POSTS TAGGED: way things work

50 Things We Didn’t Know Last Year!

Scientists are discovering new interactions in the way things work. Here is a list of 50 new things we didn’t know this time last year, and below are a few of my favorites from the list.

6. Stress causes human brain cells to either shrink or grow, leaving victims of serious stress with dramatic changes to their nervous systems.

Read About It

8. Ground-penetrating radar used by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter revealed enormous underground reservoirs of frozen water far from Mars’ polar caps — glaciers up to a half-mile thick buried beneath rock and debris. Researchers said one glacier is three times the size of Los Angeles.

Read About It

10. The world’s oceans are growing more acidic at an increasing rate, a phenomenon that may lead to major disruptions for corals, lobster, oysters, crabs, mussels and snails, which have difficulty building their calcium crusts in such conditions.

Read About It

11. Magnetic resonance imaging scans of blood flow in the human brain indicate that bullies often derive pleasure from watching others in pain.

Read About It

16. Exposure to light in grocery stores reduces the quality of cauliflower, broccoli, chard, leeks and asparagus.

Read About It

20. Searching online is better than reading books for increasing the brainpower of middle-aged and older adults.

Read About It

29. Excessive flip-flop wearing leads to a much higher risk of developing skin cancer on the feet. Only half of patients with foot melanomas survive.

Read About It

30. An ADHD-related gene may encourage behaviors beneficial for nomads.

Read About It

35. The fully fleshed-out head of a Tyrannosaurus rex may have weighed more than 1,100 pounds, but much of that volume came from air cavities that likely created painful sinus infections.

Read About It

36. An expedition 6,500-feet below the Atlantic Ocean caused one explorer to describe the region as “a new continent.” Hundreds of rare and unknown species were discovered in the 1,500-mile-long Mid-Atlantic Ridge between Europe and America.

Read About It

37. Great white sharks travel long distances every winter to meet in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. During this gathering, they make dives to depths of 300 meters.

Read About It

40. A newly found species of bacteria can grow at low temperatures, spoiling raw milk even when it’s refrigerated.

Read About It

44. Mexican scientists discovered a way to make diamonds from the carbon and organic compounds found in tequila.

Read About It

50. Drinking just three cups of coffee a day can make women’s breasts shrink.

Read About It

SPONSOR

TAG CLOUD
SPONSOR
QUICK SEARCH
JOIN FISHING FURY
  • Join the best fishing blog ever! FishingFury.com
  • Have an account? Log In!
RECENT POSTS
Japanese Rainbow Trout From Adam Guy

Japanese Rainbow Trout From Adam Guy

March 13, 2010
By Jonathon Marshall

Salmon GPS

Salmon GPS

March 12, 2010
By Clive Mathias

Hybrid Monsters Coming to An Ocean Near You!

Hybrid Monsters Coming to An Ocean Near You!

March 10, 2010
By Clive Mathias

Obama Is NOT Banning Fishing, So STFU!

Obama Is NOT Banning Fishing, So STFU!

March 10, 2010
By Jonathon Marshall

Amazing Fishing Bird!

Amazing Fishing Bird!

March 10, 2010
By Clive Mathias

Barracuda Circle

Barracuda Circle

March 9, 2010
By Clive Mathias

The Cove Wins!

The Cove Wins!

March 9, 2010
By Clive Mathias

EDITORIALS

From the Table of Adam Guy – Japanese Cuttlefish

Cuttlefish have been prized since the Edo Period in Japan, primarily as an ingredient for tenpura, but almost every part of the animal can be eaten. Only the stomach, ink sac (after removing and freezing the ink, perhaps for a pasta sauce) and beak is discarded; even the cuttlefish's bony plate can be fed to pet birds or terrestrial molluscs. The most obvious dish is tenpura: my own batter is a half-half mixture of flour and cornflour, folded into cold water in which an egg yolk has been whisked, and deep-fried in sesame oil.
RECENT COMMENTS
FURY NETWORK
  • Rockstar Lures
  • Legendary Fishermen
  • Fishing Fury