Science Daily — Earth's largest mass extinction event, the end-Permian mass extinction, occurred some 252 million years ago. An estimated 90 percent of Earth's marine life was eradicated. To better understand the cause of this "mother of all mass extinctions," researchers from Arizona State University and the University of Cincinnati used a new geochemical technique. The team measured uranium isotopes in ancient carbonate rocks and found that a large, rapid shift in the chemistry of the world's ancient oceans occurred around the extinction event.
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Tuesday, October 18, 2011
மிகவும் சிறப்பான சின்னச் சின்ன வீட்டு வைத்தியங்கள் சில
அருமருந்தான அருகம் புல்
இந்த அருகம்புல்லில் அதிக விட்டமின், தாதுப்பொருள் இருப்பதை அறிந்து ஜெர்மனியர் சப்பாத்திமாவுடன் சேர்த்து ரொட்டி செய்து சாப்பிடுகின்றனர்.
இந்தப்புல்லை நன்கு சுத்தம்செய்து கழுவி சாறு எடுத்து ஐந்துபங்கு சுத்த நீருடன் கலந்து சாப்பிட்டுவந்தால் நரம்புத்தளர்ச்சி, மலச்சிக்கல், இரத்தஅழுத்தம், அதிகமான எடை ஆகியவை குணமாகும்.
பல் ஈறு நோய்களுக்கு
எலுமிச்சம் பழச்சாறு அரை பாகம், தக்காளிப் பழச்சாறு ஒரு பாகம். சுத்தமான தேன் கால் பாகம் கலந்து காலை மாலை உண்டு வந்தால் கல்லீரல் பாதுகாக்கப்பட்டு, ரத்த ஓட்டம் சீராகவும், பலம் பெறவும் உதவும். நல்ல காபிப்பொடியில் தயாரிக்கப்பட்ட காபியில் குடிக்கும் பதத்தில் ஒரு எலுமிச்சம் பழச்சாற்றை விட்டு உடனே சாப்பிட்டு விடவேண்டும். இவ்வாறு மூன்று தினங்கள் செய்தால் தீராத தலை வலி நீங்கும்.
பல் ஈறுகளில் ஏற்படும் பல் வலிக்கும் ஈறுகளில் ஏற்படும் வலிகளுக்கும், பயோரியாவுக்கும் எலுமிச்சம் பழச்சாற்றை உள்ளுக்கு சாப்பிட்டும், பல், ஈறுகளில் படும்படி தேய்த்தும் வந்தால் மேற்கண்ட நோய்கள் தீரும்.
எலுமிச்சம் பழச்சாற்றில் சீனி கலந்து தினம் சாப்பிட்டால் வாந்தி நிற்கும். வயிற்றுக்கடுப்பு உள்ளவர்கள் சுத்தமான தண்ணீர் சமஅளவு கலந்து 60 மில்லியளவில் நான்கு மணிக்கு ஒரு முறை சாப்பிட்டால் வயிற்றுக் கடுப்பு உடனே நீங்கும். எலுமிச்சம்பழச் சாறு 1 லிட்டருக்கு 1.5 கிலோ சீனி சேர்த்து சர்பத் தயாரித்து தினமும் 15 மில்லிக்குக் குறையாமல் சாப்பிட்டால் உடல் களைப்பு நீங்கும், உடல் சுறுசுறுப்பாக இருக்கும்
எலுமிச்சை சாறு மற்றும் கிளிசரின் கலந்து கரும்புள்ளிகள் மீது தடவிவர, அவை நாளடைவில் மறைந்து விடும். நகச்சுற்று ஏற்பட்டவுடன் எலுமிச்சைப் பழத்தில் துளையிட்டு, விரலை அதனுள் சொருகி வைக்க வலி குறையும்.
