘I knocked  over the display by accident’.
By chance: ‘We planned to meet on Sunday but we met by chance on the bus this morning’.
By mistake: ‘I´m sorry but I took your dictionary by mistake’.
By the time: ‘By the time we arrived, they had already gone’.
For a while: ‘We waited for a while and then left without her’.
For me,her, you etc.:  ‘I don’t like that disco- for me it’s too noisy!
For now: ‘We have enough tea for now but we might need more later’.
For sale,rent,etc.: ‘Is your old computer for sale?’
From bad to worse: ‘Your behaviour is going from bad to worse’.
From memory: ‘I can play the whole tune from memory’.
From now on: ‘From now on you must all show your membership cards’.
In addition to: ‘She works in the café in addition to her job at the cinema’.
In aid of: ‘ We are collecting money in aid of the refugees’.
In case: ‘Let´s take an umbrella (just) in case it rains’.
In charge of: ‘Who´s in charge of the tickets on the door?’
In comparison to/with: ‘She is much  taller in comparison to (or with) most of us here.
In  contact with: ‘Are you in contact with anyone we met London?’
In danger of: ‘You are in great danger of failing all your exams’.
In demand: ‘Are those electronic pets still in demand?’
In the end: ‘In the end all of us agreed with her plan’.
In front of: ‘She stood in front of the mirror admiring herself’.
In a hurry: ‘Sorry, I can’t stop. I´m in a hurry to get work’.
In a mess: ‘Your room is  in a terrible mess’
In my opinion:  ‘In my opinion, bus fares should be cheaper’.
In need of: ‘The house is very old and in need of major repairs.
In order that: ‘ I did it in order that you would notice me.
In order to: ‘I shouted in order to get help’.
In reality: ‘ She said she was rich but in reality her parents are very poor’.
In return for: ‘ I lent her a couple of CDs in return for using her bike’.
In search for: ‘They’ve gone in search of a cheap restaurant’.
In spite of: ‘ We enjoyed our walk in spite of the rain’.
Instead of: ‘Why don’t you go to the match instead of me?’
In terms of: ‘In terms of their recent successes, the team is a good one’.
In good time: ‘ Please be there in good time because we still have to buy the tickets.
In time: ‘I arrived just in time for the start of the film’.
In no time: ‘Work hard and you’ll finish in no time (at all)’.
In touch: ‘Goodbye- keep in touch and email me.
In a way: ‘You are right in a way but I still don’t agree with you’.
Not at all: ‘I´m not at all happy with my essay’.
Of course: ‘Can I come?’ ‘Of course you can.’ ‘Do you mind?’ ‘Of course not?’.