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#154469 - 01/29/08 10:35 PM Re: The Daily Science Nugget... [Re: D. Allan]
D. Allan Moderator Offline
Panning for gold

Registered: 08/28/00
Posts: 3721
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique
A leatherback turtle was tracked by satellite traveling 12,774 miles (20,558 kilometers) from Indonesia to Oregon, one of the longest recorded migrations of any vertebrate animal, scientists announced in a new report on sea turtle conservation.

http://www.livescience.com/animals/080129-turtle-migration.html

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#154770 - 01/31/08 11:04 PM Re: The Daily Science Nugget... [Re: D. Allan]
D. Allan Moderator Offline
Panning for gold

Registered: 08/28/00
Posts: 3721
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique


Bye-bye banana?
January 29th, 2008
Author Andrea Thompson

Enjoy those banana splits while you can because in 10 years the banana may be no more… or at least may never be the same.

In this Guardian Unlimited article, science correspondent James Meek discusses the potential plight of the yellow fruit in the face of potentially deadly diseases.

Like its fellow fruit the apple, the bananas you buy from the grocery store are a particular genetic mutant of wild bananas discovered by farmers and grown from cuttings, essentially making them something like a clone of the original mutant.

Two fungi, Panama disease and Sigatoka, are threatening the current major variety, the Cavendish. (This variety was more resistant than the earlier Gros Michel, which succumbed to Panama disease in the 1950s.) Because the repeated cuttings have prevented the bananas from reproducing sexually and therefore changing up their genes, they are less resistant to pests.

Other monocultured crops, from grains to cows (which I recently mentioned in an article on animal cloning), can have this problem, so the banana may not be the only food we have to worry about disappearing in the future…

- LiveScience.com

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#154861 - 02/01/08 09:25 PM Re: The Daily Science Nugget... [Re: D. Allan]
D. Allan Moderator Offline
Panning for gold

Registered: 08/28/00
Posts: 3721
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique
Archaeological Discovery in Mexico City
Posted: 2008-01-31 10:24:45 UTC-06:00

"An exciting archaeological discovery in Mexico City is shaking things up for pre-Hispanic historians. Salvador Guilliem Arroyo announced that his team had uncovered ancient ruins in Tlatelolco, a neighborhood in the center of the sprawling capital. Believed to be built between 800 and 1,100 A.D., the site’s Templo Mayor (Main Temple) could be 225 to 525 years older than any other previously-known Aztec remnant. If the teac can corroborate these initial findings, the discovery will necessitate revision of the established timeline for the development of the Aztec civilization.

Guilliem Arroyo’s team began investigation of the Tlatelolco ruins in 1992, but work was suspended in 1993 after an earthquake damaged the site. To aid in accessing the ruins, the workers used a tunnel that reached up to seven meters (about 21 feet) in depth, largely constructed by Mexica peoples. The Tlatelolco site includes a complex used as a religious center dedicated to the military elite.

Previous research determined that Tlatelolco was founded in 1325, the same time as the Aztec Empire’s capital of Tenochtitlán, what is today Mexico City’s historic downtown. The great city was destroyed in 1521 after being conquered by Hernán Cortés’ small army. One of the first projects of the Spanish conquistadors was to construct a cathedral—which they did directly on top of Tenochtitlán’s Templo Mayor. This pyramid has been partially recovered, although full exploration would compromise the cathedral, something that no one is willing to do. The new evidence from Tlatelolco seems to place that city earlier than Tenochctitlán, and will most likely spur further investigation of the latter."
- http://feeds.feedburner.com/SpanishArticles

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