கருத்தரிக்க உதவும்
அதிமதுரம், திராட்சை இவை இரண்டையும் சமமாகப் பொடி செய்து 50லிருந்து 100 கிராம் வரை எடுத்து தண்ணீரில் அரைத்து பாலில் கலக்கி பெண்களின் மாதவிடாய் தொடங்கிய நாள் முதல் ஐந்து தினங்கள் சாப்பிட்டு வந்தால், ஆரோக்கியமான பெண்களுக்குக் கருத்தரிக்கும். கருத்தரிக்கும் வரை 3 மாதங்கள் சாப்பிட்டால் நல்ல பலனை எதிர்பார்க்கலாம்.
உதடு வெடிப்புக்கு
சிலருக்கு அதிக குளிர் என்றாலும் சரி, அதிக வெப்பம் என்றாலும் சரி சுத்தமாக ஒத்துக்கொள்ளாது. உதடுகளில் பிளவுகள் ஏற்பட்டு காய்ந்து விடும். இன்னும் சிலருக்கு உதடுகள் கறுத்து, வெடிப்புகளும் ஏற்படும்.
இப்படிப்பட்டவர்கள் பாலாடையுடன் நெல்லிக்காய் சாறு கலந்து, அதை உதடுகளில் தடவி வந்தால், உதட்டின் கருமை நிறம் மறைந்து சிவந்த நிறம் உண்டாகும்.
வெண்ணெயுடன் ஆரஞ்சு பழச் சாறு கலந்து, உதடுகளில் தடவி வந்தாலும், உதடு வெடிப்புகள் சரியாகி உதடுகள் மென்மையாகும்.
கட்டி கரைய
கடுக்காய், சிவப்பு சந்தனம் ரெண்டயும் தண்ணி விட்டு அரைச்சு குழம்பு போல ஆக்கி கட்டிமேல பூசிக்கிட்டு வா.. கட்டி தானாக் கரைந்துவிடும்.
Monday, October 17, 2011
New Technique Unlocks Secrets of Ancient Ocean
Widespread evidence exists for oceanic anoxia before the extinction, but the timing and extent of anoxia remain unknown. Previous hypotheses posited that the deep ocean was depleted of oxygen for millions of years before the end-Permian extinction. The new research using measurements of uranium isotopes in ancient carbonate rocks indicates that the period of ocean-wide anoxia was much shorter.
The mechanism of the end-Permian mass extinction has been much debated. One proposed cause for the extinction, the release of toxic hydrogen sulfide gas, is directly related to oceanic anoxia, which is a depletion of dissolved oxygen from the ocean.
"Our study shows that the ocean was anoxic for at most tens of thousands of years before the extinction event. That's much shorter than prior estimates," says Gregory Brennecka, the lead author of the study and a graduate student in ASU's School of Earth and Space Exploration in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Brennecka, working in Professor Ariel Anbar's research group, conducted the analysis of the samples. Anbar is a professor in ASU's School of Earth and Space Exploration and the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry. Achim Herrmann, a senior lecturer at Barrett, the Honors College at ASU, and Thomas Algeo of the University of Cincinnati, who collected the samples in China, helped guide the selection of samples and interpretation of data.
The team studied samples of carbonate rock from Dawen in southern China for uranium isotope ratios (238U/235U) and thorium to uranium ratios (Th/U). The study presumes that carbonate rocks capture 238U/235U and Th/U of the seawater in which they were deposited. If so, they can be used to study changes in the chemistry of ancient oceans. In separate, related work, the team is testing the limits of this assumption.
In a section of rock spanning the time of the extinction, the team found a marked shift in 238U/235U in the carbonate rocks immediately prior to the mass extinction, which signals an increase in oceanic anoxia. The team also found higher Th/U ratios in the same interval, which indicate a decrease in the uranium content of seawater. Lower concentrations of uranium in seawater also serve as signals of oceanic anoxia.
These decreases in 238U/235U and increases in Th/U only occur at the section of rock that contains the end-Permian extinction horizon. This shows that a period of oceanic anoxia existed only briefly prior to the mass extinction, rather than the previously hypothesized much longer timeframe.
