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Bats

... pups (the name for a baby bat) and have been known to risk their lives to share food with the less fortunate. 3. The African Heart-Nosed bat can hear the footsteps of a beetle walking on sand from a distance of over six feet! 4. The giant Flying Fox bat from Indonesia has a wing span of six feet! 5. Disk-winged bats of Latin America have adhesive disks on both feet that enable them to live in unfurling banana leaves (or even walk up a window pane). 6. Nearly 1,000 kinds of bats account for almost a quarter of all mammal species, and most ...

Number of words: 894 | Number of pages: 4

A Balloon And Science

... is flying through the air on a fishing line it is flying "forward" the air is pushing it "backwards" at the same time. Gravity is the force of attraction between two objects. Gravity says" what goes up, must come down." Gravity pulls the balloon and straw downwards so it drags against the fishing line. Sir Isaac Newton made up the three laws of motion. He lived 500 years ago. The first law of motion is: An object at rest will stay at rest and an object in motion will stay in motion unless a force makes the object change its state of res ...

Number of words: 422 | Number of pages: 2

Awakenings And Tourette Syndro

... the movie begins, they show Leonard to us as a normal and seemingly healthy ten year old boy who is afflicted with the "sleeping sickness" disease that reached epidemic proportions during that specific era. Like many others who contracted this illness, Leonard and those like him were often misdiagnosed and eventually placed in mental hospital facilities because of their apparent vegetative state. Doctors who worked on the earlier cases believed the patients mental faculties to have been destroyed by the illness. Dr. Sayer (Dr. Oliver S ...

Number of words: 991 | Number of pages: 4

Bacillus Anthracis 2

... of infection is 1/100,000. The disease is acquired when spores from a contaminated animal carcass inoculate an open wound. Then, the spores germinate and invade the blood stream, leading to death within 48 hours. Bacillus Anthracis is classified as a harmful, pathogenic bacterium. There is a vaccine for Anthrax in humans, but it produces no significant immunity. The vaccine is given primarily to people who work with livestock or in other businesses where workers must handle animal carcasses. The livestock version of the vaccine is very effec ...

Number of words: 306 | Number of pages: 2

Extra Sensory Perception

... whose minds seemed capable of more: people claiming knowledge that their brains could not have gained through any senses known to science. The first work on ESP was done by the Society for Physical Research in London founded a century ago. Scientists have run thousands of experiments to learn if minds indeed have supernatural powers. Most tests investigated one of the three main "faculties": telepathy, clairvoyance and precognition, collectively called extrasensory perseption (ESP) by American psycologist J.B. Rhine. Dating from ...

Number of words: 1353 | Number of pages: 5

Helium

... inert. Its single electron shell is filled, making possible reactions with other elements extremely difficult and the resulting compounds quite unstable. Helium is the most difficult of all gases to liquefy and is impossible to solidify. These properties make liquid helium extremely useful as a refrigerant and for experimental work in producing and measuring temperatures close to absolute zero. Liquid helium can be cooled almost to absolute zero at normal pressure by rapid removal of the vapor above the liquid. At a temperature sligh ...

Number of words: 521 | Number of pages: 2

Cystic Fibrosis

... people. The disease which begins in infancy afflicts more than 25,000 Americans and causes more than 500 deaths every year. Forty years ago the average life span of a patient was five years .Today improved medical therapies and nurtrient rich diets have enabled suffers to survive into adulthood. Research into the cause of reads like a detective story. One clue is that patients have excess amounts of sodium and chloride in their sweat making it vey salty . At the University of North Carolina researchers found that salt imbalance caues th ...

Number of words: 383 | Number of pages: 2

Eugenics

... within a few years it had spread worldwide and defined many of the political ideas of the time. The concept behind was not a new concept in the early 1900s, but had never been given a name before. Even early societies put into practice. For instance, in ancient Sparta, sickly children were killed or abandoned.1 They filtered out the “undesirable” traits in children, a practice which has come to be called “negative .”2 In the late nineteenth century, a man named Francis Galton gave eugenic thought great emphasis.3 Yet it was ...

Number of words: 1506 | Number of pages: 6

Global Warming 3 --

... forgive my ignorance. I am troubled that my children and their children will suffer because of our lack of concern, knowledge and greed. I read a short story the other day, about the people in a village having never heard the word cancer until they were run out of their homes and into the city area's. Years later, some of the people from this village are dying from disease. my point is that before they came to the cities, they had always died of old age ...) FIRST of all, it is important to know that the "greenhouse effect" is not a bad thin ...

Number of words: 1547 | Number of pages: 6

What Is Astrology

... as it takes residence in the physical vehicle or body. The human soul is a focal point of cosmic energy, and the pattern of the heavens, as charted in the horoscope, is the means the soul comes to know itself and its destiny. Astrology points the way to soul development and growth. The soul's strengths and weaknesses are noted in the horoscope. Life is an opportunity given to soul for further enhancement. Because the heavens are in constant motion, and because this motion is quite ordered and exact, it is possible to project the positions ...

Number of words: 418 | Number of pages: 2

Internet History Report

... typing "login," and asking by telephone if the letters appeared on the far-off monitor. On their first attempt, the “L” and “O” were transmitted successfully, but after they typed the letter “G” the system crashed. From 1969 to 1983 a lot of different packet switching schemes were tried and TCP/IP is what grew OUT of ARPANET, not what started ARPANET. During most of the seventies, the protocol was generally referred to as just the Network Control Protocol or NCP. The term Internet was probably first applie ...

Number of words: 946 | Number of pages: 4

Animal Research

... doing research on fear or anger that would break ethical laws on humans we can do on animals to achieve results. has given us many cures and vaccines against polio, diphtheria, mumps, measles, rubella, and the extinction of smallpox. We need that kind of . Another thing does and has done is given us valuable medicines to help asthma, epilepsy, arthritis, ulcers, hypertension, and diabetes. Also without research on animals we never would have been able to get drugs tested and approved for use. Animals help us to teach and practice new surg ...

Number of words: 540 | Number of pages: 2

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