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Vitreous Humor, Sclera and Other Yukky Eye Stuff

Eyes are one of the most complex organs humans have. In fact the optic nerve connection to the brain is so complex and delicate that no one has ever succeeded in transplanting the whole eye (the cornea, the clear covering on the front part of the eye, has been successfully transplanted). ...

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HumanEye
Astronomy

What Powered the Big Bang?

During the last decade, sky maps of the radiation relic of the Big Bang---first by NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite and more recently by other experiments, including Antarctic ... Continue reading

WhatPoweredtheBigBang
Geology

Crater Lake

Crater Lake: overwhelmingly yet sublimely beautiful. Moody. At times brilliantly blue, ominously somber; at other times buried in a mass of brooding clouds. The lake is magical, enchanting - a remnant ... Continue reading

CraterLake
Science

Classifying Organisms

Have you ever noticed that when you see an insect or a bird, there is real satisfaction in giving it a name, and an uncomfortable uncertainty when you can't? Along these same lines, consider the ... Continue reading

ClassifyingOrganisms
Engineering

X-Ray Astronomy vs. Medical X-Rays

It's natural to associate the X-rays from cosmic objects with an X-ray from the doctor's office, but the comparison is a bit tricky. A doctor's X-ray machine consists of two parts: an X-ray source at ... Continue reading

XRayAstronomyvsMedicalXRays

Heady Success

HeadySuccessHammerhead sharks might strike you as strange: or, they might just strike you. Among the oddest-looking of sharks, all nine types of hammerheads sport heads with sides stretched wide, like the head of a hammer on the end of its handle. Some look like shovels, bonnets, axes, or boomerangs. Scientists theorize that the hammer evolved, which indicates that it served the shark well. Certainly the 'hammer' serves many purposes - sometimes including striking prey while the shark holds it down. More common uses of this uncommon head are to aid in seeing and smelling: the shark's eyes and nostrils are located at the two ends of its head for wide-screen viewing and outstanding scent sleuthing.

Hammerheads can smell a drop of blood in one million drops of water - from a quarter-mile or 400 meters away. The wide space between the nostrils might also help the hammerhead sniff out the direction its prey is moving. The head's shape helps the hammerhead swim and dive, giving lift the same way wings help an airplane fly. Some hammerheads even 'speak' with their heads, and with other parts of their bodies as well. Bonnetheads shake their heads, swim in circles as if chasing their own tails, arch their backs, and raise their heads high. Sometimes they jerk up and down abruptly, or perform a corkscrew, twisting around while swimming fast in a circle.

The hammers on hammerhead sharks are soft at birth. As the shark grows, its hammer hardens. Unlike most sharks, hammerheads swim in schools. Perhaps these are known as the schools of hard knocks?