The team's findings represent an increase in knowledge about the ocean's chemistry at a critical period of Earth's history. "This technique gives us a better understanding of how ocean chemistry can change over time, and how sensitive it is to certain environmental factors," says Brennecka.
The implications of the new geochemical tool the researchers developed are just as important as the study's findings.
Uranium isotope ratios have been utilized to study the ocean's chemistry before, but only in black shale, a different and less common type of rock. This study represents the first time uranium isotope ratios have been studied in carbonates for paleo-redox purposes, which is a promising new geochemical tool for future research.
"One of the important outcomes of this study is that we were able to quantify the relative change in the amount of oceanic anoxia across the extinction event in the global ocean. Previous studies were only able to show whether anoxic conditions existed or not. We can now compare this event to other events in Earth history and develop a better understanding of how the amount of oxygen in the Earth's ocean has changed through time and how this might have affected marine diversity," says Herrmann.
Carbonates are much more widespread than black shales on Earth through space and time. "By focusing on carbonates we can study ancient anoxic events in many more places and times," says Anbar. "This was our major motivation in developing the uranium isotope technique."
It is only recently that researchers have developed the ability to precisely measure slight variations in uranium ratios, largely due to research completed at ASU. Most of the team's research in this study was conducted at ASU. The study samples were analyzed at ASU's W. M. Keck Foundation Laboratory for Environmental Biogeochemistry.
"Over the past decade, my research group has worked with many collaborators to develop new techniques to study changes in oxygen in the Earth's ocean through time," says Anbar. "We are especially interested in the connections between ocean oxygenation and biological evolution. The uranium isotope technique is the newest method. We expect it will be very useful. This study shows that it is yielding insights pretty quickly."
"It is exciting to be here, because most of the development work to measure uranium isotopes was done at ASU over the past five years. It is exciting to be at the forefront of these advancements," says Brennecka.
New Mystery On Mars' Forgotten Plains
Science Daily — One of the supposedly best understood and least interesting landscapes on Mars is hiding something that could rewrite the planet's history. Or not. In fact, about all that is certain is that decades of assumptions regarding the wide, flat Hesperia Planum are not holding up very well under renewed scrutiny with higher-resolution, more recent spacecraft data.
But when Gregg and her student Carolyn Roberts started looking at this classic Martian lava plain with modern data sets, they ran into trouble."Most scientists don't want to work on the flat things," noted geologist Tracy Gregg of University at Buffalo, State University of New York. So after early Mars scientists decided Hesperia Planum looked like a lava-filled plain, no one really revisited the matter and the place was used to exemplify something rather important: The base of a major transitional period in the geologic time scale of Mars. The period is aptly called the Hesperian and it is thought to have run from 3.7 to 3.1 billion years ago.
"There's a volcano in Hesperia Planum that not many people pay attention to because it's very small," Gregg said. "As I started looking closer at the broader region -- I can't find any other volcanic vents, any flows. I just kept looking for evidence of lava flows. It's kind of frustrating. There is nothing like that in the Hesperia Planum."
"A likely cause of this trouble is the thick dust that blankets Hesperia Planum," she said. "It covers everywhere like a snowfall."
So she turned her attention to what could be discerned on Hesperia Planum: about a dozen narrow, sinuous channels, called rilles, just a few hundred meters wide and up to hundreds of kilometers long. These rilles have no obvious sources or destinations and it is not at all clear they are volcanic.
"The question I have is what made the channels," said Gregg. Was it water, lava, or something else? "There are some lavas that can be really, really runny. And both are liquids that run downhill." So either is a possibility.
To begin to sort the matter out, Gregg and Roberts are now looking for help on the Moon. Their preliminary findings are being presented at the Annual Meeting of The Geological Society of America in Minneapolis.
"On the Moon we see these same kinds of features and we know that water couldn't have formed them there," Gregg said. So they are in the process of comparing channels on the Moon and Mars, using similar data sets from different spacecraft, to see if that sheds any light on the matter. She hopes to find evidence that will rule out water or lava on Hesperia Planum.
