ScienceIQ.com

What Is Polarimetry?

Polarimetry is the technique of measuring the 'polarization' of light. Most of the light we encounter every day is a chaotic mixture of light waves vibrating in all directions. Such a combination is known as 'unpolarized' light. When you turn on a lamp, for example, the light waves vibrate in all directions: up and down, side to side, or at any ...

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WhatIsPolarimetry
Astronomy

An Old Science Experiment On The Moon

The most famous thing Neil Armstrong left on the moon 35 years ago is a footprint, a boot-shaped depression in the gray moondust. Millions of people have seen pictures of it, and one day, years from ... Continue reading

AnOldScienceExperimentOnTheMoon
Biology

Will That Be One Hump or Two?

Camels are highly adaptive to their environments. Often called the ships of the desert, they have been domesticated by humans for thousands of years, as beasts of burden and as transportation. What ... Continue reading

Humps
Science

Benjamin Franklin, Science Founding Father

While popularly known for his role as one of the United States' founding fathers, Benjamin Franklin was also a renowned scientist who made a number of substantial contributions in the field of Earth ... Continue reading

BenjaminFranklin
Biology

There's A Lot More To Vision Than Meets The Eye

Have you ever heard of Anton's Syndrome? It's a bizarre medical disorder involving a dramatic mismatch between sensory input and conscious awareness. Why is the syndrome bizarre? Not because the ... Continue reading

VisionMeetsTheEye

Why Can't We Really Clone Dinosaurs?

CloneDinosaursYou might think, if you saw the movie Jurassic Park, or read the book, that a real live cloned dinosaur would be on the TV evening news any day now. Not very likely! In the fictional version, the dinosaur DNA is resurrected from the stomachs of prehistoric mosquitoes that had sucked some dinosaur blood just before being trapped and preserved in amber 80 million years ago. (Indeed, amber is a wonderful preservative, and just might preserve some DNA!) Then the DNA was transferred into crocodile eggs whose own DNA had been removed. Voila! Baby dinosaurs.

But to clone an animal, as Dolly the sheep was cloned a few years ago, you need not just DNA but whole nuclei - plus an unfertilized egg with its own nucleus removed, to transfer it into. That's why scientists call the cloning process 'nuclear transplantation.' The DNA in sheep or dinosaurs, or people or frogs or mice, or any other animal large enough to see, comes packaged in the nucleus with a lot of associated scaffolding and regulatory proteins to help it carry out the business of running a cell. Naked DNA can't do much by itself. And whole dinosaur nuclei aren't going to be found any time soon.

Some people who have given up on the possibility of cloning dinosaurs think mammoths would be a better bet. Several have been frozen (not fossilized) in the Arctic permafrost in Siberia, and they are only thousands of years old, not millions. Still, the chances of recovering intact nuclei from them is pretty slim. So don't be planning your trip to Jurassic Park, or Mammoth Park, this year.