Monday 28 September 2015

INTRODUCING NEW SERIES:-

AMAZING PICTURES OF THE WEEK-

    1. BAT TONGUES



Cays Mark The Spot
The Bahamas is home to more than 700 islands, islets, and cays. A NASA astronaut took a picture of a chain of island cays just west of Great Exuma Island that helps astronauts recognize the area in the Atlantic Ocean. Though the cays are separated by deep tidal channels, the rest of the surrounding water is less than 25 meters deep.


2.
Ultra-Exclusive Movie Screening

Astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) were treated to a private early screening  of The Martian” before its
official U.S. release date of October 2. Scott Kelly and Mikhail Kornienko are currently aboard the ISS on a one-year mission 
to study the effects that living in space has on human health. Directed by Ridley Scott, “The Martian” stars Matt Damon in 
the role of an astronaut left behind after a mission to Mars.

3. Busy in the Dark

A tiny Lebbeus polaris shrimp perches on a blade of kelp in the Arctic Ocean. Scientists recently discovered that arctic 
marine life does not go quiescent during the long polar winter. Instead, zooplankton, scallops,  crabs and other animals 
 ate, reproduced and flourished through the cold months.

4. Macro/Micro-Scopic
Part of NASA’s One Year mission is studying how the microbiome of a human changes in space, which could have big 
impacts on an astronaut’s health. Coincidentally, microbes and galaxies look pretty similar. Can you tell which image in 
each pair is a microbe and which is a galaxy?
5. The Plethora of Puggles

This rolly-polly puggle is the result of a successful breeding program collaboration between the University of Queensland 
in Australia and the Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary. Scientists have bred 14 short-beaked echidna, a relative of the platypus, 
over the last five years and are currently nurturing five new eggs. While the short-beaked echidna is still relatively common 
in Australia, its long-beaked relative is endangered.

6. The Better To Pollinate You With,My Dear


In a study published in Science this week, researchers found that two bumblebee species in the Rocky Mountains evolved 
shorter tongues in response to declines in flowering in local plants. Shorter tongues may allow the bumblebees to feed on 
more plants, as climate change and rising temperatures disrupt flowering in alpine habitats worldwide.

7. Secret London Marijuana Forest

Police in the London suburb of Kingston found a cannabis forest on September 25. Located in a private lot, some plants 
reached 5 feet tall, resembling Christmas trees. According to officer Sarah Henderson, the land was the size of a soccer field
and  was only reachable after “a 20 minute walk through wasteland”. The field will be destroyed by the police.

8. That's so Maven

NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission celebrated one year around Mars on Monday. The goal 
of the $671 million mission is to investigate the Red Planet’s upper atmosphere in hopes that it may hold clues about how 
Mars lost its liquid water and most of its once-thick atmosphere. Recreating Mars’s climate history might help scientists 
assess how habitable the planet is.

9. It's All in the Tongue

Researchers have observed bats using a tongue-pumping technique to drink nectar, a strategy that has never been seen in 
mammals before. Most vertebrates drink by lapping their tongues, but orange-nectar bats slurp up 150 percent of their 
body weight each night while barely moving their tongues. Using high-speed cameras to watch orange-nectar bats 
(Lonchophylla robusta) suck nectar from test tubes, the scientists found that the bats use muscles in their grooved tongues 
to push nectar up to their mouths, similar to the movements our bowels make.

10. Volcano vs. Man

An eruption at Iceland’s Bárðarbunga volcano last year emitted on average three times as much sulfur dioxide gas as all 
European industry combined, according to a new study from a team of European scientists. The eruption, which lasted for 
six months, was the biggest to strike Iceland in more than 200 years and produced enough lava to cover the size of 
Manhattan. Sulfur dioxide, which is produced by volcanoes and industrial processes like smelting, can cause acid rain and 
respiratory problems.




Share on Facebook,Twitter and LinkedIn

Reach us at-
Facebook-Appsource , iOn
Twitter-AppSource
LinkedIn-AppSourcce
Webpage-AppSource

No comments:

Post a Comment