"Everybody assumed these were huge lava flows," said Gregg. "But if it turns out to be a lake deposit, it's a very different picture of what Mars was doing at that time." It would also make Hesperia Planum a good place to look for life, because water plus volcanic heat and minerals is widely believed to be a winning combination for getting life started.
"The 'volcanic' part is an interpretation that's beginning to fall apart," said Gregg. "What is holding up is that the Hesperian marks a transition between the Noachian (a time of liquid water on the surface and the formation of lots of impact craters) and the Amazonian (a drier, colder Mars)."
She has found that other scientists are interested in her work because of its possible implications on the Mars geological time scale. Gregg is not worried that Mars history will need to be rewritten, but she does suspect that Hesperia Planum is a lot more complicated than people has long thought.
Self-Replication Process Holds Promise for Production of New Materials
NYU scientists have developed artificial structures that can self-replicate, a process that has the potential to yield new types of materials. These structures consist of triple helix molecules containing three DNA double helices. (Credit: Image courtesy of Nature.)
Science Daily — New York University scientists have developed artificial structures that can self-replicate, a process that has the potential to yield new types of materials. In the natural world, self-replication is ubiquitous in all living entities, but artificial self-replication has been elusive. The new discovery is the first steps toward a general process for self-replication of a wide variety of arbitrarily designed seeds. The seeds are made from DNA tile motifs that serve as letters arranged to spell out a particular word. The replication process preserves the letter sequence and the shape of the seed and hence the information required to produce further generations.
This process holds much promise for the creation of new materials. DNA is a robust functional entity that can organize itself and other molecules into complex structures. More recently DNA has been used to organize inorganic matter, such as metallic particles, as well. The re-creation by the NYU scientists of this type of assembly in a laboratory raises the prospect for the eventual development of self-replicating materials that possess a wide range of patterns and that can perform a variety of functions. The breakthrough the NYU researchers have achieved is the replication of a system that contains complex information. Thus, the replication of this material, like that of DNA in the cell, is not limited to repeating patterns.
The work, conducted by researchers in NYU's Departments of Chemistry and Physics and its Center for Soft Matter Research, appears in the latest issue of the journal Nature.
To demonstrate this self-replication process, the NYU scientists created artificial DNA tile motifs -- short, nanometer-scale arrangements of DNA. Each tile serves as a letter -- A or B -- that recognizes and binds to complementary letters A' or B'. In the natural world, the DNA replication process involves complementary matches between bases -- adenine (A) pairs with thymine (T) and guanine (G) pairs with cytosine (C) -- to form its familiar double helix. By contrast, the NYU researchers developed an artificial tile or motif, called BTX (bent triple helix molecules containing three DNA double helices), with each BTX molecule composed of 10 DNA strands. Unlike DNA, the BTX code is not limited to four letters -- in principle, it can contain quadrillions of different letters and tiles that pair using the complementarity of four DNA single strands, or "sticky ends," on each tile, to form a six-helix bundle.
In order to achieve self-replication of the BTX tile arrays, a seed word is needed to catalyze multiple generations of identical arrays. BTX's seed consists of a sequence of seven tiles -- a seven-letter word. To bring about the self-replication process, the seed is placed in a chemical solution, where it assembles complementary tiles to form a "daughter BTX array" -- a complementary word. The daughter array is then separated from the seed by heating the solution to ~ 40 oC. The process is then repeated. The daughter array binds with its complementary tiles to form a "granddaughter array," thus achieving self-replication of the material and of the information in the seed -- and hence reproducing the sequence within the original seed word. Significantly, this process is distinct from the replication processes that occur within the cell, because no biological components, particularly enzymes, are used in its execution -- even the DNA is synthetic.
"This is the first step in the process of creating artificial self-replicating materials of an arbitrary composition," said Paul Chaikin, a professor in NYU's Department of Physics and one of the study's co-authors. "The next challenge is to create a process in which self-replication occurs not only for a few generations, but long enough to show exponential growth."
"While our replication method requires multiple chemical and thermal processing cycles, we have demonstrated that it is possible to replicate not just molecules like cellular DNA or RNA, but discrete structures that could in principle assume many different shapes, have many different functional features, and be associated with many different types of chemical species," added Nadrian Seeman, a professor in NYU's Department of Chemistry and a co-author of the study.
The research was supported by grants from the W.M. Keck Foundation, the MRSEC Program of the National Science Foundation, the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, the Army Research Office, NASA, and the Office of Naval Research.
Brilliant 10: The Robot Trainer
Crowdsourcing will help robots learn complex tasks the same way children do
By Gregory Mone
Chad Jenkins Courtesy Chad Jenkins/Brown University
As an Atari-addicted kid, all Chad Jenkins wanted was to someday become a videogame designer. But once he got to grad school, he switched his obsession to robots.
Jenkins, now at Brown University, aims to program robots so that they learn the way children do: through mimicry andrepetition. To teach his first virtual humanoid robot how to do the Cabbage Patch, he programmed it to study his moves and replicate them. Now he’s turned his attention to more-complex tasks, such as setting a table or preparing a meal. The key is repetition. The more a robot observes, and the greater the variety of approaches to a given task that it observes, the better it will be able to understand the underlying essence of the act itself.
Such teaching takes a lot of repetition. rather than do all the dancing or table-setting himself, though, Jenkins has figured out a way to crowdsource the work. Prescreened users will log on to his Brown lab’s website and, through simple keystrokes, guide a robot—such as the PR2, a humanoid robot made by the Silicon Valley company Willow Garage—through a job. Instead of observing the person, the robot will learn by observing itself, recording its every movement and action, and using learning algorithms to find the most efficient way to complete a task. eventually, after someone demonstrates to the PR2 how to successfully pick up and set down a wineglass, the robot should be able to master it.
Jenkins’s training lab will also be testing new applications and tasks for the robots. Most robots run on specialized code, but Jenkins made his robots run on a common Web language so that more developers would be able to program them. “He’s democratizing access to robots,” says Willow Garage roboticist Brian Gerkey. Although Jenkins isn’t sure what applications the geek masses will devise, the father of three does have a task in mind for his own house: “I’d love for a robot to sort the toys and put them away."
Brilliant 10: Neuron Observer
Staring into the brains of fruit flies could clarify the connection between genes and behaviors
By Mara Grunbaum
Gaby Maimon Courtesy Gaby Maimon
Gaby Maimon, of Rockefeller University, can read fruit flies’ minds. As their wings buzz under his microscope, he watches the neurons fire in their poppy-seed-size brains. By doing so, he is able to discern how the firing of certain neurons corresponds to certain behaviors. His goal is to untangle precisely how genes and neuron activation trigger behavioral disorders like autism and ADHD.
To achieve such insights, Maimon needed to be able to to study fly neurons while the insects were awake and behaving as they normally would while flapping their wings. He built a plastic platform that immobilizes the flies’ heads in a saline bath—where he can surgically insert electrodes into their brains—but allows their wings to stay dry and flap freely as they “fly” through a simulated environment. His recordings of neuron activity, the first recordings of active, awake insects rather than sedated ones, lets him see which cells are working as the insects make simple decisions, such as whether to turn left or right during flight.
Maimon, who was raised in Israel, has always been curious about complex behavior. In grad school he worked with monkeys, but he grew frustrated with the pace of the work, so after finishing his doctorate, he switched to insects. He knew that fruit flies, with their 100,000 neurons and easily manipulated genetics, could help him correlate gene activation with neural function and complex behaviors.
For his next project, Maimon will record the activity of the same neurons in different flies to see if cellular variations make them behave differently. After that, he’ll search their genomes for the code that builds those cells. The research could reveal how they—and we—make choices. It will take a lot of steady hands and fly-scale brain surgeries, but he has the surgical procedure down now. The trick? “You don’t drink coffee that morning.”
Brilliant 10: Sun Diver
Flying a heat-resistant probe near the sun will reveal the physics of solar plasma
By Lauren Aaronson
Justin Kasper Courtesy Justin Kasper
In July 2010, a colleague rushed into Justin Kasper’s office at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He showed Kasper a telescope video of something they had never seen before: a comet crashing into the sun. The sight was amazing. But what grabbed Kasper’s attention was the moment before impact, when a surprising cloud puff indicated that the comet had hit unobserved material.
To answer, among other questions, what caused the cloud puff, Kasper is designing an instrument that will get closer to the sun than ever before. The Solar Probe Cup will scoop up bits of the sun’s corona and solar wind to continuously measure its speed, temperature and density. That information will help astrophysicists investigate why the corona’s plasma gets so hot—it can reach a million degrees—and how the plasma turns into a millionmile-per-hour solar wind, and what that mysterious puff might be. “Who knows what we can’t make out because we’re just too far away?” Kasper says.
The Solar Probe Cup will ride on NASA’s first solar mission, called Solar Probe Plus, in 2018. When it reaches the sun, it will have to withstand temperatures of up to 2,550°F. Kasper and his team have begun upgrading a conventional ion detector by shrinking the plasma-collection cup (so that it will absorb less heat) and etching sturdier grids out of melt-resistant tungsten and sapphire.
Once the Cup takes off, the data-crunching begins. Kasper has several theories about the plasma movements his detector could uncover, but sometimes even the best theories can’t anticipate what the actual conditions in the plasma will be. “We’re trying to build instruments as capable as we can,” Kasper says, “because very rarely do we find what we were expecting. That’s part of the fun.”
Brilliant 10: Molecular Filmmaker
Capturing the motion of macromolecules will help researchers make better HIV drugs
By Mara Grunbaum
Hashim M. Al-Hashmi Courtesy Hashim M. Al-Hashmi
Early every morning, before dawn if he can, Hashim Al-Hashimi goes running. Six miles, rain or shine, summer heat or bitter Michigan cold (Al-Hashimi works at the University of Michigan). His chosen route is hilly for a reason. Just at the uphill crests—when the muscle pain is sharpest and the body most wants to quit—that’s when his mind is sharpest. “Most of my thinking is at the top of a hill,” he says.
It was one such push that led to his biggest innovation in molecular visualization. Using a computer algorithm he developed and nuclear magnetic resonance imaging, Al-Hashimi recorded the atomic-scale contortions of RNA and DNA, long thought of in biology as relatively inflexible structures. Instead of holding one predominant form, Al-Hashimi found, RNA bends and wiggles into a predictable series of shapes as its atoms rotate around their bonds. Each shape is a potential target for RNA-attacking drugs. Using this new method, Al-Hashimi has already identified one molecule, called netilmicin, that can stop HIV replication by latching onto RNA where one of the virus’s essential proteins otherwise would.
Al-Hashimi himself has always been in motion. He was born in Lebanon just before its civil war, and his family escaped to Greece soon thereafter. They then lived in Italy, Jordan, Wales and England. Soon after he started his Ph.D. at Yale, a labmate visualized a protein called myoglobin and couldn’t fit it to any single 3-D configuration. To Al-Hashimi, it seemed obvious that the protein was moving—everything in biology moves—but at the time, most biologists did not realize the extent to which biological macromolecules were moving. He realized then that revealing molecular motion would be his focus.
He’s now lived in Ann Arbor for nine years, longer than anywhere else, advising the scientists at his biotech start-up, Nymirum, and trying to view larger areas of DNA molecules. He says that being settled is somewhat strange, but he still runs every morning. It’s best if it’s still dark out. “Then there’s nothing to look at,” he says. “It’s just you and your brain.”
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